Wednesday, February 2, 2022

Herpes Virus Hiding Place Revealed! (Nobody Believed This!)

 
Even Oxford and Cambridge doctors were alarmed when they saw this...

As new research reveals the true place where the cold sore virus hides!

And it's not just "skin deep", as everybody is falsely led to believe...



Instead, the virus creeps in this vital part of our body!

See here all the evidence:

Where the cold sore virus really hides.

























During the summer of 1336 an English embassy attempted to negotiate with Philip and David. On 20 August Philip rejected the English proposals and pledged full military support for David's partisans. French privateers immediately commenced a fresh round of attacks on English shipping and ports, causing panic on the English south coast. It was the middle of September before Edward received the news and returned to England. Arriving too late to strike at the French ships, he imposed new war taxes and returned to Scotland to winter at a fortress on the Clyde. The Scots kept up a campaign of harassment against the English, while Murray destroyed Dunnottar, Kinneff and Lauriston in order to prevent Edward using them. Famine and disease were widespread throughout Scotland. French political and legal pressures increased and Philip readied his army to invade Gascony in 1337. Edward returned to England again in December 1336 to plan for a war with France in the spring. Papal attempts to mediate were brushed aside. From early 1337 the Scottish loyalists took advantage of the English distraction. Murray and Sir William Douglas invaded Fife. Edward felt that the French were the greater threat and so was unable to send reinforcements. The local English commanders did little with the resources they had. By early summer northern Scotland had been overrun and most of the English fortifications there slighted. In April another Scottish army invaded Balliol-held Galloway and devastated it. On 24 May 1337 Philip's Great Council in Paris agreed that Gascony and Ponthieu should be taken back into Philip's hands on the grounds that Edward was in breach of his obligations as a vassal. This marked the start of the Hundred Years' War, which was to last 116 years. As the year went on the Scots raided into the Lowlandsh



















 

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