Nâng Cấp Gói Member Pro
*Nâng cấp để bỏ chờ 60s và tải nhanh không giới hạn!
In 1553, King Edward VI sent three ships under Sir Hugh Willoughby to find the Northeast Passage to China. Two ships were trapped in Arctic ice; Willoughby and his crew were later found frozen to death off the coast of Lapland. However, the third ship—the Edward Bonaventure under Richard Chancellor—survived. Chancellor sailed into the White Sea and traveled overland to Moscow.
In a symbol of this thaw, Tsar Nicholas II (whose mother was Danish) and King Edward VII (whose mother was Danish as well) were cousins. In 1909, Edward made a landmark state visit to Russia—the first and last by a reigning British monarch to Imperial Russia. rus eng
Britain (and later the US) supplied the USSR via perilous Arctic convoys to Murmansk and Archangel. British sailors lost over 3,000 lives on this route. The Soviets received thousands of tanks, aircraft, and millions of boots and tons of aluminum—material that helped them survive 1941–42 and win at Stalingrad. In 1553, King Edward VI sent three ships
The annexation of Crimea (2014), the Skripal poisonings in Salisbury (2018), and the full-scale invasion of Ukraine (2022) pushed Rus-Eng relations to a post-Cold War low. By 2023, the UK had sanctioned over 1,600 Russian individuals and entities, frozen Russian state assets, and supplied Ukraine with advanced weaponry—making Britain one of Ukraine’s most vocal military supporters. Chancellor sailed into the White Sea and traveled
By 1790, Russia supplied over 70% of the British Navy’s hemp and flax—critical for rigging and sails. London viewed St. Petersburg as an indispensable counterweight to French power.