History of Frederick the Second Emperor of the Romans |
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Page 3
... brought him to his grave . Henceforward , there would be scanty leisure for laws or arts , for poetry or prose treatises . A bloody and rancorous strife was about to lay waste Italy . Hitherto her factions had been local , each city ...
... brought him to his grave . Henceforward , there would be scanty leisure for laws or arts , for poetry or prose treatises . A bloody and rancorous strife was about to lay waste Italy . Hitherto her factions had been local , each city ...
Page 7
... brought over Azzo of Este to their side and began to harass Eccelin . Frederick took it very ill , that his Holiness had struck out of the terms of peace a salvo in favour of the honour of the Empire . Matters in Southern Italy ...
... brought over Azzo of Este to their side and began to harass Eccelin . Frederick took it very ill , that his Holiness had struck out of the terms of peace a salvo in favour of the honour of the Empire . Matters in Southern Italy ...
Page 9
... brought into Apulia . As to the last , at great cost and danger to ourselves , we removed them from the mountainous parts of Sicily , where they had killed more Christians than are now living on that island ; and we settled them in a ...
... brought into Apulia . As to the last , at great cost and danger to ourselves , we removed them from the mountainous parts of Sicily , where they had killed more Christians than are now living on that island ; and we settled them in a ...
Page 16
... brought in soldiers of the other faction ; thencefor- ward that city became Guelf . Gregory thus writes 6 of him , from Terni , in June ; We have sent our venerable Brother , in whom we have always firm trust , that he will cherish the ...
... brought in soldiers of the other faction ; thencefor- ward that city became Guelf . Gregory thus writes 6 of him , from Terni , in June ; We have sent our venerable Brother , in whom we have always firm trust , that he will cherish the ...
Page 20
... brought him by his new Empress . He had named Gebhard von Arnstein his Vicar in Italy , to whom he thus writes from Augsburg ; ' We have received with joy the letters of your devotion ; you mention a report in Lombardy , that we shall ...
... brought him by his new Empress . He had named Gebhard von Arnstein his Vicar in Italy , to whom he thus writes from Augsburg ; ' We have received with joy the letters of your devotion ; you mention a report in Lombardy , that we shall ...
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Common terms and phrases
Abbot afterwards allies Apulia Archbishop arms army Azzo besieged Bishop of Palestrina Brescia brethren brother brought burghers Cæsar Cardinal Carroccio Castle CHAP Christendom Christians Chronicon Church clergy Colonna Conrad Council Count Count of Provence Court Cremona Crown Crusade Duke Duke of Bavaria Eccelin Emperor Empire enemy England English envoys Enzio excommunication Faenza father favour Ferrara France Frederick friars galleys Genoa Genoese Germany Ghibellines Gregory Guelfs hands Henry Hohenstaufen Holy Land honour Imperial Innocent Italian Italy Kaiser King Kingdom knights late Legate letter Lombard Lord Louis Lyons March master Milan Milanese Montelongo nobles oath ordered Otho Palestine Papacy Papal Paris Parma peace Peter de Vinea Piacenza Pisa Podesta Pope Pope's Prelates priests Princes prisoners provinces Raynaldus rebels Rolandini Romagna Roman Rome Salimbene San Germano Saracens sent Sicily siege soon Sultan took town Tuscany Verona Vicar Viterbo wrote XVIII СНАР
Popular passages
Page 300 - And they came to the place which God had told him of; and Abraham built an altar there, and laid the wood in order, and bound Isaac his son, and laid him on the altar upon the wood. And Abraham stretched forth his hand, and took the knife to slay his son.
Page 475 - And it shall come to pass in that day, that Tyre shall be forgotten seventy years, according to the days of one king : after the end of seventy years shall Tyre sing as an harlot.
Page 198 - This land of such dear souls, this dear dear land, Dear for her reputation through the world, Is now leased out, I die pronouncing it, Like to a tenement or pelting farm...
Page 506 - ... judgment, was neither scornful and godless infidelity, nor certainly a more advanced and enlightened Christianity, yearning after holiness and purity not then attainable. It was the shattered, dubious, at times trembling faith, at times desperately reckless incredulity, of a man...