A Parallel History of France and England: Consisting of Outlines and Dates |
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Page 3
... continued to be kept in order by the admirable machinery of the Roman constitution . Carausius , either a Briton or Belgian by birth , was appointed A.D. 282 " Count of the Saxon shore , " with a fleet to repress the attacks of the ...
... continued to be kept in order by the admirable machinery of the Roman constitution . Carausius , either a Briton or Belgian by birth , was appointed A.D. 282 " Count of the Saxon shore , " with a fleet to repress the attacks of the ...
Page 4
... continued in the municipal towns , which had walls strong enough to hold out against the barbarians . There being more of these towns in Gaul than in Britain , the Romano - Keltic element remained far more strong in the first . The rule ...
... continued in the municipal towns , which had walls strong enough to hold out against the barbarians . There being more of these towns in Gaul than in Britain , the Romano - Keltic element remained far more strong in the first . The rule ...
Page 7
... continued the struggle , which was not so much of men , as whether the old Frank blood , now separated from the Franks in Germany , could stand against the revival of the Gallo - Romans or true French backed by the Normans . fleets in ...
... continued the struggle , which was not so much of men , as whether the old Frank blood , now separated from the Franks in Germany , could stand against the revival of the Gallo - Romans or true French backed by the Normans . fleets in ...
Page 12
... continued for so many years that Provence has never wholly recovered . The order of Dominican friars was instituted by St. Dominic , to oppose heresy ; the order of Franciscans , or Minorites , by St. Francis d'Assisi , to maintain ...
... continued for so many years that Provence has never wholly recovered . The order of Dominican friars was instituted by St. Dominic , to oppose heresy ; the order of Franciscans , or Minorites , by St. Francis d'Assisi , to maintain ...
Page 18
... continued a feeble resistance to In 1414 , a council of the Western Church met at Constance and put an end to the Great Schism . Henry V. asserted the old claim of Edward III . to the French crown , and was replied to in foolish bravado ...
... continued a feeble resistance to In 1414 , a council of the Western Church met at Constance and put an end to the Great Schism . Henry V. asserted the old claim of Edward III . to the French crown , and was replied to in foolish bravado ...
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A Parallel History of France and England: Consisting of Outlines and Dates Charlotte Mary Yonge No preview available - 2016 |
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alliance allied Anjou Anne Archbishop army attack Austrasia Austria barons battle became began besieged Bretwalda Brittany brother called caused Charles Charles II Church clergy Condé court Cromwell Crown 8vo daughter dauphin declared died duchy Duke of Brittany Duke of Burgundy Duke of Orleans Dutch Earl Edward Edward II eldest elected Elizabeth Emperor Empire endeavoured England English favourite fiefs Flanders fled fleet forced fought France François French gained Gaul George German Guise heir Henry HENRY III HLOTER Holland Huguenots imprisoned invaded James killed king king's kingdom land League Lord Louis Louis XVIII married Mary minister murdered Napoleon nation Navarre Neustria nobles Normandy obtained Paris Parliament peace Philippe Pope Prince of Condé prisoner province Prussia put to death queen reign Réné revolted Richard Richelieu Rome royal Savoy Saxons Scotland Scots seized sent Spain succeeded terrible Teutons throne took totally defeated treaty troops Turenne victory William young
Popular passages
Page 38 - Roman pontiff. Thus it was not until the time of Paul III (1534-1549) that any effective steps were taken. This pope announced a council that would meet at Mantua on May 23, 1537, but the political and religious strife prevented the gathering from taking place; an attempt to convoke a council at Vicenza...
Page 47 - ... fleet under the guns of the Copenhagen forts, put an end to the peril in that quarter. In northern as in southern seas, the arm of Britain was omnipotent. French and Spanish, Dutch and Danish fleets had been shattered, and Britain helped herself at will to the colonies of the unhappy allies of France. The Cape of Good Hope and Ceylon were taken from the Dutch to secure the sea route to India. But on land no one could make head against Bonaparte. The two victorious enemies recognized their respective...
Page 51 - Fontainebleau, in the splendid gallery of Henry II. After having had two sons, the Count de Paris (born 24th of August, 1838), and the Duke de Chartres (born November 9, 1840), the Duchess met with an overwhelming domestic calamity by the sudden death of her husband. On the 13th of July, 1842, the Duke of Orleans was killed by a fall from his carriage. The Duchess bore her loss with heroic resignation, and gave vent to her harrowed feelings only in retirement. She then, and ever since, in most eventful...
Page 22 - Appointment of the king's consort Elizabeth, queen of England, the king's kinsman Thomas, Cardinal Archbishop of Canterbury, the king's brothers George, Duke of Clarence, and Richard, Duke of Gloucester, Robert, Bishop of Bath and Wells, and Chancellor, L. Bishop of Durham,1 E.
Page 17 - In 1377, Edward III. died, and was succeeded by his grandson, Richard II.
Page 34 - Array (No. 46, p. 178), to summon the militia of the counties to his side, and on July 12, the Houses resolved, in addition to their claim to command the militia, to raise an army, and placed it under the command of the Earl of Essex (No.