The History [of The] Life of King Henry the Second, and of the Age in which He Lived: To which is Prefixed, A History of the Revolutions of England, from the Death of Edward the Confessor to the Birth of Henry the Second, Հատոր 1George Faulkner, 1768 |
From inside the book
Արդյունքներ 99–ի 1-ից 5-ը:
Էջ 19
... against it by a league with the emperor Henry the Fourth , a mighty and warlike prince , who promifed to defend him , as an ally of the empire , against any invader . And thus he took off , or much leffened , a very weighty objection ...
... against it by a league with the emperor Henry the Fourth , a mighty and warlike prince , who promifed to defend him , as an ally of the empire , against any invader . And thus he took off , or much leffened , a very weighty objection ...
Էջ 20
... against him , in terms very offenfive : Lut , before he could execute his intended hoftilities , he fell fick and died , fo opportunely for William , that it excited a fufpicion of his having been poifoned at the infti- gation of that ...
... against him , in terms very offenfive : Lut , before he could execute his intended hoftilities , he fell fick and died , fo opportunely for William , that it excited a fufpicion of his having been poifoned at the infti- gation of that ...
Էջ 22
... against him . But , before the English monarch had occafion to oppose his arms to the 1066. Flor . Normans , he was obliged to employ them against other invaders , whom he did not expect . His own brother Tofti , a man given up to the ...
... against him . But , before the English monarch had occafion to oppose his arms to the 1066. Flor . Normans , he was obliged to employ them against other invaders , whom he did not expect . His own brother Tofti , a man given up to the ...
Էջ 24
... against him with an ar- my , which forced him to betake himself again to his ships , and feek a refuge in Scotland . After fome months he returned , to invade his country once more , not with the duke of Normandy , but with See Malmb ...
... against him with an ar- my , which forced him to betake himself again to his ships , and feek a refuge in Scotland . After fome months he returned , to invade his country once more , not with the duke of Normandy , but with See Malmb ...
Էջ 28
... against fuch dangerous enemies , but leave them , who had taken no oath to the duke of Nor- mandy , and might juftly draw their fwords in the defence of their country , to fight a battle , in which if they should be overcome , the ...
... against fuch dangerous enemies , but leave them , who had taken no oath to the duke of Nor- mandy , and might juftly draw their fwords in the defence of their country , to fight a battle , in which if they should be overcome , the ...
Այլ խմբագրություններ - View all
The History Of The Life of King Henry the Second, And of the Age in which He ... George Lyttelton Ամբողջությամբ դիտվող - 1767 |
Common terms and phrases
affiftance againſt alfo almoft Anfelm archbishop archbishop of Canterbury army barons becauſe bishop brother caftle caufe cauſe Chron clergy confent crown death defired duke of Aquitaine duke of Normandy dutchy earl of Anjou earl of Glocefter earldom Edgar Atheling enemy England English Euftace fafe faid fame father favour fays fecure feemed fent ferved fervice fhew fhould fiege firft Firſt fome foon fovereign fpirit France ftate ftill ftrength ftrong fub ann fubjects fubmit fucceffion fuch fuffered fuppofed fupport fupra Geft Henry hift hiftorians hiftory himſelf huſband intereft king king of England king of France kingdom laft lefs Louis Malmb Malmſbury Matilda moft moſt muſt neceffary Normans oath occafion Ordericus Vitalis paffed perfon poffeffion pope prefent prince promifed quod raiſed reafon reign Rome Saxon ſhe Stephen thefe themſelves theſe thofe thoſe uſed vaffals whofe William Clito William Rufus William the Conqueror Wincheſter
Սիրված հատվածներ
Էջ 300 - Glocefter himfelf had no f-*8- inconfiderable tincture of learning, and was the patron of all who excelled in it : qualities rare at all times in a nobleman of his high rank, but particularly in an age when knowledge and valour were thought incompatible, and not to be able to read was a mark of nobility. This truly great man...
Էջ 169 - ... to be exempt from any arbitrary or illegal taxations ; trials by juries, and other good cuftoms, derived from our Saxon anceftors, and confirmed by the charter of King Henry the Firft. Nor can we refufe fome grateful praife to the memory of a prince, under whole aufpices thofe rights were eftablifhed, which at the diftance of more than fix hundred years, are the great bafis whereon our freedom is founded.
Էջ 593 - Et praecipio quod barones mei similiter se contineant erga filios vel filias vel uxores hominum suorum. 5. Monetagium commune quod capiebatur per civitates et comitatus quod non fuit tempore regis Edwardi, hoc ne amodo fiat omnino defendo. Si quis captus fuerit sive monetarius sive alius cum falsa moneta, justitia recta inde fiat.
Էջ 38 - ... be exacted or taken of them but their free " fervice, which they by right owed to the " crown and were bound to perform." It is further faid, " That this was ordained and ** granted to them as an hereditary right for " ever, by the cowmm council of the kingdom :" which very remarkable ftatute is juftly ftyled by a learned author, Nathanael Bacon, the SeeN.Baconyfry?
Էջ 47 - His temperance and his chaftity were conftant guards, that fecured his mind from all weaknefs, fupported it's dignity, and kept it always, as it were, on the throne. Through his whole life he had no partner of his bed but his queen : a...
Էջ 452 - ... and by the blackeft ingratitude to his uncle, King Henry, from whom he had received fuch obligations, as, to a mind endued with a right fenfe of honour, would have been no lefs binding than the oaths he had taken. This was a ftain on his character, which even the merit of a good, government could not have effaced : but his was fo bad, that it might have expelled a lawful king from an hereditary throne. Indeed the weaknefs of his title, and the too great obligations he had to the clergy in his...
Էջ 48 - ... times — belief without examination, and devotion without piety. It was a religion that prompted him to endow...
Էջ 89 - ... but the iron point remained deeply fixed in his breaft. Some colliers, who happened then to pafs through the foreft, faw the corpfe of their dead fovereign, and put it, ftill bleeding, into a cart they had with them, which brought it to Winchefter, where it was haftily buried, without any royal pomp, or even a decent attendance-, on the following day.
Էջ 46 - His courage was heroic, and he poftefled it not only in the field, but (which is more uncommon) in the cabinet, attempting great things with means that to other men appeared totally unequal...
Էջ 47 - It is true, indeed, that among many acts of extreme inhumanity, some shining instances of great clemency may be produced, that were either effects of his policy, which taught him this method of acquiring friends, or of his magnanimity, which made him...