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. 3 vols. [and] Notes to the second and third (fourth and fifth) books, Հատոր 2 |
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Արդյունքներ 98–ի 1-ից 5-ը:
Էջ 3
... crown , fo lately worn by her valiant antagonist , was placed on her head . Some of the party of Stephen , who came to offer their allegiance and fer- vices to her , she received with great coldness , others fhe drove from her prefence ...
... crown , fo lately worn by her valiant antagonist , was placed on her head . Some of the party of Stephen , who came to offer their allegiance and fer- vices to her , she received with great coldness , others fhe drove from her prefence ...
Էջ 7
... crown , and going into a convent , or to the holy land , for the remainder of his life ; which the chief lords of his party en- gaged he fhould do , and offered Matilda to vid . auctores furrender their caftles and give her many citat ...
... crown , and going into a convent , or to the holy land , for the remainder of his life ; which the chief lords of his party en- gaged he fhould do , and offered Matilda to vid . auctores furrender their caftles and give her many citat ...
Էջ 10
... crown , to his nephew Euftace , that king's eldeft fon . And surely , if this great prelate could fo far give way to reafon of state , or rather to the paffions and revenge of Matilda , as to acquiefce in her keeping the unfortunate ...
... crown , to his nephew Euftace , that king's eldeft fon . And surely , if this great prelate could fo far give way to reafon of state , or rather to the paffions and revenge of Matilda , as to acquiefce in her keeping the unfortunate ...
Էջ 11
... crown . Nevertheless she refused it , perhaps from a jealousy she had conceived of the bishop : but however juftly she may have suspected him , by denying him a favor fo reafonable in itself the hurt her own caufe , and gave him a fair ...
... crown . Nevertheless she refused it , perhaps from a jealousy she had conceived of the bishop : but however juftly she may have suspected him , by denying him a favor fo reafonable in itself the hurt her own caufe , and gave him a fair ...
Էջ 35
... crowns , and re- ceived the inveftiture of the duchy , under the usual form of homage to France . Louis , old and infirm , was inclined to confider pof- feffion as the best right , and had good reasons of policy , as king of France ...
... crowns , and re- ceived the inveftiture of the duchy , under the usual form of homage to France . Louis , old and infirm , was inclined to confider pof- feffion as the best right , and had good reasons of policy , as king of France ...
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The history of the life of king Henry the second, and of the ..., Հատորներ 4-5 George Lyttelton (1st baron.) Ամբողջությամբ դիտվող - 1769 |
Common terms and phrases
Abbot Suger affift againſt alfo alſo Anjou archbishop of Canterbury army auctores barons becauſe bishop Book caftle caſtle caufe cauſe Chron crown crufade defired duke duke of Aquitaine dutchy earl of Anjou earl of Glocefter earldom efcuage eleven hundred enemy England English epift Euftace fafe faid fame fays fecure feemed fent ferved fervice feven fide fiege firſt fome foon force fovereign fpirit ftill ftrength ftrong fub ann fubjects fubmitted fuch fuffered fufficient fuppofed fupport fupra Geoffry Gerv Gryffyth Guienne Henry Plantagenet hift hiftorian himſelf honor huſband intereft itſelf king of France king of Scotland kingdom kingdom of England lefs lord Louis mafter Matilda meaſures moft moſt muſt narch neceffary Neubrig Norman Normandy occafion paffed party perfon poffeffion pope prefent prince propofed raiſed reafon reign ſhe ſhould ſtate Stephen thefe themſelves theſe thofe thoſe tion treaty uſe vaffals Wales Welsh whofe William Wincheſter
Սիրված հատվածներ
Էջ 371 - Wales, fays, that formerly they hardly ever married without a prior cohabitation ; it having been cuftomary for parents to let out their daughters to young men upon trial, for a fum of money told down, and under a penalty if the girls were returned.
Էջ 58 - Glocester himself had |ho inconsiderable 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 502 - Of Fees holden either immediately of the king, or of others who held of the king in capite ; and if alienated, whether the owners were cnfeoffed ab antique, or de novo ; as also fees holden in frank-almoigne, with the values thereof respectively.
Էջ 271 - ... in their defence. Thus he deftroyed the only ground upon which he could ftand, and changed the nature of the queftion between him and Matilda, making her caufe, and her fon's, the caufe of the nation, inltead pf a perfonal claim of inheritance.
Էջ 227 - Welch and the Scotch, calling themselves allies or auxiliaries to the Empress, but in reality enemies and destroyers of England, have broken their bounds, ravaged our borders, and taken from us whole provinces, which we never can hope to recover ; while instead of employing our united force...
Էջ 370 - ... of it was recent in their minds ; but it was frequently carried back, by a falfe fenfe of honour, even to very remote and traditional quarrels, in which any of their family had been ever engaged. For not only the nobles and gentry, but even the loweft among them, had each by heart his own genealogy, together with which he retained a...
Էջ 373 - Notwithstanding their poverty they were fo hofpitable, that every man's houfe was open to all; and thus no wants were felt by the moft indigent, nor was there a beggar in the nation. When any ftranger, or traveller came to a houfe, he ufed no other ceremony, than, at his firft entrance, to deliver his arms into the hands of the mafter, who thereupon offered to...
Էջ 39 - Yet that hiftorian affirms, that, even in the latter years of his reign, broken as he was with inceffant toils, and heavy from a too corpulent habit of body, if any thing happened in any part of his kingdom, by which the royal majefty was hurt or offended, he never fuffered it to continue unchaftifed.
Էջ 228 - England must pay the price of their services : our lands, our honours, must be the hire of these rapacious invaders. But suppose we should have the fortune to conquer for Stephen, what will be the consequence ? Will victory teach him moderation ? Will he learn from security that regard to our liberties, which he could not learn from danger...
Էջ 375 - ... paid, in his days, a more devout reverence to churches and churchmen, to the relics of 'faints, to crofles, and to bells, than any other nation. Whenever any of them happened to meet a monk, or other ecclefiaftic, they inftantly threw down their arms, and, bowing their heads, implored his bleffing.