EuropeRivington, Percival & Company, 1895 - 532 էջ |
From inside the book
Արդյունքներ 58–ի 11-ից 15-ը:
Էջ 261
... Pippin is of far more importance in Frankish history than the effete royal family . Warned by the fate of Grimoald , they did not again demand the crown for a space of eighty years , and were con- tent with a practical domination ...
... Pippin is of far more importance in Frankish history than the effete royal family . Warned by the fate of Grimoald , they did not again demand the crown for a space of eighty years , and were con- tent with a practical domination ...
Էջ 262
... Pippin and his son Charles were to work at the restoration of the ancient frontier of the Frankish realm , beating down by constant hard fighting the various vassal tribes who had slipped away from beneath the Frankish yoke . Pippin's ...
... Pippin and his son Charles were to work at the restoration of the ancient frontier of the Frankish realm , beating down by constant hard fighting the various vassal tribes who had slipped away from beneath the Frankish yoke . Pippin's ...
Էջ 263
... Pippin no systematic attempt had been made to convert those among the German races who still lay in the darkness of Paganism . It was Pippin who first saw that this duty was incumbent on the Frankish government . He sent to England for ...
... Pippin no systematic attempt had been made to convert those among the German races who still lay in the darkness of Paganism . It was Pippin who first saw that this duty was incumbent on the Frankish government . He sent to England for ...
Էջ 264
... Pippin began , his greater son , Charles the Hammer , and his still mightier great - grandson , Charles the Emperor , were destined to com- plete . By this work alone the house of the great Austrasian mayors did more to justify their ...
... Pippin began , his greater son , Charles the Hammer , and his still mightier great - grandson , Charles the Emperor , were destined to com- plete . By this work alone the house of the great Austrasian mayors did more to justify their ...
Էջ 265
... Pippin's widow Plectrudis tried to seize the reins of government in behalf of her little grandson , and some of the Austrasians adhered to her cause . As a precautionary measure she cast her husband's natural son Charles into prison ...
... Pippin's widow Plectrudis tried to seize the reins of government in behalf of her little grandson , and some of the Austrasians adhered to her cause . As a precautionary measure she cast her husband's natural son Charles into prison ...
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Agilulf Aistulf Alps Aquitaine Arian arms army Arnulf attack Austrasia Avars Baduila battle Bavaria Belisarius Benevento bishops brother Brunhildis Burgundian Burgundy caliph Carloman century Charles chief Childebert Chilperich Chlodovech Chlothar Chlothar III Chosroes Christian Church conquered conquest Constantine Constantinople count crown Danes Danube death defeated died duchy duke East East-Roman eastern emperor empire enemies exarch father fell force Frankish empire Frankish realm Franks frontier garrison Gaul Germany Gothic Goths Gregory Grimoald hands Heraclius Heraclius Constantinus homage imperial invaded invasion Isaurian Italy Justinian king kingdom land Leovigild Lewis Liutprand Lombard Lothair Mayor Merovings Moslem murder Neustria Odoacer once Ostrogoths palace Papacy Pavia peace peninsula Persian Pippin Pope prince ravaged Ravenna rebellion rebels Reccared reign Roman Rome royal ruler Saracen Saxons seized sent Septimania siege Sigibert Slavs Spain subdued Teutonic Theodoric Theudebert Theuderich throne took towns tribes troops trouble vassals Visigothic wars West whole Witiges
Սիրված հատվածներ
Էջ 454 - Constantinople (866), where the patriarch, the emperor, and a thousand bishops and abbots drew up the eight articles which declared the Roman Church to have departed from the orthodox faith and discipline. Six of the articles only dealt with small ritual matters, such as the observance of Lent and the shaving of the clergy. But the third, which denounced the enforced celibacy of the priesthood as a snare of Satan, and the seventh, which condemned the Roman doctrine as to the procession of the Holy...
Էջ 512 - It was the mailed feudal horseman, and the impregnable walls of the feudal castle, that foiled the attacks of the Dane, the Saracen, and the Hungarian. While the emperor or king was expected to protect every corner of the realm, and as a matter of fact protected none of it, the governors of the gaus and marks proved, on the whole, to be equal to the task, when once they had got their hands free and were not fettered by the close supervision of their master. Europe lapsed, indeed, into utter decentralisation,...
Էջ 6 - Brittany, ..oo a!?oa rough confederacy of Celtic states. The Seine valley and the middle Loire formed a Romano-Gallic kingdom under Syagrius, the last governor who had acknowledged the supremacy of the empire beyond the Alps. The Cantabrians and Basques in their hills above the Bay of Biscay had preserved their independence against the Visigoths, just as their ancestors, five centuries before, had held out against the Roman conquerors of Spain. Lastly, there was still a fragment of territory on the...
Էջ 60 - God of his queen, and he cried, " Jesus Christ, whom Clotilda declares to be the Son of the living God, if Thou wilt grant me victory over these enemies, I will believe in Thee and be baptized in Thy name.
Էջ 339 - Theodoric the Ostrogoth alone deserves a mention by his side, and Theodoric had a smaller task and less success than the great Charles. For the first time since we began to tell the tale of the Dark Ages we have come upon a man whose form and mind, whose plans and method of life, have been so well recorded that we can build up for ourselves a clear and tangible image of him. Charles the Hammer, king Pippin, Leo the Isaurian, and even the good Theodoric himself, are but shadowy figures, whose outlines...
Էջ 21 - Roman, and taught both that he was no respecter of persons, but a judge set upon the throne to deal out even-handed justice. Alone among all rulers, Roman or German, in his day, he was a believer without tending in the least to become a persecutor. No monarch for a thousand years to come could have been found to echo Theodoric's magnificent declaration that 'religion is a thing which the king cannot command, because no man can be compelled to believe against his will.