Viii Sentence Examples

viii
  • It was one of the ancient manors of the Butlers, who received for it the grant of a fair from Henry VIII.

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  • The rivalry between the French and English factions in Scotland was complicated by private feuds of the Hamiltons and Douglases, the respective heads of which houses, Arran and Angus, were contending for the supreme power in the absence of Albany in France, where at the instance of Henry VIII.

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  • But when her desire to arrange a meeting between James and Henry VIII.

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  • In 1494 he was again in the Netherlands, where he led an expedition against the rebels of Gelderland, assisted Perkin Warbeck to make a descent upon England, and formally handed over the government of the Low Countries to Philip. His attention was next turned to Italy, and, alarmed at the progress of Charles VIII.

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  • Serdonati, Vitae fatti d'Innocenzo VIII.

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  • He participated in the conclave which followed the death of Innocent VIII.

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  • He made his home with his elder brother Piero at Florence throughout the agitation of Savonarola and the invasion of Charles VIII.

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  • He obtained 150,000 ducats towards the expenses of the expedition from Henry VIII.

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  • See Allgemeine deutsche Biographie, Band viii.

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  • In the 17th century we have only to mention the concordat between Urban VIII.

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  • Science, he says, may be compared to a tree; metaphysics is the root, physics is the trunk, and the three chief branches are mechanics, medicine and Ouvres, viii.

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  • Innocent excommunicated and deposed Ferdinand, king of Naples, by bull of the 11th of September 1489, for refusal to pay the papal dues, and gave his kingdom to Charles VIII.

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  • The word "bowls" occurs for the first time in the statute of 1511 in which Henry VIII.

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  • But though the same statute absolutely prohibited bowling alleys, Henry VIII.

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  • It appears from Judith viii.

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  • In the early 16th century Tournai was an English possession for a few years and Henry VIII.

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  • He published Lives of Foreign Statesmen (1830), The Greek and the Turk (1853), and Reigns of Louis X VIII.

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  • It is a more remarkable fact that, in spite of his prominence, neither Henry VIII.

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  • See Letters and Papers of Henry VIII.

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  • The worc nepotism acquired new significance in the reigns of Sixtus IV and Innocent VIII.

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  • Feeling himself alone, with no right to the title he was bent on seizing, he had recourse to Charles VIII.

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  • Leo died in 1829, and the mild, religious Pius VIII.

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  • The king (Henry VIII.) happened at the time to be visiting in the immediate neighbourhood, and two of his chief counsellors, Gardiner, secretary of state, afterwards bishop of Winchester, and Edward Fox, the lord high almoner, afterwards bishop of Hereford, were lodged at Cressy's house.

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  • Anne's sister, Mary Boleyn, had been Henry VIII.'s mistress; this by canon law was a bar to his marriage with Anne - a bar which had been removed by papal dispensation in 1527, but now the papal power to dispense in such cases had been repudiated, and the original objection revived.

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  • Cranmer was present with Henry VIII.

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  • He had pledged himself to respect the testamentary disposition of Henry VIII.

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  • After long struggles this was hindered, in France by the bull Romana (Fournier, p. 218), in England by the Bill of Citations, 23 Henry VIII.

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  • This recourse in England sometimes took the form of the appeal to the king given by the Constitutions of Clarendon, just mentioned, and later by the acts of Henry VIII.; sometimes that of suing for writs of prohibition or mandamus, which were granted by the king's judges, either to restrain excess of jurisdiction, or to compel the spiritual judge to exercise jurisdiction in cases where it seemed to the temporal court that he was failing in his duty.

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  • In England the Constitutions of Clarendon (by chap. viii.) prohibited appeals to the pope; but after the murder of St Thomas of Canterbury Henry II.

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  • At any rate the " original " jurisdiction claimed for the monarch personally and his delegates, under Henry VIII.

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  • This charter was confirmed and extended by Count Baldwin VIII.

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  • Myres, " An Attempt to reconstruct the Maps used by Herodotus," Geographical Journal, viii.

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  • He corresponded frequently with Mary, but there being no hopes whatever of his restoration, and a new suitor being found in the duke of Norfolk, Mary demanded a divorce, on pleas which recall those of Henry VIII.

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  • He himself was attainted and was lying a prisoner in the Tower, doomed to die in the morning, on the night of the death of Henry VIII.

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  • The young duchess died in her seventeenth year after giving birth to a son, and the duke took a second wife from a humble stock, newly enriched and honoured, the daughter of Henry VIII.'s subservient chancellor, the Lord Audley of Walden.

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  • O'Hanlon, Lives of the Irish Saints, viii.

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  • Almoners, as distinct from chaplains, appear early as attached to the court of the kings of France; but the title of grand almoner of Franc* first appears in the reign of Charles VIII.

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  • The total paid-up railway capital of the United Kingdom amounted, in 1908, to £1,310,533,212, or an average capitalization of £56,476 per route mile, though it should be noted that this total included £196,364,618 of nominal additions through " stock-splitting," &c. Per mile of single track, the capitalization in England and Wales, Scotland, Ireland and the United Kingdom, is shown in Table VIII.

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  • Its importance is attested by Judges viii.

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  • Judges viii.

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  • It is almost incredible that two grand Letters and Papers of Henry VIII.

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  • Biography and authorities cited; Henry VIII.

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  • Cavendish (1641, rep. Harleian Misc. 1810 v.); C. Wriothesley's Chronicle (Camden Soc., 1875-1877); Notes and Queries, 8 ser., viii.

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  • See also articles on CATHERINE OF ARAGON and HENRY VIII.

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  • Reprinted in Somers Tracts (Scott, 1812), viii.

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  • The rest of the earl's life was mainly occupied by endeavours to maintain his influence, and by an undying feud with his son Shane (John), arising out of his transaction with Henry VIII.

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  • After an inconclusive campaign in Munster in January 1600, he returned in haste to Donegal, where he received supplies from Spain and a token of encouragement from Pope Clement VIII.

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  • He died on the 8th of July 1623, and was succeeded by Urban VIII.

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  • Soon after 1509 he was appointed a member of 'the royal council and chaplain to Henry VIII.

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  • But this passage is the sequel to the rejection of Saul in xv., and Samuel's position agrees with that of the late writer in vii., viii.

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  • Such, at least, was the thought of later writers, who have given effect to the belief in chap. viii.

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  • Some misunderstanding has been caused by the confusion of Edom (cis) and Aram (o,·) in viii.

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  • He had, moreover, received assurances from the emperor that he would further Wolsey's candidature for the papacy; and although he protested to Henry VIII.

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  • His morals were of the laxest description, and he had as many illegitimate children as Henry VIII.

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  • Brewer, in his elaborate prefaces to the Letters and Papers (reissued as his History of the Reign of Henry VIII.), originated modern admiration for Wolsey; and his views are reflected in Creighton's Wolsey in the "Twelve English Statesmen" series, and in Dr Gairdner's careful articles in the Dict.

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  • In 12 9 5 the Malatesta obtained possession of it, and kept it until 1444, when it was sold, with Pesaro, to Federico di Montefeltro of Urbino, and with the latter it passed to the papacy under Urban VIII.

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  • And the rych men that bath moche catell wold have the advantage, and the poore man can have no help nor relefe in wynter when he bath moste nede; and if an acre of lande be worthe sixe pens, or it be enclosed, it will be worth VIII.

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  • Nor are stored goods exempt, for much loss annually takes Viii.

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  • A statement of Peter Langtoft that he was at the parliament of Lincoln in 1301, when the English barons repudiated the claim of Pope Boniface VIII.

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  • The duke died in June 1537, and Mary was sought in marriage by James V., whose wife Magdalene died in July, and by Henry VIII.

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  • The chief sources for her history are the Calendar of State Papers for the reigns of Henry VIII.

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  • Everything, therefore, portended a change in this sphere, but few persons expected a change so drastic as that which Bonaparte now brought about in the measure of 28 Pluviose, year VIII.

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  • He gives an account (chapter viii.) of the unwearied efforts made by himself and his agents to collect books.

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  • But in 1261 the Greeks, supported by the Genoese, took advantage of the absence of the Venetian fleet from Constantinople to seize the city and to restore the Greek empire in the person of Michael VIII.

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  • After visiting Luther at Wittenberg, he settled with his amanuensis William Roy in Cologne, where he had made some progress in printing a 4to edition of his New Testament, when the work was discovered by John Cochlaeus, dean at Frankfurt, who not only got the senate of Cologne to interdict further printing, but warned Henry VIII.

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  • After Henry VIII.'s change of attitude towards Rome, Stephen Vaughan, the English envoy to the Netherlands, suggested Tyndale's return, but the reformer feared ecclesiastical hostility and declined.

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  • In May 1533 he expressed approval of Henry VIII.'s marriage with Anne Boleyn in a sermon preached before the king.

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  • Dinefawr Castle and its estates were granted away by Henry VIII.

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  • But the assignees of both parties were placed on the same footing by a statute of Henry Viii.

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  • A pier existed before 1500, but by the reign of Henry VIII.

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  • But these plans were cut short by a fever which carried him off just at the time when Charles VIII.

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  • The others followed at intervals - the fifth, which appeared in 1842, bringing down the narrative to the pontificate of Boniface Viii.

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  • The Capetian-Valois dynasty lasted until 1498, when Louis, duke of Orleans, became king as Louis XII., on the death of King Charles VIII.

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  • A third branch formed the house of the counts of Artois, which was founded in 1238 by Robert, son of King Louis VIII.

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  • The Pisans conquered Sardinia at the instigation of Benedict VIII.

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  • Until then St Michael's Mount had been regarded as the port of Mounts Bay; but in that year Henry VIII.

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  • At the end of his term he became a judge of the peace, but after the parliamentary coup d'etat of the 3 oth of Prairial of the year VIII.

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  • A diagnosis covering all the Ratitae (struthio, rhea, casuarius, dromaeus, apteryx and the allied fossils dinornis and aepyornis) would be as follows - (i) terrestrial birds without keel to the sternum, absolutely flightless; (ii) quadrate bone with a single proximal articulating knob; (iii) coracoid and scapula fused together and forming an open angle; (iv) normally without a pygostyle; (v) with an incisura ischiadica; (vi) rhamphotheca compound; (vii) without apteria or bare spaces in the plumage; (viii) with a complete copulatory organ, moved by skeletal muscles.

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  • He made many alliances to secure his position, but fearing himself isolated he sought help from Charles VIII.

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  • Robert Barclay, writing some twenty years later, admits of degrees of perfection, and the possibility of a fall from it (Apology, Prop. viii.).

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  • Beaton was one of King James's most trusted advisers, and it was mainly due to his influence that the king drew closer the French alliance and refused Henry VIII.'s overtures to follow him in his religious policy.

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  • Had Beaton confined himself to secular politics, his strenuous opposition to the plans of Henry VIII.

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  • The cipher Atbash (Canon VIII.) is used in Jeremiah xxv.

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  • The prefects of the department were created by a law of the 28th Pluviose in the year VIII.

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  • When the prefects were created in the year VIII.

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  • Finally, various receipts of which the principal separately specified are government share of railway receipts (Oriental railways and Smyrna-Cassaba railway), ET201,710, and " subscriptions " for the Hejaz railway, ET264,600, form Section VIII.

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  • His successor was his son, Antiochus VIII.

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  • Davout was turned about and directed on the enemy's right, and the VIII.

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  • In the interior there are a number of interesting monuments, among which the most noticeable are those of Thomas Howard, 3rd duke of Norfolk, and of Henry Howard, the famous earl of Surrey, who was beheaded by Henry VIII.

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  • As to the castle and the Black and Gray Friars see Archaeologia Cambrensis, 3rd series, viii.

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  • They acquired great wealth and influence, and in 1623 Maffeo Barberini was raised to the papal throne as Urban VIII.

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  • In England this revenue was annexed to the crown by Henry VIII.

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  • The castle, founded by the Breton Juhel, lord of the manor after the Conquest, was already dismantled under Henry VIII.; but its ivy-clad keep and upper walls remain.

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  • In 1509 he went with Cardinal Christopher Bainbridge, archbishop of York, to Rome, where he won the esteem of Pope Leo X., who advised Henry VIII.

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  • No mention of the monastery occurs after the Conquest, but the nunnery of Shaftesbury retained the lordship of the manor until the dissolution in the reign of Henry VIII.

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  • Rome by Clement VIII.

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  • Though his Roman Antiquities and Scotia illustrior had been placed on the Index pending correction, Pope Urban VIII.

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  • Remains of a monastery of the Cordeliers (15th and 17th centuries), of a building (13th century)known as the Palais Cardinal, and a square keep (the chief relic of a stronghold founded by Louis VIII.) are also to be seen.

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  • Now if Barlow all this time was not consecrated - and so far the only form of consecration known in England was according to the Roman rite - he would have incurred the penalties of praemunire, let alone the fact that Henry VIII.

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  • The monastery was destroyed at the dissolution of religious houses by Henry VIII.

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  • For the moment the earl of Surrey (who in King Henry VIII.'s absence was charged with the defence of the realm) had no organized force in the north of England, but James wasted much precious time among the border castles, and when Surrey appeared at Wooler, with an army equal in strength to his own, which was now greatly weakened by privations and desertion, he had not advanced beyond Ford Castle.

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  • That it was proper to wear special garments (or at least to rearrange one's weekday clothes) on the Jewish sabbath was recognized in the Talmud, and Mahommedans, after discussing at length the most suitable raiment for prayer, favoured the use of a single simple garment (Bukhari, viii.).

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  • Moltke thereupon brought the VIII.

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  • His zeal in founding monasteries earned for him his surname "the Pious," and canonization by Pope Innocent VIII.

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  • In 1604 he was sent to Rome as charge d'affaires de France; when Clement VIII.

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  • Although they made some concessions, .the Beaujeus succeeded in maintaining the results of the previous reign, and in triumphing over the feudal intrigues and coalitions, as was seen from the meeting of the estates general in 1484, and the results of the "Mad War" (1485) and the war with Brittany (1488); and in spite of the efforts of Maximilian of Austria they concluded the marriage of Charles VIII.

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  • Gold, with myrrh and frankincense were offered by the Persian Magi to the infant Jesus at his birth; and in Revelation viii.

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  • The ritual of the mass remained unchanged until the death of Henry VIII.

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  • Hyde Park, to the west, belonged originally to the manor of Hyde, which was attached to Westminster Abbey, but was taken by Henry VIII.

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  • The name Bridewell came from a well near the Fleet (New Bridge Street), dedicated to St Bride, and was attached to a house built by Henry VIII.

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  • Love of show was so marked a characteristic of Henry VIII.

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  • The best mode of utilizing the buildings of the suppressed religious houses was a difficult question left unsolved by Henry VIII.

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  • Bridges, on the other hand, and so much of the highway as is immediately connected with them, are as a general rule a charge on the county; and by 22 Henry VIII.

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  • A plot of the Donati to establish their influence over Florence with the help of Boniface VIII.

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  • After the French had abandoned VIII.

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  • The manor of Wembley belonged to the priory of Kilburn until that foundation was dissolved by Henry VIII.

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  • In 1494 the duke of Milan demanded the aid of France, and King Charles VIII.

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  • In the critical situation after the battle of Pavia (1525) she proved herself equal to the emergency, maintained order in the kingdom, and manoeuvred very skilfully to detach Henry VIII.

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  • He did not succeed in gaining the support of Henry VIII.

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  • The performance was the occasion of a split among the actors of the Comedie Frangaise, and the new theatre in the Palais Royal, established by the dissidents, was inaugurated with Henri VIII (1791), generally recognized as Chenier's masterpiece; Jean Calas, ou l'ecole des juges followed in the same year.

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  • Services rendered to Aegimius by Heracles led (I) to the adoption of Hyllus, son of Heracles, by Aegimius, side by side with his own sons Dymas and Pamphylus, and to a threefold grouping of the Dorian clans, as Hylleis, Dymanes and Pamphyli; (2) to the association of the people of Aegimius in the repeated attempts of Hyllus and his family to recover their lost inheritance in VIII.

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  • To escape the urgent demands of his creditors, he VIII.

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  • He was VIII.

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  • The Statute of the Six Articles (' 1 539), " the whip with six strings," was the outcome of the retrograde policy which distinguished the latter years of Henry VIII.

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  • These, with the sun now almost at their backs, were shooting better than usual, and Manteuffel was compelled to call on the VIII.

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  • Corps was on the north, with a bridge head at Hauconcourt-sur-Moselle, the II., VIII.

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  • The state, represented by the emperor Phocas, is persuaded to connive at the pope's assumption of spiritual authority; the other churches are intimidated into acquiescence; Lucifer's projects seem fully accomplished, when Heaven raises up Henry VIII.

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  • The year of Charles VIII.'s invasion and of the Medici's expulsion from Florence (1494) saw Machiavelli's first entrance into public life.

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  • On the 19th of December 1187 he was chosen at Pisa to succeed Gregory VIII.

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  • It is divided into three arrondissements (29 cantons, 292 communes) cognominal with the towns of Bourges, SaintAmand-Mont-Rond, and Sancerre, of which the first is the capital, the seat of an archbishop and of a court of appeal and headquarters of the VIII.

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  • Crowns, both open and arched, are represented in sculpture and paintings until the end of the reign of Edward IV., and the royal arms are occasionally ensigned by an open crown as late as the reign of Henry VIII.

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  • A similar crown appears on the great seal of Henry VIII.

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  • On the 13th of December 1839 he ascended the Danish throne as Christian VIII.

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  • See Strabo viii.

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  • The only New Testament reference is in Acts viii.

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  • As one traces the vicissitudes of the papacy during the two centuries from Boniface VIII.

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  • Yet the discussions he aroused, the attacks he made upon the institutions of the medieval Church, and especially the position he assigned to the Scriptures as the exclusive source of revealed truth, serve to make the development of Protestantism under Henry VIII.

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  • Henry's elder brother Arthur, a notoriously sickly youth of scarce fifteen, had been married to Catherine, daughter of Ferdinand and Isabella, but had died less than five VIII.

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  • It seems just as clear that there was VIII.

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  • It would seem as if this sharp, uncompromising reaction was what was needed to produce a popular realization of the contrast between the Ecclesia anglicana of Henry VIII.

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  • In 1559 ten of Henry VIII.'s acts were revived.

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  • The English monks took the lead in carrying out this legislation, and in 1 218 the first chapter of the province of Canterbury was held at Oxford, and up to the_ dissolution under Henry VIII.

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  • This is found in the Prayer-book of Serapion VIII.

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  • At the instance of his friend Erasmus he prepared an elaborate commentary on Augustine's De Civitate Dei, which was published in 1522 with a dedication to Henry VIII.

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  • He had by this time established his reputation as a publicist, and, when the consular government was established in the year VIII (1799), he was selected as one of the hundred members of the tribunate, and resigned, in consequence, the direction of the Decade.

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  • This view is confirmed by the fact that in Luke viii.

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  • Near the city is a communistic religious community, the Israelite House of David, founded in 1903; the members believe that they are a part of the 144,000 elect (Revelation, viii, xiv) ultimately to be redeemed.

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  • The origin and subsequent formation of rivers and the valleys along which they flow are considered under Geography, § Principles of Geography, and Geology, § viii.

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  • History (" Second Assyrian Empire"); and authorities quoted in § viii.

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  • Sir Francis Walsingham was born at Chislehurst, where his family had long flourished; Hever Castle was the seat of the Boleyns and the scene of the courtship of Anne Boleyn by Henry VIII.

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  • The staff appointed for St Bartholomew's, on its re-establishment by Henry VIII.

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  • Two annual fairs and two weekly markets were granted by Henry VIII.'s charter, and are still held.

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  • Hence he overpraises Henry VIII.

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  • In 1288 Obizzo d'Este was recognized as lord of the city; after the death of his successor, Azzo VIII.

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  • His intrigues were discovered by Otto, who, after he had defeated and taken prisoner Berengar, returned to Rome and summoned a council which deposed John, who was in hiding in the mountains of Campania, and elected Leo VIII.

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  • He was considered to have approached Horace more nearly than any other modern poet, and a gold medal was given him by Pope Urban VIII.

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  • In 1809 an edition was published under the supervision of Sir Henry Ellis, and in 1904 the part dealing with the reign of Henry VIII.

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  • Under Elizabeth, Ramsgate was still unimportant though possessed of a fair before the reign of Henry VIII.

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  • He was succeeded by Pius VIII.

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  • The original form of the name was Nethunim, as in the Khetib (consonantal reading) of Ezra viii.

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  • He accompanied an embassy to England in 1625, and in 1630 visited Rome, where he won the favour of Urban VIII.

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  • Henderson, Stonewall Jackson and the American Civil War (London, 1898) and The Science of War, chapters viii.

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  • Nor was her legitimacy ever legally established; but after Jane Seymour's death, when Henry seemed likely to have no further issue, she was by act of parliament placed next in order of the succession after Edward and Mary and their issue; and this statutory arrangement was confirmed by the will which Henry VIII.

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  • He was serjeantat-arms to Henry VIII.

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  • The policy was Cromwell's, but Henry VIII.

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  • He also had an act of attainder passed against him, a somewhat novel distinction for a heretic, which illustrates the way in which Henry VIII.

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  • Alfonso Salmeron and Pasquier-Brouet, as papal delegates, were sent on a secret mission to Ireland to encourage the native clergy and people to resist the religious changes introduced by Henry VIII.; Nicholas Bobadilla went to Naples; Faber, first to the diet of Worms and then to Spain; Laynez and Claude le Jay to Germany, while Ignatius busied himself at Rome in good works and in drawing up the constitutions and completing the Spiritual Exercises.

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  • Anciently the residence of Sir Stephen de Penchester, Penshurst was granted to Henry VIII.'s chamberlain, Sir William Sidney, whose grandson, Sir Philip Sidney, was born here in 1554.

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  • Asked by Boniface VIII.

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  • He had advanced as far as the tenth sheet, bearing the signature K, when his work was discovered by Johann Cochlaeus, a famous controversialist and implacable enemy of the Reformation, who not only caused the Senate of Cologne to prohibit the continuation of the printing, but also communicated with Henry VIII.

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  • The title-page represents Henry VIII.

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  • Meanwhile the closing years of Henry VIII.'s reign were characterized by restrictive measures as to the reading and use of the Bible.

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  • His uncle Sir Edmund was lieutenant of the Tower, and his mother was related to Sir Anthony Denny, a member of Henry VIII.'s privy council who attended him on his death-bed.

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  • In Llanfaes there was formerly a Dominican priory, but in 1542 Henry VIII.

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  • In 1853 Henry VIII.'s charter was repealed, and under a chancery scheme adopted two years later, D1200 a year was appropriated for the school.

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  • His position was not unlike that of Henry VIII.

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  • And to give an historical example, Henry VIII.

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  • While there is frequent mention of the acolyte's office in the Ordines Romani, it is only in the Ordo VIII.

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  • See Diogenes viii.

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  • In 1684 he went to Rome, and became librarian to Cardinal Ottoboni, who, as Pope Alexander VIII.

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  • We have to remember the traces of his separate discourses, and his own double versions; and that, as in ancient times Simplicius, who had two versions of the Physics, Book vii., suggested that both were early versions of Book viii.

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  • Quin's universal hydrometer is described in the Transactions of the Society of Arts, viii.

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  • On his abdication the amalgamation was dissolved, and the Franciscan element fled to the East and was finally suppressed by Boniface VIII.

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  • During this war he gave proofs of much diplomatic ability, and Pope Urban VIII.

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  • As king of Aragon he took a share in the work of the reconquest, by helping his cousin Alphonso VIII.

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  • Had he not been so good a Catholic Sigismund might well have imitated the example of Henry VIII.

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  • On the 2nd of February 1831 he was, after sixty-four days' conclave, unexpectedly chosen to succeed Pius VIII.

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  • Having remained abroad nearly a year, he returned to Cambridge, and was elected a fellow of Trinity College, then first erected by King Henry VIII.

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  • In Early English Lyrics (Oxford, 1907) we have a poem in which a lover sends to his mistress a love-greeting composed in three languages, and his learned friend replies in the same style (De amico ad amicam, Responcio, viii and ix).

    0
    0
  • After being betrothed successively to Gaston de Foix, Charles of Austria (the future emperor Charles V.), his brother Ferdinand, Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • His failure only made Pope Boniface VIII.

    0
    0
  • He was an intimate friend of Holbein, whose first introduction to England was as a visitor to More in his house at Chelsea, where the painter is said to have remained for three years, and where he probably first met Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • He was made protector of England in the Roman curia; and in 1524 Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • But in some of them the internal buildings are all of stone, while in and substantially built storehouses with buttresses and dry basements (viii.).

    0
    0
  • The town was noted for the manufacture of ropes and cables as early as 1213, and an act of parliament (21 Henry VIII.) shows that the inhabitants had "from time out of mind" made the cables, ropes and hawsers for the royal navy and for most of the other ships.

    0
    0
  • The ceremonial of the ashes was not proscribed in England at the Reformation; it was indeed enjoined by a proclamation of Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • Founded by the conquests of Philip Augustus and Louis VIII.

    0
    0
  • This change was a prelude to the more or less complete subjection of the papacy to French influence which took place in the following century at the period of the " Babylonish Captivity," the violent reaction personified by Boniface VIII.

    0
    0
  • The continued efforts of the popes to drain Christian gold to Rome were limited only by the fiscal pretensions of the lay sovereigns, and it was this financial rivalry that gave rise to the inevitable conflict between Boniface VIII.

    0
    0
  • Even if the bull encouraged the persecution of witches, in so far as it encouraged the inquisitors to take earnest action, there is still no valid ground for the accusation that Innocent VIII.

    0
    0
  • This explains how on the death of Innocent VIII.

    0
    0
  • The cardinals opposed to Alexander, headed by Giuliano della Rovere, found protection and support with Charles VIII.

    0
    0
  • On the r8th of April 1506 the foundation-stone of the new St Peter's was laid; 120 years later, on the r8th of November 1626, Urban VIII.

    0
    0
  • To add to the disasters, the divorce of Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • If it was Richelieu and not the pope who was the real arbiter of destinies from 1624 to 1642, Urban VIII.

    0
    0
  • Militarism may account for much of the tremendous deficit under Urban VIII.; but the real cancer was nepotism.

    0
    0
  • This was perhaps, as regards England, the most critical conjuncture in the history of the Reformation, both on this account and on account of the position in which Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • It is the result of the fusion of two previous commissions; that for the affairs of bishops, established by Gregory XIII., and that for the affairs of the regular clergy, founded by Sixtus V.; the fusion dates from Clement VIII.

    0
    0
  • The Congregation of Immunity (Sacra Congregatio Jurisdictionis et Immunitatis ecclesiasticae) was created by Urban VIII.

    0
    0
  • It was also the site of one of the earliest printing-presses, and copies of the stannary laws and of a translation of Boethius issued from the Tavistock press in the reign of Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • The church of St Mary, founded in 1111, retains the south door of the original building in the Transition style, but the greater portion of the structure is Perpendicular, of the time of Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • The mode of appointment is regulated by 25 Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • Frederick I., the next landgrave (1730-1751), had become by marriage king of Sweden, and on his death was succeeded in the landgraviate by his brother William VIII.

    0
    0
  • Nor did it fare much better with the high peaks, though the two earliest recorded ascents were due to non-natives, that of the Rochemelon in 1358 having been undertaken in fulfilment of a vow, and that of the Mont Aiguille in 1492 by order of Charles VIII.

    0
    0
  • From this date the Beauchamps were lords of the whole manor until it passed by female descent to the Grevilles in the reign of Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • On the 18th he publicly proclaimed James VIII.

    0
    0
  • Translations took place in the 9th, 15th and 17th centuries, and the remains now rest beneath the altar in the chapel of Clement VIII.

    0
    0
  • The four palaces, of uniform design, encircling this plads, were built for the residence of four noble families; but on the destruction of Christiansborg in 1794 they became the residence of the king and court, and so continued till the death of Christian VIII.

    0
    0
  • But his public lessons were ill attended, and he soon fell back upon his old vocation of publisher under the patronage of a new pope, Clement VIII.

    0
    0
  • But the steady Edward was useful to Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • The conclave that met at Perugia on his death was divided between the partisans of the irreconcilable policy of Boniface VIII.

    0
    0
  • In 1485 the borough of Llandovery, or Llanymtheverye, was incorporated by a charter from Richard III., and this king's privileges were subsequently confirmed by Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • Finke, Aus den Tagen Bonifaz VIII.

    0
    0
  • He confirmed the bull of Alexander VIII.

    0
    0
  • It is the seat of the bishop of Ostia, and has a statue of Pope Clement VIII.

    0
    0
  • It will be remembered that when the laird of Dumbiedikes lay dying (Scott's Heart of Midlothian, chap. viii.) he gave his son one bit of advice which Bacon himself could not have bettered.

    0
    0
  • African locality must be mentioned.; considerable finds were reported in 1905 and 1906 from gravels at Somabula near Gwelo in Rhodesia where the diamond is associated with chrysoberyl, corundum (both sapphire and ruby), topaz, garnet, ilmenite, staurolite, rutile, with pebbles of quartz, granite, vIII.

    0
    0
  • It was due to his dependence on Charles V., rather than to any conscientious scruples, that Clement evaded Henry VIII.'s demand for the nullification of his marriage with Catherine of Aragon, and so brought about the breach between England and Rome.

    0
    0
  • This, with most of the abbey lands, was granted by Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • In modern practice, as definitively settled by the decrees of Pope Urban VIII.

    0
    0
  • A rivalry, however, growing up between him and Roderigo Borgia, he took refuge at Ostia after the latter's election as Alexander VI., and in 1494 went to France, where he incited Charles VIII.

    0
    0
  • Julius forthwith formed the Holy league with Ferdinand of Aragon and with Venice against France, in which both Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • Having in 1490 driven the Hungarians from Vienna ane recovered his hereditary lands, and having ordered the affair of the Netherlands, Maximilian turned his attention to Italy whither he was drawn owing to the invasion of that country by Charles VIII.

    0
    0
  • During the period of these constitutional struggles the kings chief energies were spent in warring against the French kings Maxi- Charles VIII.

    0
    0
  • St Catherine's Fort, dating from the days of Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • By a treaty, confirmed by Pope Boniface VIII.

    0
    0
  • Holstein was now restored to Denmark, and Prussia and Austria consented to take part in the conference of London, by which the integrity of Denmark was upheld, and the succession to the whole monarchy settled on Prince Christian, youngest son of Duke William of SchleswigHolstein-Sonderburg-Gliicksburg, and husband of Louise of Hesse, the niece of King Christian VIII.

    0
    0
  • In January 1906 King Christian ended his long reign, and was succeeded by his son Frederick VIII.

    0
    0
  • The splendid cultivation of metrical art threw other branches into the shade; and the epoch VIII.

    0
    0
  • A rich collection of materials was made by Andrea Niccoletti, Della vita di Papa Urbano VIII.

    0
    0
  • We know from Deuteronomy viii.

    0
    0
  • The Latin tenure of Constantinople lasted only 57 years; the imperial city was recaptured in 1261 by Michael VIII.

    0
    0
  • He was brought up in the household of Catherine Parr, the last wife of Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • He was the first English monarch to be educated under the influence of the Renaissance, and his tutors included the poet Skelton; he became an accomplished scholar, linguist, musician and athlete, and when by the death of his brother Arthur in 1502 and of his father on the 22nd of April 1509 Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • While political and ecclesiastical conditions made the breach with Rome possible - and in the view of most Englishmen desirable - Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • Nevertheless, to the encouragement given by Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • The original materials for Henry VIII.'s biography are practically all incorporated in the monumental Letters and Papers of the Reign of Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • The best collection of Henry's portraits was exhibited at the Burlington Fine Arts Club in 1909, and the catalogue of that exhibition contains the best description of them; several are reproduced in Pollard's Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • They schemed to kidnap the king as vainly as Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • His wavering, intriguing mother, Margaret Tudor, or her sometimes friend, sometimes foe, Albany, arrived from France; or her discarded husband, Angus, the paid tool of Henry VIII.?

    0
    0
  • The distraction of Scotland promised to Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • Then the Douglases allied themselves with the cardinal, and Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • The negotiations were constantly disturbed by Jacobite intrigues with France in favour of James VIII.; by Scottish adherence to the Act of Security, which might give Scotland a king other than a Hanoverian in succession to Anne; and by the hanging of an Englishman, Captain Green, for piracy on a lost Scottish vessel (1705).

    0
    0
  • It seems probable that in the reign of Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • The Jubilee dispensation according to the edict of Boniface VIII.

    0
    0
  • The church of St Mary the Virgin, a beautiful specimen of the Perpendicular style, dating from the reign of Henry VII., but frequently repaired and restored, contains the tomb of Lord Audley, chancellor to Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • This society spread rapidly, and was specially privileged by Sixtus IV., Innocent VIII.

    0
    0
  • It was at this interview that Bonner intimated the appeal of Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • The part that he was allowed to take in the drawing up of doctrinal formularies in Henry VIII.'s time is not clear; but at a later date he was the author of various tracts in defence of the Real Presence against Cranmer, some of which, being written in prison, were published abroad under a feigned name.

    0
    0
  • Controversial writings also passed between him and Bucer, with whom he had several interviews in Germany, when he was there as Henry VIII.'s ambassador.

    0
    0
  • He received the red hat from Urban VIII.

    0
    0
  • His learning gained him an exhibition from the king, and in 1540, on Henry VIII.'s foundation of the regius professorships, he was elected to the chair of Greek.

    0
    0
  • The Venetian ambassador calls Fox "alter rex" and the Spanish ambassador Carroz says that Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • The pacific policy of the first two years of Henry VIII.'s reign was succeeded by an adventurous foreign policy directed mainly against France; and Fox complained that no one durst do anything in opposition to Wolsey's wishes.

    0
    0
  • At this point (r6r B.C.) Judas sent an embassy to Rome and an alliance was concluded (r Macc. viii.), too late to save Judas from the determined and victorious attack of Demetrius.

    0
    0
  • There is a general resemblance between the victories of Gideon and Jephthah, which is emphasized by the close relation between viii.

    0
    0
  • The latter's successor James made peace with Boniface VIII.

    0
    0
  • The French king entered Italy in September 1 495, and conquered the Neapolitan kingdom without VIII.

    0
    0
  • At the age of thirteen he was married to Leonora, daughter of Alphonso VIII.

    0
    0
  • But his position was weakened when Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • She had as good a reason for repudiating her husband as Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • The rest of the river line was held by the Duke of Aosta, with the VIII.

    0
    0
  • The papacy received its full monarchial structure under Hildebrand (Gregory VII.) in the middle of the II th century; its political decline set in suddenly after the pontificate of Boniface VIII.

    0
    0
  • The century of Dante was also that of the first English parliament; its vast economic expansion enabled the national state to triumph in both England and France, and furnished the grounds for the overthrow of Boniface VIII.

    0
    0
  • The Premonstratensians came into England (c. 1143) first at Newhouse in Lincoln, and before the dissolution under Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • The English had not followed up their victory at Flodden, although there were as usual forays on the borders, but Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • This "erection" of James as king was mainly due to the efforts of Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • In 1536 he had refused to meet Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • Two plots to murder the king were now discovered, and James also foiled the attempts of Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • Gifts which the courts have held void on the analogy of those mentioned in the acts of Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • The Renaissance may be said to have begun in France with Charles VIII.'s expedition to Naples, and to have continued until the extinction of the house of Valois.

    0
    0
  • But the French wars, the Wars of the Roses and the persecution of the Lollards deferred the coming of the new age; and the year 1536, when Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • Luther published his theses in 1517, sixty-four years after the fall of Constantinople, twenty-three years after the expedition of Charles VIII.

    0
    0
  • Pontano's connexion with the Aragonese dynasty as political adviser, military secretary and chancellor was henceforth a close one; and the most doubtful passage in his diplomatic career is when he welcomed Charles VIII.

    0
    0
  • The Pale varied considerably, according to the strength or weakness of the English authorities, and in the time of Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • This act of union was followed in 1542 by an " Act for certain Ordinances in the King's Majesty's Dominion and Principality of Wales " (34 & 35 Henry VIII.), which placed the court of the president and council of Wales and the Marches on a legal footing.

    0
    0
  • There was also a shortlived attempt to declare that even a clerk in lower orders should lose his clerical privileges on his marriage; but Boniface VIII.

    0
    0
  • Thomas More was right and Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • He studied law in Rome and Naples, entered the Curia under Urban VIII.

    0
    0
  • He also wrote a History of Great Britain from Death of Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • The Swedes first broke away from it in 1434 under the popular leader Engelbrecht, and after his murder they elected Karl Knutsson Bonde their king under the title of Charles VIII.

    0
    0
  • In 1441 Charles VIII had to retire in favour of Christopher of Bavaria, who was already king of Denmark and Norway; but, on the death of Christopher (1448), a state of confusion ensued in the course of which Charles VIII.

    0
    0
  • In 1547 it was handed over by Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • Together they make a fine collection, and it is a pity that Urban VIII.

    0
    0
  • After his accession he had divorced his virtuous and ill-favoured queen, Joan, and had married, in 1499, Anne of Brittany, the widow of Charles VIII.

    0
    0
  • On her death in January 1514, in order to detach England from the alliance against him, he married on the 9th of October 1514, Mary Tudor, sister of Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • The cloth trade flourished for a century and was replaced by silk-weaving, stocking-knitting and glovemaking, all of which have died out., See Abbot Gasquet, Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • It was planted in the early part of the reign of William III., though it has been supposed that a maze had existed there since the time of Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • In the park a cross marks the site of Ampthill Castle, the residence of Catherine of Aragon while her divorce from Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • The transference of the Curia from Rome to Avignon (1309) had brought the papacy under the influence of the French crown; and this position Philip the Fair of France now endeavoured to utilize by demanding from the pope the dissolution of the powerful and wealthy order of the Temple, together with the introduction of a trial for heresy against the late Pope Boniface VIII.

    0
    0
  • Japan, accidentally discovered by three Portuguese traders in 1542, soon attracted large numbers of merchants and missionaries (see Japan, § viii.).

    0
    0
  • This group of laws clearly formed no part of the original narrative of P since it interrupts the connexion of chap. viii.

    0
    0
  • It reduces the breadth of the Solent to a little over 4 m., and broadens at the end, on which stands Hurst Castle, an important fortification dating from the time of Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • In fact, as privy seal he was practically prime minister, as Thomas Cromwell was afterwards to Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • Her father was the leader of the German Protestants, and the princess, after the death of Jane Seymour, was regarded by Cromwell as a suitable wife for Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • Pollard (1905); Four Original Documents relating to the Marriage of Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • In return for important service rendered by his father, he was in 1527 nominated by Clement VIII.

    0
    0
  • Kayserling, in Jewish Encyclopedia, viii.

    0
    0
  • It was probably the, uayvijrts XLOos of Theophrastus, described as a stone of silvery lustre, easily Scotland under Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • That the Leguminosae (a group of plants including peas, beans, vetches, lupins, &c.) play a special part in agriculture was known even to the ancients and was mentioned by Pliny (Historia Naturalis, viii.).

    0
    0
  • But it appears to be true that the Thracian army had no more than half of its nominal strength of 226,000 men, while the Macedonian army short of the VIII.

    0
    0
  • A bibliography of Vieira will be found in Sommervogel, Bibliotheque de la compagnie de Jesus, viii.

    0
    0
  • In the Church of England the status of suffragan bishops was regulated by the Act 26 Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • Having made extensive concessions to the nobles both clerical and lay, he was crowned king by Hincmar, archbishop of Reims, on the 8th of December following, and in September 878 he took advantage of the presence of Pope John VIII.

    0
    0
  • He has produced various works on mediaeval church history and liturgies, among them being Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • The old manor house, now demolished, was Catherine's residence; and had been, according to tradition, the place of the retirement of Catherine of Aragon after her divorce from Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • These suggestions were indignantly repelled by Rudolph, whose anger was greatly increased by a letter of Pope Clement VIII.

    0
    0
  • In 1022 he went to Rome to obtain the pallium, and was received with great respect by Pope Benedict VIII.

    0
    0
  • Mercy to the Gentiles and the punishment of "the sons of the kingdom" is foretold viii.

    0
    0
  • These doctrines, although in harmony with the prevailing feeling of the Roman Catholic Church of the period, and further recommended by their marked opposition to the teachings of Luther and Calvin,excited violent controversy in some quarters, especially on the part of the Dominicans, and at last rendered it necessary for the pope (Clement VIII.) to interfere.

    0
    0
  • But Maximilian was incapable of defending her, and in 1491 the young duchess found herself compelled to treat with Charles VIII.

    0
    0
  • Nevertheless, in 1492, after the conspiracy of Jean de Rohan, who had endeavoured to hand over the duchy to the king of England, Charles VIII.

    0
    0
  • He died at Ferrara and was succeeded by Gregory VIII.

    0
    0
  • See Justin viii.

    0
    0
  • Aumale itself was conferred by Philip Augustus as an appanage on his son Philip. It was subsequently granted by Louis VIII.

    0
    0
  • But the popes had made it their residence after the insults offered to Boniface VIII.

    0
    0
  • He obtained several ecclesiastical appointments, but owing to the resistance of Pope Boniface VIII.

    0
    0
  • The towns owe their origin to two forts or castles, built on each side of the mouth of the Medina by Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • Henry VIII.'s chaplain, John Leland, is the father of English antiquaries.

    0
    0
  • The hundred rate is seldom made, though in some counties it may be made for purposes of main roads and bridges chargeable to the hundred as distinguished from the county at large; (ii.) the borrowing of money; (iii.) the passing of the accounts of, and the discharge of the county treasurer; (iv.) shire halls, county halls, assize courts, the judges' lodgings, lock-up houses, court houses, justices' rooms, police stations and county buildings, works and property; (v.) the licensing under any general act of houses and other places for music or for dancing, and the granting of licences under the Racecourses Licensing Act 1879; (vi.) the provision, enlargement, maintenance and management and visitation of, and other dealing with, asylums for pauper lunatics; (vii.) the establishment and maintenance of, and the contribution to, reformatory and industrial schools; (viii.) bridges and roads repairable with bridges, and any powers vested by the Highways and Locomotives Amendment Act 1878 in the county authority.

    0
    0
  • He thinks, for instance, that verse so of chapter viii.

    0
    0
  • In 1625 he visited England in the train of Henrietta Maria; in 1640 he was at Rome, on the invitation of Cardinal Barberini, and was received with special favour by Pope Urban VIII.

    0
    0
  • At one time deans of the " old foundation " - in contradistinction to those of the " new foundation," founded by Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • The Logis du Roi, the most important portion, was the work of Charles VIII.; the other wing was built under Louis XII.

    0
    0
  • Suspicion has been cast upon poems viii.

    0
    0
  • De Luanco ascribes some of them to a Raimundo VIII.

    0
    0
  • Portland Castle, built by Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • And even if we think that the phraseology of viii.

    0
    0
  • The church of St Michael and All Angels is a fine specimen of a late Perpendicular building (principally of the time of Henry VIII.).

    0
    0
  • This prophecy is really nothing more than an extension of the vision of the 2300 evening-mornings of viii.

    0
    0
  • In that year Ludovico, now duke of Milan in his own right, for the strengthening of his power against Naples, first entered into those intrigues with Charles VIII.

    0
    0
  • In 1300 he was elevated to the episcopal see of Frejus by Pope Boniface VIII.

    0
    0
  • Later it passed to William de Longespee, son of Henry II., to the Lancasters, to the protector Somerset (by grant of Henry VIII.) and then to the Rutlands, and Trowbridge is now a non-corporate town.

    0
    0
  • Southsea Castle was built by Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • The manor belonged to the see of Salisbury in the middle ages, but reverted to the crown in the time of Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • In 1602 Garnet received briefs from Pope Clement VIII.

    0
    0
  • Although this was one of the bloodiest fights that ever took place between the O'Neills and the O'Donnells, it did not bring the war to an end; and in 1531 O'Donnell applied to the English government for protection, giving assurances of allegiance to Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • Wolsey beautified the mansion and kept high state there, but on his disgrace Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • As to his sister Margaret, she was married to one of Henry VII.'s Welsh followers, Sir Richard Pole (or Poole), and could give no trouble, so that, when Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • Though the promise to spare his life was kept by the king who gave it, his son Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • It has been translated into several languages, and Greek and Latin translations are found in the Acta Sanctorum Bollandistarum, tome viii.

    0
    0
  • An attempt to procure another small bishopric in the following year also failed, Clement VIII.

    0
    0
  • At the end of the 12th century it became a republic, but in 1226 was taken and dismantled by Louis VIII.

    0
    0
  • His failure to pay the interest of the money borrowed in Rome, and the desire of Urban VIII.

    0
    0
  • About 1290 its principal officers were a mayor and coroner, afterwards assisted by eight burgesses, whom Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • This assembly elaborated 102 canons, which did not become part of the Western law till much later, on the initiative of Pope John VIII.

    0
    0
  • It was besieged in the reigns of Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • The number is divisible (i) by io if it ends in o; (ii) by 5 if it ends in o or 5; (iii) by 2 if the last digit is even; (iv) by 4 if the number made up of the last two digits is divisible by 4; (v) by 8 if the number made up of the last three digits is divisible by 8; (vi) by 9 if the sum of the digits is divisible by 9; (vii) by 3 if the s l um of the digits is divisible by 3; I 3=31 2 9 =32 3 27=33 481 =34 (viii) by II if the difference between the sum of the 1st, 3rd, 5th,.

    0
    0
  • The town, which is well situated among the mountains, was an independent republic in the 12th and 13th centuries, and in 1495 was sacked by the troops of Charles VIII.

    0
    0
  • The mobilization of 1870 placed him at the head of the VIII.

    0
    0
  • He commanded the VIII.

    0
    0
  • Broadstairs has a small pier for fishing-boats, first built in the reign of Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • He died on the 12th of August 1484, and was succeeded by Innocent VIII.

    0
    0
  • This struggle, the only continental war in which the first of the Tudors risked his fortunes, was not prosecuted with any great energy, and came to a necessary end when Anne, duchess of Brittany, in whose behalf it was being waged, disappointed her allies by marrying Charles VIII.

    0
    0
  • Moreover, it was known that the one dominating desire of Charles VIII.

    0
    0
  • The enmity of the house of Valois and the house of Habsburg, which had first appeared in the wars of Charles Viii.

    0
    0
  • But it had always continued to exist, and in the early years of Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • Now he was doomed, and both Campeggio and Cardinal du Bellay were able to send their governments accurate outlines of the future policy of Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • That they exaggerated the evils of monastic life hardly admits of doubt; but even a Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • His seal of arms is among those attached to the famous letter of remonstrance addressed by the barons of England to Pope Boniface VIII.

    0
    0
  • He seldom or never entered a place of worship, and declared that he could not listen to a sermon, a circumstance perhaps due to the extremely strict religious discipline under which he was brought up. Nevertheless there is reason to believe that he VIII.

    0
    0
  • In 1602 the queen's suspicions were increased by the discovery of a plot to marry Arabella to Edward, eldest son of Lord Beauchamp, who as grandson of Edward Seymour, earl of Hertford, and of Lady Catherine Grey (younger sister of Lady Jane Grey), was heir to the throne after Elizabeth according to the will of Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • One (Yoma, " the day ") deals exclusively with the rites which were to be observed on the great day of expiation or atonement; the other (Taanith, " fast ") is devoted to the other fasts, and See Judith viii.

    0
    0
  • In two letters addressed to the emperors Constantine VIII.

    0
    0
  • The manor afterwards descended to the families of Fitz Piers, Bohun and Strafford, and was granted by Henry VIII.

    0
    0
  • He took a leading part in establishing the oligarchy of the Four Hundred at Athens in 411 B.C., and was assassinated in the same year (Thucydides viii.).

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  • The direction of affairs having passed into the hands of Talleyrand and his associates, Daunou turned once more to literature, but in 1 798 he was sent to Rome to organize the republic there, and again, almost against his will, he lent his aid to Napoleon in the preparation of the constitution of the year VIII.

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  • See Mansi viii.

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  • It is the see of an archbishop of the Orthodox Greek Church, and the headquarters of the VIII.

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  • It was inevitable that, in proportion as this casuistry assumed the character of a systematic penal jurisprudence, its precise determination of the limits between the prohibited and the allowable, with all doubtful points closely scrutinized and illustrated by fictitious cases, would have a tendency to weaken the moral sensibilities of ordinary minds; the greater the industry spent in deducing conclusions from the diverse authorities, the greater necessarily became the number of points on which doctors disagreed; and the central authority that might have repressed serious divergences was wanting in the period of moral weakness'- that the church went through after the death of Boniface Viii.

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  • In the treasury of the church are many costly objects presented by illustrious personages, among others by the emperor Charles V., King Henry VIII.

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  • His son and successor, Sir Piers Edgecumbe, went to France with Henry VIII.

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  • Vinet's Chrestomathie francaise (1829), his Etudes sur la litterature francaise au XIX me siècle (1849-51), and his Histoire de la litterature francaise au X VIII me siecle, together with his Etudes sur Pascal, Etudes sur les moralistes aux X VIme ei X VII me siecles, Histoire de la predication parmi les Reformes de France and other kindred works, gave evidence of a wide knowledge of literature, a sober and acute literary judgment and a distinguished faculty of appreciation.

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  • The earls of Shrewsbury are still earls of Waterford, and retain the right to carry the white staff as hereditary stewards, but the palatinate jurisdiction over Wexford was taken away by Henry VIII.

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  • Occupied in pleasure or foreign enterprise, Henry VIII.

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  • The royal power was practically confined to what in the previous century Henry had become known as the " Pale," that is Dublin, viii.

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  • A strong effort was made to save these six houses, but Henry VIII.

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  • Ample evidence exists that the Irish church was full of abuses before the movement under Henry VIII.

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  • But perhaps the most severe condemnation is that of the report to Henry VIII.

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  • Sir Francis Bryan, Henry VIII.'s favourite, succeeded him, and on his death St Leger was again appointed.

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  • In the parliament which conferred the royal title on Henry VIII.

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  • Gilbert's Viceroys of Ireland (Dublin, 1865) gives a connected view of the feudal establishment to the accession of Henry VIII.

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  • Henry gave Brittany defensive aid; but after the duchess Anne had married Charles VIII.

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  • From two particular premises nothing can be inferred.3 viii.

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  • There was always the tendency for clerics in such cases to invest their sons with the temporalities of the Church; and the poonani synod convened by Benedict VIII.

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  • The struggle was complicated throughout its course by political and other considerations; there were repeated rebellions of German nobles, constant strife between rival imperial and papal factions in the Lombard cities and at Rome, and creation of several anti-popes, of whom Guibert of Ravenna (Clement III.) and Gregory VIII.

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  • By the beginning of the 13th century the Capet monarchy was so strong that the crisis occasioned by the sudden death of Louis VIII.

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  • A truce arranged by Boniface VIII.

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  • Strife began immediately between the numerous malcontents and the Beaujeu party, who had charge of the little Charles VIII.

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  • Italy was their first battlefield; Charles VIII.

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  • To safeguard himself in the rear Charles VIII.

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  • Having been unable to win over Henry treSty of VIII.

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  • Italy remained faithful to the vanquished in spite of all, while even Henry VIII.

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  • Parliamentary institutions annulled by the The concomplication of three assembliesthe Council of State aiftutlon which drafted bills, the Tribunate which discUssed oi the them without voting them, and the Legislative year VIII.

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  • The complicated story of the Christian kingdoms of Spain during the next two generations can be best made intelligible by taking the king of Castile as the centre of the Am,nso Viii.

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  • Ferdinand secured the restoration of Roussillon from Charles VIII.

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  • In the first year of her reign she revived an act passed by Henry VIII.

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  • Long previous to this, however, the word Shire, in connexion with horses, was used in the statutes of Henry VIII.

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  • After being in the possession of the earls of Clare and Hertford, and of the earls of Gloucester, it became the property of the Staffords, and on the attainder of the duke of Buckingham in the reign of Henry VIII.

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  • In 1491, Guillaume Cappel, as rector of the university of Paris, protested against a tithe which Innocent VIII.

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  • Besides the preferments above mentioned, he was rector of the gild of Jesus at St Paul's and chaplain to Henry VIII.

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  • For an analysis of the Lais see Revue de philologie francaise, viii.

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  • Henry of Ceva had taken refuge in Sicily at the time of Pope Boniface VIII.'s persecution of the Spirituals, and thanks to the good offices of Frederick of Sicily, a little colony of Franciscans who rejected all property had soon established itself in the island.

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  • He was a mere tool in the hands of the feudal nobility of the city; he was succeeded by Benedict VIII.

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  • Representatives of the Ginkgoales constitute characteristic members of the later Triassic floras, and these, with other types, carry us on without any break in continuity to the Rhaetic floras of Scania, Germany, Asia, Chile, Tonkin and Honduras (Map A, VIII.), and to the Jurassic and Wealden floras of many regions in both the north and south hemispheres.

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  • The elector, however, unlike his brother, did not break with the forms of the Church of Rome, but established an ecclesiastical organization independent of the pope, and took up a position similar to that of King Henry VIII.

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  • In England a parish-ale or feast was always held after the perambulation, which assured its popularity, and in Henry VIII.'s reign the occasion had become an excuse for so much revelry that it attracted the condemnation of a preacher who declared "these solemne and accustomable processions and supplications be nowe growen into a right foule and detestable abuse."

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  • In 1906 he was promoted to the rank of general of infantry, and at the outbreak of the World War was Generaloberst and Inspector-General of the VIII.

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  • The new Anglo-Russian entente led in 1844 to a visit of the Martens, Recueil, viii.

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  • Edward VIII was the only British monarch who voluntarily abdicated the throne.

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  • He was made the first Protestant archbishop by King Henry VIII, and helped him to divorce several of his wives.

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  • The best known exponent of tennis was Henry VIII who, as a young man, was extremely athletic and passionate about sport.

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  • Within 24 hours of Anne Boleyn's execution, Jane Seymour and Henry VIII were formally betrothed.

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  • Henry VIII had also debased the coinage in 1526 to compete with the great number of inferior foreign pieces in circulation.

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  • There the most intriguing item for me was the set of proofs of the never to be issued coinage of Edward VIII.

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  • The hospital escaped dissolution under Henry VIII's Act of 1547, probably because of its charitable activities.

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  • Edward viii chose of atoms the this view see.

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  • Synopsis The year is 1539 and the court of Henry VIII is increasingly fearful at the moods of the aging sick king.

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  • In the Fairbairns the 1st VIII finished fifth which was a disappointing result.

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  • Regent's Park One of Henry VIII's hunting grounds.

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  • During the years of World War 1 the former headmaster of Henry VIII Grammar School was Vicar.

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  • A dedication to him survives and records his career which included a spell early on as primus pilus of VIII Augusta.

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  • In orthodox history Henry VIII is regarded as a great king, yet he was a tyrant who severely damaged the nation's psyche.

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  • Henry VIII's pleasure palace Henry VIII (r. 1509-47) made Westminster even more important by building an extravagant royal residence there.

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  • Over the gateway are Henry VIII's arms, and on the turrets more terracotta roundels of Roman emperors.

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  • The VIII had a very strong if somewhat scrappy row, achieving 2nd place (losing to Caius by one second ).

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  • Covers topics such as Ancient Egypt, Ancient Greeks, Roman and viking settlers and Henry VIII.

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  • I would also want a Tobin tax levied on currency speculation viii.

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  • Raised in 1982, she was a favorite of King Henry VIII, and represents a perfect time capsule of Tudor life on board.

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  • He also lived through Henry VIII's extension of the treason act in 1535 to include verbal treason.

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  • He was finally ushered back by Henry VIII and then once more exiled by his daughter Mary when she inherited the throne.

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  • The Parties shall respond to alleged violations of the provisions of this Annex through the procedures provided in Article VIII.

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  • Article VIII of the IWC Convention allows unlimited whaling for research purposes.

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  • Against this further compliance with Henry's wishes Warham drew up a protest; he likened the action of Henry VIII.

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  • From the very day of Clement's coronation the king had charged the Templars with heresy, immorality and abuses, and the scruples of the weak pope were at length overcome by apprehension lest the State should not wait for the Church, but should proceed independently against the alleged heretics, as well as by the royal threats of pressing the accusation of heresy against the late Boniface VIII.

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  • On the 26th of May 1521 the emperor signed the edict of the diet of Worms, which placed Luther under the ban of the Empire; on the 21st of the same month Henry VIII.

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  • There is in existence a map, dedicated to Henry VIII.

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  • The salt industry, still the staple of several towns lower down the vale of the Weaver, was so important here in the time of Henry VIII.

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  • His paternal grandfather was Sir Henry Cromwell of Hinchinbrook, a leading personage in Huntingdonshire, and grandson of Richard Williams, knighted by Henry VIII., nephew of Thomas Cromwell, earl of Essex, Henry VIII.'s minister, whose name he adopted.

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  • During the middle ages it formed a suburb of Rochester, but Henry VIII.

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  • In this year Lorenzo died, and was succeeded by his son, the vain and weak Piero; France passed beneath the personal control of the inexperienced Charles viii.

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  • Later in Englnd it became usual to appoint one man to the two offices and to call him chancellor, a word perhaps borrowed from cathedral chapters, and not in use for a diocesan officer till the time of Henry VIII.

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  • The Constitutions of Clarendon recognize this appeal (c. viii.).

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  • In this retreat he probably wrote his eclogues, but in 1520 "Maistre Barkleye, the Blacke Monke and Poete" was desired to devise "histoires and convenient raisons to florisshe the buildings and banquet house withal" at the meeting between Henry VIII.

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  • The concentration of civil and ecclesiastical power by Wolsey in the hands of a churchman provided a precedent for its concentration by Henry VIII.

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  • In 1544 on Henry VIII.'s recommendation he was elected master of Corpus Christi College, and in 1545 vice-chancellor of the university.

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  • But the traditional account is that the books were sent to the Durham Benedictines at Oxford, and that on the dissolution of the foundation by Henry VIII.

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  • Great efforts were made to obtain mercy for the accused, but the crime was considered too heinous, and the pope (Clement VIII.) refused to grant a pardon; on the i ith of September 1599, Beatrice and Lucrezia were beheaded, and Giacomo, after having been tortured with redhot pincers, was killed with a mace, drawn and quartered.

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  • He left the property to the see of Canterbury, and about the time of the dissolution it was given up, by Cranmer to Henry VIII.

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  • His Quesiti et invenzioni diverse, a collection of the author's replies to questions addressed to him by persons of the most varied conditions, was published in 1546, with a dedication to Henry VIII.

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  • In this capacity he made a sensation by his L'Etat de la France a la fin de l'an VIII (1800), which he had been commissioned by Bonaparte to draw up, as a manifesto to foreign nations, after the coup d'Nat of the 18th Brumaire.

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  • The indictment, in eight articles, dealt with his conduct in the Fries and Callender trials, with his treatment of a Delaware grand jury, and (in article viii.) with his making "highly indecent, extra-judicial" reflections upon the national administration, probably the greatest offence in Republican eyes.

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  • Its resolutions comprised the rejection of the pragmatic sanction, the proclamation of the pope's superiority over the council, and the renewal of the bull Unam sanctam of Boniface VIII.

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  • The first of these was Ober den Unsprung andCharakterdesKrieges gegen die franzosische Revolution (1801), by many regarded as Gentz's masterpiece; another important brochure, Von dem politischen Zustande von Europa vor and nach der Revolution, a criticism of Hauterive's De l'etat de la France a la fin de l'an VIII, appeared the same year.

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  • The Babylonian and Assyrian kings had consequently no difficulty in 1 For a survey of the chronological systems adopted by different modern scholars, see below, section viii.

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  • The leading spirit of this reform was Giano della Bella, a noble who by engaging in trade had become a popolano; the grandi now tried to make him unpopular with the popolani grassi, hoping that without him the Ordinamenti would not be executed, and opened negotiations with Pope Boniface VIII.

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  • The following year a revolt of the Neapolitan barons against King Ferdinand broke out, actively supported by Pope Innocent VIII.; Lorenzo remained neutral at first, but true to his policy of maintaining the balance of power and not wishing to see Ferdinand completely crushed, he ended by giving him assistance in spite of the king's unpopularity in Florence.

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  • The same year witnessed the fulfilment of Savonarola's second prediction in the death of Innocent VIII.

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  • The emperor drove Gelasius from Rome in March, pronounced his election null and void, and set up Burdinus, archbishop of Braga, as antipope under the name of Gregory VIII.

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  • Having helped to draw up the Institution of a Christian Man, Wotton in 1539 went to arrange the marriage between Henry VIII, and Anne of Cleves and the union of Protestant princes which was to be the complement of this union.

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  • It is conceivable that a pope of Boniface VIII.'s temperament would not submit kindly to any restriction of the discretionary power with which he was invested by tradition, and he endeavoured to make the cardinals dependent on him and even to dispense with their services as far as possible, only assembling them in consistory in cases of extreme necessity.

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  • Beth is probably the Syriac equivalent of the Assyrian Bit as in Bit-Adini (see below, § 3 viii.), as is shown by such names as Beth `Arbaye, "district of Arabians," Beth Armaye, "district of Aramaeans."

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  • To thoroughly overpower the troublesome Bit-Adini (see above, § 3, viii.), which had naturally been aided by the states west of the Euphrates, Shalmaneser II.

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  • To the east of Weybridge lies Henry VIII.'s park of Oatlands (see Walton-on-Thames).

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  • The Decretum forbade their alienation to lay proprietors, denounced excommunication against those who refused to pay, and based the right of the Church upon scriptural precedents.6 The decretals contained provisions as to what was and what was not tithable property, as to those privileged from payment, as to sale or hypothecation to laymen, as to priority over state taxes, &c. 7 Various questions which arose later were settled by Boniface VIII.

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  • In 1480 he was made legate to France, mainly to settle the question of the Burgundian inheritance, and acquitted himself with such ability during his two years' stay that he acquired an influence in the college of cardinals which became paramount during the pontificate of Innocent Viii.

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  • Meanwhile, to balance the power of the primate, James purchased from Innocent VIII.

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  • Ere long his abilities attracted the notice of Cardinal Wolsey, who made him his secretary, and in this capacity he is said to have been with him at More Park in Hertfordshire, when the conclusion of the celebrated treaty of the More brought Henry VIII.

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  • Giovanni (1513-1556), born in Candia, translator of Terence's Andria and Eunuchus, of Cicero's In Verrem, and of Virgil's Aeneid, viii.

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  • Vinet's Chrestomathie francaise (1829), his Etudes sur la litterature francaise au XIX me siècle (1849-51), and his Histoire de la litterature francaise au X VIII me siecle, together with his Etudes sur Pascal, Etudes sur les moralistes aux X VIme ei X VII me siecles, Histoire de la predication parmi les Reformes de France and other kindred works, gave evidence of a wide knowledge of literature, a sober and acute literary judgment and a distinguished faculty of appreciation.

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  • We are amused at beholding the costume of Henry VIII, or Queen Elizabeth, as much as if it was that of the King and Queen of the Cannibal Islands.

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  • Listen to the recorder group playing ' Pastime with Good Company ' possibly composed by Henry VIII.

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  • Edward VIII had the shortest reign of any monarch apart from Lady Jane Gray.

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  • The Scots reneged on the treaties which drove Henry VIII into a fury.

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  • Henry VIII 's pleasure palace Henry VIII (r. 1509-47) made Westminster even more important by building an extravagant royal residence there.

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  • Over the gateway are Henry VIII 's arms, and on the turrets more terracotta roundels of Roman emperors.

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  • The VIII had a very strong if somewhat scrappy row, achieving 2nd place (losing to Caius by one second).

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  • He also lived through Henry VIII 's extension of the treason act in 1535 to include verbal treason.

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  • The turmoil created by Henry VIII lasted to beyond the Civil War with the people never sure whether to be Popish or Lutheran.

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  • Walmer Castle Following Henry VIII 's break from the Catholic Church, England 's shores were vulnerable to attack from across the English Channel.

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  • After playing the role of Jane Seymour in the BBC television series The Six Wives of Henry VIII, the actress took the moniker as her stage name.

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  • Instead of the classic four-in-hand knot, which is narrower in shape, Edward VIII preferred a larger knot.

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  • Each Final Fantasy game, with the possible exception of Final Fantasy VIII, features a fantasy swords and sorcery theme.

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  • Hemophilia or hemophilia A (factor VIII deficiency) is an inherited coagulation disorder, affecting about 20,000 Americans.

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  • Von Willebrand's disease is caused by a defect in the von Willebrand clotting factor, often accompanied by a deficiency of factor VIII as well.

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  • Hemophilia A is diagnosed with laboratory tests that can detect the presence of clotting factor VIII, factor IX, and others, as well as the presence or absence of clotting factor inhibitors.

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  • Gene carriers for both forms of hemophilia can be detected through DNA studies in conjunction with results from factor VIII assays.

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  • Other supportive data include measuring levels of factors V and VIII, fibrinogen, hemoglobin, and platelets, any of which may be diminished or entirely depleted.

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  • Von Willebrand's disease is diagnosed by ordering laboratory tests that reveal a prolonged bleeding time, absent or reduced levels of factor VIII, and a normal platelet count.

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  • Von Willebrand's disease is treated by several methods to reduce bleeding time and to replace factor VIII, which then replaces the von Willebrand factor.

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