Edward i Sentence Examples

edward i
  • A few years afterwards he married again, his second wife being Agnes, daughter of Sir James 1 The descent of the first Napier of Merchiston has been traced to "Johan le Naper del Counte de Dunbretan," who was one of those who swore fealty to Edward I.

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  • The abbot seems to have held a market from very early times, and charters for the holding of markets and fairs were granted by various sovereigns from Edward I.

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  • He is of some value for the reign of Edward I.

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  • It occupies the site of a fortress erected in the time of Alexander II., which was besieged in 1303 by Edward I.

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  • On the site of St Mary's (1837-1839), also Gothic, stood the small chapel raised by Christiana, sister of Robert Bruce, to the memory of her husband, Sir Christopher Seton, who had been executed on the spot by Edward I.

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  • Strong, talented and ambitious, Gaveston gained great influence over young Edward, and early in 1307 he was banished from England by the king; but he returned after the death of Edward I.

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  • After the death of Margaret, the "maid of Norway," in 1290, Bruce's grandfather, the 6th Robert de Bruce, lord of Annandale, claimed the crown of Scotland as the son of Isabella, the second daughter of David, earl of Huntingdon, and greatgranddaughter of King David I.; but John de Baliol, grandson of Margaret, the eldest daughter of Earl David, was preferred by the commissioners of Edward I.

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  • His youth is said by an English chronicler to have been passed at the court of Edward I.

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  • Though a king, Bruce had not yet a kingdom, and his efforts to obtain it were disastrous failures until after the death of Edward I.

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  • In a moment all was changed by the death of Edward I.

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  • His sieges, the most difficult part of medieval warfare, though won sometimes by stratagem, prove that he and his followers had benefited from their early training in the wars of Edward I.

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  • This was no less than the rising of the whole Celtic race, who had felt the galling yoke of Edward I.

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  • The manor in 1242 was handed over to the Scottish king who held it till 1295, when Edward I.

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  • Pierre Dubois, in a pamphlet "De recuperatione Sanctae Terrae," addressed to Edward I.

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  • The modern theological position of Oberlin college is reflected in the writings of President King and of Dean Edward I.

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  • This Bohun lives in history as one of the recalcitrant barons of the year 1297, who extorted from Edward I.

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  • He led his forces from Ireland to support Edward I.

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  • The town was laid out by Edward I.

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  • The waves finally obliterated the site in 1288, and Edward I.

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  • In the main this conclusion substantiates the verdict of Stubbs, who has published the Vita et mors in his Chronicles of the reigns of Edward I.

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  • Melcombe had received a charter from Edward I.

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  • Kenneth is alleged to have brought the Stone of Destiny, on which the Celtic kings were crowned, from Dunstaffnage Castle on Loch Etive, and to have deposited it in Scone, whence it was conveyed to Westminster Abbey (where it lies beneath the Coronation Chair) by Edward I.

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  • In this reign also the abbot appointed the mayor, but from the reign of Edward I.

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  • All the liberties of the Cinque Ports were granted to the barons of Faversham by Edward I.

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  • The prior and convent obtained from Edward I.

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  • The evil is of very long standing, for in 1306 the citizens petitioned Edward I.

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  • The Friars of the Blessed Virgin of Mount Carmel or Carmelites or Whitefriars came to London in 1241, and made their home on land between Fleet Street and the Thames given by Edward I.

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  • Maitland's Domesday Book and Beyond (Cambridge, 1897) is indispensarle; and the same remark applies to his History of English Law before the time of Edward I.

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  • Young, ardent and active, he strove with all his might to win back for England something of the position which it had acquired under Edward I.

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  • From this date, by a succession of royal charters and private gifts, the nunnery amassed vast wealth and privileges, and became a fashionable retreat for ladies of high rank, among whose number were Eleanor, widow of Henry III., and Mary, daughter of Edward I.

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  • After the Norman Conquest the mints increased to about seventy, a greater number than now exists in the world, but they were gradually reduced and in the reign of Edward I.

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  • Between the Conquest and the 14th century the earldom of Kent was held successively by Odo, bishop of Bayeux, William of Ypres and Hubert de Burgh (sheriff of the county in the reign of Henry III.), none of whom, however, transmitted the honour, which was bestowed by Edward I.

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  • The site of the palace was first chosen by Bishop Anthony Beck, in the time of Edward I.

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  • Agenais and southern Saintonge, which fell to the Crown by the death of Alfonse of Poitiers in 1276, as part of his vast possessions in Aquitaine and Languedoc, were ceded to Edward I.

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  • He shared in the negotiations between the Scottish nobles and Edward I.

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  • The church, chiefly late Perpendicular, contains a large number of monuments of the Sidney family and an effigy of Sir Stephen de Penchester, Warden of the Cinque Ports in the time of Edward I.

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  • Sir Herbert Maxwell won great fame by defending his castle of Carlaverock against Edward I.

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  • The town received grants of markets from Edward I.

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  • Lyme ranked as a port in 1234, and Edward I.

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  • The first existing grant of a market and fairs to Bridport is dated 1593, but it appears from the Quo Warranto Rolls that Edward I.

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  • The obscurity of the early annals of the town is explained by the circumstance that Edward I.

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  • During the Scottish wars of the Independence its fortifications were strengthened by Edward I.

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  • In 1280 Roger de Lancaster obtained a charter from Edward I.

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  • Sir Alan Plokenet, Sir Ralph Daubeney and Sir Philip Daubeney are entered as bannerets on the roll of the garrison of Caermarthen Castle in 1282, and the roll of Carlaverock records the names and arms of eighty-five bannerets who accompanied Edward I.

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  • He wrote in French verse a Chronicle dealing with the history of England from the earliest times to the death of Edward I.

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  • The earlier part of the Chronicle is taken from Geoffrey of Monmouth and other writers; for the period dealing with the reign of Edward I.

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  • The town was formerly called Barnover and, still earlier, Rhosfair, and bears its present name of French origin since Edward I.

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  • In 1268 he was chosen bishop of Worcester, resigning the chancellorship shortly afterwards; and both before and after 127 9, when he inherited the valuable property of his brother the archbishop, he was employed on public business by Edward I.

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  • Its ruins are extensive, and date for the most part from the Norman period to the reign of Edward I.

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  • In his foreign policy Adolph allied himself with Edward I.

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  • The surrounding deer-forest was often visited by Edward I.

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  • Fowey (Fawy, Vawy, Fowyk) held a leading position amongst Cornish ports from the reign of Edward I.

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  • The relations between their Ilkhan and the Egyptian sultan continued strained, and the 8th Ilkhan Oeljeitu (1304-1316) addressed letters to Philip the Fair and the English king Edward I.

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  • The town, which witnessed much of the international strife and Border lawlessness, was taken by Edward I.

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  • The grammar school, founded in the reign of John, was incorporated by Edward I.

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  • Apparently British, the castle was repaired later, probably in the time of Edward I.

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  • They are of Elizabethan date, but there are also lines of much earlier date, the fortifications of Edward I.

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  • In 1279 Alexander did homage to Edward I.

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  • They show that the barbarities of Edward I.

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  • Edward Baliol was enabled to seize and fortify Perth and was crowned at Scone, as Edward I.

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  • The borough returned two members to parliament more or less irregularly from the first parliament of Edward I.

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  • The battle of the 22nd of July 1298 was fought between the forces of King Edward I.

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  • Confirmation charters were granted by Edward I.

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  • After the countess's death the manor came to the hands of Edward I.

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  • On a crannog in the lake are the ruins of a small castle which belonged to James ("the Admirable") Crichton, and the large mound near the loch was the site of the castle in which Edward I.

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  • Yet as far back as the 13th century a statute, known as that of "Watch and Ward," was passed in the 13th year of Edward I.

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  • It was given (with Bromfield and Yale, or Idl) by Edward I.

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  • This arrangement was confirmed by subsequent statutes passed in the reigns of Edward I.

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  • He allied himself closely with Edward I.

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  • In 1296 Floris forsook the alliance of Edward I.

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  • His reign in some ways resembled that of Edward I.

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  • In the castle Owen Goch (Owen the Red) was imprisoned from 1254 to 1277, by the last Llewelyn, whose brother Dafydd held it for some time against Edward I.

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  • Although the new archbishop crowned Edward I.

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  • The younger Comyn, who had inherited the lordship of Badenoch from his great-uncle the earl of Mentieth, was appointed one of the guardians of Scotland in 1286, and shared in the negotiations between Edward I.

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  • Leland speaks of Shaftesbury as a great market town, and it possessed a market in the time of Edward I.

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  • He had yet twenty-eight years to reign, for he survived to the age of sixty-seven, an age unparalleled by any of his predecessors, and by all his successors till Edward I.

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  • But his most offensive act was to promote to the position of chief councillor of the crown, and disperser of the royal favors, a clever but vain and ostentatious Gascon knight, one Piers Gaveston, who had been the companion of his boyhood, and had been banished by Edward I.

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  • But Arch bishop Winchelsea had returned from exile in a belli gerent mood, and the place of Norfolk and Hereford was taken by an ambitious prince of the royal house, Thomas, earl of Lancaster, the son of the younger brother of Edward I.

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  • He fell short of Edward I.

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  • But knowing that his seat was precarious he did homage to the English king, and made him all the promises that his father had given to Edward I.

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  • Butas it chanced and the issue of this alliance was destined to unite the English and the Scottish crowns, when the male line of the Tudors died out, and Henry, quite unintentionally, had his share in bringing about the consummation, by peaceful means, of that end which Edward I.

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  • The old complaints which had been raised against the Church of England in the days of Edward I.

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  • The evolution of the army which won Crecy and Poitiers is accompanied by the accumulation of a mass of indentures and other military documents, the value of which has been illustrated in Dr Morriss Welsh Wars of Edward I.

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  • In 1304 it fell with the town to Edward I.

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  • It was a royal borough previous to the Norman Conquest and returned two members to parliament in the reign of Edward I.

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  • Yet some enlightened men strove to fuse the two nations together, and the native Irish, or that section which bordered on the settlements and suffered great oppression, offered 8000 marks to Edward I.

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  • There is a vague tradition that Edward I.

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  • The north and west were still Edward I.

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  • See Chronicles of the Reigns of Edward I.

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  • These houses were at Alvingham, Catley, Holland Brigg, Lincoln, before the gate of which the first Eleanor Cross was erected by Edward I.

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  • The creation of bannerets is traceable, according to Selden, to the time of Edward I.

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  • That doubt should be cast upon the readiness of his tenants to pay fealty to Edward I may indicate that his sympathies were liberal.

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  • Philip's war with Edward I was the result of a long-standing feud over England's possessions in France.

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  • In the 14th century a deer park created by Edward I brought royal patronage.

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  • Most precious to her is an Edward I silver penny dated 1227 Ð 1307.

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  • We have already noticed the great if disastrous Crusade of i ioo-I Ioi, and the Venetian Crusade of 1123-1124; and we may also refer to the Crusade of Henry the Lion in 1172, and to that of Edward I.

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