Henry i Sentence Examples

henry i
  • His sister Plaisance had married in 1250 Henry I.

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  • Having detached Henry I.

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  • In the old town of Bridlington the church of St Mary and St Nicholas consists of the fine Decorated and Perpendicular nave, with Early English portions, of the priory church of an Augustinian foundation of the time of Henry I.

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  • Between 1283 and 1290, a Bavarian disciple of Wolfram's 2 adopted the story and developed it into an epic poem of nearly 8000 lines, incorporating episodes of Lohengrin's prowess in tournament, his wars with Henry I.

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  • Lower Bavaria was ruled by the descendants of Henry I.

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  • The first in date is that which was concluded for England with Henry I.

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  • Burton was evidently a mesne borough under the abbot, who held the court of the manor and received the profits of the borough according to the charter of Henry I.

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  • In January 1131 Innocent held a personal interview with King Henry I.

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  • Addressing the gathering, Langton referred to the laws of Edward the Confessor as "good laws," which the king ought to observe, and then mentioned the charter granted by Henry I.

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  • This follows the precedent set in the accession charter of Henry I.

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  • Lymington dates its importance from the grant of the town to Richard de Redvers, earl of Devon, in the reign of Henry I.

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  • The borough was founded before 1217 by William de Vernon, earl of Devon, whose ancestor Richard de Redvers had received the manor from Henry I.

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  • See for instance that by Philippe de Thaun (Philippus Taonensis), dedicated to Adelaide or Alice, queen of Henry I.

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  • Henry on his side looked to find in Becket the archbishop a coadjutor as loyal as Becket the archdeacon; and anticipated that the Church would once more be reduced to that state of dependence in which she had stood during the latter years of Henry I.

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  • The church of St Peter and St Paul is a fine fragment of the church of the Augustinian priory founded by Henry I.

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  • Breda was in the i i th century a direct fief of the Holy Roman Empire, its earliest known lord being Henry I.

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  • It was in the keep, and not, as tradition says, in the much later "Black Tower" (also called "Duke Robert's Tower"), that Robert, duke of Normandy, was imprisoned by order of his brother Henry I.

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  • In the reign of Edward the Confessor, Doncaster, as a berewic of the manor of Hexthorp, belonged to Earl Tostig; but before 1086 it had been granted to Robert, earl of Mortain, whose successor William was attainted for treason in the time of Henry I.

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  • The town, which had grown up under the shadow of the almost impregnable castle, was first incorporated by Henry I.

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  • John is valuable for the latter years of Henry I.

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  • He was but twenty years old when he stamped out, with the help of his overlord, Henry I.

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  • Alarmed at the close connexion of Normandy with Flanders, Henry I.

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  • Much of his attention must have been engrossed by the work of administration, carried on without the help of those elaborate institutions, judicial and financial, which were perfected by Henry I.

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  • First (908-910) they ravaged Thuringia, Swabia and Bavaria, and defeated the Germans on the Lechfeld, whereupon the German king Henry I.

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  • In 1 roo Rufus was slain, and Henry I.

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  • It belonged to an Augustinian priory founded by Henry I.

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  • The manor passed in the reign of Henry I.

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  • In 1 11 2 it broke out, and Fulk, being unable to prevent Henry I.

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  • But in 1127 a new alliance was made, and on the 22nd of May at Rouen, Henry I.

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  • From the first he tried to profit by his marriage, and after the death of Henry I.

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  • The name of Midhurst (Middeherst, Mudhurst) first occurs in the reign of Henry I.

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  • Four of Malcolm's sons, Duncan II., Edgar, Alexander I., and David I., became kings of Scotland; and one of his daughters, Matilda, became the wife of Henry I.

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  • Thuringia was retained by Otto's son and successor, Henry I.

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  • Duderstadt was founded by Henry I.

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  • The castle built at Malmesbury during the reign of Henry I.

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  • The archbishops of York as lords of the manor had various privileges in the town, among which were the right of holding a market and fair, and Archbishop John, being summoned in the reign of Henry I.

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  • It contains a handsome parish church dedicated to St Martin, a town hall and a castle (Wildeck), built by the Emperor Henry I.

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  • A market on Friday and a three days' fair at the feast of St Rumon were granted by Henry I.

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  • Many of the supporters of hilip now made overtures to Otto, and an attempt to set up Henry I.

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  • We have observed that Lanfranc invested Henry I.

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  • No written document relating to Alcester exists before the reign of Henry I.

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  • At the conquest Wimborne was a royal borough, ancient demesne of the crown, and part of the manor of Kingston Lacy, which Henry I.

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  • It was inherited by his daughter Maud, who was married first to Simon de St Liz and afterwards to David, son of Malcolm III., king of Scotland, who was created by Henry I.

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  • It was granted by Henry I.

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  • Henr y was brought to England by Henry I.

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  • Having thus settled this momentous dispute Henry spent his later years in restoring order in Germany, and in planning to assist his father-in-law, Henry I.

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  • This history, which is a contemporary one, covers the period from the death of Henry I.

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  • This family became extinct in the male line about 1232, and was succeeded by Henry I.

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  • It is possible that the itinerant justices of the English kings Henry I.

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  • Proceeding to Rome the new archbishop found that Thurstan had anticipated his arrival in that city and had made out a strong case against him to Pope Calixtus II.; however, the exertions of the English king Henry I.

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  • The archbishop had sworn to Henry I.

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  • A fine Norman doorway, now appearing as the entrance to a hotel, is preserved from an Augustinian priory founded in the reign of Henry I.

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  • The town was granted by Henry I.

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  • The only mention of Kenilworth as a borough occurs in a charter of Henry I.

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  • Towards the end of the pontificate trouble began anew in England, Paschal complaining (1115) that councils were held and bishops translated without his authorization, and threatening Henry I.

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  • In the Domesday survey it appears as a royal manor containing two mills, but it was bestowed by Henry I.

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  • It is probable that Henry I.

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  • A castle existed in the time of King Alfred, and at the time of the Conquest it was rebuilt by Roger de Montgomerie, but it was taken from his son, who rebelled against the reigning monarch, Henry I.

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  • Langton encouraged the barons to formulate their demands, and is said to have suggested that they should take their stand upon the charter of Henry I.

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  • He lived for a time in the Norman kingdom of Sicily and returned to England in the reign of Henry I.

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  • Though they purported to declare the usages on the subject which prevailed in the reign of Henry I.

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  • In particular he showed himself a doughty opponent to Henry I.

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  • During the quarrels between the sons of William the Conqueror it was pillaged and sacked by Henry I.

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  • After the conquest of England, he added a seal of majesty, copied from the seal of Henry I.

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  • At the time of the Domesday Survey, Thirsk (Treske) was a manor of little importance belonging partly to the king and partly to Hugh, son of Baldric. Soon afterwards it was granted to Robert de Mowbray, who often resided there, and is said to have raised the castle round which the borough grew up. His estates, being forfeited for treason against William Rufus, were restored by Henry I.

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  • In the 10th century Cothen was a Slav settlement, which was captured and destroyed by the German king Henry I.

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  • Haverfordwest owes its origin to the advent of the Flemings, who were permitted by Henry I.

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  • Of the numerous charters the earliest known (through an allusion found in a document of Bishop Houghton of St Davids, c. 1370) is one from Henry II., who therein confirms all former rights granted by his grandfather, Henry I.

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  • Henry also wrote epistles to Henry I.

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  • A "strenuous and sagacious man" he rendered valuable service to both kings in their Norman wars, and Henry I.

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  • He seems to have been a man of independent character, for he assisted Anselm against William Rufus, although he supported Henry I.

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  • After being imprisoned for five years by Henry I.

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  • The crown of Succession England was left vacant for the boldest kinsman to of Henry I.

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  • The citizens of London welcomed him, but he was not secure of his success till by a swift swoop on Winchester he obtained possession of the royal treasurean all-important factor in a crisis, as Henry I.

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  • His next job was to restore the bureaucracy by which Henry I had organized the country.

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  • The barons expressed their wish for a peace with France, and when summoned to produce their feudal contingents pleaded poverty, and raised a rather shallow theory to the effect that their services could not be asked for wars beyond seasagainst which there were conclusive precedents in the reigns of Henry I.

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  • A great landmark in the constitutional history of England was reached when Langton assembled the leading barons, rehearsed to them the charter issued by Henry I.

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  • The Great Charter of 1215 was a commentary on, rather than a reproduction of, the old accessiop pledges of Henry I.

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  • Not being stronghanded or capable, he could never face criticism nor suppress discontent by force, as a king of the type of Henry I.

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  • Glossop was granted by Henry I.

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  • He was the son of William de Barri and Augharat, a daughter of Gerald, the ancestors of the Fitzgeralds and the Welsh princess, Nesta, formerly mistress of King Henry I.

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  • Conrad I handed over the chief authority in Franconia to his brother Eberhard, who remained on good terms with Conrad's successor Henry I.

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  • And before this date William the Conqueror had ordered that "every one who wishes to be regarded as free must be in a pledge, and that the pledge must hold and bring him to justice if he commits any offence"; and the laws of Henry I.

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  • The old castle, Schloss Ilsenburg, lying on a high crag above the town, was originally an imperial stronghold and was probably built by the German king Henry I.

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  • The manor of Avebury was granted in the reign of Henry I.

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  • To her succeeded the house of Brabant, issue of Mahaut of Boulogne, sister of Ida, and wife of Henry I.

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  • He was also mixed up in English affairs, and as a rule maintained cordial relations with Henry I.

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  • Most of the Norman leaders were near relations, many being descended from Nesta, daughter of Rhys Ap Tudor, prince of South Wales, the most beautiful woman of her time, and mistress of Henry I.

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  • England was the scene of an investiture contest in which the chief actors were Henry I.

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  • The ridings were each presided over by a riding-reeve, and wapentake courts were held in the reign of Henry I.

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  • The bishops received the title of count from the emperor Henry I.

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  • Of the abbey founded in 1117 by Henry I.

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  • Tonbridge owed its early importance to the castle built by Richard, earl of Clare, in the reign of Henry I.

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  • Domesday describes Woodstock (Wodestock, Wodestok', Wodestok) as a royal forest; it was a royal seat from early times and 'Ethelred is said to have held a council there, and Henry I.

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  • But his chief interest is in the histories' of Duke Robert of Normandy, William Rufus and Henry I.

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  • It changes again if you include Henry I to Matilda, even tho Stephen was proclaimed king and crowned accordingly.

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  • He died in prison and his lands and titles remained with the crown until Henry I granted the lordship to.. .

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  • In 921, however, he recognized the authority of Henry I.

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  • Griffith ap Cynan, of the royal house of Gwynedd, who had been first an exile in Ireland, and later a prisoner at Chester, once more returned to his native land, and defied the Norman barons with success, whilst Henry I.

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  • In 1136 the army of Griffith ap Rhys met with a large English force near Cardigan, composed of the denizens of the South Wales castles and of the hated Flemish colonists, who had been lately planted by Henry I.

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  • His next care was to restore the bureaucracy by which Henry I.

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