Henry ii Sentence Examples

henry ii
  • It was not till the reign of Henry II.

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  • About 1583 Antonio took this son to France, where he became a page in the service of Catherine de' Medici, wife of King Henry II.

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  • A further step was taken by Henry II.

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  • Outside England the title justiciar was given under Henry II.

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  • Its site is now occupied by an open square, one stone remaining to mark the spot where Henry II.

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  • By the marriage of Eleanor of Aquitaine with Henry Plantagenet, the countship passed under the suzerainty of the kings of England, but at the same time it was divided, William VII., called the Young (1145-1168), having been despoiled of a portion of his domain by his uncle William VIII.,called the Old,who was supported by Henry II.

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  • He will restore lands and castles to those who have been deprived of them without the judgment of their peers; he will do the same concerning property unlawfully seized by Henry II.

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  • The second epithet designates its position on a hill, but the first is given it from the market granted to the abbots of St Albans to be kept there, by Henry II.

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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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  • He then followed the fortunes of his friend Maurice, the new elector of Saxony, deserted Charles, and joined the league which proposed to overthrow the emperor by an alliance with Henry II.

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  • This office he held until 1547, when he was sent by Henry II.

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  • On their extinction it passed to the Saxon house, and in 1007 the emperor Henry II.

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  • Ranulf married Constance, widow of Henry II.

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  • It was from Milford Haven that Henry II.

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  • In September 1550 she visited France and obtained from Henry II.

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  • Repeated appeals had been sent to the West from the beginning of the Egyptian affair (1163) onwards; while in 1184-1185 a great mission, on which the patriarch of Jerusalem and the masters of the Templars and the Hospitallers were all present, came to France and England, and offered the crown of Jerusalem to Philip Augustus and Henry II.

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  • The very means which Philip Augustus and Henry II.

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  • For the chronology of the controversy see Eyton's Itinerary of Henry II.

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  • She is noteworthy as having given the chief impulse at the court of her brother Henry II.

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  • The third Marguerite (1553-1615), called more particularly Marguerite de Valois, was great-niece of the first and niece of the second, being daughter of Henry II.

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  • He remained loyal to Henry II.

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  • York was frequently visited by the kings of England on the way to Scotland, and several important parliaments were held there, the first being that of 1175, when Malcolm, king of Scotland, did homage to Henry II.

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  • In the first charter (which is undated) Henry II.

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  • There were numerous trade gilds, one of the chief being that of the weavers, which received a charter from Henry II.

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  • That to the east, the Château de St Georges, built by Henry II.

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  • Between 1547 and 1549 he was employed in the decoration of the Loggia ordered from Lescot for the entry of Henry II.

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  • He studied at Paris under Girard la Pucelle, who began to teach in or about 1160, but as he states in his book De nugis curialium that he was at the court of Henry II.

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  • A market for horses and cattle existed here at least as early as the time of Henry II.

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  • The old British fort, Caer Drewyn, one of a chain of forts from Dyserth to Canwyd, is the supposed scene of Glendower's retreat under Henry IV., and here Owen Gwynedd is said to have prepared to repulse Henry II.

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  • He put up for auction the highest offices and honours; even remitting to William the Lion of Scotland, for a sum of 15,000 marks, the humiliating obligations which Henry II.

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  • She died 1 The remains of Richard, together with those of Henry II.

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  • The town was constituted a suffragan see by Henry II.

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  • William the Conqueror, under whom it appears as Carusbur, provided it with a hospital and a church; and Henry II.

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  • Having lost both her parents at an early age, Catherine was sent to a convent to be educated; and she was only fourteen when she was married (1533) at Marseilles to the duke of Orleans, afterwards Henry II.

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  • Its author (generally referred to since the edition of Nevelet in 1610 as the "Anonymus Neveleti") was long unknown, but Hervieux has shown grounds for identifying him with Walther of England, chaplain to Henry II.

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  • It was a royal borough before 1086, and a charter of Henry II.

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  • In 1552 it was given as an appanage by Henry II.

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  • In 1174 and 1175 he made treaties with Genoa and Venice and his marriage in February 1177 with Joan, daughter of Henry II.

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  • The moneyers, who were elected by the burgesses, were responsible for the manufacture of the coin, and according to Madox were liable at the time of Henry II.

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  • Malvezin (Michel de Montaigne, son origine et sa famille, 1875) proved the existence of a family of Eyquems or Ayquems before the marriage of Eleanor of Aquitaine to Henry II.

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  • Sir Philip Sidney was born at Penshurst, being descended from William de Sidney, chamberlain to Henry II.

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  • Favourable terms were granted to Magdeburg, which surrendered and remained in the power of Maurice, and in January 1552 a treaty was concluded with Henry II.

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  • Catherine de' Medici was greatly incensed at this affront, and took her revenge by having the constable disgraced on the death of Henry II.

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  • Olive has been supposed to be an anagram for the name of a Mlle Viole, but there is little evidence of real passion in the poems, and they may perhaps be regarded as a Petrarcan exercise, especially as, in the second edition, the dedication to his lady is exchanged for one to Marguerite de Valois, sister of Henry II.

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  • When the news reached Rome of the martyrdom of Adalbert, bishop of Prague (997), Bruno determined to take his place, and in 1004, after being consecrated by the pope as archbishop of the eastern heathen, he set out for Germany to seek aid of the emperor Henry II.

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  • But his future was a subject of anxious thought to Henry II.

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  • In a chapel in the south transept are the effigies of Henry II.

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  • Sherwood was a crown forest from the time of Henry II.

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  • After the death of Theobald in 1161, John continued as secretary to Thomas Becket, and took an active part in the long disputes between that primate and his sovereign, Henry II.

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  • It owes its brilliancy largely to the protection accorded by Henry II.

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  • It was composed at the request of Henry II.

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  • In 1182 he and his younger brother Geoffrey took up arms, on the side of the Poitevin rebels, against Richard Coeur de Lion; apparently from resentment at the favour which Henry II.

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  • Robert of Cricklade, prior of St Frideswide at Oxford, dedicated to Henry II.

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  • Then there grew up all over Europe a system of fining the knights who failed to respond to the sovereign's call or to stay their full time in the field; and in England this fine developed, from the reign of Henry II.

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  • But on the Continent they were discredited by the fatal accident which befell Henry II.

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  • Andover existed as a borough before 1176, and Henry II.

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  • His son and successor, who was chosen German king as Henry II.

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  • Louis died childless in 1296; Stephen left two sons at his death in 13ro, namely, Henry II.

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  • The town of Groningen belonged originally to the pagus, or gouw, of Triantha (Drente), the countship of which was bestowed by the emperor Henry II.

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  • At the Domesday Survey, Kidderminster was still in the hands of the king and remained a royal manor until Henry II.

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  • In 1018 the city, after receiving a charter, was given by the emperor Henry II.

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  • He entered into an alliance with John, margrave of Brandenburg-Custrin, with another Hohenzollern prince, Albert Alcibiades of Bayreuth, and with other Lutheran leaders, and also with Henry II.

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  • The treaty with France was signed in January 1552; in March Henry II.

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  • After Maurice of Saxony had made terms with Charles at Passau he went to help Ferdinand against the Turks, but one of his allies, Henry II.

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  • In 1629 the title of prince de Conti was revived in favour of Armand De Bourbon (1629-1666), second son of Henry II.

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  • The church in 678 became the head of the new see of Bernicia, which was united to that of Lindisfarne about 821, when the bishop of Lindisfarne appears to have taken possession of the lordship which he and his successors held until it was restored to the archbishop of York by Henry II.

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  • At the age of twenty-one, preferring arms to the gown, he entered the household of Henri d'Angouleme, grand prior of France, the natural son of Henry II.

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  • On the 28th of June i180 Philip made a treaty with Henry II.

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  • At a conference at Bonmoulins on the 18th of November Richard again abandoned his father, and after a second conference at La Ferte Bernard, Philip invaded Maine and forced Henry II.

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  • His baillis, who at first rather resembled the itinerant justices of Henry II.

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  • The burgesses must have received certain privileges from Henry I., since Henry II.

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  • Obtaining from Henry II.

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  • Through his aid the towns of Waterford, Wexford and Dublin had already become English colonies before the arrival of Henry II.

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  • In 996 Stephen married Gisela, the daughter of Duke Henry II.

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  • A political middle age certainly lay between Theodosius and William the Conqueror, or at least between Justinian and Henry II.

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  • Bavaria was transferred from Henry II.

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  • Sculpture, on the contrary, in which art, as in architecture, the medieval French had been surpassed by no other people of Europe, was practised with originality and power in the reigns of Henry II.

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  • But it was not till the reign of Henry II.

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  • On the other hand, " The Lord Rhys," as he is usually termed, did homage to Henry II.

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  • In 1184 (on 25th May) the whole of the buildings were laid in ruins by fire; but Henry II.

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  • Having inadvertently caused the death of King Henry II.

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  • Conan IV., defeated by the revolted Breton nobles, appealed to Henry II.

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  • Besides checkmating Barbarossa, he had humbled Henry II.

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  • He was certainly there in February 1549, when he dates from Du Bellay's palace a little account of the festivals given at Rome to celebrate the birth of the second son of Henry II.

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  • Submission and homage were made to Henry II.

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  • Cork was a borough by prescription, and successive charters were granted to it from the reign of Henry II.

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  • In Germany, however, this full type had already been attained somewhat earlier in the seal of the emperor Henry II.

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  • It was granted by Henry II.

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  • Roger, son of Nigel, took part in the rebellion against Henry II.

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  • Thirsk is first mentioned as a borough in a charter granted by Roger de Mowbray to Newburgh Priory in the reign of Henry II.

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  • After the Conquest it became a demesne of the crown, and it was bestowed by Henry II.

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  • Other buildings are the Henneberger Haus with a collection of antiquities, and the town church, with twin towers, built by the emperor Henry II.

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  • His elder son Arnulf married Liutgardis, daughter of Siegfried of Luxemburg and sister-in-law of the emperor Henry II.

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  • He was a member of the family of the count of Tusculum, and was opposed by an anti-pope, Gregory, but defeated him with the aid of King Henry II.

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  • This work, undertaken before 1130, was first published in that year; the author subsequently published in succession four more editions, of which the last ends in 115 4 with the accession of Henry II.

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  • Orazio, Pierluigi's third son, was made duke of Castro when his father became duke of Parma, and married Diane, a natural daughter of Henry II.

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  • These latter are at once disafforested; but those of Henry II.

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  • Moreover, the idea of corporate responsibility and discipline was overshadowed by that of medicine for the individual soul, though public penance was still often exacted, especially in cases of notorious crime, as when Henry II.

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  • The king of Scotland bought for i5,ooo marks a release from the homage to the English crown which had been imposed upon him by Henry II.

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  • The strong governance set up by Henry II.

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  • Strong and regular governance had on the whole prevailed ever since Henry II.

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  • After the departure of Prince Louis and his foreigners the earl marshal had to take up much the same task that had fallen to Henry II.

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  • But, save during the years when William the LiOn, after his captivity, had own.ed himself the vassal of Henry II.

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  • While the kingdom of France was weak, monarchs like Henry II.

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  • Almost his first duty was to bury the insane Charles VI., who only survived his son-in-law for a few months, and to proclaim his little nephew king of France under the name of Henry II.

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  • It is followed by a series of exchequer records, called the Pipe Rolls, which begin in the reign of Henry I., and dating from that of Henry II.

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  • It was Henry II.

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  • In 1157 it was gifted by Henry II.

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  • In 1176 an attempt was made to elect him bishop of St David's, but Henry II.

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  • The machinery of the frankpledge was probably used by Henry II.

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  • Stephen granted to the monks the lordship of Furness, and his charter was confirmed by Henry I., Henry II.

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  • The earliest authenticated charter is that of Henry I., which was confirmed in a charter of Henry II.

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  • In 1175 Benedictus became prior of Holy Trinity, Canterbury; in 1177 he received from Henry II.

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  • Stubbs conjecturally identified the first part of the Gesta (r170-1177) with the Liber Tricolumnis, a register of contemporary events kept by Richard Fitz Neal, the treasurer of Henry II.

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  • We can only say that the Gesta are the work of a well-informed contemporary who appears to have been closely connected with the court and is inclined on all occasions to take the side of Henry II.

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  • The work begins at Christmas 1169, and concludes in 1192; it is thus in form a fragment, covering portions of the reign of Henry II.

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  • He studied at Caen; he became personally known to Henry I., Henry II., and the latter's eldest son, Prince Henry; from Henry II.

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  • It possesses the remains of a magnificent castle, built in the middle of the 16th century by Henry II.

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  • When the merchants of Dublin fled from their city at the time of the AngloNorman invasion it was given by Henry II.

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  • On learning that O'Rourke was leading an army against him with the support of Ruadri, he burnt his castle of Ferns and went to Henry II.

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  • According to the Metalogus of John of Salisbury, who in 1155 went on a mission from King Henry II.

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  • Irish Less than two years before Strongbow's arrival Pope Eugenius had established an ecclesiastical constitution in Ireland depending on Rome, but the annexation was very imperfectly carried out, and the hope of fully asserting the Petrine claims was a main cause of Adrian's gift to Henry II.

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  • Boleslaus, duke of the Poles, took the title of king, and assumed a threatening attitude; Rudolph III., king of Burgundy or Arles, who had arranged that the emperor Henry II.

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  • It is said that Henry II.

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  • The two rivals were typical of their states, Henry II.

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  • Philip Augustus, who was to be the bitterest enemy of Henry II.

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  • Like his father, Philip understood how to make capital out of the quarrels of the aged and ailing Henry II.

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  • The Protestant alliance was substituted for the Turkish alliance, and Henry II.

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  • The Germans, in whom national feeling got the better of imperialistic ardour, as soon as they saw the French at Strassburg, made terms with the emperor at Passau and permitted Charles to use all his forces against Henry II.

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  • In slaying Henry II.

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  • Philip II., through States- the duke of Ferias instrumentality, demanded the throne for his daughter Isabella, grand-daughter of Henry II.

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  • Finally, the system of commercial companies, antipathetic to the French bourgeoisie, was for the first time practised on a grand scale; but Sully never understood that movement of colonial expansion, begun by Henry II.

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  • It obtained the grant of a market from Henry II.

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  • He afterwards taught Latin at Villeneuve, and then at Bordeaux, Some time before 1552 he delivered a course of lectures in the college of Cardinal Lemoine at Paris, which was largely attended, Henry II.

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  • A controversy exists concerning an embassy sent by Henry II.

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  • The existing Tuesday market is stated in the Hundred Rolls of 1279 to have been granted by Henry II.

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  • Richard still continued to serve Henry II.

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  • Richard owes his surname to the fact that Henry II.

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  • The Lais are dedicated to an unknown king, who is identified as Henry II.

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  • When King Henry II died Richard was greatly grieved at his father's death.

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  • It required a personal intervention on the part of Henry II to secure their return.

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  • In 1555 he was nominated bishop of Ostia and dean of the Sacred College, an appointment which was disapproved of by Henry II.

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  • Their reluctance to acknowledge a female sovereign was increased when Henry gave her in marriage to Geoffrey Plantagenet, the heir of Anjou and Maine (1129); nor was it removed by the birth of the future Henry II.

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  • That to the east, the Château de St Georges, built by Henry II.

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  • The success of Roman imperialism was particularly remarkable in England, where Innocent was confronted by one of the principal potentates of the West, by the heir of the power that had been founded by two statesmen of the first rank, William the Conqueror and Henry II.

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  • He reportedly recognized Pope Sixtus V years before he became Pope, and he predicted the death of Henry II.

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