Henry iii Sentence Examples

henry iii
  • Of the old castle, called Nenagh Round, dating from the time of King John, there still exists the circular donjon or keep. There are no remains of the hospital founded in 1200 for Austin canons, nor of the Franciscan friary, founded in the reign of Henry III.

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  • Later charters were given by Henry II., by John in 1204 (who also granted an annual fair of three days' duration, 29th of October, at the feast of St Modwen, and a weekly market on Thursday), by Henry III.

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  • He ultimately married Isabella, after the death of John, and had by her a number of sons, half-brothers of Henry III.

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  • Civil war was raging in France, and Clement became an ardent partisan of the League; his mind appears to have become unhinged by religious fanaticism, and he talked of exterminating the heretics, and formed a plan to kill Henry III.

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  • After John's death he crowned the infant Henry III.

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  • Not long after it had been sacked by Totila Benevento became the seat of a powerful Lombard duchy and continued to be independent until 1053, when the emperor Henry III.

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  • On the 12th of November 12 t 6 the regent William Marshal, earl of Pembroke, reissued the charter in the name of the young king Henry III.

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  • Subsequently the charters were confirmed several times by Henry III.

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  • Before the 13th century the burgesses held a weekly market on Sunday and a yearly fair on St James's day, but in 1218 Henry III.

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  • Among his informants were Earl Richard of Cornwall and Henry III.

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  • None the less, he gives a more vivid impression of his, age than any other English chronicler; and it is a matter for regret that his great history breaks off in 1259, on the eve of the crowning struggle between Henry III and the baronage.

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  • The Ferrers estates were forfeited by Robert, earl of Derby, in the reign of Henry III.

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  • He intervened in the French religious wars, and also fought with Bern and other Swiss cantons, and on the murder of Henry III.

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  • His family appears to have been in good circumstances, but in the stormy reign of Henry III.

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  • In 1264 he was sent to England to mediate between Henry III.

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  • And possibly enough Hood was contemporary with that earl, who "flourished" in the reigns of Richard I., John and Henry III.

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  • Having received some ecclesiastical preferments, he acted as one of the regents of the kingdom from the death of Henry III.

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  • It passed into the hands of the houses of Rieux and Lorraine, and was raised to the rank of a duchy in the peerage of France by Henry III.

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  • In the time of the Confessor Winchelsea (Winchenesel, Winchelese, Wynchelse) was included in Rameslie which was granted by him to the abbey of Fecamp. The town remained under the lordship of the abbey until it was resumed by Henry III.

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  • In 1275, two years after the death of his first wife, Aveline de Fortibus, Edmund married Blanche of Artois, the widow of Henry III.

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  • A Saturday market and an annual fair were granted to the lord of the manor by Henry III.

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  • His chief work is a Chronicon ad annum 1054, which furnishes important and original material for the history of the emperor Henry III.

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  • The right of preferment to that see had been given to the Richelieu family by Henry III.

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  • His learning, genial disposition, and conversational powers won him the favor of Henry III.

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  • Henry, who continued his father's policy, was followed in 1018 by his brother Adalbert and in 1055 by his nephew Ernest, whose marked loyalty to the emperors Henry III.

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  • The royal processions arranged in connexion with coronations were of great antiquity, but one of the earliest to be described is that of Henry III.

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  • A fair on the 31st of October and the two following days was held under grant of Henry III.

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  • But he never desisted from his wars with the Marchers of South Wales, and in the early years of Henry III.

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  • In 1668 was published his Aurum reginae or Records concerning Queen-gold, the Brief Animadversions on Coke's Institutes in 1669, and the History of King John, Henry III.

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  • In 1266 and 1267 the merchants of Hamburg and Lubeck received from Henry III.

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  • Innocent, determined that the Hohenstaufen should not again dominate Italy, offered the crown of Sicily in turn to Richard of Cornwall, Charles of Anjou, and Henry III.

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  • He held, indeed, to his bargain with Henry III.

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  • Though municipal in its outlook, it is valuable for the general history of the kingdom, owing to the important part which London played in the agitation against the misrule of Henry III.

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  • It is said that he advised the chaplain of Henry III.

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  • This was confirmed by subsequent sovereigns from Henry III.

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  • A yearly fair was granted by John in 1204, for eight days from August 14, and two more by Henry III.

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  • He recommended him in 1580 as a "maitre des requetes" (master of requests); and Henry of Navarre, at the instance of Rohan, addressed two letters to Henry III.

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  • He succeeded so far as to make a treaty with his rival, King John, son of Henry of Trastamara, for the succession, by virtue of which his daughter Catherine became the wife of Henry III.

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  • The duke of Lancaster then claimed the kingdom as due to himself by virtue of his descent from Henry III.

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  • The claim which he put forward involved, to all appearance, a strange falsification of history, for it seemed to rest upon the supposition that Edmund of Lancaster, and not Edward I., was the eldest son of Henry III.

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  • If, on the other hand, succession through females was valid, he could trace his descent through his mother from Henry III.

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  • Bruno had been well received at Toulouse, where he had lectured on astronomy; even better fortune awaited him at Paris, especially at the hands of Henry III.

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  • It was originally attached to the hospital of God's House, founded in the time of Henry III.

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  • Grants and confirmations were made from the reign of Henry III.

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  • In the same year Alexander joined the English barons in their struggle against John, and led an army into England in support of their cause; but on the conclusion of peace after John's death between his youthful son Henry III.

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  • He shared his brother's fortunes, and at one time had to take refuge from Henry III.

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  • The earliest instance in English history is the appointment of the earl of Pembroke with the assent of the loyal barons on the accession of Henry III.

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  • Moreover, a similar story has been told of a daughter of the emperor Henry III.

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  • After presiding over a synod at Pavia, he joined the emperor Henry III.

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  • He supported Henry III.

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  • The assizes for the county were held in the reign of Henry III.

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  • Rochester Castle was in 1216 captured by the dauphin of France, to whom nearly all Kent submitted, and during the wars of Henry III.

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  • The desperate position of the papacy in the 11th century obliged Henry III.

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  • But was it possible for the relation between Empire and Papacy to remain what Henry III.

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  • It was destroyed by Henry III.

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  • The first subject of dispute was the inheritance of the count of Provence, Raymond-Berenger IV., father of Margaret and of Eleanor, wife of Henry III.

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  • She retained her influence in the reign of Henry IV., conveyed the bodies of Catherine de' Medici and Henry III.

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  • The right to hold a fair was granted to the abbey by Henry III.

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  • He then appeared in England fighting for Henry III.

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  • He sided with the English barons against John in 1215, and accompanied Henry III.

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  • Its object was to secure a solid Anglo-French alliance against Spain without the condition upon which Henry III.

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  • In 1216 Magna Carta, a copy of which is to be found in the Red Book of the Exchequer, was granted to the Irish by Henry III.

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  • In 14th-century documents it is described as a town or borough governed by a portreeve, who frequently came into conflict with the parson of St John's church, who had become lord of the manor of Yeovil during the reign of Henry III.

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  • This was an early conception, and in early times the order in question was simply verbal; thus some letters patent of Henry III.

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  • Farnham Castle, on a hill north of the town, the seat of the bishops of Winchester, was first built by Henry de Blois, bishop of Winchester, and brother of King Stephen; but it was razed by Henry III.

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  • Other charters were granted by Henry III.

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  • In 1152 the place is mentioned as the seat of a synod convened by the papal legate, Cardinal Paparo; in 1224 it was chosen by Lucas de Netterville, archbishop of Armagh, for the foundation of the Dominican friary of which there are still remains; and in 1228 the two divisions of the town received separate incorporation from Henry III.

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  • The archbishop claimed under charters of King ZEthelstand and Henry III.

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  • In 1213 the pope, became not only the nominal suzerain but, de facto and de jure, the veritable sovereign of England, and during the last years of John and the first years of Henry III.

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  • So began the period of misrule by which Henry III.

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  • In view of the low esteem into which the Order of St Michael had fallen, Henry III.

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  • In 1201 King John increased the farm paid by the burgesses, while Henry III.

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  • In 1581 Mary accepted the advice of Catherine de' Medici and Henry III.

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  • Early in his reign Albert made some concessions to the reformers, who were still strong in Bavaria; but about 1563 he changed his attitude, favoured the decrees of the council of Trent, and pressed forward the work of 1308, died in 1312, leaving a son, Henry III.

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  • Lower Bavaria was governed by these three princes until 1333, when Henry III.

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  • No mention occurs in Domesday, but it is given in a list of serjeanties of the reign of Henry III.

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  • Atherstone is mentioned in Domesday among the possessions of Countess Godiva, the widow of Leofric. In the reign of Henry III.

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  • John's younger son Richard, king of the Romans, left a son Edmund, earl of Cornwall, with whom his line ended; his elder son Henry III.

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  • Corfe Castle was held for the empress Maud against King Stephen in 1139, was frequently the residence of King John, and was a stronghold of the barons against Henry III.

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  • Brixton and Kennington are mentioned in Domesday; and in Vauxhall is concealed the name of Falkes de Breaute, an unscrupulous adventurer of the time of John and Henry III.

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  • Under these popes a new era began for the church, anc - in thus reforming the Papacy Henry III.

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  • At the age of ten, Alexander, at York, wedded a child bride, Margaret, daughter of Henry III.

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  • In 1046 it returned to the German Henry III.

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  • In 1255 William le Boteler obtained a charter from Henry III.

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  • Gilbert's son, Gilbert, earl of Angus (c. 1244-1307), took part in the fighting between Henry III.

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  • He returned in 1404 with the title of king, which he had secured from Henry III.

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  • Battle Of Dover This famous and important naval victory was won off the town of Dover by the ships of the Cinque Ports on the 21st of August 1217, during the minority of King Henry III.

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  • The political importance of the battle was very great, for it gave the death-blow to the cause of the barons who supported Louis, and it fixed Henry III.

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  • Innocent IV., in his determination to crush the Hohenstaufens, offered the kingdom in turn to Richard, earl of Cornwall, to Edward, son of Henry III.

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  • The manor was held by Falkes de Breaute (whence the name, Falkes Hall) in the time of John and Henry III.

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  • Brieg, or, as it is called in early documents, Civitas Altae Ripae, obtained municipal rights in 1250 from Duke Henry III.

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  • But the fanatical preachers of the League clamoured furiously for vengeance, and on the 1st of August 1589, while Henry III.

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  • In October King John repeated grants, and Henry III.

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  • Wenlock received the grant of a market from Henry III.

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  • Geoffrey's grandson released his right to King John, and the castle remained with the crown until Henry III.

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  • This is most noticeable in her hostility to her brother-in-law Charles of Anjou, who had married her sister Beatrice, and her devotion to Henry III.

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  • This custom was continued after Henry III.

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  • The castle, which may have been built before Henry III.

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  • It appears by the confirmation of Henry III.

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  • The succeeding century Brought the Empire to the acme of its power, until Henry III.

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  • King John in 1215 granted them freedom from toll throughout England except the city of London, and in 1227 Henry III.

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  • The first authentic mention of Nuremberg, which seems to have been called into existence by the foundation of the castle, occurs in a document of 1050; and about the same period it received from the emperor Henry III.

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  • The most interesting portion is the north-west wing, which was erected by Francis I., and contains the room where Henry, duke of Guise, was assassinated by order of Henry III.

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  • Later Simon made peace with Henry III.

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  • A curious illustration of this popular animosity is found in the insertion of a clause in the charters granted by Henry III.

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  • The privilege of market was granted in 1227 by a charter of Henry III.

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  • This was confirmed by Henry III.

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  • His original name was Poppo, and he was bishop of Brixen when the emperor Henry III.

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  • Side by side with his indignation at the idea of cheating his Saracen enemies may be mentioned his answer to those who after Taillebourg complained that he had let off Henry III.

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  • He obtained men and provisions from Henry III.

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  • The site of a castle built by Richard, brother of Henry III.

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  • The charter itself indicates Runnimede by name, but this may have included the island, which is the traditional site and was in 1217 the meeting-place of Henry III.

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  • Yet Henry maintained the independence of the clergy against the pope Leo IX., and claimed Lorraine from the emperor Henry III.

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  • In an interview at Ivois, he reproached the emperor with the violation of promises, and Henry III.

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  • In 1054 he was sent to the emperor Henry III.

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  • Subsequent to the Conquest many kings and queens were buried here, from Henry III.

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  • Flitt was parcel of the manor of Luton, and formed part of the marriage portion of Eleanor, sister of Henry III.

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  • He fought for Henry III.

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  • In 1252 the burgesses received their first charter from Henry III.

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  • He favoured Charles of Anjou, and declared in June 1263 that the papal grant of the kingdom to Edmund, son of Henry III.

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  • It was burned by King John in 1216 and by Henry III.

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  • His teaching at Oxford in 1250-1257 fell precisely into the years of the worst misgovernance of Henry III.

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  • The mendicants, Dominican and Franciscan, took rapid root in England; the number of friaries erected in the reign of Henry III.

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  • The baronage were angry and suspicious, for many of their customary rights rested on immemorial and unchartered antiquity, while others were usurpations from the weakness of John or Henry III.

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  • Population was steadily increasing, and with it commerce; the intellectual activity which had marked the reign of Henry III.

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  • There had been a long interval of peace in the i3th century, because Henry III.

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  • It required all Elizabeths finesse to run with the hare and hunt with the hounds; but she was, as Henry III.

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  • A few letters survive from the time of the Norman kings, but the earliest collection of English royal letters is the Letters of Henry III.

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  • The city received a new charter from Henry III.

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  • At a council held by the emperor Henry III.

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  • Newton Bushel was so called from Robert Bussell or Bushel, foster-child and kinsman of Theobald de Englishville, who was made lord of the manor by Henry III.

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  • At the time of the Domesday Survey, the church of Avebury (Avreberie, Abury), with two hides attached, was held in chief by Rainbold, a priest, and was bestowed by Henry III.

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  • The borough was never incorporated, but certain liberties, including exemption from toll and passage, were granted to the townsmen by Henry III.

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  • In matters concerning the succession in Flanders, Hainaut and Navarre; in the quarrels of the princes regarding the Empire, and in those of Henry III.

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  • By a treaty signed at Paris (1259), Henry III.

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  • In order to oust his rival Henry of Guise, Henry III.

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  • This would have reduced peace of Henry III.

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  • Thanks to this he was on the point of seizing Paris, Assassins- when in his turn he was assassinated on the 1st of Henry III.

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  • The states-general, called together ten times in the 16th century, and at the death of Henry III.

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  • The Wednesday market, which is still held, was granted by Henry III.

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  • The castle was besieged by William Rufus, was taken by John in the wars with the barons, and again by Prince Edward, son of Henry III.

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  • He twice incurred a well-merited rebuke from Henry III.

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  • Grosseteste realized that the misrule of Henry III.

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  • On the death of William of Kilkenny in 1256 the monks elected him bishop of Ely, to the annoyance of Henry III.

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  • He was succeeded by David II., at whose death without children in 1246 the sovereignty of Gwynedd, and consequently of Wales, reverted to his three nephews, sons of his half-brother Griffith, who had perished in 1244 whilst trying to escape from the Tower of London, where Henry III.

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  • But the duke of Guises audacity did not make Henry III.

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  • In 1251 he protested against a papal mandate enjoining the English clergy to pay Henry III.

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