Henry iv Sentence Examples

henry iv
  • In November 1408 Chicheley was back at Westminster, when Henry IV.

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  • His mother married Francois de Balzac, marquis d'Entragues, and one of her daughters, Henriette, marchioness of Verneuil, afterwards became the mistress of Henry IV.

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  • He was accused of desiring to make himself pope; more probably he thought of serving as a papal condottiere against the emperor Henry IV.

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  • From 1604 to 1612 he studied at the school of La Fleche, which Henry IV.

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  • Two years before he left school he was selected as one of the twenty-four who went forth to receive the heart of Henry IV.

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  • After a period of retirement at Fonte Avellana, he proceeded in 1069 as papal legate to Germany, and persuaded the emperor Henry IV.

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  • There is a fine park outside the town belonging to the duke of Arenberg, whose ancestor, Charles de Ligne, bought it from Henry IV.

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  • Educated at the Lycee Corot, and the Rcole Normale he was successively professor of philosophy at the Lycee d'Angers 1881-3, at the Lycee de Clermont 1883-8, at the College Rollin 1888-9, at the Lycee Henry IV.

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  • He was educated at the College of Henry IV.

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  • It was in her castle of Canossa that Henry IV.

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  • But Wratyslaus of Bohemia speedily appealed to the emperor for help, and a war between Poland and the Empire was only prevented by the sudden rupture of Henry IV.

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  • Isabella succeeded to the throne (1474) on the death of Henry IV.

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  • A space of over 200 acres to the east of the palace is covered by the park, which is traversed by a canal dating from the reign of Henry IV.

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  • The "Luck of Eden Hall," which has been celebrated in a ballad by the duke of Wharton, and in a second ballad written by Uhland, the German poet, and translated by Longfellow, is an enamelled goblet, kept in a leathern case dating from the times of Henry IV.

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  • By her first husband she had no children, by her second a son who died in infancy, and a daughter, Jeanne d'Albret, who became the mother of Henry IV.

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  • Walsingham is the main authority for the history of England during the reigns of Richard II., Henry IV.

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  • He had three sons and four daughters, and was succeeded by his eldest son Charles; one of his daughters, Jeanne, became the wife of Henry IV.

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  • About 1367 she married Sir Hugh Swynford (1340-1372), a Lincolnshire man, by whom she had a son, Thomas (c. 1 3 68 - 1 433), who was a friend and companion of Henry IV.

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  • Egbert was a rival of the emperor Henry IV.

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  • The family produced not a few turbulent warriors during the Hundred Years' War, and the cardinal's father, Francois du Plessis, seigneur de Richelieu, began his career by killing the murderer of his elder brother and then fighting through the wars of religion, first as a favourite of Henry III., and after his death under Henry IV.

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  • In 1606, at the age of twenty-one, Richelieu was nominated bishop of Luton by Henry IV.

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  • His governor, Marshal D'Ornano, was arrested by Richelieu's orders, and then his confidant, Henri de Talleyrand, marquis de Chalais and Vendome, the natural sons of Henry IV.

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  • The latter part of Bodin's life was spent at Laon, which he is said to have persuaded to declare for the League in 1589, and for Henry IV.

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  • A few years later William of Malmesbury adds a love adventure at Cordova, a compact with the devil, the story of a speaking statue that foretold Gerbert's death at Jerusalem - a prophecy fulfilled, somewhat as in the case of Henry IV.

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  • In 1190 tenants of Wisbech Barton acquired an exemption from tolls throughout England, confirmed by John, Henry IV.

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  • The defence of the castle was committed by Henry IV.

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  • He was created cardinal-bishop of Ostia in 1078 by Gregory VII., to whom he displayed such loyalty, especially as papal legate in Germany (1084), that he was imprisoned for a time by Henry IV.

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  • Their tone is hostile to Henry IV.

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  • Af ter the death of her husband, by whom she had no children, she married Henry of Albret, king of Navarre; and thus the count 563 ship of Armagnac came back to the French crown along with the other dominions of Henry IV.

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  • King Henry IV.

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  • Holinshed's Chronicle was the chief source of Shakespeare's account of Hotspur in Henry IV.

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  • After spending some time in Rome he visited eastern Europe, and subsequently made the acquaintance of Segur Pardaillan, a representative of Henry, king of Navarre, afterwards Henry IV.

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  • There are also an ancient church crowning the eastern hill, and a curious fortified warehouse (called the New Works), dating probably from the 14th century, when a trading company was established here under a grant from Henry IV.

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  • In the wars of religion Dijon sided with the League, and only opened its gates to Henry IV.

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  • Later charters were obtained from Henry IV.

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  • In its sixth chapter the question whether it is lawful to overthrow a tyrant is freely discussed and answered in the affirmative, a circumstance which brought much odium upon the Jesuits, especially after the assassination of Henry IV.

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  • The most illustrious member of the Bethune family was Maximilien, baron of Rosny, and afterwards duke of Sully, minister of Henry IV.

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  • It is true that his children by this lady were born before he married her; but they were made legitimate by act of parliament, and, though Henry IV.

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  • It will be noted that this crown is, like its predecessors, what is known as an open crown, without any arches rising from the circlet, but in the accounts of the coronation of Henry IV.

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  • These arches must have been a later addition, and possibly were first added for the coronation of Henry IV.

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  • Their dynasty of monarchs can be traced back with tolerable certainty to a period coincident with the reign of Henry IV.

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  • The inhabitants appear to have had a prescriptive right to hold a cattle-market, which was confirmed by Henry IV.

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  • Moreover, the mightiest secular ruler was but a poor sinner dependent for his eternal welfare on the Church and its head, the pope, who in this way necessarily exercised an indirect control over the civil government, which even the emperor Henry IV.

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  • Gebhard had been a leading opponent of the emperor Henry IV.

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  • The bishop of Liege introduced it in Germany in 1082, and three years later a synod held at Mainz in the presence of the emperor Henry IV.

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  • In 1589 its cannon decided the battle of Argues in favour of Henry IV.

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  • The Saxons, however, were not quite subdued; risings took place from time to time, and the opponents of Henry IV.

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  • During the Wars of Religion, the Huguenots repeatedly made unsuccessful attempts to seize the fortress, which opened its gates to Henry IV.

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  • Henceforth the policy of France was directed by Richelieu, who took up in its main features the system of Protestant alliances and opposition to the power of Austria and Spain, which had been begun by Henry IV.

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  • His nature was timid, lethargic and melancholy, and his court was not marked by the scandals which had been seen under Henry IV.

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  • During the 1 rth century the Thuringians refused to pay tithes to Siegfried, archbishop of Mainz, and this was probably one reason why they joined the rising of the Saxons against the emperor Henry IV.

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  • He himself was an alchemist; and believing the transmutation of metals to be a possibility, he carried out experiments in the hope of effecting it; and he was instrumental in obtaining the repeal, in 1689, of the statute of Henry IV.

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  • Champlain returned to France and again related to Henry IV.

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  • The Chronicle begins with the accession of Henry IV.

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  • On the death of her father, who was succeeded by her brother Henry IV.

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  • Near it are the remains of the old Benedictine monastery of Homburg or Hohenburg, where the emperor Henry IV.

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  • From the year 1425 the provinces were desolated by party wars among the lesser nobles (parientes mayores) but these came to an end in 1460-1498, when Henry IV.

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  • The Jesuits were banished from France in 1594, but were allowed to return by Henry IV.

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  • The Jesuit influence at Rome was supported by the Spanish ambassador; but when Henry IV.

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  • Further charters were granted by Henry IV.

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  • Samuel de Champlain, who had seen service under Henry IV.

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  • Strictly speaking, none of the Lancasters after Thomas had any clear title either by grant or otherwise; such title as they had merged in the crown when Henry IV.

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  • Subsequently he joined Henry of Navarre, whom he succeeded in withdrawing from the corrupting influence of the house of Valois (1576), and to whom he rendered valuable service, both as a soldier and as a counsellor, in the wars that issued in his elevation to the throne as Henry IV.

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  • It was not until the reign of Henry IV.

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  • So the system and policy which were the creations of Henry IV.

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  • For other documents and modern authorities see under HENRY IV.

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  • His successor, Leo XI., undisguisedly French in sympathy, reigned but twenty-seven days - a sorry return for the 300,000 ducats which his election is rumoured to have cost Henry IV.

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  • The growing resources of the Silesian duchies are exemplified by the strength of the army with which Henry II., duke of Lower Silesia, broke the force of the Mongol invasion at the battle of Liegnitz (1241), and by the glamour at the court of the Minnesinger, Henry IV.

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  • This was a pretended revival of an order supposed to have been created by Henry IV.

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  • In 1608 it was in France united by Henry IV.

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  • It was of short duration and purchased by hard conditions, but it implied the recognition by Henry IV.

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  • After studying law he practised at Paris as an advocate, but, having met with no great success, entered the church, and soon gained the highest popularity as a preacher, rising to the dignity of canon, and being appointed preacher in ordinary to Marguerite, wife of Henry IV.

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  • It received, however, the warm support of Henry IV.

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  • A custom by the religious to obtain exemption for lands let to their tenants by means of bulls from the pope was put an end to by a statute of Henry IV.

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  • Of the fairs, those on December 7th to 9th and March 24th to 26th are held under a charter of Henry IV.

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  • The princes had long been chafing under the royal power; they had shaken even so stern an autocrat as Henry III., and the authority of Henry IV.

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  • When this struggle began it may be said in general that Henry was supported by the cities and the lower classes, while Rudolph Henry IV.

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  • After some desultory fighting Henry IV.

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  • Henrys chief friends were his nephews, the two Hohenstaufen princes, Frederick and Conrad, to whose father Frederick the emperor Henry IV.

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  • Lothairs rebuff in Bohemia stiffened the backs of Frederick and Conrad, and in order to contend with them the king secured a powerful ally by marrying his daughter Gertrude to Henry the Proud, a grandson of Welf, whom Henry IV.

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  • The result was that Protestant princes, including the three temporal electors, united in placing their grievances before the emperor; obtaining no redress they met at Torgau in 1591 and offered help to Henry IV.

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  • It acquired, however, immense importance through its alliance with Henry IV.

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  • One is concerned to glorify at all costs the Carolingian house; another sacrifices almost everything to attack the emperor Henry IV.

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  • Lambert, a monk of Hersfeld, and Widukinds countryman, Bruno, in his De bello Saxonico, tell the story of the great contest between the emperor Henry IV.

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  • During the religious wars, Carcassonne several times changed hands, and it did not recognize Henry IV.

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  • Conti, who belonged to the older faith, appears to have taken no part in the wars of religion until 1587, when his distrust of Henry, third duke of Guise, caused him to declare against the League, and to support Henry of Navarre, afterwards King Henry IV.

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  • In 1589 after the murder of Henry III., king of France, he was one of the two princes of the blood who signed the declaration recognizing Henry IV.

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  • In 1605 Conti, whose first wife Jeanne de Cdeme, heiress of Bonnetable, had died in 1601, married the beautiful and witty Louise Marguerite (1574-1631), daughter of Henry duke of Guise and Catherine of Cleves, whom, but for the influence of his mistress Gabrielle d'Estrees, Henry IV.

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  • When his half-brother became king as Henry IV.

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  • The details are not quite clear, but it seems tolerably certain that the prince and the bishop, anxious to retain their power, sought to induce Henry IV.

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  • Charged by Gloucester with treason against Henry IV.

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  • For documents and modern authorities see under HENRY IV.

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  • Surprised by the Spaniards in 1597, the city was recaptured from them after a long siege by Henry IV.

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  • Owen thereupon took up arms, and when Henry IV.

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  • Another fair was granted by Henry IV.

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  • Two round towers (15th century) are a survival of the castle of Beaune, dismantled by Henry IV.

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  • On his mother's side he was a grandnephew of Pere Coton, the confessor of Henry IV.

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  • On his return he wrote a Relation of the State of France, with sketches of the leading persons at the court of Henry IV.

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  • Through John of Gaunt it came to Henry IV.

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  • As early as 1073, therefore, we find the citizens of Worms successfully rising against their bishop in order to provide the emperor Henry IV.

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  • From the court of Catherine de Bourbon, at Pau, where he was well received, Perez passed to that of Henry IV.

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  • It was built between 1065 and 1069, but was laid in ruins by the Saxons in 1074; again it was built and again destroyed during the struggle between the emperor Henry IV.

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  • For Owen's brilliant but brief career and ruthless treatment of English settlers and Anglophil Welshmen, his countrymen had not unnaturally to pay a heavy penalty in the severe statutes which the affrighted parliaments of Henry IV.

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  • He hated lecturing, and there were those among his friends who erroneously believed that with the success of Henry IV.

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  • He opposed the Protestants until the end of the reign of Henry III., but espoused the cause of Henry IV.

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  • An unwise foreign policy simultaneously injured the royal prestige, for Alphonso married his own niece, Joanna, daughter of Henry IV.

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  • The extraordinary comings and goings of strangers to Winchester College, just opposite the gates of the bishop's palace at Wolvesey in 1399, suggest that he took part in the revolution of Henry IV.

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  • On the 23rd of July 1400 he lent Henry IV.

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  • Among its numerous monuments is one to Rudolph of Swabia, the rival of the emperor Henry IV.

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  • The use of the title was resented by the emperor Henry IV.

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  • In 1411 John the Fearless contracted an alliance with Henry IV.

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  • This book, the "soldier's Bible" (or "breviary," according to others), as Henry IV.

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  • One of these vogts was a certain Henry, who died about 1120, after having been entrusted by the emperor Henry IV.

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  • In 1603 De Monts received from Henry IV.

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  • In this he was confirmed by two charters of the emperor Henry IV.

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  • The people rose in revolt, but by command of the emperor Henry IV.

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  • From him it passed to Geoffrey, duke of Lorraine, and afterwards to the countess Matilda, whose support of the pope led to the conquest of Mantua by the emperor Henry IV.

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  • Here died Henry IV.

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  • In 1397 he was chosen archbishop of Canterbury in succession to Thomas Arundel, who had just been banished from the realm, but he lost this position when the new king Henry IV.

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  • It was ravaged by the English in 1379, and, in 1591, owing to its support of the League, had to sustain a siege conducted by Marshal Jean d'Aumont, general of Henry IV.

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  • The main events in that long struggle were the victory of Argues over Charles, duke of Mayenne, on the 28th of September 1589; 9f Ivr_y, on the 14th of March 1590; the siege of Paris (1590); of Rouen (1592); the meeting of the Estates of the League (1593), which the Satire Menippee turned to ridicule; and finally the conversion of Henry IV.

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  • The works dealing with Henry IV.

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  • From the Lacys the manor passed to Thomas Plantagenet, duke of Lancaster, through his marriage with Alice de Lacy, and so came to the crown on the accession of Henry IV.

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  • In his secular capacity he led the levies of Calahorra in the civil wars of the reign of Henry IV.

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  • For four generations the land was comparatively quiet, but the great rebellion of Owen Glendower in the reign of Henry IV.

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  • It was read to a parliament summoned in his shin of name on the 3oth of September, and the throne was Henry Iv.

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  • The rising of the earls was only the first and the least dangerous of the trials of Henry IV.

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  • By winning the battle of Shrewsbury Henry IV.

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  • It would be going too far to seek the origin of the Yorkist partyas some have donein the old enmity of the houses of March, Norfolk and Salisbury against Henry IV.

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  • The subjection of the Netherlands was now almost out of the question, and although Elizabeths help had not enabled the Protestant cause to win in France, Henry IV.

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  • From 1216 we have nothing but Ramsay, Stubbs, Longmans Political History and monographs (some of them good), until we come to Wylies Henry IV.

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  • As councillor to the duke of Mayenne he sought to reconcile him with Henry IV.

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  • Various suitors for her hand were proposed, including Henry IV.

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  • He was designated by Duke Godfrey as his successor; but the emperor Henry IV.

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  • He was, however, recalled to the aid of Gregory VII., besieged in San Angelo by Henry IV.

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  • In the midst of these difficulties Parma received orders to abandon the task on which he had spent himself for so many years, and to raise the siege of Paris, which was blockaded by Henry IV.

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  • In 1411 he went on an embassy abroad, and in 1412 became chancellor again, his return to power being accompanied by a change in the foreign policy of Henry IV.

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  • Near it is the plain of Ivry, where Henry IV.

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  • He also occupied Bohemia, till driven out by the emperor Henry IV.

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  • In 1516 Spanish Navarre was finally annexed by Ferdinand the Catholic. French Navarre survived as an independent little kingdom till it was united to the crown of France by Henry IV.

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  • It was a republican state within the kingdom, and, being unwilling to break with it, Henry IV.

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  • Despite the leagues of either faith, religious liberty was now confirmed by the more free and generous spirit of Henry IV.

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  • At all events, when the kingdom had been reconquered from the Spaniards and religious strife ended, in order to fulfil his engagements, Henry IV.

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  • Without much learning and sceptical in religious matters, he had the Character lively intelligence of the Gascon, more subtle than of Henry iv.

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  • He then provided for the Henry IV.

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  • Inspired by Barthlemy de Laffmas (1545-1612), controller-general of commerce, and by Olivier de Serres (1539_1619),i Henry IV.

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  • Moreover, under insinuating and crafty pretexts, Henry IV.

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  • The great external affair of the reign was the projected war upon which Henry IV.

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  • The Cornette blanche of Arques, the Poule au p81 of the peasant, successes as a lover and a dashing spirit, have combined to surround Henry IV.

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  • The cautious Lutheran princes of Germany, especially Augustus I., elector of Saxony, were not enthusiastic in support of Gebhard, whose friendly relations with the Calvinists were not to their liking; and although Henry of Navarre, afterwards Henry IV.

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  • In his later years Philip added to all his other burdens a costly intervention in France to support the league and resist the succession of Henry IV.

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  • Much as he mingled with society, and with persons of importance in church and state, his single interference in political matters was in 1593, when his persuasions induced the pope, Clement VIII., to withdraw the excommunication and anathema of Henry IV.

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  • This grant was confirmed by Henry III., Edward I., Henry IV.

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  • As chancellor of the university of Oxford, an office to which he was elected in 1407 and again in 1410, Courtenay asserted the independence of the university against Thomas Arundel, archbishop of Canterbury, in 1411; but the archbishop, supported by Henry IV.

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  • In 1598 Oldenbarneveldt took part in special embassies to Henry IV.

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  • He did indeed join the league of Torgau, which voted assistance to Henry IV.

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  • Having assured themselves of the support of Henry IV.

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  • We should have to tell of the great and rapid increase of the Church; of its powerful influence among the nobles and the bourgeoisie; of its direful persecutions; of its St Bartholomew massacre with 70,000 victims; of its regrettable though perhaps inevitable entanglements in politics and war; and finally of its attaining not only tolerance but also honourable recognition and protection when Henry IV.

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  • It sustained several sieges, the most noteworthy of which, in 1591, was the result of its opposition to Henry IV.

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  • At length, after much blood had been shed in the dispute, Philip Bennett, a monk residing in the town, succeeded by his eloquence, on the festival of Corpus Christi, 1412, in persuading the authorities of the two corporations to send to Henry IV.

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  • This fact, together with the strong Italian bias of the Valois, serves to explain in some degree the reason why the Counter-Reformation entailed those fierce entangled civil wars, massacres of St Bartholomew, murders of the Guises, regicides, treasons and empoisonments that terminated with the compromise of Henry IV.

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  • The decay of the town began in the Toth century owing to the recession of the sea, and it received another blow in the suppression of its priory by Henry IV.

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