Henry vi Sentence Examples

henry vi
  • The patent for it, dated 10th of May 1438, is for a warden and 20 scholars, to be called " the Warden and College of the souls of all the faithful departed," to study and pray " for the soul of King Henry VI.

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  • With the archbishop of Canterbury he received Henry VI.

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  • When William II., the last monarch of the Norman race, died, Henry VI.

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  • Facing the castle, on the western side of the pill, stand the considerable remains of Monkton Priory, a Benediction house founded by Earl William Marshal as a cell to the abbey of Seez or Sayes in Normandy, but under Henry VI.

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  • Since the days of Godfrey and Baldwin I., Egypt had been a 3 Manuel was an ambitious sovereign, apparently aiming at a world-monarchy, such as was afterwards attempted from the other side by Henry VI.

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  • The heirs of the Norman kings were the Hohenstaufen; and we have already seen Henry VI.

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  • On the one hand he aimed at the conquest of Constantinople as Henry VI.

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  • They had indeed, as has been already noticed, done even more; they had used the name of Crusade, from the days of Henry VI.

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  • Having crossed to England with Henry, the queen was crowned in Westminster Abbey on the 23rd of February 1421, and in the following December gave birth to a son, afterwards King Henry VI.

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  • The date of the grant of the town at an annual fee-farm of 8 marks is uncertain, but in the reign of Henry VI.

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  • As Albert left no children, Meissen was seized by the emperor Henry VI.

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  • Dying at Rouen in 1439, he left by Isabel, widow of Richard Beauchamp, earl of Worcester, a son, Earl Henry, who was created duke of Warwick, 1445, and is alleged, but without authority, to have been crowned king of the Isle of Wight by Henry VI.

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  • In 1195 Conrad was succeeded by his son-in-law Henry, son of Henry the Lion, duke of Saxony, who was a loyal supporter of the emperor Henry VI.

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  • In Palestine he quarrelled with Richard I., king of England, captured him on his homeward journey and handed him over to the emperor Henry VI.

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  • On the 10th of May 1254 Conrad died, leaving his infant son Conradin, as Henry VI.

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  • They were always ready to come to blows, and gave still more signal proofs of their enmity during the Sicilian War in behalf of the emperor Henry VI.

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  • For contemporary authorities see under HENRY VI.

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  • In spite of his conciliatory policy, Clement angered Henry VI.

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  • The golden circlet was confined to dukes and marquesses till 1 444, when Henry VI.

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  • The dignity of a viscount was first created by Henry VI.

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  • The charter of incorporation was given by Henry VI.

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  • King Henry VI.

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  • Still hoping to regain his former position, he took advantage of a league against Henry VI.

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  • The authorities for the life of Henry the Lion are those dealing with the reign of the emperor Frederick I., and the early years of his son King Henry VI.

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  • During the Wars of the Roses he showed his sympathy with the Lancastrian party after the defeat of Henry VI.

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  • But the people were hostile to him, and he was driven from his bishopric in 1429; whereupon he attached himself to the English court, and in 1431 endeavoured to procure the surrender of Reims to the English, so that Henry VI.

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  • They did not secure their independence nor become "abbeys" till the reign of Henry VI.

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  • There are several old charities, including the hospital of St John the Baptist, founded in 1109 but modernized; the hospital of St Anne, founded probably in the reign of Henry VI.

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  • In 1190 Louis died and Hermann by his energetic measures frustrated the attempt of the emperor Henry VI.

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  • Evil days did not, however, come in the time of Henry VI., who, although without his fathers greatness, had some of his determination and energy, and was at least his equal Henry VI in ambition.

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  • By it private war was declared unlawful, except in cases where justice could not be obtained; a chief justiciar was appointed for the Empire; all tolls and mints erected since the death of Henry VI.

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  • He accompanied King Henry VI.

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  • Though utterly baseless, the story gained currency in the Mirrour for Magistrates, and was adopted in Shakespeare's 2 Henry VI.

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  • From 1457 to 1459 a truce was made between Scotland and the Lancastrian party, then in power, but in July 1460, Henry VI.

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  • The latter founded the cathedral; but the town was almost entirely destroyed by earthquake in 1170, and devastated by Henry VI.

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  • Warwick, the king-maker, and Queen Margaret were aided in the expedition which in 1470 again placed Henry VI.

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  • The university was founded in 1436 by Henry VI.

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  • He reached Paris at Christmas 1191, having concluded on his way an alliance with the emperor Henry VI.

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  • He left by his wife, Beatrix, five sons, of whom the eldest afterwards became emperor as Henry VI.

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  • These early charters were confirmed by several succeeding kings, Henry VI.

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  • He had been kindly treated by Henry V., and his name appears at the head of the knights made by the little Henry VI.

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  • In 1442 he relieved successively Saint Sever, Dax, Marmande, La Reole, and in 1444 Henry VI.

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  • The church of High Halden, in the neighbourhood, is remarkable for its octagonal wooden tower constructed of huge timbers, with a belfry of wooden tiles (shingles), of the time of Henry VI.

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  • Rene took part in the negotiations with the English at Tours in 1444, and peace was consolidated by the marriage of his younger daughter, Margaret, with Henry VI.

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  • When just fourteen she was betrothed to Henry VI.

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  • This, like the scandal concerning Margaret and Suffolk, is baseless; the tradition, however, continued and found expression in the Mirror for Magistrates and in Drayton's Heroical Epistles, as well as in Shakespeare's Henry VI.

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  • It has thus occasionally happened that the dukes of Cornwall have not been princes of Wales, as Henry VI.

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  • John and Philip wrote to the emperor to beg him to detain his captive at all costs, but Henry VI.

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  • He was a pious young man, simple to the Cbaracter verge of imbecility; a little later he developed actual henry vi.

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  • But there seemed to he a curse on whatever Henry VI.

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  • It is this fact which accounts for the growing bitterness of the Yorkist and Lancastrian parties during the last years of Henry VI.

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  • Retaliatory executions began, though on a small scale, and when York reached London he at last began to talk of his rights to the crown, and to propose the deposition of Henry VI.

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  • He then moved to London, and which was being threatened by Kentish levies raised in Warwicks name, delivered the city, and next day caused the unhappy Henry VI.

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  • As regards domestic agriculture, it has been often stated that the I5th century was the golden age of the English peasant, and State of that his prosperity was little affected either by the the rvral unhappy French wars of Henry VI.

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  • The present king might be unscrupulous and avaricious, but he was cautious, intelligent and economical; no one would have wished to recall the rgime of that crowned saint Henry VI.

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  • In 1447 it was granted by Henry VI.

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  • In 1463, after it had been recovered a second time by the queen, Henry VI.

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  • Meantime the prince, who had now, in 1443, been created by Henry VI.

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  • Even the walled towns, Kilkenny, Ross, Wexford, Kinsale, Youghal, Clonmel, Kilmallock, Thomastown, Fethard and Cashel, were!almost starved Henry VI.

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  • Of amiable disposition, he hastened to make peace with Henry VI.

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  • A mayor of Woodstock was witness to a deed in 1398, but the earliest known charter of incorporation was that from Henry VI.

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  • Anxious to retain the support of the pope, Frederick promulgated a bull at Eger on the 12th of July 1213, by which he renounced all lands claimed by the pope since the death of the emperor Henry VI.

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  • He crowned Katherine at Westminster (loth, February 1421), and on the 6th of December baptized her child Henry VI.

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  • Barbarossa, perceiving the advantage that would accrue to his house if he could join the crown of Sicily to that of Germany, and thus deprive the popes of their allies in Lower Italy, procured the marriage of his son Henry VI.

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  • Never were the leaders of the Church and the in such jeopardy as during the reign of Barbarossa's Emperor son, Henry VI.

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  • This vigorous despot, whose ambi- Henry vI tions were not all chimerical, had succeeded where his predecessors, including Frederick, had failed.

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  • The struggle only ceased in 1444, when the English council, in which a peace party had at last been formed, concluded a two-year truce with King Charles, which they hoped to turn into a permanent treaty, on the condition that their king should retain what he held in Normandy and Guienne, but sign away his claim to the French crown, and relinquish the few places outside the two duchies which were still in his power-terms very similar to those rejected at Arras nine years before but there was now much less to give up. To mark the reconciliation of the two powers Henry VI.

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  • But there was bitterness and mistrust between the old Lancastrian faction and the Nevilles, and Queen Margaret Restorarefused to cross to England or to trust her son in the Henry Vi.

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