James i Sentence Examples

james i
  • The building was enlarged by Edward IV., by Henry VIII., who made it one of his chief residences, by James I.

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  • The first Napier of Merchiston, "Alexander Napare," acquired the Merchiston estate before the year 1438, from James I.

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  • He was a younger son of David Murray, 5th Viscount Stormont (c. 1665-1731), the dignity having been granted in 1621 by James I.

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  • In 1585 Lord Deputy Sir John Perrot undertook the shiring of Ulster (excluding the counties Antrim and Down, which had already taken shape); and his work, though of little immediate effect owing to the rising of Hugh O'Neill, served as a basis for the division of the territory at the plantation of Ulster in the reign of James I.

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  • This, if we do not count the proclamation of James I.

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  • There was in the time of Elizabeth, James I.

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  • The government continued to struggle against this spirit of defiance; proclamations of James I.

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  • Orihuela was captured by the Moors in 713, and retaken by James I.

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  • In 1246 he married Beatrice, daughter and heiress of Raymond Berenger V., the last count of Provence, and after defeating James I.

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  • This was directed against the oath of allegiance which James I.

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  • This has been a point of coast defence since the time of James I.

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  • A free grammar school, founded in 1591, was refounded by James I.

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  • The familiar, who is sometimes replaced by the devil, commonly figured in witchcraft trials; and a statute of James I.

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  • Bangor was incorporated by James I.

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  • Theobalds Park was built in the 18th century, but the original mansion was acquired by William Cecil, Lord Burghley, in 1561; being taken in 1607 by James I.

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  • He became involved in a controversy with Joseph Justus Scaliger, formerly his intimate friend, and others, wrote Ecclesiasticus auctoritati Jacobi regis oppositus (1611), an attack upon James I.

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  • The town was treated as a borough by prescription until 1608, when James I.

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  • Originally a Moorish stronghold, it was captured in 1233 by James I.

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  • Queen Mary granted three new fairs, and James I.

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  • The continual disputes between the two boroughs led to the passing of an act of union in 1571, the new borough being incorporated under the title of the "Mayor, Bailiffs and Burgesses" by James I.

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  • The earliest charter recorded was granted in 1201 under King John; a charter of James I.

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  • An entertainment of another form is recalled in the name of Spring Gardens, St James' Park, where at the time of James I.

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  • Tuam received its first charter from James I.

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  • A stone bridge, consisting of seventeen arches, was built in 1485 over the river, and made a county bridge under James I.

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  • A charter was granted to the town by the lords of Powis, confirmed by James I.

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  • Charters were granted to the town by James I.

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  • Sir Isaac Wake (c. 1580-1632), the diplomatist, was a kinsman of the archbishop. He commenced his diplomatic career in Venice, and then he represented his county for sixteen years at Turin; he was knighted in 1619, and after being sent on various special missions by James I.

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  • Among Sir Isaac's writings is Rex platonicus, a description of the entertainment of James I.

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  • Previous to the Union Ballyshannon returned two members to the Irish parliament and it was incorporated by James I.

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  • The town was incorporated by Elizabeth in 1582 under the government of two bailiffs and a common council of 24 burgesses, and her .charter was confirmed by James I.

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  • It was defended by James I.

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  • They were rejected both by Queen Elizabeth, and, after the Hampton Court Conference petitioned about them, by King James I.

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  • A charter was now granted to the town by James I.

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  • Also see bibliography to the article on James I.

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  • He assisted at the coronation of James I.

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  • In 1617 he accompanied James I.

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  • The introduction into England of the game of golf is traditionally placed here in 1608, and attributed to King James I.

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  • The Company has been entrusted with the duty since the time of James I.

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  • A further grant of privileges was bestowed in 1292 by the earl of Devon, but no charter of incorporation was granted until that from James I.

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  • The district formed part of Ely O'Carroll, and was not included in King's county till the time of James I.

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  • Isaac Roosevelt was a member of the Provincial Congress in 1775-77 and of the state Senate in 1777-86 and in 1788-92; in the state Assembly were James Roosevelt (1796-97), Cornelius C. Roosevelt (2803), James I.

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  • English traders were in Siam very early in the 17th century; there was a friendly interchange of letters between James I.

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  • This expedition was frustrated at the time, but was resumed by James I.

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  • There is no evidence to show that Romsey was a borough before the charter of incorporation granted by James I.

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  • Admiralty rights were granted by James I.

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  • The cathedral was erected and dedicated to the Virgin by King James I.

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  • Prayer, drawn up probably by Cranmer 1 and Ridley in the time of Edward VI., and variously modified between then (1549) and 1661; (ii.) the meaning of the two sacraments, written on the suggestion of James I.

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  • It arose incidentally out of a Conference Version, between the High Church and the Low Church parties convened by James I.

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  • Under the leadership of Sir Ferdinando Gorges there was formed in 1620 the Council for New England, which procured from King James I.

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  • He was the author of two historical works - a brief defence of the literary merit and personal and political character of James I.

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  • The work exhibiting this fantastic emulation of extravagance with genius was dedicated to James I.

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  • The chronicle comes down to the death of James I.

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  • His father, Ernest Augustus, had taken a step of great importance in the history of Hanover when he married Sophia, daughter of the elector palatine, Frederick V., and grand-daughter of James I.

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  • A smouldering and growing Puritan discontent with the Prayer Book, suppressed with a firm hand under Queen Elizabeth, burst out into a flame on the accession of King James I.

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  • Harding followed with a Confutation, and Jewel with a Defence, of the Apology in 1566 and 1567; the combatants ranged over the whole field of the Anglo-Roman controversy, and Jewel's theology was officially enjoined upon the Church by Archbishop Bancroft in the reign of James I.

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  • On the death of the "Wolf of Badenoch" the earldom of Buchan passed to his brother Robert, duke of Albany, also earl of Fife and earl of Menteith, but these earldoms were forfeited on the execution of his son Murdoch in 1425, the earldom of Buchan again, however, coming to the house of Stewart in the person of James, second son of Sir James Stewart, the black knight of Lorn, by Joan or Joanna, widow of King James I.

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  • In the female line, however, there are among the descendants of James I.

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  • Bridport was incorporated by James I.

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  • In 1604, or early in 1605, he presented to James I.

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  • The Blackfriars' monastery was the scene of the murder of James I.

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  • Mallow received a charter of incorporation from James I.

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  • It was incorporated by James I.

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  • New charters for the school were obtained from James I.

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  • In 1595 Elizabeth issued a new charter to the town, confirmed by James I.

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  • The earliest mention of a market is in a grant by James I.

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  • See James I.

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  • Whitgift attended Elizabeth on her deathbed, and crowned James I.

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  • It probably received its charter from Alexander III., was created a royal burgh in 1367 and was the scene of the poem of Peblis to the Play, ascribed to James I.

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  • Llan Egwest, dissolved in 1535, was given by James I.

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  • His works included A Dialogue on Dying Well (1603), a translation from the Italian; Restitution of Decayed Intelligence in Antiquities concerning the English Nation, dedicated to James I.

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  • The governing charter, which held force until the Municipal Corporation Act of 1835, was granted by James I.

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  • These early charters were confirmed by most of the succeeding kings, until James I.

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  • But the promise of peace and prosperity in exchange for absolute independence was rejected with all the old resolution; and the freedom which a Bruce desired to sell was retained by the first of the Stewart line, Robert II.; for Mr Froude erred in alleging that James I.

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  • But Charles did grant a General Assembly in Glasgow (21st of November), where, among unseemly uproar, the ecclesiastical legislation of James I.

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  • This was confirmed by James I.

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  • The marriage itself did not take place until 1503, just a century before the accession of James I.

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  • Elizabeth in 1562 confirmed the charters which former kings had granted to the abbots, and James I.

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  • The reversion of the fairs and two markets on Wednesday and Saturday were granted by James I.

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  • Parliaments were held here in 1272, 1296 and 1446, but the borough was not represented until 1608, when James I.

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  • The guardians of the harbour were incorporated by James I.

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  • Loftus, who had an important share in the administration of Ireland under successive lords deputy, and whose zeal and efficiency were commended by James I.

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  • If, as has been claimed, Louis owed to them any of his tendency to prefer the society of the poor, or rather of the bourgeois, to that of the nobility, their example was his best lesson in the craft of kingship. In June 1436, when scarcely thirteen, he was married to Margaret (c. 1425-1445), daughter of James I.

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  • Bridgnorth was incorporated by James I.

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  • Among the papers left at his death were some which were published in 1848 as the Court and Times of James I.

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  • This famous editio princeps of the Welsh Bible, first and foremost of Welsh classics, was further supplemented under James I.

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  • The Moors, who occupied Minorca in the 8th century, were expelled by James I.

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  • Although the name (which apparently had its origin in Britannia Major, the name given to the island to distinguish it from Britannia Minor or Brittany) had, in earlier times, been often used both by English and by foreign writers, especially for rhetorical and poetical purposes, it was not till after the accession of James I.

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  • From that time forward Table Bay was used as an occasional port of call for British ships, and in 1620 two English captains formally took possession of the Cape in the name of James I.

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  • This patriotic act was not, however, sufficiently appreciated by either King James I.

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  • There was also a labyrinth at Theobald's Park, near Cheshunt, when this place passed from the earl of Salisbury into the possession of James I.

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  • Houghton Park, in the vicinity, contains the ruins of Houghton House, built by Mary, countess of Pembroke, in the time of James I.

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  • The "Irish Society" was incorporated in the 11 James I.

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  • It was incorporated as a borough (under the name of Liffer) in the reign of James I.

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  • For the use of Charles II., during his visits to the races, a palace, no longer extant, was built on the site of the lodge of James I.

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  • Confirmatory chapters were granted by Henry VIII., Edward VI., Elizabeth, James I.

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  • To understand clearly the nature and origin of the famous conspiracy, it is necessary to recall the political situation and the attitude of the Roman Catholics towards the government at the accession of James I.

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  • Another exchange of letters took place between King James I.

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  • In 1607 the Plymouth Company, of which he was an influential member and which had received a grant of this region from James I.

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  • He supported the church in its conflicts with the civil powers in Venice, France and England, and sharply criticized James I.

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  • The series is History of England from the Accession of James I.

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  • A more ancient pier, originally constructed in the reign of Henry VI., was renewed in that of James I.

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  • In 1609 Donne was engaged in composing his great controversial prose treatise, the Pseudo-Martyr, printed in 1610; this was an attempt to convince Roman Catholics in England that they might, without any inconsistency, take the oath of allegiance to James I.

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  • In 1618 a George Canning, son of Richard Canning of Foxcote in Warwickshire, received a grant of the manor of Garvagh in Londonderry, Ireland, from King James I.

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  • The charter was confirmed by James I.

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  • By Tyrconnel she had a son Hugh; and among other children a daughter Mary Stuart O'Donnell, who, born after her father's flight from Ireland, was so named by James I.

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  • In 16ro he commanded a small naval force sent by James I.

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  • The present governing charters were issued by James I.

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  • But, if instead of a son he should leave a brother his heir, then - as was decided in the reign of James I.

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  • On the entablature surmounting the Ionic columns are panels containing medallions of Scots sovereigns from James I.

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  • In King Street is the mansion-house occupied as a hunting-lodge by Queen Elizabeth and James I.

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  • Elizabeth took loans which were often repaid; and in 1614 James I.

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  • This probably led to a charter of incorporation being obtained from James I.

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  • About 1623 the people of Edinburgh called him to be their minister, but he was rejected by James I.

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  • Strange as it may seem, the accession of James I.

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  • During his later years he was to some extent in opposition to the administration of James I.

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  • In all these cases the virus seems to have come from Holland; the last two executions followed the rash dedication to James I.

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  • Later charters were granted by Philip and Mary in by Elizabeth in 1558 and 1567, by James I.

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  • Great things were expected of James I.

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  • The industry originated with the colony of straw-plaiters transplanted by James I.

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  • He lived in the reign of James I.

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  • Prior to the introduction of carriages horseback was the means of locomotion, and Queen Elizabeth rode in state to St Paul's on a pillion; but even after carriages were used, horseback was held to be more dignified, for James I.

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  • The introduction of carriages and the invention of gunpowder thus opened out a new industry in breeding; and a decided change was gradually creeping on by the time that James I.

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  • A charter was granted to it by Roger Bigod in the reign of Edward I., which was extended by James I.

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  • It was confirmed by Elizabeth in 1598 and by James I.

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  • Bandon was founded early in the 17th century by Richard Boyle, earl of Cork, and was incorporated by James I.

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  • In the reign of Elizabeth British trade with the Netherlands reached in one year 12,000,000 ducats, and in that of James I.

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  • Tanistry was abolished by a legal decision in the reign of James I.

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  • This body existed till 1604, when it fell under suspicion of being political in its aims, and was abolished by James I.

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  • A lighthouse (50 55' N., o 58' E.) stands on the ness, which has been the scene of many shipwrecks, and has been lighted since the time of James I.

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  • The additions of Bower form eleven books, and bring down the narrative to the death of King James I.

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  • The work De simplicibus, which bears his name, was for centuries a standard authority on what would now be called materia medica, was printed in twenty-six editions in the 15th century and later, and was used in the formation of the first London pharmacopoeia, issued by the College of Physicians in the reign of James I.

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  • Donne, Sir Henry Wotton, Izaak Walton, Bishop Andrewes and Francis Bacon, who dedicated to him his translation of the Psalms. Walton tells us that "the love of a court conversation, mixed with a laudable ambition to be something more than he was, drew him often from Cambridge to attend the king wheresoever the court was," and James I.

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  • Atmospheric clock experimentation began with inventor Cornelius Drebbel, who created clocks for King James I and King James VI of Britain and Rudolf II of Bohemia.

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  • Albany had to blockade Margaret in Stirling Castle before she would surrender her sons, After being obliged to capitulate, Margaret returned to Edinburgh, and being no longer responsible for the custody of the king she fled to England in September, where a month later she bore to Angus a daughter, Margaret, who afterwards became countess of Lennox, mother of Lord Darnley and grandmother of James I.

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