William i Sentence Examples

william i
  • The city contains a fine statue of Schiller, designed by Thorvaldsen; a bronze statue of Christopher, duke of Wurttemberg; a monument to the emperor William I.; an equestrian statue of King William I.

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  • The barony and castle of Kendal or Kirkby-in-Kendal, held by Turold before the Conquest, were granted by William I.

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  • The manor was granted by William I.

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  • The palace contains a picture gallery and collections of natural history and antiquities, and in front of it are two monumental fountains and a monument to the emperor William I.

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  • See the authorities cited for WILLIAM I.

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  • Among the educational establishments is the State University, founded by King William I.

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  • There are many fine streets and squares and some handsome public monuments, notably among the last the fountain on the market square surmounted by a statue of Charlemagne, the bronze equestrian statue of the emperor William I.

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  • During this period of diplomatic work he acquired an exceptional knowledge of the affairs of Europe, and in particular of Germany, and displayed great tact and temper in dealing with the Swedish senate, with Queen Ulrica, with the king of Denmark and Frederick William I.

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  • The town possesses a fine park and has statues of the emperor William I.

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  • Notwithstanding some obvious moral and intellectual defects, he was the most eminent and the most disinterested of those who had co-operated with William I.

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  • See also the authorities cited in the articles on WILLIAM I.

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  • It possesses an Evangelical and a Roman Catholic church and a monument to the emperor William I.

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  • Henceforth it remained in the house of Nassau, passing ultimately to William I.

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  • In 1066 it was taken by Harold Hardrada, and in 1068 the men of the north of England, rising under Edgar Aetheling and Earl Waltheof, stormed the castles which William I.

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  • The Danes captured the stronghold after the escape of the king, but it was won back in 921, and remained in the hands of the crown, passing to William I.

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  • The Kaisersaal retained its antique appearance until 1843, when, as also again in 1904, it was restored and redecorated; it is now furnished with a series of modern paintings representing the German kings and Roman emperors from Charlemagne to Francis II., in all fifty-two, and a statue of the first German emperor, William I.

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  • The army was the very foundation of the Prussian state, a truth which both Frederick William I.

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  • Near the site of the modern Marlborough (Merleberge, Marieberge) was originally a Roman castrum called Cunetio, and later there was a Norman fortress in which William I.

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  • In 1724 the three independent parts were united into a single town by Frederick William I.

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  • Hereon are also memorials to Bismarck and to the emperor William I.

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  • The most noticeable of the modern public monuments are those to the emperor William I.

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  • It originally consisted of two detached buildings, but in 1826-1827 King William I.

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  • The Willibroek Canal was made in the 16th century, and William I.

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  • In 1648 it passed to Sweden, but in 1676 was retaken by Frederick William I.

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  • The principal buildings are the palace of the prince of Reuss-Greiz, surrounded by a fine park, the old château on a rocky hill overlooking the town, the summer palace with a fine garden, the old town church dating from 1225 and possessing a beautiful tower, the town hall, the governmental buildings and statues of the emperor William I.

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  • Migrating at an early age to England, the young Ranulf entered the chancery of William I.

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  • King William I.

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  • His son and successor, George II., who founded the university of Göttingen in 1737, was on bad terms with his brother-in-law Frederick William I.

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  • It was erected in the reign of William I.

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  • From 1829 to 1833 he acted as secretary to King William I.

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  • For the loss in 1801 of his possessions on the left bank of the Rhine he was in 1803 compensated by some of the former French territory round Mainz, and at the same time was raised to the dignity of Elector (Kurfilrst) as William I.

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  • The Order of the Crown, founded by William I.

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  • His second wife, Sophie Charlotte (1668-1705), sister of the English king George I., was the friend of Leibnitz and one of the most cultured princesses of the age; she bore him his only son, his successor, King Frederick William I.

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  • The town possesses two Protestant and a Roman Catholic church, a technical institute, a natural history museum, a library, a theatre, a monument to the emperor William I.

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  • During the years 1815-1830 a large part of the extensive scheme of construction inaugurated by King William I.

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  • The Congress of Vienna confirmed the William I.

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  • The principal memorials embrace, besides the Roland, the Willehad fountain (1883), the monument of the Franco-German War (erected 1875), the centaur fountain (1891), an equestrian statue of the emperor William I.

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  • The sovereignty of the newly formed state was given to the prince of Orange, who mounted the throne (23rd of March 1815) under the title of William I.

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  • The Fundamental Law promulgated by William I.

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  • That such was the case must not be entirely charged to partiality, still less to deliberate unfairness on the part of William I.

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  • In the early part of the 19th century the repairing of the cathedral was taken in hand, in 1842 the building of fresh portions necessary for the completion of the whole structure was begun, and on the 15th of October 1880 the edifice, finally finished, was opened in the presence of the emperor William I.

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  • Workmens Insurance.On June 15, 1883, the Reichstag, as the result of the policy announced by the emperor William I.

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  • In 1688 the elector took Belgrade; in 1691 Louis William I.

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  • At the second is the Norman keep of the de Veres, of whom Aubrey de Vere held the lordship from William I.

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  • The Prince's Garden was originally laid out by William Frederick of Nassau in 1648, and was presented to the town by King William I.

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  • Newport is not mentioned in the Domesday Survey, but at the time of the Conquest formed part of the manor of Edgmond, which William I.

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  • The main thoroughfares are embellished by several striking monuments, notably the memorials of the wars of 1864 and 1870, bronze statues of the emperor William I.

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  • Falck was called in Holland the king's good genius, but William I.

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  • Among the public monuments comes first, in excellence, Rauch's celebrated statue of Frederick the Great, which stands in tinter den Linden opposite the palace of the emperor William I.; and in size the monument to the emperor William I.

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  • Here also lie the emperor William I.

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  • It was not, however, until the time of King Frederick William I.

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  • In the public park there is a bust of Schiller, a monument to Alexander von Humboldt, and a statue of the mystic Jakob BOhme (1575-1624); a monument has been erected in the town in commemoration of the war of 1870-71, and also one to the emperor William I.

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  • It contains nine Evangelical and two Roman Catholic churches, a stately modern town hall, a Hall of Fame (Ruhmes- halle), with statues of the emperors William I.

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  • Of its recent public monuments may be mentioned one to Joseph Victor von Scheffel (1826-1886); a bronze equestrian statue of the emperor William I.

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  • The palace was purchased by the States in 1595, rebuilt by the stadtholder William III., and extended by King William I.

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  • In front of the building is an equestrian statue of William I.

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  • On the collapse of his confederate's rising, Roger was tried before the Great Council, deprived of his lands and earldom, and sentenced to perpetual imprisonment; but he was released, with other political prisoners, at the death of William I.

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  • The steady Scottish infantry held their own for some time against the charge of the English men-at-arms. But when Edward brought forward his archers to aid his cavalry, as William I.

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  • The latter, designed as a miniature copy of Windsor Castle, in the midst of a park in the English taste, was formerly the summer residence of the emperor William I.

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  • With the aid of dissatisfied barons, Adrian brought William I.

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  • On the death of Edith, the widow of Edward the Confessor, to whom it belonged, William I.

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  • But he increased the lands of his house around Paris, maintained order in them, and held his own against William I.

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  • By the convention of Gastein (14th of August 1865) Austria surrendered her claim to Prussia in return for the payment of nearly £300,000 and in September 1865 King William I.

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  • The principal buildings are the palace of the prince of Reuss-Greiz, surrounded by a fine park, the old château on a rocky hill overlooking the town, the summer palace with a fine garden, the old town church dating from 1225 and possessing a beautiful tower, the town hall, the governmental buildings and statues of the emperor William I.

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  • His son and successor, George II., who founded the university of Göttingen in 1737, was on bad terms with his brother-in-law Frederick William I.

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