Lives of English Popular Leaders, Količina 1H.S. King & Company, 1872 |
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Anglo-Saxon Chronicle Annales de Dunstapliâ Anselm appeal Archbishop barons Becket bishops Book Bouquet Bréauté Bromton Bulæus Canterbury cause champion chap Charter chroniclers Church citizens clause clergy Coggeshale Conquest Constitutions of Clarendon Council Court crusade death demands Earl of Pembroke ecclesiastical election England English Eustace Eustace de Vesci evils excommunication Falkes de Bréauté feeling Florent Fœdera France freedom Giraldus Guill Henry Henry's Hist Historical Letters Holy Honorius honour hope Hubert de Burgh Ibid Innocent Innocent's insurrection interdict John's justice justiciary King kingdom Lanfranc leaders Legate liberties London Longchamp Lord Louis Magna Charta monks nobles Norman Normandy Pandulph Papal Paris peace Peter des Roches Philip Pope reign Roger of Hoveden Roger of Wendover Roman Rome Royal and Historical Rufus Rymer Salisbury seems seized Shirley Stephen Langton struggle sympathy tion tyranny Univ Vatican MSS Walter of Hemingburgh Wigorn William William d'Albini
Priljubljeni odlomki
Stran 266 - This was the noblest Roman of them all; All the conspirators save only he Did that they did in envy of great Caesar; He only, in a general honest thought, And common good to all, made one of them. His life was gentle, and the elements So mix'd in him that Nature might stand up And say to all the world, 'This was a man!
Stran 142 - ... the dead were carried outside the town-gates and buried in ditches and road-sides, without prayer or priest's offices. The images of apostles and saints were taken down or veiled ; the frequent tinkle of the convent bell no longer told the serf at the plough how the weary day was passing, or guided the traveller through the forest to a shelter for the night. Religion, wont to mix with and hallow each hour of the day, each action of life, was totally withdrawn. The state of the country resembled...
Stran 142 - Annunciation, they proclaimed the sentence of general Interdict over the whole of England. From that moment all spiritual acts must cease ; all visible intercourse between heaven and earth was suspended, and the Church withdrawn from the kingdom, — or rather, its life and soul were withdrawn, while the body remained. As an ecclesiastical act, the features which most struck the minds of the country people were, that the daily sacrifice ceased, the doors of the churches were shut against them ; that...
Stran 198 - And whereas, for the honour of God and the amendment of our kingdom, and for the better quieting the discord that has arisen between us and our barons, we have granted all these things aforesaid...
Stran 32 - ... every powerful man made his castles, and held them against him ; and they filled the land full of castles. They cruelly oppressed the wretched men of the land with castle-works. When the castles were made, they filled them with devils and evil men.
Stran 199 - ... redressed by our justiciary, within forty days, reckoning from the time it has been notified to us, or to our justiciary, (if we should be out of the realm,) the four barons aforesaid shall lay the cause before the rest of the...
Stran 217 - We, on the part of God Almighty, Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, by the authority of His Apostles Peter and Paul, and by our own, and by...
Stran 243 - Canterbury, anno 1236. it was ordered, that there should be in every deanery two or three men having God before their eyes, who, at the command of the archbishop or his official, should inform of the public excesses of prelates and other clerks e.
Stran 197 - ... and besides we shall cause to be summoned generally, by our sheriffs and bailiffs all those who hold from us in chief, for a certain day, that is at the end of forty days at least, and for a certain place; and in all the letters of that summons, we will express the cause of the summons, and when the summons has thus been given the business shall proceed on the appointed day, on the advice of those who shall be present, even if not all of those who were summoned have come.
Stran 186 - ... make common cause with them. There is a curious document dated the 20th of May, which exhibits the anger of John at this circumstance, and the pettiness of his revenge : " The king to all his bailiffs and faithful people who may view these letters. Know ye, that the citizens of London in common have seditiously and deceitfully withdrawn themselves from our service and fealty ; and therefore we command you that when they or their servants or chattels pass through your districts, ye do offer them...