The History of England: From the Invasion of Julius Caesar to the Revolution in 1688, Tập 1Liberty Classics, 1983 |
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... honour to Offa ; as distant princes at that time had usually little communication with each other . That emperor ... honours from Charlemagne , and even became his preceptor in the sciences . The chief reason , why he had at first ...
... honour to Offa ; as distant princes at that time had usually little communication with each other . That emperor ... honours from Charlemagne , and even became his preceptor in the sciences . The chief reason , why he had at first ...
Trang 457
... honour of the com- munity . We are not to imagine , that all the conquered lands were seized by the northern conquerors ; or that the whole of the land thus seized was subjected to those military services . This supposition is confuted ...
... honour of the com- munity . We are not to imagine , that all the conquered lands were seized by the northern conquerors ; or that the whole of the land thus seized was subjected to those military services . This supposition is confuted ...
Trang 487
... honour and fidelity the chief tie among them ; and rendered it the capital virtue of every true knight , or genuine professor of chivalry . The solem- nities of single combat , as established by law , banished the notion of every thing ...
... honour and fidelity the chief tie among them ; and rendered it the capital virtue of every true knight , or genuine professor of chivalry . The solem- nities of single combat , as established by law , banished the notion of every thing ...
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Thuật ngữ và cụm từ thông dụng
advantage Alfred ancient appeared archbishop archbishop of Canterbury arms army attended authority barons battle Becket Bede bishop Britanny Britons Brompton brother Canterbury Canute castle CHAPTER Christian Chron church civil clergy conduct conquerors conquest constitutions of Clarendon count of Bologne court crown Danes dangerous death defence Diceto dominions duke duke of Normandy dutchy Eadmer earl ecclesiastical Edgar Atheling enemy engaged English enterprize Epist established farther favour feudal Fitz-Steph French gave Glocester Harold Henry Heptarchy Hist historians HISTORY OF ENGLAND honour Hoveden Ibid immediately inhabitants justice king of France king's kingdom land laws liberty Malm Mercia military monarch monks murder nation nobility Norman Normandy Northumberland obliged Paris person Philip pontiff pope possession prelates pretended primate prince provinces received reign revenue Richard Robert Roman Rome royal Saxon sensible soon sovereign spirit subjects submission success throne tion valour vassals victory violence William