Pontefract: Its Name, Its Lords, and Its Castle. A Concise HistoryA. Holmes, 1878 - 247 páginas |
Dentro del libro
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Página 4
... probably adapted the old British paths to their own purposes , and their street ( the Watling- Street ) can still be very easily traced in the present road from Doncaster to Barnsdale , thence across the Went by Standing Flat Bridge ...
... probably adapted the old British paths to their own purposes , and their street ( the Watling- Street ) can still be very easily traced in the present road from Doncaster to Barnsdale , thence across the Went by Standing Flat Bridge ...
Página 6
... probably extended much further , but how much is doubtful , though he is recorded to have constituted a bishopric even in Lincolnshire , and it is known that Edinburgh itself received its name from him . † The town of Pontefract was ...
... probably extended much further , but how much is doubtful , though he is recorded to have constituted a bishopric even in Lincolnshire , and it is known that Edinburgh itself received its name from him . † The town of Pontefract was ...
Página 7
... death was the decay of his teeth , for he could not masticate solid food , and the liquid food which was prepared for him did not contain sufficient nourishment 8 Taddenescylf . and probably enough the Witan met either.
... death was the decay of his teeth , for he could not masticate solid food , and the liquid food which was prepared for him did not contain sufficient nourishment 8 Taddenescylf . and probably enough the Witan met either.
Página 9
... probably caused by the Norwegian and Norman invasions , which had but lately passed over and through the district , the former from the north in 1066 , the latter from the south in 1069 . When the lordship was subdivided , as it seems ...
... probably caused by the Norwegian and Norman invasions , which had but lately passed over and through the district , the former from the north in 1066 , the latter from the south in 1069 . When the lordship was subdivided , as it seems ...
Página 10
... probably have written of " Tateshale , that is the palace of Tate , now Pontefract ; " and to have done this , if he had had occasion to mention the town at all in the latter part of his history , in which , as being written from his ...
... probably have written of " Tateshale , that is the palace of Tate , now Pontefract ; " and to have done this , if he had had occasion to mention the town at all in the latter part of his history , in which , as being written from his ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Pontefract: Its Name, Its Lords, and Its Castle. a Concise History Richard Holmes Sin vista previa disponible - 2015 |
Pontefract: Its Name, Its Lords, and Its Castle, a Concise History - Scholar ... Richard H. Holmes Sin vista previa disponible - 2015 |
Términos y frases comunes
afterwards Albreda Alice Archbishop arms Barbican Bill of Demolition Bishop Bridge brother called Carta Castleford century Chapel Charter Chester Chronicle Church Crown daughter death died Duchy Duke Earl of Lincoln Earl Thomas Earldom ecclesiæ ecclesiam Edmund Edward England evidence fair father feet Fractus Gate grant Hall heir Henry de Lacy Henry III Honour House Hugh de Laval Ilbert de Lacy Johannis John of Gaunt King Henry King Richard kingdom Kirkby Knight Knottingley Lancaster LANCASTER HERALD lands Lascy letters patent Lisois Lissours Lord Manor married meæ monachis Monastery monks murder Norman Nostell omnibus Ordericus Vitalis Paid Pilgrimage of Grace Pomfret Pontefract Castle possession Pountfret Prince Priory probably Pryez quæ quod received records regis reign Richard of Hexham Robert Roger royal sancti Saxon says siege Sold unto Swillington Tateshale tefract terræ town wall wife William Willielmo yards York
Pasajes populares
Página viii - Si qua igitur in futurum ecclesiastica secularisve persona, hanc nostre constitutionis paginam sciens, contra eam temere venire temptaverit, secundo tertiove commonita, nisi reatum suum congrua satisfactione correxerit, potestatis honorisque sui dignitate careat reamque se divino judicio [exi]stere de perpetrata iniquitate cognoscat et a sacratissimo corpore ac sanguine Dei et Domini redemptoris nostri Jesu Christi aliena fiat atque in extremo examine districte subjaceat ultioni.
Página xiv - Innocent the twenty-second, to whose predecessors in the See of Rome, the First Fruits and Tenths of all Ecclesiastical Benefices had for a long time been paid, gave the same in 1253 to King Henry the Third for three years, which occasioned a Taxation the following year, sometimes called the Norwich Taxation, and sometimes Pope Innocent's Valor.
Página 230 - The place is very well known to be one of the strongest inland Garrisons in the Kingdom ; well watered ; situated upon a rock in every part of it, and therefore difficult to mine. The walls very thick and high, with strong towers ; and if battered, very difficult of access, by reason of the depth and steepness of the graft.
Página xiv - In the year 1288, Pope Nicholas IV. granted the tenths to King Edward I. for six years, towards defraying the expenses of an expedition to the Holy Land, and that they might be collected to their full value, a taxation by the King's precept was begun in that year, and finished as to the province of Canterbury, in 1291 ; and as to that of York, in the following year ; the whole being under the direction of John, Bishop of Winton, and Oliver, Bishop of Lincoln. A third taxation, entitled
Página xiv - In the year 1288, Pope Nicholas the Fourth granted the Tenths to King Edward the First for six years, towards defraying the expense of an expedition to the Holy Land; and that they might be collected to their full value, a taxation by the King's precept was begun in that year...
Página viii - Sepulturam quoque ipsius loci liberam esse decernimus ut eorum devotioni et extreme voluntati qui se illic sepeliri deliberaverint, nisi forte excommunicati vel interdicti sint, nullus obsistat, salva tamen iustitia illarum ecclesiarum a quibus mortuorum corpora assumuntur.
Página 181 - While things were in this state, a true report was current in London, of the death of Richard of Bordeaux. I could not learn the particulars of it, nor how it happened, the day I wrote these chronicles. When dead, Richard of Bordeaux was placed on a litter covered with black, and having a canopy of the same. Four black horses were harnessed to it, and two varlets in mourning conducted the litter, followed by four knights dressed also in mourning.
Página viii - Christi aliena fiat atque, in extremo examine, districte ultioni subjaceat. Cunctis autem eidem loco sua jura servantibus sit pax Domini nostri Jesu Christi, quatinus et hic fructum bone actionis percipiant et apud districtum judicem premia eterne pacis inveniant. Amen.
Página xiv - II.) by virtue of a Royal Mandate directed to the Bishop of Carlisle ; chiefly on account of the invasion of the Scots, by which the clergy of those border countries were rendered unable to pay the former tax.