Marry he doth consider, that by the King's Majesty, with all your advices and the consent of the nobles of the realm, he was called to the place. |
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Many nobles now ostentatiously turned their backs on public life, as beneath their dignity. |
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While the guards still wore their uniform, the nobles were in their nightdresses and dressing gowns. |
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In 1877 Japanese nobles formed the Iwakura mission and travelled the world cherry-picking ideas on how to industrialise the country. |
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Clerics from the wealthiest churches and cathedrals had robes as fine as any worn by nobles and princes. |
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The Vaishyas had to pay tribute for the lands that they got from the Kshatriya nobles. |
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Undoubtedly princes, peers and other great nobles of old stock resented the power thus vested in men whom they regarded as social inferiors. |
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In Piedmont and Naples the nobles were the principal beneficiaries from the alienations of tax revenues and demesne lands. |
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Hunting and tournaments, at least for some nobles, began to give way to a lively interest in culture and education. |
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Since poetry is essentially encomiastic, the great nobles have a definite use for it. |
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Then the sons of nobles scattered in four directions, disunited, in search of land. |
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In his experience most nobles considered it beneath them to help those of lesser rank. |
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Beneath the king was an aristocracy of nobles who had a limited amount of power. |
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So, since Shakespearean nobles did not uphold the standards of today's BBC English, they must have had no standards at all, right? |
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He was a supporter of the French Revolution from its beginnings, and in June 1789 he organized the 47 nobles who joined the Third Estate. |
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The official guest list named at least 70 kings, queens, grand dukes, princes, counts and lesser nobles. |
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The Venetian republic forbade its citizen nobles from assuming titles such as prince, duke, marquis, or count. |
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The following day a page approached Jacques with a contract from the young nobles. |
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The minstrels, bedecked in red doublets and white hose, played upbeat tunes to which gardens of brightly clad nobles danced merrily. |
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The prerogative of nobles was to command, and nobilities everywhere dominated the machineries of state. |
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Most spectacular in this period, however, were the marriages of European nobles to the heiresses of American millionaires. |
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A number of nobles, knights and aldermen of Mechelen were called upon to witness and put their seal to the legal document. |
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A feudal prince must be wise in controlling the nobles and keeping the people content. |
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This sort of thing was a common enough practice, for ransoming nobles was a profitable business. |
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Those French orators engaged in the real matters of public concern address the king and the great nobles either from the pulpit or in parliament. |
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Cyrus's Achaemenian dynasty also allowed local kings and nobles to govern their original realms, albeit under Persian suzerainty. |
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High-status warriors, nobles, and priests ate the flesh of those sacrificed. |
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She was walking her highest ranked nobles in front of her and her ladies in waiting behind. |
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Which means I will have to spend the next couple of months or so in a school of magic surrounded by snot-nosed nobles and arrogant mages. |
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The great nobles of Europe, however, the kings and dukes and so on, were not there. |
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Many sumptuous banquets for nobles and heads of state have been held in this magnificent room. |
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In the wake of the demise of the Roman Empire, European peasants, nobles and clergyman had to literally remake their lives. |
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He had to consult the nobles, the magnates of the Church, and, in time, representatives from the towns who could make commitments of money. |
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The same is true of the large clienteles who gathered at the doors of Roman nobles during customary morning salutations. |
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It's an anarchic assemblage of petty autocracies with numerous additional charismatic nobles advising the autarchs. |
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Henry is shown surrounded by a host of footmen, officials and dignitaries, a mace bearer, a crowd of nobles, and six trumpeters. |
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In Austria there were major and minor nobles, small farmers who were freemen, indentured farmers and serfs. |
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During the Carolingian reign, nobles were granted booty as reward and incentive to support the current king. |
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Nevertheless, in most provinces, nobles continued to escape the oldest basic direct tax, the taille, not to mention forced labour on the roads. |
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They were disgusted by the manipulation of recent changes in favour of the Manchu nobles. |
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While nobles and bourgeois owned most of the land, peasants were left in control of it. |
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The city's artisans rebelled against the ruling oligarchy of merchants and nobles. |
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A State Council served as the consulting body, comprised mainly of Neapolitan nobles and bourgeois. |
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The great nobles essentially use poets and poetry in the early seventeenth century to wage a war of prestige. |
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In other regions, Norman nobles married the daughters of Irish chiefs and went native. |
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The next morning riders were sent out to call the minor nobles of the west to arms. |
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There were more young nobles wandering around holding those green pieces of paper. |
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But the circle of outraged nobles had made an almost impenetrable wall surrounding the king and the prince. |
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Only true nobles were taught flute, it was an upper class instrument and forbidden to commoners. |
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Besides foreign corresponding members, about half were local Tuscan patricians or nobles, and half were non-nobles. |
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Even one of the most famous monarchies in England which gave the king almost absolute powers came under scrutiny from some nobles. |
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After all, there are many wealthy nobles who wed at Camelot, and there are many tournaments. |
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Most nobles were offended by peasants attempting to act higher class than they truly were. |
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For in reality France under Louis XVI was governed not by the nobility, but by a plutocracy in which the majority of nobles had no share. |
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Had Arthur considered the pain that he should cause his knights, lords, nobles, wife? |
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Calvinism found support from the lower classes, lesser nobles and town leaders. |
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He wasn't lean, like her brothers, but he didn't have the flabbiness that so many nobles have from a lifetime of good food. |
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All three of them were dressed up, wearing clothing designed for lords and nobles. |
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They have connections with all the nobles who resent my power and my politics. |
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There he established a committee of great lords and other nobles to co-ordinate counter-revolutionary activity. |
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A few nobles squawked out in protest, and Sharin smiled a cold, dangerous little smile. |
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Edward displayed shrewdness and ruthlessness in the way he turned on nobles who had usurped his power during his minority. |
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The nobles founded many monasteries and the archbishopric of Rouen was coterminous with the duchy. |
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The castles of the rebellious barons were razed and the nobles never challenged the duke's power again. |
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Even as they haggled over the small print with the French, British officials were encouraging Arab nobles to revolt against the Ottomans. |
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The nobles were able to address remonstrances to the throne through their corporate organizations. |
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Since it was the day after the great ball, all the suitors and nobles with rank were still sleeping. |
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Because several of the nobles to the north of us are plotting against the King. |
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The banquet hall was bright and cheerful, full of nobles and lords looking dignified and regal. |
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The idea of decorum had its strongest hold on the traditions of portraiture of nobles and worthies. |
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One of these nobles chooses to drift from the others to get to know this vibrant peasant girl. |
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It began to fill with peasants and nobles, mourning for those who had fallen in battle all that way from home. |
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Ilandere had become accepted as part of the winter household, as lots of nobles stay for extended visits at each other's mansions. |
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Another of the king's sniveling nobles had noticed, however, that she slipped out of his house long after candles had been snuffed and fires extinguished. |
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Similarly, the authority of marquesses, dukes, earls, barons, counts, and other nobles had long existed side by side with royal and imperial authority. |
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An electric atmosphere filled the air, as the lords, nobles and other important figures all along the table waited in anticipation for the show to begin. |
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In the ensuing confusion, everyone in the room, king, nobles and commoners alike, ended up removing their hats, and the meeting continued on a note of sartorial equality. |
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Salted meats and fish were considered low-status ingredients, appropriate for labourers but not for nobles, and certainly not worthy enough to be treated with spices. |
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A noblewoman bears children and raises them to be fine nobles. |
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Some members of the third estate, however, decided that they would no longer remain bareheaded in the presence of the king, and, like the nobles, covered themselves. |
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Barons and lords glanced furtively at each other from down the table, ladies and nobles picked disinterestedly at their food as if suspecting it had been poisoned. |
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Elter is taken with the action of Love's Labours Lost, wherein a group of nobles swear off wine, women, and all pleasure in order to pursue their studies. |
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Following Dacre's death in 1563, Elizabeth alternated the wardenships between lesser nobles like Lords Scrope and Eure or southerners like the earl of Bedford or Lord Hunsdon. |
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Until the mid-seventeenth century, bourgeois and nobles in many regions used the local tongue among themselves, and even wrote literary works in them. |
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Just as nobles and bourgeois were defined by their lifestyle, so too were workers, with the common economic feature that they all worked with their hands. |
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Indeed, just a glance at Europe reveals that in many places not only monarchs, clergy, and nobles but also commoners had obtained land and a lifestyle to go with it. |
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The widespread diffusion of texts exploded not only among nobles and merchants but also among artisans, shopkeepers, workers, and even, on occasion, peasants and millers. |
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Many nobles viewed him as a commoner and only royal by marriage. |
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The latter had a knack for persuading descendants of Chinese nobles to part with their inherited treasures, including rare paintings and porcelains with imperial provenances. |
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If that was not enough, nobles of both countries thronged the hall. |
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Decadent, corrupt nobles were always easy prey for barbarians and rebels. |
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In the Church, nobles occupied all bishoprics and all the choicest abbacies and canonries, and under Louis XVI it became a matter of policy that they should. |
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He abandoned the countryside above all to escape the taille, a tax to which, unlike the nobles, he would have been subject if he had continued to live in rural France. |
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The ongoing dispute between Henry and the French nobles had begun in 1087, following the untimely death of William I and the division of his kingdom between his two sons. |
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Originally the meeting worked effectively however later it merely became a forum for discussion and for nobles to express their dissatisfaction. |
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During the Middle Ages, many fortified castles were built by feudal nobles to mark their powers. |
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It is from this class of nobles that the first Taoist priests are believed to have emerged. |
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The example of the Roman emperors influenced the political objective of the Crown, while the nobles benefited from feudalism. |
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In 1640, John IV spearheaded an uprising backed by disgruntled nobles and was proclaimed king. |
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The prime minister in turn disliked the old nobles, whom he considered corrupt and incapable of practical action. |
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The strongholds on the coast were now stormed and the nobles were slaughtered and the rest sold into slavery. |
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Odo, Count of Paris was then elected by nobles as the new king of West Francia, and was crowned the next month. |
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Both nobles became increasingly opposed to Charles, and in 922 deposed him and elected Robert I as the new king. |
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Instead, Frankish nobles of the realm asked his cousin, Emperor Charles the Fat to assume the crown. |
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Finally the nobles unanimously summoned back Louis, thanks to the decisive support of Hugh the Great to France to become their new King. |
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Eadwig was not a popular king, and his reign was marked by conflict with nobles and the Church, primarily St Dunstan and Archbishop Oda. |
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A conclave of nobles declared Edgar as king of the territory north of the Thames. |
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The lesser prisoners taken at Tinchebray were released, but Robert and several other leading nobles were imprisoned indefinitely. |
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A force of Goths under Catualda, a Marcomannian exile, bought off the nobles and seized the palace. |
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Religious differentiation left the Ukrainian Orthodox peasants leaderless, as they were reluctant to follow the Ukrainian nobles. |
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In France, nobles were exempt from paying the taille, the major direct tax. |
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Most nations traditionally had an untitled lower nobility in addition to titled nobles. |
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The Laws of the Indies and other pertinent Royal Decrees were enforced in the Philippines and benefited many indigenous nobles. |
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It was not permitted for Spanish Parish Priests to treat these Filipino nobles with less consideration. |
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The word Andriana has often formed part of the names of Malagasy kings, princes and nobles. |
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In particular, the nobles of greater distinction, by respect and tradition, were allowed to use their titles during the republican regime. |
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After Pepin's long rule, his son Charles Martel assumed power, fighting against nobles and his own stepmother. |
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Annual national assemblies of the nobles and their armed retainers decided major policies of war making. |
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This was immediately opposed by the nobles because Theudoald was a child of only eight years of age. |
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Pippin's death occasioned open conflict between his heirs and the Neustrian nobles who sought political independence from Austrasian control. |
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Before the end of the year, Charles Martel had escaped from prison and been acclaimed mayor by the nobles of Austrasia. |
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Odo and his remaining Aquitanian nobles formed the right flank of Charles's forces at Tours. |
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The manor contained seventeen houses built inside the courtyard for nobles and family members and was separated from its supporting villas. |
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The monarchies strengthened their positions in the 12th and 13th centuries through imposing taxes on peasants and a class of nobles also emerged. |
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A foreign pope and foreign papal officers were seen with suspicion by Roman nobles, who were led by Crescentius II to revolt. |
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Henry II died in 1024 and Conrad II, first of the Salian Dynasty, was elected king only after some debate among dukes and nobles. |
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The Tlatoanimeh of the Aztec Empire were chosen by a council of elders, nobles, and priests. |
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The following year, 1388, Swedish nobles called upon her help against King Albert of Mecklenburg. |
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Nor in any sort of augury is more faith and assurance reposed, not by the populace only, but even by the nobles, even by the Priests. |
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These men were used as a judicial police force for Castile, as well as to attempt to keep Castilian nobles in check. |
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Byzantine nobles were devoted to horsemanship, particularly tzykanion, now known as polo. |
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Mieza was like a boarding school for Alexander and the children of Macedonian nobles, such as Ptolemy, Hephaistion, and Cassander. |
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Separate from the Frankish nobles or burgesses, the communes were autonomous political entities closely linked to their countries of origin. |
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It was a joint effort of Venetian colonists and Cretan nobles who attempted to create an independent state. |
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By 1636, most Inner Mongolian nobles had submitted to the Qing dynasty founded by the Manchus. |
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His court limited government spending and prohibited nobles and troops from abusing civilians or issuing edicts without authorization. |
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Beginning in the early 19th century, most of the island was united and ruled as the Kingdom of Madagascar by a series of Merina nobles. |
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Royal knights were mainly nobles with a close relationship with the king, and thus claimed a direct Gothic inheritance. |
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But the Navarrese nobles rejected him, and chose the Theobald IV of Champagne in his stead. |
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Of course, Asturian and Galician minor nobles and clergymen sent their own expeditions with the peasants they maintained. |
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The country prospered under his rule, but not peacefully, as his laws interfered with the ambition of powerful nobles. |
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As one of example of the measure he took, he deprived the nobles of their right to administer justice on their estates. |
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In the 16th century, there was a brook there which the nobles used to promenade in their boats. |
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As she had been named in her brother's will as his successor, the nobles asked Isabella to take his place as champion of the rebellion. |
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This decision was warmly approved by many leading nobles of the court, but Isabella was reluctant to take such drastic measures. |
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While the nobles held the titles, those individuals of lesser breeding did the real work. |
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While the nobles were no longer directly involved in the matters of state, they were welcome to attend the meetings. |
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Many of popular poems among the Thai nobles are also based on Indian stories. |
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The French presence encouraged by Phaulkon, however, stirred the resentment and suspicions of the Thai nobles and Buddhist clergy. |
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All rajas were selected from the Kayeli tribal nobles, who had by this time proved their loyalty to the Dutch. |
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Ambassadors were often nobles with little foreign experience and no expectation of a career in diplomacy. |
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Moctezuma issued new laws that further separated nobles from commoners and instituted the death penalty for adultery and other offenses. |
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Apparently due to his incompetence, Tizoc was likely assassinated by his own nobles five years into his rule. |
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Cuauhipiltin, or eagle nobles, were commoners who impressed the nobles with their martial prowess, and were treated as nobles. |
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In response, de Alvarado ordered a preemptive slaughter of Aztec nobles and priests celebrating a festival in the city's main temple. |
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At any sign of weakness, Aztec nobles within Tenochtitlan and in other Aztec tributaries were liable to rebel. |
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He tortured priests and nobles and discovered that the Aztecs were planning a revolt. |
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He ordered the gates closed and initiated the killing of many thousands of Aztec nobles, warriors and priests. |
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Huguenot numbers grew rapidly between 1555 and 1561, chiefly amongst nobles and city dwellers. |
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During the Middle Ages, a huge quantity of fortified castles were built by Galician feudal nobles to mark their powers against their rivals. |
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In October 1919, the Republic of China occupied Mongolia after the suspicious deaths of Mongolian patriotic nobles. |
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These are Knightes in their offices, but not nobles, and are called knights Caligate of Armes, because they were startuppes to the middle legge. |
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I refused to make so much as a curtsey for the passing nobles, as I am a staunch egalitarian. |
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And who shall then stick closest to ye, and excite others? not he who takes up armes for cote and conduct, and his four nobles of Danegelt. |
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In the course of the struggle with the unfortunate ethnarch, the nobles had found it expedient to attach themselves to Rome. |
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Listen closely, we, the Gardanes, heard tell of the glory of the nation-kings, how those nobles performed deeds of valor! |
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Her family also served as a conduit for the entry of English nobles into Scotland. |
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Many of the ousted Gothic nobles took refuge in the unconquered north Kingdom of Asturias. |
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Many of the Saxon nobles grew jealous and from 1049 there was conflict between the disgruntled Saxon nobility, the king and the incoming Normans. |
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Olaf Haraldsson stood down, unable to put up any fight, as his nobles were against him for his tendency to flay their wives for sorcery. |
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The Londoners chose his son Edmund as their king, while most of the nobles met at Southampton and swore fealty to Cnut. |
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Despite the submission of the English nobles, resistance continued for several years. |
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The empire became a popular destination for many English nobles and soldiers, as the Byzantines were in need of mercenaries. |
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William was engaged in military actions against his own nobles throughout 1053, as well as with the new Archbishop of Rouen, Mauger. |
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Local nobles resisted the claim, but William invaded and by 1064 had secured control of the area. |
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Brittany, a region where nobles were traditionally very independent, was under Angevin control during Henry II and Richard I's reigns. |
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By 1135, major disputes between Henry I and Matilda drove the nobles previously loyal to Henry I against Matilda. |
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Philip's nobles refused to attack the lands of an absent crusader, though Philip instead gained lands in Artois. |
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Louis seized Rochester, London, and Winchester, whilst John was deserted by several nobles, including the Earl of Salisbury. |
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With news arriving of the Battle of Hattin, he took the cross at Tours in the company of other French nobles. |
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The nobles had sought to add another document, the De Tallagio, to Magna Carta. |
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During his minority the nobles again attempted to seize power, but they were defeated by Charles' sister Anne of France. |
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After the Battle of Poitiers, many French nobles and mercenaries rampaged, and chaos ruled. |
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Margaret and the remaining Lancastrian nobles gathered their army in the north of England. |
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Richard II's reign was marked by increasing dissension between the King and several of the most powerful nobles. |
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At this stage, few of the nobles supported such drastic action, and York was forced to submit to superior force at Blackheath. |
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Margaret built up an alliance against Richard and conspired with other nobles to reduce his influence. |
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Paul's Cathedral, with Lancastrian and Yorkist nobles following him, hand in hand. |
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Several Lancastrian nobles, including the third Duke of Somerset, who had apparently been reconciled to Edward, readily led the rebellion. |
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Many of Buckingham's defeated supporters and other disaffected nobles fled to join Henry Tudor in exile. |
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He was content to allow the nobles their regional influence if they were loyal to him. |
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Although a king could raise personal militia from his lands, he could only muster a significantly large army through the support of his nobles. |
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Powerful nobles could demand greater incentives to remain on the liege's side or else they might turn against him. |
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Shortly after, the citizens of London, both nobles and commons, convened and drew up a petition asking Richard to assume the throne. |
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On 30 June 1688, a group of seven Protestant nobles invited the Prince of Orange to come to England with an army. |
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Strong turnout produced 1,201 delegates, including 303 clergy, 291 nobles and 610 members of the Third Estate. |
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Pamphlets by liberal nobles and clergy became widespread after the lifting of press censorship. |
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During the course of a few hours nobles, clergy, towns, provinces, companies and cities lost their special privileges. |
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The bulk of the nobles argued for an aristocratic upper house elected by the nobles. |
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On the night of 20 June 1791 the royal family fled the Tuileries Palace dressed as servants, while their servants dressed as nobles. |
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In the ancien regime, new opportunities for nuns as charitable practitioners were created by devout nobles on their own estates. |
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Primogeniture was ended both for nobles and peasants, thereby weakening the family patriarch. |
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Nelson hastily organised the evacuation of the Royal Family, several nobles and the British nationals, including the Hamiltons. |
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Many nobles, including Alexander II of Scotland for his English possessions, gathered to give homage to him. |
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By 1018, the last Bulgarian nobles had surrendered to the Byzantine Empire. |
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Beneath them, lesser nobles had authority over smaller areas of land and fewer people. |
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Like many of his predecessors, Richard II conflicted with the nobles by attempting to concentrate power in his own hands. |
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In ancient China, nobles sometimes made a point of visiting Mount Tai and, on occasion, all five Sacred Mountains. |
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The nobles siding with Anselm, the conference ended in deadlock and the matter was postponed. |
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Palaces in Romania, as elsewhere in Europe, were originally built for royalty, nobles and bishops. |
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With over a thousand years of monarchic history, Spain has many palaces of its own that were built for different monarchs or nobles. |
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He also appointed Scottish nobles such as George Home to his court, which proved unpopular with the Parliament of England. |
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Even more discontent resulted when the King allowed his Scottish nobles to collect the recusancy fines. |
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The invasion has the support of the Scottish nobles, who are appalled and frightened by Macbeth's tyrannical and murderous behaviour. |
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Proposed nobles include the Earl of Sussex, the Earl of Pembroke, and Lord Strange. |
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Clientship was also practised between nobles, which established hierarchies of homage and political support. |
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It is unclear whether the Mormaers were originally former kings, royal officials, or local nobles, or some combination of these. |
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Naturalistic depictions of Pictish nobles, hunters and warriors, male and female, without obvious tattoos, are found on monumental stones. |
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In 1320, the Declaration of Arbroath was sent by a group of Scottish nobles to the Pope affirming Scottish independence from England. |
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Edward III also had the support of a group of Scottish nobles, led by Balliol and Henry Beaumont, known as the 'Disinherited. |
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Many of her experienced nobles were dead and the economy which had barely begun to recover from the earlier wars was once again in tatters. |
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Various factions among the Scottish nobles contended for power, and custody of the young king. |
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Some of the terms of Coloman's coronation are summarized in Pacta Conventa by which the Croatian nobles agreed to recognise Coloman as king. |
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Frederick William enjoyed support from the nobles, who enabled the Great Elector to undermine the Diet and other representative assemblies. |
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The nobles served in the upper levels of the elector's army and bureaucracy, but they also won new prosperity for themselves. |
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Russia was aided in achieving its goal when the Targowica Confederation, an organisation of Polish nobles, appealed to the Empress for help. |
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Queensberry, however, was never again sent to parliament by the Scottish nobles. |
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During the reign of Otto II, the nobles revolted and the West Franks, under Lothair, raided Aachen in the ensuing confusion. |
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Powerful local nobles turned their cities, counties and duchies into private kingdoms, that felt little sense of obligation to the emperor. |
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On 26 September Cardinal Alberic, Bishop of Ostia, arrived at Carlisle where David had called together his kingdom's nobles, abbots and bishops. |
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There were fourteen nobles who put themselves forward as candidates for the throne. |
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Unsurprisingly, a court made up of Scots nobles rejected these arguments out of hand. |
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This decision had the support of the majority of Scots nobles and magnates, even a number of those appointed by Bruce as auditors. |
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Scotland entered an uncertain period as the leading nobles vied for the vacant crown. |
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While King Edward marched through the subdued realm, the Scots nobles captured at Dunbar were taken south in chains. |
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Most of the strategic royal castles were placed in the keeping of Edward's nobles. |
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This was one of several rebellions taking place across Scotland, including those of several Scottish nobles and Andrew Moray in the north. |
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The uprising suffered a blow when the nobles submitted to the English at Irvine in July. |
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Soules, who had probably been appointed by John, supported his return, as did most other nobles. |
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Opposition to Bothwell led to the formation of a coalition of nobles, who styled themselves as the Confederate Lords. |
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The first thing the future Charles VII did was to shower munificence upon the Scottish nobles. |
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The Protestant nobles and others, including Knox, were taken prisoner and forced to row in the French galleys. |
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Much of this was now in the hands of the nobles, who were reluctant to give up their possessions. |
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In order to defend these men, Knox sent out letters calling the nobles to convene. |
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When he returned to Edinburgh, he found the Protestant nobles divided over what to do with Mary. |
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Although his funeral was attended by the nobles of Scotland, no major politician or diplomat mentioned his death in their letters that survive. |
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Furthermore, Scotland's nobles were almost bankrupted by the Darien fiasco. |
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Two senior nobles stood out as candidates to head Henry's regency government. |
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The English nobles protested the marriage of the King's sister to a foreigner of modest rank. |
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The nobles of France offered him the Regency of the kingdom, vacated by the death of Queen Blanche of Castile. |
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A few other minor Welsh nobles submitted in time to retain their lands, but became little more than gentry. |
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The remaining royal family of Llwelyn and Dafydd was crushed and their lands divided amongst major English nobles. |
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He turns his back on the praise of nobles which he sees as flattery and falsehood and sets his eyes on the blessedness of heaven. |
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In this parliament, apart from the nobles and military commanders, also sat the representatives of each township and village. |
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In southern China, fierce debates about whether Buddhism should be allowed were held frequently by the royal court and nobles. |
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The event originates from the Middle Ages, when the most important Florentine nobles amused themselves playing while wearing bright costumes. |
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Revolts broke out in Franconia, Swabia, and Thuringia in 1524, even drawing support from disaffected nobles, many of whom were in debt. |
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The testimonial concept can also be traced to Normandy before 1066, when a jury of nobles was established to decide land disputes. |
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Tausen's preaching converted ordinary people, merchants, nobles, and monks and even the Prior grew to appreciate Tausen and ordered his release. |
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The Crown closed churches, abbeys, priories and cathedrals, giving their property to local nobles or selling it. |
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In addition, Ivan and several prominent nobles attended, including his brother Prince Iur'ii Vasil'evich and the boiars of the Muscovite court. |
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There were a few minor rumblings among some of the other Earls and Thegns, the nobles of the realm. |
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Enthoven's later, more detailed account of the Kapuas Malay kingdoms also cites numerous rulers and nobles with abang honorifics. |
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Giuliano arrived in Spain in 1619 as Florence's new ambassador and made protocolary visits to all the influential nobles in the capital. |
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She accomplishes this by resisting any effort by Leontes or the other nobles to forget the incomparability of Hermione. |
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Isabella I of Castile, considered a usurper by many Galician nobles, eradicated all armed resistance and definitively established the royal power of the Castilian monarchy. |
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Of the 12,000 nobles there, 570 became oprichniks, the rest were expelled. |
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In 1505, Louis XII, having fallen ill, ordered that his daughter Claude and Francis be married immediately, but only through an assembly of nobles were the two engaged. |
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Overall, Huguenot presence was heavily concentrated in the western and southern portions of the French kingdom, as nobles there secured practise of the new faith. |
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Thereafter, Pizarro went on to look for Atahualpa himself, who was shielded by his faithful nobles who, in the end, were also captured by the Spaniards. |
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The nobles desired for Charles to marry a princess of Spanish blood and a marriage to Isabella would secure an alliance between Spain and Portugal. |
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The captured nobles and their families could be imprisoned, or sacrificed. |
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After Rajah patis of Cebu, random native nobles resisted Spanish rule. |
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This portion consisted of some bishops, some nobles, and an increasingly important element of professional administrators with legal training known as letrados. |
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The large territories awarded to military orders and nobles were the origin of the latifundia in today's Andalusia and Extremadura in Spain, and Alentejo in Portugal. |
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Noble knights came from the ranks of the infanzones or lower nobles, whereas the commoner knights were not noble but were wealthy enough to afford a horse. |
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Many Mongols of the upper class such as the Jalayir and the Oronar nobles as well as the emperors also patronized Confucian scholars and institutions. |
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In the 5th century the Buddhist monk Dharmapriya was proclaimed State Teacher of the Rouran Khaganate and given 3000 families and some Rouran nobles became Buddhists. |
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Control of castles allowed the nobles to defy kings or other overlords. |
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The post was held by senior nobles such as Thomas Radcliffe. |
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Many Khalkha nobles and folks fled to Inner Mongolia because of the war. |
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As the position of captain could be quite profitable, it became quite attractive to lesser nobles and men of ambition hoping for a quick and easy fortune. |
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The Confederacy, governed by nobles of various cantons, facilitated management of common interests and ensured peace on the important mountain trade routes. |
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Instead, to secure their own position from the threat of being deposed, Emperors were forced to grant more and more autonomy to local rulers, both nobles and bishops. |
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The vast majority of titles borne by nobles were not, however, hereditary. |
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Untitled nobles were not infrequently wealthier than titled families, while considerable differences in wealth were also to be found within the titled nobility. |
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All the Frankish lands were briefly reunited by Charles the Fat, but in 888 he was deposed by nobles and in East Francia Arnulf of Carinthia was elected king. |
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It was then the custom for the Portuguese Crown to appoint nobles to naval and military commands, regardless of experience or professional competence. |
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It has been suggested that the nobles were already in league with Albany. |
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He checked the power of the nobles and helped the towns to free themselves from seigniorial authority, granting privileges and liberties to the emergent bourgeoisie. |
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Because of this, their cousin Charles the Fat, already Holy Roman Emperor and King of East Francia, was invited by the nobles of the Kingdom to assume the throne. |
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Lothar managed to increase his power, but this was reversed with the coming of age of Hugh Capet, who began forming new alliances of nobles and eventually was elected as king. |
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The King also had to move with his army against the southern nobles to receive their homage and loyalty, however, the count of Barcelona managed to avoid this completely. |
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In his struggles with his nobles in 1488 James III received assistance from his two warships the Flower and the King's Carvel also known as the Yellow Carvel. |
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First used by English nobles during the late 18th century, the tascu began being used in Sicily in the early 20th century as a driving cap, usually worn by car drivers. |
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Early in his career he composed in the tradition of the Poets of the Princes but he was among the first to sing the praises of the nobles and others using the cywydd meter. |
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The other aspect of the tradition was the professionalism of the poets and their reliance on patronage from kings, princes and nobles for their living. |
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Although Hywel's commission generally recorded the traditions of the country, one modification they made was to end the right of nobles to trial by combat, finding it unjust. |
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These officers are employed by Scottish nobles and chiefs and perform duties relating to genealogical, heraldic, and ceremonial matters of clan members. |
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As a generality, most nobles, whether titled or not, have coats of arms, hence the widely held perception of heraldry as an aristocratic trapping. |
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