Half Hours of English History: From the Roman period to the death of Henry IIIF. Warne, 1899 - 602 sider |
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Side 2
... followed by a citizen of the cele- brated colony of the Phocians , the Massilian Pytheas , to the scanty fragments of whose journal , preserved by Strabo and other ancient authors , we are indebted for the oldest accounts concern- ing ...
... followed by a citizen of the cele- brated colony of the Phocians , the Massilian Pytheas , to the scanty fragments of whose journal , preserved by Strabo and other ancient authors , we are indebted for the oldest accounts concern- ing ...
Side 43
... followed the example of those who observed the command of the law : " If thou wilt make me an altar of stone , thou shalt not build it of hewn stone ; for if thou lift up thy tool upon it , thou hast polluted it . " ( Exodus , chap . xx ...
... followed the example of those who observed the command of the law : " If thou wilt make me an altar of stone , thou shalt not build it of hewn stone ; for if thou lift up thy tool upon it , thou hast polluted it . " ( Exodus , chap . xx ...
Side 72
... followed the first ; new bodies daily crowded in . As soon as the Saxons began to be sensible of their strength , they found it their interest to be discontented ; they complained of breaches of a contract , which they construed ac ...
... followed the first ; new bodies daily crowded in . As soon as the Saxons began to be sensible of their strength , they found it their interest to be discontented ; they complained of breaches of a contract , which they construed ac ...
Side 76
... followed the overthrow of the Roman power by barbarian tribes . These apply to the constitution of England as well as to that of France ; and we therefore extract the following from Mr. Hazlitt's translation . It seems to me that people ...
... followed the overthrow of the Roman power by barbarian tribes . These apply to the constitution of England as well as to that of France ; and we therefore extract the following from Mr. Hazlitt's translation . It seems to me that people ...
Side 100
... followed . " Never was a familiar image more beautifully applied ; never was there a more striking picture of ancient manners - the storm without , the fire in the hall within , the king at supper with his great men around , the open ...
... followed . " Never was a familiar image more beautifully applied ; never was there a more striking picture of ancient manners - the storm without , the fire in the hall within , the king at supper with his great men around , the open ...
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Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
Abbey abbot Adela Alfred ancient Anglo-Saxon appears archbishop arms army Asselyn barons battle battle of Hastings Becket bishop Bretwalda Britain Britons brother Cæsar called Canterbury Canute castle cause charter chroniclers church clergy Conqueror conquest court crown crusaders Danes death duke earl Edward Edward the Confessor emperor enemy English father favour feudal fief forest France French Gaul Gloucester Godwin hand Harold hast heaven Henry Henry II holy honour horse Hubert inhabitants island John king of England king of Scots king's kingdom knights land Lanfranc laws liberty London lord Matilda monks Montfort nation never noble Norman Normandy oath peace pope possession priest prince prisoner queen reign Richard Ricola Roman Rome royal Rufus Runnemede Saladin Saxon says scene sent ships Silchester soldiers Stephen sword thee Thomas à Becket thou throne took town Tyrrel vassals walls whilst William William the Conqueror Winchester Wolfstan