| Edward Wedlake Brayley, John Britton - 1836 - 578 sider
...liberties which William, bishop of Durham, granted to the prior and monks ol St. Cuthbert. — Ibid. p. ii, from archives in the Tower. the palatial buildings...following year Rufus kept the festival of Whitsuntide at Westminster.t Fabyan, when speaking of the grievous exactions of William Rufus (under the year 1097),... | |
| Edward Wedlake Brayley, John Britton - 1836 - 584 sider
...1753. the palatial buildings received a memorable accession by the erection of the Great Hall,—of which Matthew Paris thus speaks under the date 1099.—'...grievous exactions of William Rufus (under the year 109/), says, " the kynge filled the spiritualtie and temporaltie with unreasonable taskys, * Matt.... | |
| Edward Wedlake Brayley, John Britton - 1836 - 578 sider
...Hall, — of which Matthew Paris thus speaks under the date 1099. — ' In the same year, King Williom, on returning from Normandy into England, held for...grievous exactions of William Rufus (under the year 109/), says, " the kynge filled the spiritualtie and temporaltie with unreasonable taskys, * Matt.... | |
| 1839 - 532 sider
...of the year 1099, says : — " In the same year, King William, returning to England from Normandy, held for the first time his court in the New Hall...comparison with the building which he intended to make.' " Another old writer, speaking of the same monarch, says : — "The kynge filled the spiritualtie and... | |
| John Heneage Jesse - 1847 - 474 sider
...at Westminster. Having entered to inspect it, with a large military retinue, some persons remarking that it was too large, and larger than it should have...comparison with the building which he intended to make." This same year, according to Stow, William Rufus kept his Wrhitsuntide in the Palace of Westminster,... | |
| James Hogg, Florence Marryat - 1866 - 800 sider
...Some person remarked that it was too large— larger than it should havo been. The king replied, ' that it was only a bedchamber in comparison with the building which he intended to make.' Rufue, no doubt, would have used the new clock tower as an eight-day clock, and the York and Nelson... | |
| Mark Lemon - 1867 - 368 sider
...Some person remarked that it was too large — larger than it should have been. The king replied, " that it was only a bedchamber in comparison with the building which he intended to make." Rufus, no doubt, would have used the new clock tower as an eight-day clock, and the York and Nelson... | |
| Edward Foss - 1874 - 376 sider
...at Westminster. Having entered to inspect it, with a large military retinue, some persons remarking that it was too large, and larger than it should have...comparison with the building which he intended to make." This same year, according to Stow, William Rufus kept his Whitsuntide in the Palace of Westminster,... | |
| harper's monthly magazine - 1884 - 992 sider
...Some of them exclaimed that "it was too large; larger than it should have been." But the king declared that "it was not half so large as it should have been,...only a bedchamber in comparison with the building he intended to make." Before we go on, the reader must form an idea of how this remarkable edifice... | |
| 1884 - 1082 sider
...Some of them exclaimed that "iUwas too large; larger than it should have been." But the king declared that "it was not half so large as it should have been,...only a bedchamber in comparison with the building he intended to make." Before we go on, the reader must form an idea of how this remarkable edifice... | |
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