Memoirs Chiefly Illustrative of the History and Antiquities of Northumberland, Volume 2Bell and Daldy, 1858 - Northumberland (England) |
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Page vi
... tion throughout all the architectural part of the volume having been purely to elicit the truth , as I have had no preconceived theories which I was desirous of maintaining . The North Country Borders are in themselves so interesting ...
... tion throughout all the architectural part of the volume having been purely to elicit the truth , as I have had no preconceived theories which I was desirous of maintaining . The North Country Borders are in themselves so interesting ...
Page 3
... tion borrowed , though a little abridged in the liberty , from the laws of King Cnut . Edward the Confessor diminished the sojourn to two nights.§ William the Conqueror and Henry I. fixed the stay of a stranger at three nights . Again ...
... tion borrowed , though a little abridged in the liberty , from the laws of King Cnut . Edward the Confessor diminished the sojourn to two nights.§ William the Conqueror and Henry I. fixed the stay of a stranger at three nights . Again ...
Page 14
... tion of their offences by the more prompt execution of a judicial sentence . The warden's courts were opened and kept with a due regard to the ceremonial of justice . The jurors , who usually consisted of six gentlemen of England and ...
... tion of their offences by the more prompt execution of a judicial sentence . The warden's courts were opened and kept with a due regard to the ceremonial of justice . The jurors , who usually consisted of six gentlemen of England and ...
Page 30
... tion of it when it sustained its last assault under the Duke of Albany , in 1523 , of which the poet was an eye - witness , that we may readily conceive what was its plan . He states that there was a large tower in the innermost area of ...
... tion of it when it sustained its last assault under the Duke of Albany , in 1523 , of which the poet was an eye - witness , that we may readily conceive what was its plan . He states that there was a large tower in the innermost area of ...
Page 32
... tion of the whole country . The campaign , however , was terminated by the complete overthrow of the Scots at the battle of the Standard near Northallerton , and David fled . equately to his own dominions . When he set out on This ill ...
... tion of the whole country . The campaign , however , was terminated by the complete overthrow of the Scots at the battle of the Standard near Northallerton , and David fled . equately to his own dominions . When he set out on This ill ...
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Popular passages
Page 161 - Ceteris servis non .in nostrum morem, discriptis per familiam ministeriis, utuntur: suam quisque sedem, suos penates regit. frumenti modum dominus aut pecoris aut vestis ut colono iniungit, et servus hactenus paret : cetera domus officia uxor ac liberi exsequuntur.
Page 161 - Ceteris servis, non in nostrum morem descriptis per familiam ministeriis, utuntur. Suam quisque sedem, suos penates regit. Frumenti modum dominus, aut pecoris aut vestis, ut colono, injungit : et servus hactenus paret ; cetera domus officia uxor ac liberi exsequuntur.
Page lxxxiii - Engolismensis diocesis salutem et apostolicam benedictionem. Cum a nobis petitur, quod iustum est et honestum tam vigor equitatis quam ordo exigit rationis, ut id per sollicitudinem officii nostri ad debitum perducatur effectum.
Page lxxxi - In cujus rei testimonium has litteras nostras fieri fecimus patentes. Teste me ipso apud Westmonasterium xiii die Decembris, anno regni nostri quarto.
Page 135 - This year went Siward the earl [of Northumbria] with a great army into Scotland, both with a ship force and with a land force, and fought against the Scots, and put to flight King Macbeth, and slew all who were the chief men in the land, and led thence much booty, such as no man before had obtained. But his son Osbarn, and his sister's son Siward, and some of his house-carles, and also of the king's, were there slain, on the day of the Seven Sleepers," (July 27.) Bishop Aldred, of Worcester, is sent...
Page 134 - ... with the other nobles. The king gave him besides many mansions on the road, that he and his successors might find entertainment in going and re* De Gestis Regum. turning ; and these houses continued to belong to the kings of Scotland until the time of Henry II.
Page 220 - ... of the fourteenth century may be divided more or less definitely into 41 groups separated by average intervals of 13^ years. In Kyoto a complete record has been kept for a thousand years. Here there was a strong maximum of destructive and strong earthquakes...
Page 296 - The earl concluded by entreating the king to order his council and treasurer to pay him and his son a large sum, conformably to the grant made in the last parliament, so that no injury might arise to the realm by repudiating what was due to them. It is clear that these just demands of the Percies received no consideration ; and it is not to be wondered at that, thus slighted, defrauded of their due, harassed by debts incurred for the king, and with their honour engaged for their fulfilment, goaded...
Page 156 - Counties palatine are so called a palatio; because the owners thereof (the earl of Chester, the bishop of Durham, and the duke of Lancaster,) had in those counties jura regalia, as fully as the king hath in his palace ; regalem potestatem in omnibus, as Bracton expresses it u.
Page lxxxiv - Benedicti, salutem et apostolicam benedictionem. Cum a nobis petitur quod justum est et honestum, tam vigor equitatis quam ordo exigit rationis ut id per sollicitudinem officii nostri ad debitum perducatur effectum...