The reign of Eadward the Confessor. 2d ed., rev. 1870Clarendon Press, 1868 |
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Results 1-5 of 92
Page ix
... April 3 , 1043 Eadward crowned at Winchester Exhortation of Archbishop Eadsige ; position of Ead- ward ; his relations to Godwine and the other great Earls 9 10-14 14 14-16 A. D. Presence of foreign Ambassadors at the coronation ;
... April 3 , 1043 Eadward crowned at Winchester Exhortation of Archbishop Eadsige ; position of Ead- ward ; his relations to Godwine and the other great Earls 9 10-14 14 14-16 A. D. Presence of foreign Ambassadors at the coronation ;
Page xi
... Archbishop Eadsige ; he retires to Abingdon and dies 68-69 July 25 , 1044 August 10 , 1044 Death of Elfweard , Bishop of London 69 Restoration of Stigand ; Robert of Jumièges Bishop of London 70-71 A. D. Baneful influence of Robert ...
... Archbishop Eadsige ; he retires to Abingdon and dies 68-69 July 25 , 1044 August 10 , 1044 Death of Elfweard , Bishop of London 69 Restoration of Stigand ; Robert of Jumièges Bishop of London 70-71 A. D. Baneful influence of Robert ...
Page xiv
... Archbishop Eadsige ; the monks of Christ Church elect Ælfric , who is supported by Godwine but rejected by the King . Witenagemót of London ; Robert of Jumièges ap- pointed to Canterbury , Spearhafoc to London , and Rudolf to the Abbey ...
... Archbishop Eadsige ; the monks of Christ Church elect Ælfric , who is supported by Godwine but rejected by the King . Witenagemót of London ; Robert of Jumièges ap- pointed to Canterbury , Spearhafoc to London , and Rudolf to the Abbey ...
Page xvii
... Archbishop Robert ; succession and primacy of Malger . 1048-1098 Odo Bishop of Bayeux ; his character in England and in Normandy . . Ecclesiastical movement in Normandy ; foundation of monasteries Character of the monastic reformations ...
... Archbishop Robert ; succession and primacy of Malger . 1048-1098 Odo Bishop of Bayeux ; his character in England and in Normandy . . Ecclesiastical movement in Normandy ; foundation of monasteries Character of the monastic reformations ...
Page xxi
... Archbishop Robert and many other Normans ; " Good law decreed for all folk " Sept. 29 Absence of Swegen ; his pilgrimage to Jerusalem He dies in Lykia . 335-337 Personal reconciliation between Godwine and the King 337 Restoration of ...
... Archbishop Robert and many other Normans ; " Good law decreed for all folk " Sept. 29 Absence of Swegen ; his pilgrimage to Jerusalem He dies in Lykia . 335-337 Personal reconciliation between Godwine and the King 337 Restoration of ...
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Common terms and phrases
Abbey Abbot Abingdon Ælfgar Appendix appointment Archbishop banished Beorn Biographer Bishop Bishoprick brother Canons castle CHAP character charter Chron church claim Cnut connexion consecration crime Crown cyng Danes death Denmark Dipl doubt doubtless Duke Eadgyth Eadward Ealdred Earl Earldom ecclesiastical ejus election Emma Emperor England English Englishmen eorl Evroul father favour Flor Florence foreign French Gemót Godwine Godwine's Gruffydd Harold Harthacnut held honour Jumièges King Eadward King's Kingdom land Lanfranc later Leofric Leofwine Macbeth Magnus Malms Mercia minster monastery monastic monks Norman Normandy Osgod Peterborough Peterborough Chronicle Petrib Prelates prince probably quæ quod Regis Robert Roman de Rou Rome royal Saint says Scriptt seems seqq shires Siward sons Stigand story Swegen Swend Thegns tion told Tostig VIII Vita Eadw West-Saxons William of Jumièges William of Malmesbury Winchester Witan Worcester Chronicle writers þæt þam
Popular passages
Page 157 - He turned a jealous over lord into an effective ally against his rebellious subjects, and he turned those rebellious subjects into faithful supporters against that jealous overlord. He came to his duchy under every disadvantage. At once bastard and minor, with competitors for his coronet arising at every moment, with turbulent barons to hold in check and envious neighbours to guard against, he was, throughout the whole of his early life, beset by troubles, none of which were of his own making, and...
Page 152 - As we cannot refuse to place him among the greatest of men, neither will a candid judgement incline us to place him among the worst of men. If we cannot give him a niche among pure patriots and heroes, he is quite as little entitled to a place among mere tyrants and destroyers. William of Normandy has no claim to a share in the pure glory of Timoleon, Alfred, and Washington ; he cannot even claim the more mingled fame of Alexander, Charles, and Cnut ; but he has...
Page 152 - Washington ; he look on his work as being any the less trustworthy on account of its poetical shape. But of course, whenever he departs from contemporary authority, and merely sets down floating traditions nearly a hundred years after the latest events which he records, his statements need to be very carefully weighed.
Page 135 - But for a private landowner to raise a private fortress to be the terror of his neighbours was something to which Englishmen had hitherto been unaccustomed, and for such a structure the English language had hitherto contained no name.
Page 329 - No man ever deserved a higher or a more lasting place in national gratitude than, the first man who, being neither King nor Priest, stands forth in English history as endowed with all the highest attributes of the statesman. In him, in those distant times, we can revere the great minister, the unrivalled parliamentary leader, the man who could sway councils and assemblies at his will...
Page 135 - Normans, a class of buildings whose grandest type is to be seen in the Conqueror's own Tower of London and in the more enriched keep of Rochester, began, doubtless on a far humbler scale, to rear itself over the dwellings of Englishmen.
Page 534 - Harold and Beorn. It is therefore quite possible that one or other of them may have governed Herefordshire from 1046 to 1050. But it is equally possible that the shire was, during that interval, held by Ralph of Mantes, Ralph the Timid, the son of Walter and Godgifu. Indeed, this last view becomes the more likely of the two, when we remember the firm root which the Normans had taken in Herefordshire before 1051 (see p. 138), which looks very much as if they had been specially favoured in these parts....
Page 555 - ... one that a certain amount of confusion is involved in the familiar description of the great King-Duke as William the Conqueror. He is not often called " Conqueestor" by writers of or near his own time. Moreover, " Conqusestor" hardly means " Conqueror" in the common use of that word, but rather " Acquirer," or " Purchaser," in the wider legal sense of the word "purchase.
Page 149 - ... as if he ruled the king and all England ; and his sons were earls and the king's darlings, and his daughter wedded and united to the king: she was brought to Wherwell, and they delivered her to the abbess.
Page 159 - English ground with no rights but those of his own sword, with no supporters but his own foreign army, he yet contrived to win the English crown with every circumstance of formal legality. He was elected, crowned, and anointed like his native predecessors, and he swore at the hands of an English primate to observe the ancient laws of England. By force and by craft, but with the outward pretext of law always put prominently forward, he gradually obtained full possession of the whole land ; he deprived...