The Early and Middle Ages of EnglandBell and Daldy, 1861 - 472 pages |
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Page 3
... emigration , and Britain was regarded as a holy island in Gaul at a time when 1 Taciti Agricola , cap . xi . 2 Prichard's Physical History of Man , vol . iii . , section 10 . 4 THE BELGE AND DIVITIACUS . its southern coasts had.
... emigration , and Britain was regarded as a holy island in Gaul at a time when 1 Taciti Agricola , cap . xi . 2 Prichard's Physical History of Man , vol . iii . , section 10 . 4 THE BELGE AND DIVITIACUS . its southern coasts had.
Page 22
... regarded as a nobility of office ; property was their only qualification ; but their rank designated them as the class from whom the higher magistrates should be chosen . They differed rather as a sub- division than as an order from the ...
... regarded as a nobility of office ; property was their only qualification ; but their rank designated them as the class from whom the higher magistrates should be chosen . They differed rather as a sub- division than as an order from the ...
Page 41
... regarded the faith of Augustine with super- stitious dread ; but no history records religious massacres , such as afterwards abounded in the struggle against the Danes . The distinction of faith was no doubt a rallying point to either ...
... regarded the faith of Augustine with super- stitious dread ; but no history records religious massacres , such as afterwards abounded in the struggle against the Danes . The distinction of faith was no doubt a rallying point to either ...
Page 42
... regarded with the deepest horror . The ascendancy of the priests over women , the secret and midnight orgies , the effemi- nate tendency of the doctrines , were all outrages upon national self - respect . It is clear that for many ...
... regarded with the deepest horror . The ascendancy of the priests over women , the secret and midnight orgies , the effemi- nate tendency of the doctrines , were all outrages upon national self - respect . It is clear that for many ...
Page 44
... regarded by them with a gloomy exultation ; the crash of the world could not make them more miserable , but it would avenge them on Rome . The peaceful tenets of the Gospel were congenial to men who had forgotten the use of arms ; and ...
... regarded by them with a gloomy exultation ; the crash of the world could not make them more miserable , but it would avenge them on Rome . The peaceful tenets of the Gospel were congenial to men who had forgotten the use of arms ; and ...
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Common terms and phrases
A. S. Laws Ętheling Alcuin Alfred Alfred's Anglia Anglo-Saxon Anselm archbishop army Athelstane Baldr barbarous barons battle Becket Bede bishop Britain British Britons brother Cędmon Cęsar Canute castle century character chief Christian Chron church civil claim clergy conquerors conquest court crime crown Danes Danish death districts Domesday Domesday Book doubt Dunstan Eadric Streona ealdorman earl Edgar Edgar Ętheling Edward Edward the Confessor Edwi England English estates Ethelred fact faith father favour feudal Gaul Godwin Harold Henry homage honour justice Kent king king's kingdom land Lanfranc legend London lord Malmesbury marriage married Mercia monastery monks murder native Nennius never nobles Norman Normandy Northumbria oath pagan peace perhaps Picts pope priest primate prince probably province race reign religion revolt Roman Rome royal Saxon seems story thought tion took towns tribes Welsh Wessex William William Fitz-Osbern witan
Popular passages
Page 397 - Among them, the purchase of charters by the municipalities may be classed in the first order. Richard once said that he would sell London itself, if he could find a purchaser. The sheriffs and their officers were removed throughout the kingdom that their places might be sold. If it be true that the great justiciary, Glanville, was imprisoned, and forced to ransom himself for three thousand pounds, the act may be regarded as one of extortion rather than of justice ; for Glanville's offences...
Page 61 - The object of the races who broke up the Roman empire was not to settle in a desert, but to live at ease as an aristocracy of soldiers, deriving rent from a peaceful population of tenants.
Page 345 - ... robbers. The bishops and learned men cursed them continually, but the effect thereof was nothing to them; for they were all accursed, and forsworn, and abandoned. To till the ground was to plough the sea: the earth bare no corn, for the land was all laid waste by such deeds; and they said openly, that Christ slept, and his saints.
Page 424 - I become your man from this day forward [of life and limb, and of earthly worship,] and unto you shall be true and faithful, and bear to you faith for the tenements that I claim to hold of you, saving the faith that I owe unto our sovereign lord the king ; and then the lord, so sitting, shall kiss him.
Page 105 - I fear not death, since I have fulfilled the greatest duty of life ; but I pray thee not to let my hair be touched by a slave, or stained with blood." His request was granted, and a freeman held up his hair for the fatal stroke ; but as the axe descended, Sigurd swayed himself forward, and the blow fell upon his captor's hands. The rough...
Page 60 - ... remarkable ; and the desperate courage with which the Britons bore up, at least in Wessex and Northumbria, against repeated defeats, is evidence of the high qualities of the race. They obtained their reward in the liberal terms which were granted them by the conqueror. For the common belief, that the Keltic population of Britain was exterminated or driven into Wales and Brittany by the Saxons, has absolutely no foundation in history.
Page 424 - I become your man from this day forward of life and limb and of earthly worship, and unto you shall be true and faithful, and bear to you faith for the tenements (MN) that I claim to hold of you, saving the faith that I owe unto our sovereign lord the king;' and then the lord so sitting shall kiss him.
Page 47 - I have suffered hunger for the Son of the Virgin. I have been fostered in the land of the Deity, I have been teacher to all intelligences, I am able to instruct the whole universe. I shall be until the day of doom on the face of the earth ; And it is not known whether my body is flesh or fish. Then I was for nine months In the womb of the hag Ceridwen ; I was originally little Gwion, And at length I am Taliesin.
Page 423 - ... are all elements in the system which overspread Europe in the middle ages. Men in those times commonly regarded it from the practical point of view, as service for reward. But it came to have a higher meaning to the state. The feudal baron was the representative of kingship on his domain; rendering justice, maintaining police, and seeing that military service was performed.
Page 172 - He has shown in his maps the territorial identity of many ancient Saxon Tithings with modern English Parishes and Townships. He says, "Ten families constituted a tithing, the self-governing unit of the state, which is now represented among us by the parish, and ten tithings were a hundred, whose court administered justice among the little communities themselves."* Pearson has shown that the Hundreds of Devonshire contain on the average...