Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "April 18" ¶ 4
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

1689 and
* 1689 The Treaty of Nerchinsk is signed by Russia and the Qing empire.
* 1689 Samuel Richardson, English writer ( d. 1761 )
* 1689 The Battle of Dunkeld in Scotland.
* 1689 1, 500 Iroquois attack the village of Lachine in New France.
* 1689 The former King James II of England, now deposed, lays siege to Derry.
* 1689 William III and Mary II are crowned as joint sovereigns of Britain.
* Duchy of Saxe-Lauenburg: 1269 1689
* Magnoald Ziegelbauer ( 1689 1750 )
Persecution and Toleration in Protestant England 1558 1689.
New England suffered smallpox epidemics in 1677, 1689 90, and 1702.
* 1626 Queen Christina of Sweden ( d. 1689 )
* 1689 Convention Parliament: The Declaration of Right is embodied in the Bill of Rights.
* 1640 ( baptism date ) Aphra Behn, English playwright and novelist ( d. 1689 )
Initially fighting on the Rhine with Max Emmanuel receiving a slight head wound at the Siege of Mainz in 1689 Eugene subsequently transferred himself to Piedmont after Victor Amadeus joined the Alliance against France in 1690.
In response to the early-to-mid-17th century " continental rationalism " John Locke ( 1632 1704 ) proposed in An Essay Concerning Human Understanding ( 1689 ) a very influential view wherein the only knowledge humans can have is a posteriori, i. e., based upon experience.
* 1689 The Convention Parliament declares that the flight to France in 1688 by James II, the last Roman Catholic British monarch, constitutes an abdication.
* 1689 William and Mary are proclaimed co-rulers of England.
* 1689 Pietro Gnocchi, Italian composer, choir director, historian, and geographer ( d. 1775 )
Equally influential was Charles de Secondat, baron de Montesquieu ( 1689 1755 ).
The practice was introduced to the west by Lady Mary Wortley Montagu ( May 26, 1689 August 21, 1762 ).
* 1689 Edward Holyoke, American clergyman, 9th President of Harvard University ( d. 1769 )
* 1761 Samuel Richardson, English writer ( b. 1689 )

1689 and Bostonians
In April 1689, when news arrived that King James had been overthrown in the Glorious Revolution, Bostonians overthrew their government and imprisoned dominion Governor Edmund Andros.

1689 and rise
There is no suspicion of any relations until the letter in 1689, even during the period of Galitzine ’ s rise to power.
John Murray, 1st Marquess of Atholl, KT ( 2 May 1631 6 May 1703 ) was a leading Scottish royalist and defender of the Stuarts during the English Civil War of the 1640s, until after the rise to power of William and Mary in 1689.

1689 and up
The possession case of Richard Dugdale was taken up by the ejected nonconformist Thomas Jollie, and other local ministers, in 1689.
Thus the history of English military law up to 1879 may be divided into three periods, each having a distinct constitutional aspect: ( I ) prior to 1689, the army, being regarded as so many personal retainers of the sovereign rather than servants of the state, was mainly governed by the will of the sovereign ; ( 2 ) between 1689 and 1803, the army, being recognized as a permanent force, was governed within the realm by statute and without it by the prerogative of the crown and ( 3 ) from 1803 to 1879, it was governed either directly by statute or by the sovereign under an authority derived from and defined and limited by statute.
In 1689, partly as a result of the Protestant Revolution of 1688 in England that exiled Catholic King James II and brought in Dutch rulers William and Mary of Orange, Puritans rose up in Maryland and deposed the Catholic Maryland government.
On 18 April 1689, soon after news reached Boston of the overthrow of James II of England, the colonists of Boston rose up against his rule.
It was compiled over many years, but written up between 1687 and 1689.
However Somers did play a leading part in drawing up the Declaration, which would be passed in Parliament and become known as the Bill of Rights 1689.
After the overthrow of James II by William of Orange in the Glorious Revolution of 1688 reached Boston, the colonists rose up in rebellion, and the dominion was dissolved in 1689.
* was a 24-gun ship launched in 1651, rebuilt as a 32-gun fifth rate in 1689, rebuilt again in 1707 and broken up in 1734.
When word of the 1688 Glorious Revolution arrived in Massachusetts, a mob rose up and arrested Andros in April 1689.
After the Glorious Revolution of 1688 opened up the prospect of a return, in 1689 Ludlow came back to England.
Its commander, von Dachenhausen, surrendered it to French troops on 11 October 1688, but on 15 March 1689 they blew it up.
Other late 17th century French and Dutch landscapes, in that intensely ordered and flat terrain, fell naturally into avenues ; Meindert Hobbema, in The Avenue at Middelharnis, 1689, presents such an avenue in farming country, neatly flanked at regular intervals by rows of young trees that have been rigorously limbed up ; his central vanishing point mimics the avenue's propensity to draw the spectator forwards along it.
After James ' death, the remnants of this force merged into the French Irish Brigade, which had been set up in 1689 from 6000 Irish recruits sent by the Irish Jacobites in return for French military aid.
In March 1689 Dahl and Tilson were back in London and Dahl started to work on living up to his new reputation.
* was a sheer hulk purchased in 1689 and broken up in 1730.

1689 and rebellion
In 1689, the year following the Glorious Revolution, John Coode led a Protestant rebellion that expelled Lord Baltimore from power in Maryland.
In addition to his council duties, he negotiated with New York's Indians, and sat as chief judge in the trial of Jacob Leisler, who had led the rebellion that in 1689 overthrew Andros ' lieutenant governor, Francis Nicholson.
A minor incident on May 30, 1689 in which Nicholson made an intemperate remark to a militia officer then flared into open rebellion.
When news of the Glorious Revolution reached the Province of New York in 1689, Jacob Leisler led a rebellion in which he appointed himself ruler of the Province of New York.

0.431 seconds.