Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Richard III of England" ¶ 60
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Royal and Blood
It appeared in 1993 as Nkumbi initiation ritual and structure among the Mbo of Zaïre and as Asa: Myth of Origin of the Blood Brotherhood Among the Mbo of the Ituri Forest, both in Annales of the Royal Museum for Central Africa ( Tervuren, Belgium ), vol.
In the English colony of Port Royal, Peter Blood is purchased by Arabella Bishop ( Olivia de Havilland ), the beautiful niece of the local military commander Colonel Bishop.
Blood decides to take Arabella and Lord Willoughby to the safety of Port Royal.
However, when Willoughby reveals that James II has since been deposed in the Glorious Revolution and that Willoughby has been sent by the new king, William of Orange, to offer a full pardon, emancipation, and a commission with the Royal Navy to Blood and his men, they joyfully change their minds at this good news and prepare for battle.
* Blood Royal, ( with Junius Podrug ) 2005
Under the constitution the heir to the throne ( Dauphin Louis-Charles at that time ) was restyled as Prince Royal ( a Prince of the Blood would be retitled as prince français ), taking effect from the inception of the Legislative Assembly on 1 October 1791.
Having read English history for years as a hobby, and not satisfied with the books written about King Richard III, Fields spent four years researching and two years writing the non-fiction book Royal Blood: Richard III and the Mystery of the Princes ( ISBN 0-06-039269-X ), which was published in 1998.
* Brian Blessed portrayed Hereward in the TV drama Blood Royal: William the Conqueror ( 1990 ).
On screen, Odo has been portrayed by John Nettleton in the two-part BBC TV play Conquest ( 1966 ), part of the series Theatre 625, and by Denis Lill in the TV drama Blood Royal: William the Conqueror ( 1990 ).
* Peter Berresford Ellis, Erin's Blood Royal: The Gaelic Noble Dynasties of Ireland ISBN 0-09-478600-3
The following few issues follow the early stages of his relationship with Kit, a plot to install a demon on the British throne in the plotline " Royal Blood ", and in the extended issue # 50, his first meeting with the King of the Vampires.
* Ellis, Peter Berresford, Erin's Blood Royal: The Gaelic Noble Dynasties of Ireland.
* The Plantagenet Roll of the Blood Royal ( Mortimer-Percy Volume ) by the Marquis of Ruvigny and Raineval ( 1911 ), pages 250 – 251
Louis was titled Prince of Condé in a parliamentary document on 15 January 1557 and, without any legal authority beyond their dignity as princes of the Blood Royal, they continued to bear it for the next three centuries.
Although Henry's own descendants thereafter held the senior positions within the royal family of dauphin, Fils de France, and petits-fils de France, from 1589 to 1709 the Princes of Condé coincidentally held the rank at court of premier prince du sang royal ( First Prince of the Blood Royal ), to which was attached income, precedence, and ceremonial privilege ( such as the exclusive right to be addressed as Monsieur le prince at court ).
# " Royal Blood " ( Broadcast: 30 January 1975 )
* In 2007, Nunkie Theatre Company premiered Blood, Bone and Genius, a new one-man play based on Haydon's life and diaries, written and performed by Robert Lloyd Parry, in the historic life-drawing classroom of the Royal Academy Schools in London.
The story " Royal Blood " told in John Constantine Hellblazer ( 1992, DC Comics ) mentions Jack the Ripper being Sir William Gull possessed by a demon called Calibraxis.
* Fields, Bertram Royal Blood: Richard III and the Mystery of the Princes New York: Regan Books 2000 ISBN 0-06-098738-3
She was the longest-lived Princess of the Blood Royal of the British Royal Family and the last surviving grandchild of Queen Victoria.
On screen, Robert has been portrayed by Gordon Whiting in the two-part BBC TV play Conquest ( 1966 ), part of the series Theatre 625, and by Richard Ireson in the TV drama Blood Royal: William the Conqueror ( 1990 ).
On screen, Malet has been portrayed by Peter Halliday in the two-part BBC TV play Conquest ( 1966 ), part of the series Theatre 625, and by Gawn Grainger in the TV drama Blood Royal: William the Conqueror ( 1990 ).
* Waltheof was portrayed by actor Marcus Gilbert in the TV drama Blood Royal: William the Conqueror ( 1990 ).

Royal and Richard
( Ian Richard Netton, Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, Third Series, Vol.
Admiral of the Fleet David Richard Beatty, 1st Earl Beatty GCB, OM, GCVO, DSO, PC ( 17 January 1871 – 11 March 1936 ) was an admiral in the Royal Navy.
Notable made-for-television productions of Hamlet include those starring Christopher Plummer ( 1964 ), Richard Chamberlain ( 1970 ; Hallmark Hall of Fame ), Derek Jacobi ( 1980 ; Royal Shakespeare Company, BBC ), Kevin Kline ( 1990 ), Campbell Scott ( 2000 ) and David Tennant ( 2009 ; Royal Shakespeare Company, BBC ).
* 1757 – Richard Goodwin Keats, Royal Navy admiral ( d. 1834 )
Through his friend Richard Lower, whom he knew from the Westminster School, Locke was introduced to medicine and the experimental philosophy being pursued at other universities and in the Royal Society, of which he eventually became a member.
He later joined the faculty of the Royal Conservatory where his notable students included Michel van der Aa, Richard Ayres, Richard Baker, Michael Fiday, Jeff Hamburg, Michael Zev Gordon, Rozalie Hirs, Ivana Kiš, Yannis Kyriakides, Juan Sebastian Lach, Steve Martland, Nathan Michel, Koji Nakano, Damien Ricketson, Patrick Saint-Denis, Víctor Varela, Jasna Veličković, and Sinta Wullur.
Richard Bartelot, of the Royal Artillery Institution, said that the bow was of yew, 6 feet ( 1. 83 m ) long, with a 3 foot ( 914 mm ) arrow.
* 25 Years of the English Stage Company at the Royal Court, Richard Findlater ( ed ) Amber Lane Press 1981.
* 1194 – King Richard I of England gives Portsmouth its first Royal Charter.
* 1484 – The College of Arms was formally incorporated by Royal Charter signed by King Richard III of England.
* 1726 – Richard Howe, 1st Earl Howe, Royal Navy admiral of the fleet ( d. 1799 )
In 1482 Richard recaptured Berwick-upon-Tweed from the Kingdom of Scotland, the last time that the Royal Burgh would change hands between the two realms.
As Duke of Gloucester, Richard used the Royal Arms of England quartered with the Royal Arms of France, differenced by a label argent of three points ermine, on each point a canton gules.
Arms of King Richard I adopted towards the end of his reign, a version of the lion emblems or recognizance used on the shield of his grandfather Geoffrey Plantagenet, Count of Anjou ( d. 1151 ), which became fixed during his reign as the Royal Arms of England: Gules, three lions passant guardant in pale or
Sir John Everett Millais, The Two Princes Edward and Richard in the Tower, 1483, Royal Holloway collection, 1878
* The North Carolina General Assembly passes an act establishing the town of Martinsborough, named for Royal Governor Josiah Martin, on the land of Richard Evans, which will serve as the county seat of Pitt County.
Two years later, in 1612, the Virginia Company's Royal Charter was officially extended to include the island, and a party of 60 settlers was sent, under the command of Sir Richard Moore, the island's first governor.
* Royal Family ( 1969 ) is a celebrated and reverential BBC documentary made by Richard Cawston to accompany the investiture of the current Prince of Wales.
Royal Arms of England | Arms of King Henry III, inherited from his uncle King Richard I ( Arms of Plantagenet ): Gules, three lions passant guardant in pale or
The effect of these raids, particularly when coupled with his capture of the Royal Navy's HMS Drake — the first such success in British waters, but not Jones's last — was to force the British government to increase resources for coastal defence, and to create a climate of fear among the British public which was subsequently fed by press reports of his preparations for the 1779 Bonhomme Richard mission.
The story of Caroline's marriage to George and her battle to be recognized as queen consort served as the basis for the 1996 BBC docudrama A Royal Scandal with Susan Lynch as Caroline and Richard E. Grant as George IV.

1.304 seconds.