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At and Castle
At the south-east is a tall clock tower topped with turrets, one of which has a balustrade similar to a feature at Castle Fraser.
* 1922 – At Windsor Castle, King George V receives the colours of the six Irish regiments that are to be disbanded – the Royal Irish Regiment, the Connaught Rangers, the South Irish Horse, the Prince of Wales's Leinster Regiment, the Royal Munster Fusiliers and the Royal Dublin Fusiliers.
At the age of two, she clapped her hands and laughed with joy when the great cannons of Kalmar Castle boomed out the royal salute.
At nearby Gauldwell Castle ( now only with one partial wall left standing ) Mary, Queen of Scots, is reputed to have spent the night.
At one point, he was arrested and imprisoned in Maxstoke Castle, but he escaped, swam the moat, and regrouped with his gang at Newbold Revel.
At the age of sixteen he went to New Castle, Delaware to begin the study of law under his cousin, David Finney.
At the outbreak of World War II, Margaret and her sister were at Birkhall, on the Balmoral Castle estate, where they stayed until Christmas 1939 enduring nights so cold that drinking water in carafes by their bedside froze.
At the time, the Kingdom of Denmark extended across both sides of the Sound, and on the eastern shore the Helsingborg Castle had been in existence since the Middle Ages.
At his father's death in 1239, he inherited large estates from his father around the ancestral seat of Habsburg Castle in the Aargau region of present-day Switzerland as well as in Alsace.
At its heart is Glenveagh Castle, a beautiful late Victorian ' folly ' that was originally built as a summer residence.
At Nottingham, rioters set fire to Nottingham Castle ( the home of the Duke of Newcastle ) and attacked Wollaton Hall ( the estate of Lord Middleton ).
At the age of three, he was sent by his father to Ludlow Castle as nominal head of the Council of Wales and the Marches, a body that had originally been set up to help the future Edward V of England in his duties as Prince of Wales.
At Ruddigore Castle, Robin ( now Sir Ruthven ) tries to come to grips with being a bad baronet, a task at which he proves to be spectacularly lacking.
At this point, Isabella undertook a pilgrimage to Canterbury, during which she left the traditional route to stop at Leeds Castle, a fortification held by Bartholomew de Badlesmere, steward of the King's household who had by 1321 joined the ranks of Edward's opponents.
At Stirling Castle, James maintained an alchemical workshop with a furnace of the quintessence.
At that time there were substantial buildings in the Highland area, a castle in Codrington, a fort at River, now known as the Martello Tower, and houses at Palmetto Point, Coco Point, and Castle Hill.
At Kincardine Castle on 2 July he confessed to rebellion and prayed for forgiveness.
At Pembroke Castle on 28 January 1457, the Countess gave birth to her only child, Henry Tudor.
At first Guise stayed unwillingly at Linlithgow Palace, then in July 1543 she moved with the infant queen to Stirling Castle.
At Radom's Royal Castle, the Nihil novi and the Łaski's Statute were adopted by the Sejm in 1505.
At that point, they established courts in the town of New Castle and at the Hoerkill at the southern end of the territory, effectively creating two counties out of the territory.
At Christmas 1182 a royal court celebration for Christmas in the aula of Caen Castle brought together Henry II and his sons, Richard the Lionheart and John Lackland, receiving more than a thousand knights.
At this time, the town took the name of Castrum Theodorici, later transformed in Château-Thierry ( Castle of Thierry, Thierry is the French or early Roman language translation of Theuderic ).
At the centre of the earldom is the vast, largely deserted Castle, whose remaining inhabitants centre their lives on the ritual surrounding the ruling family of Groan.
File: The Obelisk At Castle Howard-geograph. org. uk-211022. jpg | The Great Obelisk

At and Howard
At the end of his second term, Roosevelt promoted his friend William Howard Taft for the 1908 Republican nomination.
At first, Howard considered Hanks for the role of the main character's wisecracking brother, a role that eventually went to John Candy.
At the Howard University commencement address on June 4, 1965, he said that both the government and the nation needed to help achieve goals:
At the opening of the Convention, John Howard stated that if the Convention could not decide on a model to be put to a referendum, then plebiscites would be held on the model preferred by the Australian public.
At Shaw's insistence, she starred as Eliza Doolittle in the film Pygmalion ( 1938 ) with Leslie Howard as Professor Higgins.
At the time of the village's dissolution, the mayor was current Cattaraugus County legislator Howard Van Rensselaer.
At one time there was a Howard Johnson's Restaurant in Lynbrook that was popular with auto travelers.
At the suggestion of Roddy McDowall, Astaire donated her papers and memorabilia — amounting to several trunks of material — to the Howard Gotlieb Archival Research Center at Boston University.
At a concert at Howard Theatre in Washington, D. C. Mickey & Sylvia heard Jody Williams play a guitar riff that Williams had played on Billy Stewart's debut single " Billy's Blues ".
At this time, on land purchased from Samuel Howard in 1886, the LDS Church began to store tithed produce and livestock.
At Bristol he appeared in a Drama Society production of Howard Barker's Victory alongside Sarah Kane and David Greig.
At its 138th Commencement Convocation in May 2006, Howard University conferred on Robinson the degree of Doctor of Music, honoris causa.
At the closing ceremony of the 2000 Olympic Games in Sydney, the group performed before the Prime Minister, John Howard, and a television audience of hundreds of millions, wearing black overalls bearing the word " sorry ".
At a summit in Bali John Howard told Habibie that a United Nations Peace Keeping force should oversee the process.
At the 1966 general election and 1970 general election, Howard unsuccessfully contested the safe Labour parliamentary constituency of Liverpool Edge Hill.
At the outbreak of World War II, Howard volunteered for the RAF and British Army, but was turned down by both.
At the Royal Shakespeare Theatre, Terry Hands and actor Alan Howard had a marathon year working on Henry V, a virtually uncut, Henry VI, part 1, Henry VI, part 2 and Henry VI, part 3 and Coriolanus.
At the time of Finch's death, he was doing a promotional tour for the 1976 film Network in which he played the television anchorman Howard Beale who develops messianic pretensions.
At Cambridge he was a contemporary of Michael Howard, Kenneth Clarke, Leon Brittan, and John Gummer all of whom became leading figures in the Conservative Party.
At the conclusion of the episode, Monday Night Football host Howard Cosell knowing that few had been watching the football game up to that point joked on the air that he had not been invited to the wedding, and welcomed viewers back to the game.
At the end of the novel Howard and Barbara are still together, and all their friends admire their stable yet " advanced " marriage.
At the end there is a caption stating that in the 1979 General Election Howard Kirk voted Conservative.
At the Orne River bridge, a machine-gun nest was suppressed with mortar fire but no other defenders were found, and the two platoons captured the bridge before radioing Major Howard and informing him of their success.
At the time of dissolution, Howard MacLaughlin was mayor.
At the Battle of Chancellorsville, Howard suffered the first of two significant military setbacks, which together led to his occasional nickname, " Uh-Oh Howard ".

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