Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "De Administrando Imperio" ¶ 10
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Bury and 1906
( 1906 ); JB Bury, Ancient Greek Historians ( 1909 ), pp. 27 sqq.

Bury and 1910
File: Reading the charter at the Angel Hotel Charter Day Bury St Edmunds Suffolk. jpg | Reading the charter, Angel Hotel, Charter Day, c. 1910

Bury and 1931
In the 1950s to the north of the town the National Coal Board did some open cast mining near Radcliffe Moor Road, but the last legal instance of coal mining in Radcliffe was between 1931 and 1949, close to Bury and Bolton Road.

Bury and through
These riots spread from Accrington through Oswaldtwistle, Blackburn, Darwen, Rossendale, Bury and Chorley.
By road, Sudbury is served by the A131 which runs from near Little Waltham, north of Chelmsford in Essex, and the A134 which runs from Colchester in Essex, through Bury St Edmunds, past Thetford in Norfolk to its west, before merging with the A10 south of King's Lynn.
Rising at Bradfield Combust, to the south of Bury St Edmunds in Suffolk, it flows through Bury, Mildenhall and Prickwillow, and joins the Great Ouse south of Littleport in Cambridgeshire.
Seventeen locks were required to climb to the summit as it passed through Pendleton, heading northwest to Prestolee before it split northwest to Bolton and northeast to Bury.
Bury is located in the middle of an undulating area of East Anglia known as the East Anglian Heights, with land to the East and West of the town rising to above 100 metres ( 328 feet ), though parts of the town itself are as low as 30 metres ( 98 feet ) above sea level where the Rivers Lark and Linnet pass through it.
The 4 song ( " Big Cat Stomp / What You Lack In Brains / Bury You Alive / Blues Theme ") EP was released in May 2010. A UK tour had to be canceled due to a volcanic eruption in Iceland, but they toured the US extensively through December 2010 with Warner on drums and another former Blackheart, Sean Koos, on bass.
Mutual and Langendorf continued the series on the West Coast Don Lee Network through the 1940s at 7: 30pm on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays, always with the familiar organ theme, " The Dying Cowboy " (" Bury Me Not on the Lone Prairie ").
Although remaining largely farmland until the mid 20th century, initial transport links to the area began in 1848 with the building of the Liverpool and Bury Railway through Kirkby.
The main routes through the district are Crescent Road, Cravenwood Road, Delaunay's Road, Cleveland Road, Crumpsall Lane, Middleton Road, Lansdowne Road ( the main shopping area with the post office ), one half of Bury Old Road between Melton Road and Crescent Road ( the other side of the road being in the Higher Broughton area of Salford ) and Ash Tree Road ( bounded on the east side by Crumpsall Park ).
The body of St Edmund the Martyr was said to have been carried through it in 1010 on its way from Bury St Edmunds to St Gregory's church to save it from the Danes.
Lydgate, a monk of Bury, claimed that the body cured many lame peasants as it passed through the gate.
On this particular Friday, a procession leads from school through the major street of Bury to Bury Parish Church, led by the Combined Cadet Force ( CCF ).
It passes the eastern edge of Whitefield, through junction 3, goes underneath the East Lancashire Railway and enters the suburbs of Bury.
The documentary also contained sequences of Craig Potter demonstrating Elbow's unusual recording techniques at Blueprint Studios, Mark Potter driving around Elbow's old neighbourhood in Bury, Greater Manchester, Peter Turner showing cameras around Manchester's Northern Quarter, where the band played their first gigs as Elbow, and sequences of Guy Garvey reading through old and new lyric books.
Castleton was originally the junction for the branch line to Heywood, which was then extended through Bury to Bolton.
Born in Bury, Greater Manchester, England, Lindsay joined the Anfield club in the March 1969 for £ 67, 000 from his hometown club Bury, His debut was a night to remember, The Reds were playing host to FAI side Dundalk in a European Fairs Cup 1st round 1st leg tie, the Irish side were ' like lambs to the slaughter ,' and it took just 1 minute for the flood gates to open through a goal from youngster Alun Evans, free scoring full-back Chris Lawler made it 2 in the 10th and it was 3-0 by the 24th minute when the man nicknamed Anfield Iron, Tommy Smith, scored, before the referee could sound the half-time whistle and give the Dundalk team a rest Liverpool found net 2 more times with goals from Bobby Graham and a 2nd from Evans scoring in the 36th and 38th minutes respectively.
His son Andrew Gray, a striker, came through the ranks at Leeds and later played for Nottingham Forest, Bury, Preston, Oldham Athletic, Bradford City, Sheffield United, Sunderland, Burnley, Charlton Athletic, Barnsley and now plays for Leeds United again.
The Trail includes 28 art pieces and follows a well established footpath stretching from Salford Quays through Bury into Rossendale and up to the Pennines above Bacup.
A Roman road passes through the area, along the border between Radcliffe and Bury.
The town also has Roman associations ; a Roman road passes through the town, along the border between Radcliffe and Bury on a south-east to north-west route.
It then crosses Bury and Bolton Road, and heads through Higher Spen Moor.

Bury and published
After the trial and execution the Moderate Intelligencer, a parliamentary paper published during the English Civil War, in an editorial of 4 – 11 September 1645 expressed unease with the affairs in Bury.
* Charles G Tebbutt of the Bury Fen bandy club is responsible for the first published rules of bandy and also for introducing the game into the Netherlands and Sweden, as well as elsewhere in England.
John Franklin Broxholme ( born 11 June 1930 Bradford, died 24 June 2000 Bury St Edmunds ) is an English thriller writer who published fifteen novels in a little over twenty years ( 1971 – 1993 ) using the pen name of Duncan Kyle.
His Bury the Chains: Prophets and Rebels in the Fight to Free an Empire's Slaves, published in 2005, is about the antislavery movement in the British Empire.
It was originally published under the collective pseudonym " Stephen Bury ", as was their earlier novel Interface ( 1994 ).
In the 1920s, Norman Hastings built on Berry's hypothesis proposing Bury as the Ripper, and more recently William Beadle and Dundee librarian Euan Macpherson have published books and articles popularising Bury as a Ripper suspect.
He is the joint author with Philippe Mabille of ” Don ’ t Bury France ” (" N ' enterrez pas la France ") published in February 2007, before jointly penning with Sophie Coignard “ Une présidence de crises ” published in February 2009.
However, his belief that Bury and ' Jack the Ripper ' were one and the same was published in his memoirs which appeared in Thomson's Weekly News of 12 February 1927.

Bury and De
* Richard De Bury, English statesman ( d. 1345 )
De Bury received a royal pension beginning in 1779, and was ennobled by Louis XVI in 1785, a few months before his death, which occurred at Versailles.

Bury and which
Bury wrote, " His name would be forgotten among the obscurest occupants of the Imperial throne were it not that his reign coincided with the fatal period in which it was decided that western Europe was to pass from the Roman to the Teuton.
It ran for 1, 181 performances and was nominated for seven Tony Awards ( best actor for both McKellen and Curry, best director for Peter Hall, best play, best costume design, lighting, and set design for John Bury ), of which it won five ( including a best actor Tony for McKellen ).< ref >
Her birth was registered at Hitchin, Hertfordshire, near the Strathmores ' English country house, St Paul's Walden Bury, which was also given as her birthplace in the census the following year.
Resting at Bury nearby, Rupert was joined by the Marquess of Newcastle's cavalry under Lord George Goring, which had broken out of York early in the siege, with a small contingent from Derbyshire, and several regiments which were being freshly raised in Lancashire by the Earl of Derby.
Great abbeys and priories like Glastonbury, Walsingham, Bury St. Edmunds, and Shaftesbury which had flourished as pilgrimage sites for many centuries, were soon reduced to ruins.
Bury, E. M. Walker and others, most of whom attribute the fragment, which deals with the events of the year 395 BC and is of considerable extent, to Cratippus.
980, and the Volto Santo of Lucca ( renewed with a later figure ), which is known to have inspired Leofstan, Abbot of Bury ( d. 1065 ) to create a similar figure, perhaps covered in precious metal, on his return from a visit to Rome.
Remains of a Roman villa and over 6, 000 Bronze-Age artefacts, which are now in the Moyse's Hall Museum at Bury St Edmunds, indicate that it has been a centre of occupation since antiquity.
In 1790, there were plans for a link from Bury St Edmunds to the River Orwell at Mistley, which John Rennie surveyed, but it involved heavy engineering work, including a tunnel, and the estimated cost of £ 75, 000 could not be raised.
He rebuilt most of the locks and staunches in the 1830s, resulting in increased trade in coal and general merchandise which originated from Kings Lynn, but success was short lived, as the Eastern Union Railway opened a line from Ipswich to Bury St Edmunds in 1846, and decline was immediate.
* Broom's Barn, a 120 ha experimental farm near Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk, which is the UK's national centre for sugar beet research.
In 1974 zander, a non-indigenous coarse fish native to Europe, were introduced legally to Old Bury Hill Lake which supplies the Pipp Brook.
* Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee, a 1970 book by Dee Brown, which chronicles events leading up to the Wounded Knee Massacre
It passes near the Iron Age hill fort of Bury Camp and becomes another section of the county boundary, crossing second the South Wales railway which is the South Wales Main Line, next the site of an old chapel and spring at Fosse Lodge in Dunley, and then the M4.
Many large and small businesses are located in Bury, which traditionally has given Bury an affluent economy with low unemployment, with the town being the main cultural and retail centre for West Suffolk.
The name Bury is etymologically connected with borough, which has cognates in other Germanic languages such as the German " burg " meaning " fortress, castle "; Old Norse " borg " meaning " wall, castle "; and Gothic " baurgs " meaning " city ".
Suffolk County Cricket Club play occasional games at the Victory Ground which is also the home ground of Bury St Edmunds Cricket Club.
Unlike most of England, which operates a two tier school system, state education in Bury St Edmunds and its catchment area is a three-tier system.
The 1988 – 89 season began with Wolves losing 3 – 1 to Bury at Gigg Lane, but they soon found their winning ways and by the time of their 6 – 0 home win over Preston North End on 26 November 1988, in which the still prolific Steve Bull scored four goals, a second successive promotion was looking increasingly likely.
David Whittaker ( born 24 April 1957, Bury, England ) is known for numerous video game music which he wrote in most of the 1980s and early 1990s, for many different formats.
* Lydgate is a character in a 2003 mystery novel The Bastard's Tale, by Margaret Frazer, which takes place in Bury St. Edmunds in 1447.

0.794 seconds.