Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Battle of Marston Moor" ¶ 13
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Bypassing and on
Bypassing station seven to save time, Young and Duke arrived at station eight on the lower flank of Stone Mountain, where they sampled material on a ray from South Ray Crater for about an hour.
Bypassing the scrolls ' safeguards, however, takes a huge toll on the monks ' vision.
* Bypassing of copy protection for loading of copies or backups on CDR / DVDR or HDD, or homebrew software.

Bypassing and from
* Jean-Daniel Stanley and Thomas F. Jorstad, Direct Sediment Dispersal from Mountain to Shore, with Bypassing via Three Human-Modified Channel Systems to Lake Annecy, SE France ( 2004 ) Vol 20 ( 4 ) Journal of Coastal Research pp 958-969 JStor.
Bypassing Big Springs from the mouth, the river picks up more agricultural runoff as it meanders north between irrigated fields.
Bypassing it means that the player does not pay rent, expend fuel when leaving the space, or do the other usual things associated with landing ; instead, he continues his turn, rolling the dice and moving again from the bypassed space.
Bypassing Marseilles the Carthaginians reached the Rhone four days ' march to the north but were impeded from crossing by a Gallic force friendly to Rome ( the Volcae ).

Bypassing and .
Bypassing any king of León, Afonso declared himself the direct liegeman of the Papacy.
However, many of the techniques in the Bypassing filters section still work.
* How to Bypass Internet Censorship, also known by the titles: Bypassing Internet Censorship or Circumvention Tools, a FLOSS Manual, 10 March 2011, 240 pp. Translations have been published in Chinese, Russian, Arabic, Farsi, Vietnamese, Burmese, and Spanish.
Bypassing any king of Castile or León, Afonso declared himself the direct vassal of the Papacy.
The Delft Report was published in 1971 and outlined a series of works for Gold Coast Beaches including Gold Coast Seaway, works at Narrowneck that resulted in the Northern Gold Coast Beach Protection Strategy and works at the Tweed River that became the Tweed River Entrance Sand Bypassing Project.
Bypassing Plattsburgh to the west is Interstate 87, which connects Montreal with Albany and points south.
Bypassing both high school and college, he proceeded to postgraduate study at Moscow State University, where his advisor was the preeminent mathematician Andrei Kolmogorov.
Bypassing Great Chart, the road undulates around the Kentish Weald via Bethersden and High Halden, to the market town of Tenterden.
Bypassing occurs when group members have different meanings for different words and phrases and thus miss each other's meanings.
Outlets for the Tweed River Entrance Sand Bypassing System include Duranbah Beach, Snapper Rocks East, Snapper Rocks West, Greenmount and Kirra.
Bypassing the safeguard is pointless, as it is nearly impossible to even scratch the megastructure.
Bypassing several senior officers, Preble was asked to travel to Boston and ready USS Constitution for duty in the Mediterranean.
Bypassing Jinzhou, Ningyuan and Shanhai Pass, they broke through the Great Wall west of Shanhai Pass and reached north of Beijing in the winter of 1629.
* Bypassing non-executable-stack during exploitation using return-to-libc by c0ntex at InfoSecWriters. com
Bypassing many rapids, this world renowned waterway is used by pleasure boaters and anglers during the summer months.
Bypassing many other senior judges, Tan Sri Dato ' Zaki was the first lawyer appointed directly to the Federal Court.
Bypassing and cutting off enemy strongpoints often results in the collapse of that strongpoint even where the physical damage is minimal ( e. g. the Maginot Line ).

Parliamentarian and stronghold
After defeating the Army of Sir William Waller at the Battle of Cropredy Bridge, King Charles marched west in pursuit of the Parliamentarian army of the Earl of Essex, who was invading the Royalist stronghold of Cornwall.
In the English Civil War between 1642 to 1648 Ludlow was a Royalist stronghold and was besieged by Parliamentarian forces but negotiated a surrender, avoiding damage and slighting.
The town played a large part in the English Civil War when it became a stronghold for the Parliamentarian forces, like many market towns a nursing-ground of Puritan sentiment and in 1642 the Battle of Aylesbury was fought and won by the Parliamentarians.
Bierton was a Royalist stronghold, opposed to its larger Parliamentarian neighbour of Aylesbury, and the Red Lion was host to many Cavalier Officers, and rumours have it to Charles I himself.
During the first English civil war ( 1642 – 1645 ) Gloucester was a Parliamentarian stronghold of some strategic importance.
The arrival of 400 armed men from Birmingham was decisive in securing Coventry's refusal to admit Charles I in August 1642, which established Warwickshire as a Parliamentarian stronghold.
During the English Civil War, Somerset was largely Parliamentarian, although Dunster was a Royalist stronghold.
They managed to capture a Parliamentarian stronghold at Bunratty castle in Clare and to smash the Scottish Covenanter army at the battle of Benburb and also take Sligo town.
The area of Furness was a Parliamentarian stronghold during the Civil War.
Chester was a Royalist stronghold, while the market towns of Stockport, Knutsford, Nantwich, Congleton, Middlewich and Northwich remained in Parliamentarian hands.
During the English Civil War the Fiennes family of Bloxham was strongly Parliamentarian and the area had a reputation as a Puritan stronghold.

Parliamentarian and Manchester
On 3 June, they were reinforced by the Parliamentarian army of the Eastern Association under the Earl of Manchester.
Units from the existing Parliamentarian armies of the Earl of Essex, the Southern Association under Sir William Waller and the Eastern Association under the Earl of Manchester were reassigned to provide regiments for the new army.
In response to Brereton's urgent appeal for reinforcements, the Committee of Both Kingdoms ( the Parliamentarian body responsible for the conduct of the war ) ordered Sir Thomas Fairfax to proceed to Manchester.
On arriving at Manchester, he found the infantry of the Parliamentarian garrison to be so ragged that he was supposed to have burst into tears.
The Parliamentarian high command of Sir William Waller, the Earl of Manchester, Sir William Balfour and Cromwell decided to split their large force into two.
On the English Restoration in 1660, as a reprisal for its defence of the Parliamentarian cause, Manchester was deprived of its recently granted Members of Parliament.
Didsbury was one of the few places between Stretford and Stockport where the River Mersey could be forded, which made it significant for troop movements during the English Civil War, in which Manchester was on the Parliamentarian side.
The town of Manchester was deprived of its parliamentary representation in 1660 in reprisal for its support of the Parliamentarian faction during the English Civil War.

0.187 seconds.