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Chichele and other
Like other ecclesiastical lawyers and civil servants of the day Chichele was paid with ecclesiastical preferments.
On 30 November 1411 Chichele, with two other bishops and three earls and the prince of Wales, knelt to the king to receive public thanks for their administration.

Chichele and envoys
In 1406 renewed efforts were made to stop the schism, and Chichele was one of the envoys sent to the new Pope Gregory XII.

Chichele and were
Before the single-sex senior schools were merged, the former girls school in Rushden was named " Chichele Girls School " after Henry Chichele who was born in the neighbouring town of Higham Ferrers.
There is no contemporary authority for the charge, which seems to appear first in Redman's rhetorical history of Henry V, written in 1540 with an eye to the political situation at that time, As a matter of fact, the parliament at Leicester, in which the speeches were supposed to have been made, began on 30 April 1414 before Chichele was archbishop.

Chichele and received
In November 1408 Chichele was back at Westminster, when Henry IV received the cardinal archbishop of Bordeaux and determined to support the cardinals at Pisa against both popes.

Chichele and on
On 31 August 1407 Guy Mone ( he is always so spelt and not Mohun, and was probably from one of the Hampshire Meons ; there was a John Mone of Havant admitted a Winchester scholar in 1397 ), bishop of St David's, died, and on 12 October 1407 Chichele was by the pope provided to the bishopric of St David's.
In January 1409 Chichele was named with Bishop Hallam of Salisbury and the prior of Canterbury to represent the Southern Convocation at the council, which opened on 25 March 1409, arriving on 24 April.
In the interval Chichele found time to visit his diocese for the first time and be enthroned at St Davids on 11 May 1411.
This brought Chichele into collision with Martin V. The struggle between them has been represented as one of a patriotic archbishop resisting the encroachments of the papacy on the Church of England.
Chichele died on 12 April 1443.
Prior to joining the Court, he had served on the United Nations ' International Law Commission from 1961 to 1972, and had also been Chichele Professor of Public International Law at All Souls College, Oxford.
*" NYU's Waldron to Take Up Chichele Chair at Oxford on Half-Time Basis " Leiter Reports, 17 December 2009.

Chichele and ;
From 1413 to 1420, Kempe also visited important sites and religious figures in England, including Philip Repyngdon, the Bishop of Lincoln ; Henry Chichele, the Archbishop of Canterbury ; and the mystic Julian of Norwich.
The Commission consisted of a number of notable persons including Professor Joseph Rotblat, recipient of the 1995 Nobel Peace Prize ; Michel Rocard, former Prime Minister of France ; Robert McNamara, former United States Secretary of Defense and President of the World Bank Group ; General George Butler, former Commander of the United States Strategic Air Command ; Doctor Maj Britt Theorin, then President of the International Peace Bureau ; Field Marshal Michael Carver, former Chief of the General Staff and Defence Staff ; Professor Robert O ' Neill, Chichele Professor of the History of War at Oxford University and former director of the International Institute for Strategic Studies ; and Jacques-Yves Cousteau, oceanographer and environmentalist.

Chichele and result
In 1864, as a result of ill-health and depressed by his failure to be appointed Oxford University's inaugural Chichele Professor of Modern History and his low salary at King's College, he took a year off in South Australia.

Chichele and was
The south hall ( 39 ), meanwhile, was the private home of Mrs Letitia Pett ( 1841 ), Mrs Maria Brown ( 1852 ), Mrs Greswell ( 1861 ), Rev Richard Greswell ( 1866 ), Misses Greswell ( 1882 ), Charles William Chadwick Oman, Fellow of All Souls College and Chichele Professor of Modern History ( 1898 ).
From 1957 to 1967, he was Chichele Professor of Social and Political Theory at the University of Oxford.
He was librarian at Lambeth Palace, and in 1862 was an unsuccessful candidate for the Chichele professorship of modern history at Oxford.
Henry Chichele ( also Checheley ) ( c. 1364 – 12 April 1443 ), English archbishop, founder of All Souls College, Oxford, was born at Higham Ferrers, Northamptonshire, in 1363 or 1364.
Chichele was the third and youngest son of Thomas Chicheley, who appears in 1368 in still extant town records of Higham Ferrers as a suitor in the mayor's court, and in 1381 – 1382, and again in 1384 – 1385, was mayor: in fact, for a dozen years he and Henry Barton, schoolmaster of Higham Ferrers grammar school, and one Richard Brabazon, filled the mayoralty in turns.
On 9 June 1405 Chichele was admitted, in succession to his father, to a burgage in Higham Ferrers.
There is therefore no foundation in fact for the account ( copied into the Dictionary of National Biography from a local historian, J Cole, Wellingborough, 1838 ) that Henry Chichele, as a poor ploughboy " eating his scanty meal off his mother's lap ", was picked up by William of Wykeham.
Chichele appears in the Hall-books of New College up to the year 1392 / 93, when he was a B. A.
As a relapsed heretic, he was left to the secular arm by Chichele.
Chichele was tenacious of the privileges of his see, and this involved him in a constant struggle with Henry Beaufort, bishop of Winchester.

Chichele and by
Most wards in the Borough Council of Wellingborough are covered by the constituency and also include the wards in East Northamptonshire, the wards are: Brickhill, Castle, Croyland, Finedon, Great Doddington and Wilby, Hemmingwell, Higham Ferrers Lancaster, Higham Ferrers Chichele, Irchester, North, Queensway, Redwell East, Redwell West, Rushden Hayden, Rushden Spencer, Rushden Bates, Rushden Sartoris, Rushden Pemberton, South, Swanspool, and Wollaston.
These dates are important as they help to save Chichele from the charge, versified by Shakespeare ( Henry V. act 1. sc.
On 1 July 1416 Chichele directed a half-yearly inquisition by archdeacons to hunt out heretics.
Chichele, by appointing a jubilee to be held at Canterbury in 1420, after the manner of the Jubilee ordained by the Popes, threatened to divert the profits from pilgrims from Rome to Canterbury.
Chichele also incurred the papal wrath by opposing the system of papal provision which diverted patronage from English to Italian hands, but the immediate occasion was to prevent the introduction of the bulls making Beaufort a cardinal.
Judd was also grand-nephew of Archbishop Henry Chichele, the founder of All Souls College, Oxford ( a fellow of the college still comes to Skinners ' Day at the school each year and a school essay competition is judged by that college ).
Following the work of the 1850 Commission to examine the organization of the University, All Souls College suppressed ten of its fellowships to create the funds to establish the first two Chichele professorships: The Chichele Professor of International Law and Diplomacy, established in 1859 and first held by Mountague Bernard, and the Chichele Professor of Modern History, first held by Montagu Burrows.

Chichele and three
Chichele now became the subject of a leading case, the court of kings bench deciding, after arguments reheard in three successive terms, that he could not hold his previous benefices with the bishopric, and that, spite of the maxim Papa potest omnia, a papal bull could not supersede the law of the land ( Year-book ii.

Chichele and .
In the fifteenth century the then Archbishop of Canterbury Henry Chichele ( 1414 – 1443 ), acquired lands in Willesden and Kingsbury.
Berlin is popularly known for his essay " Two Concepts of Liberty ", delivered in 1958 as his inaugural lecture as Chichele Professor of Social and Political Theory at Oxford.
Henry V, who had had uneasy relations with Arundel, installed Henry Chichele in his place.
The first recorded appearance of Chichele himself is at New College, Oxford, as Checheley, eighth among the undergraduate fellows, in July 1387, in the earliest extant hall-book, which contains weekly lists of those dining in Hall.

other and envoys
The Sejm now comprised two chambers: the ' Senat ' ( Senate ) of 81 bishops and other dignitaries, and the Chamber of Envoys, made up of 54 envoys elected by small Sejms ( local assemblies of landed nobility ) in each of the Kingdom's provinces.
The 9th-century " Historia Brittonum " sees in Lucius a translation of the Celtic name Llever Maur ( Great Light ), says that the envoys of Lucius were Fagan and Wervan, and tells us that with this king all the other island kings ( reguli Britanniæ ) were baptized ( Hist.
He and the other envoys returned to their master and reported that Hezekiah and his people were obdurate, and would not submit.
Boniface and the other leaders sent envoys to Venice, Genoa, and other city-states to negotiate a contract for transport to Egypt, the object of their crusade ; one of the envoys was the future historian Geoffrey of Villehardouin.
Cassius Dio reported that a group of one hundred men were sent as envoys from Egypt to make their case to the Romans against Ptolemy XII's restoration, but Ptolemy had their leader ( a philosopher named Dion ) poisoned and most of the other protesters killed before they reached Rome to plead their desires.
These strategoi had duties which included planning military expeditions, receiving envoys of other states and directing diplomatic affairs.
By two other measures of Gabinius, loans of money to foreign ambassadors in Rome were made non-actionable ( as a check on the corruption of the Senate ) and the Senate was ordered to give audience to foreign envoys on certain fixed days ( February 1-March 1 ).
The other, Clotilde, had been seen by envoys of Clovis I, King of the Franks, who told their master of her beauty and intelligence.
After this, all other envoys reporting about uprisings would later say the bandits were being pursued and captured.
* Ministers, envoys, and other very important visitors from foreign countries
# Ministers, envoys, and other very important visitors from foreign countries
On the other hand, the Danish and Dutch envoys, as well as those of the Holy Roman Empire and Brandenburg, did what they could to derail the proceedings.
Lucius, apprised of the situation by his envoys, raises a heathen army of the East, composed of Spaniards and Saracens, as well as other enemies of the Christian world.
Until the Sui Dynasty in the sixth century, Emperor Yangdi invited envoys from other countries to China to see the colorful lighted lanterns and enjoy the gala performances.
Here envoys and other honoured guests were granted a personal audience with the ruler.
He and all other envoys were arrested by German soldiers in Kaunas, and sent to Minsk, then to Homyel, before making their way to Moscow.
When the negotiations there for a time proved fruitless, Prokop with the other envoys returned to Bohemia, where new internal troubles broke out.
Gagulia was also heavily involved in negotiations over the future of Abkhazia, choosing to handle negotiations himself, rather than sending envoys, as has generally been the case with other Abkhaz leaders.
The king also sent troops, expeditions and envoys to other nearby kingdoms such as the Sunda-Galuh kingdom, Pahang kingdom, Balakana kingdom ( Kalimantan / Borneo ), and Gurun kingdom ( Maluku ).
On September 3, 2009, when envoys from the United States, Britain, France, Germany, and other Western nations met in Paris to discuss the recent 2009 Afghan election, U. N. Special Representative in Afghanistan Kai Eide said that the 2009 Afghan presidential election, widely characterized by rampant fraud and intimidation, " was a better election than five years ago.
* The film shows Spanish envoys and other members of court wearing swords during their audiences with Elizabeth.

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