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1069 and when
The county was presumably run by his father until 1069 when the county revolted and reverted to Hugh V of Maine.
:: Example: “ Each case must be scrutinized on its particular facts to determine whether a trial error is harmless error or prejudicial error when viewed in the light of the trial record as a whole, not whether each isolated incident viewed by itself constitutes reversible error .” United States v. Grunberger, 431 F. 2d 1062, 1069 ( CA2 1970 ).
The Crónica de San Juan de la Peña, a rather late source for Peter's reign, states that Peter was 35 years of age when he died, which places his birth in 1068 or 1069.
After the Conquest Wakefield was a victim of the Harrying of the north in 1069 when William the Conqueror took revenge on the local population for resistance to Norman rule.
In 1069, when together with Robert of Eu, he led an army against a force of Danes in Lindsay and affected great slaughter against them.
The coat of arms was first attributed to Michał Bogorya, whose name was first recorded in the papers of Trzemeszno monastery, when he was given the title of count, and in a decree granting privileges to the Holy Cross monastery near Sendomierz around 1069.
The relation between the Lý Dynasty and the Song Dynasty began to deteriorate when the Song chancellor Wang Anshi brought out his reforms in 1069.

1069 and northern
In response to the worsening security situation, William conducted his second northern campaign in 1069.
The Harrying ( or Harrowing ) of the North was a series of campaigns waged by William the Conqueror in the winter of 1069 – 1070 to subjugate northern England, and is part of the Norman conquest of England.
In 1069, large sections of the mosque, particularly the northern wall, were destroyed in a fire as a result of an uprising by the city's residents against the Fatimid's Berber army who were garrisoned there.
In 1173, the northern wall of the mosque was damaged again by fire and was rebuilt by the Ayyubid sultan, Saladin ( r. 1174 – 1193 ), along with the Minaret of the Bride, which had been destroyed in the 1069 fire.

1069 and rebelled
After the Norman Conquest, much of the north rebelled in 1069, even trying to bring back Danish rule ; the suppression that followed was the Harrying of the North.

1069 and against
He was still firm is his convictions, and about 1069 he published a treatise in which he gave vent to his resentment against Pope Nicholas II and his antagonists in the Roman council.
He is first noted as a member of Sweyn's 1069 raid of England, and the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle reports that Canute was one of the leaders of another raid against England in 1075.
In 1069 the citizens of Le Mans revolted against the Normans.
From his hidden stronghold at Buttermere, it is said that Jarl Buthar conducted a campaign of running resistance against the Norman invaders, from the time of William the Conqueror's Harrying of the North in 1069 right up until the early 12th century.
Shortly after the Norman conquest of England, between 1069 and 1070, William the Conqueror led a military campaign against the Saxon Earl Edwin, who ruled England north of the River Mersey.
While William marched north against the uprisings in Mercia and Northumbria, Geoffrey gathered troops from the forces occupying London, Winchester and Salisbury and led them to victory against the rebels besieging Montacute Castle in September 1069.

1069 and William
William never quite trusted Ealdred or the other English leaders, and Ealdred had to accompany William back to Normandy in 1067, but he had returned to York by the time of his death in 1069.
Henry I ( c. 1068 / 1069 – 1 December 1135 ) was the fourth son of William I of England.
When the Normans had control of Maine, William the Conqueror was able to invade England successfully ; however in 1069 the citizens revolted and expelled the Normans, which led to Hugh being proclaimed count of Maine.
William symbolically wore his crown in the ruins of York on Christmas Day 1069, and then proceeded to buy off the Danes.
William was able to secure the departure of Sweyn and his fleet in 1070, allowing him to return to the continent to deal with troubles in Maine, where the town of Le Mans had revolted in 1069.
The church was damaged in 1069 during William the Conqueror's harrying of the North, but the first Norman archbishop, Thomas of Bayeux, arriving in 1070, organised repairs.
When, in 1069, Malcolm Canmore and William the Conqueror held a conference regarding the claims of Edgar Atheling to the English Crown, they met at Abernithi – a term which in the old British tongue means a port at the mouth of the Nith.
In 1069 William the Conqueror dammed the River Foss just south of York Castle, close to its confluence with the Ouse, in order to create a moat around the castle.
He joined forces with Edgar Atheling, the last remaining heir of the Anglo-Saxon royal house, and sent a force to attack king William in 1069.
He took part in a failed uprising to support the 1069 invasion by Sweyn II of Denmark and Edgar Ætheling ( including an attack on York ), but then once again submitted to the William and was granted Judith, the King's niece, to marry.
The town of Selby, a sizeable town on the main route north from the Midlands, is the traditional birthplace of King Henry I, fourth son of William the Conqueror, in 1068 / 69 ; the connection is supported by William and his wife Matilda's unique joint charter of Selby Abbey, far to the north of their usual circuit of activities, which was founded for Benedict of Auxerre in 1069 and subsequently supported by the de Lacy family.
William conducted a widespread sequence of punitive operations across the north of England in the aftermath of the attacks in 1069 and 1070.
A second minster soon arose at Ripon, but it too perished – this time in 1069 at the hands of William the Conqueror.
In 1069, in an attempt to quell rebellion in the north, the area between the Ouse and the Tyne was laid to waste by the armies of William the Conqueror.
Between 1069 and 1086 William the Conqueror gave Amounderness to Anglo-Norman baron Roger the Poitevin.
in 1069, the land in the area of Middleham was given to William the Conqueror's nephew, Alan Rufus.
It was built in 1069 by William de Warenne, 1st Earl of Surrey, the brother-in-law of William the Conqueror.

1069 and attempted
In 1068 and 1069 Diarmait lent them the fleet of Dublin for their attempted invasions of England.

1069 and Edgar
Early in 1069, Edgar the Ætheling rose in revolt, and attacked York.
When a major rebellion broke out in Northumbria at the beginning of 1069, Edgar returned to England with other rebels who had fled to Scotland, to become the leader, or at least the figurehead, of the revolt.
Early in 1069 the newly installed Norman Earl of Northumbria Robert de Comines and several hundred soldiers accompanying him were massacred at Durham ; the Northumbrian rebellion was joined by Edgar, Gospatric, Siward Barn and other rebels who had taken refuge in Scotland.
When Sweyn II invaded Northern England in 1069, Waltheof and Edgar Ætheling joined the Danes and took part in the attack on York.

1069 and king
In 1069 or 1070 the Danish king Sweyn Estrithson sent a small army to try to establish a camp on the Isle of Ely.
After negotiations with Byzantium, Zadar was attached to the Croatian state led by king Petar Krešimir IV in 1069.
In the year 1091 the last sovereign king of al-Andalusia, al-Mu ' tamid, saw his Abbadid-inherited taifa of Seville, controlled since 1069, in jeopardy of being taken by the increasingly stronger king of Castile-León, Alfonso VI.
Son of king Sweyn II Estridsson, Harald took part in Sweyn's 1069 raid of England alongside his uncle Jarl Asbjørn and his brother Canute, the later king Canute IV the Saint.
The Seljuk king Tutush ( r. 1079 – 1095 ) initiated the repair of damage caused by the 1069 fire.

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