Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Bury St Edmunds" ¶ 4
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

1214 and barons
Nonetheless, when John left for Poitou in February 1214, many barons refused to provide military service ; mercenary knights had to fill the gaps.
Over the course of his reign a combination of higher taxes, unsuccessful wars that resulted in the loss of English barons ' titled possessions in Normandy following the Battle of Bouvines ( 1214 ), and an ongoing conflict with the Pope Innocent III had made King John unpopular with many of his barons.
Initially his barons were unenthusiastic about the expedition, which delayed his departure, and so it was not until February 1214 that he was able to disembark at La Rochelle.
The irritation caused by these exactions reached a climax in 1214, when John demanded three marcs, and this became a prominent cause among the many causes that led the barons to insist on the Great Charter ( 1215 ).

1214 and England
He spent time in England ( John of England knighted him at Clerkenwell Priory in 1213 ) before succeeding to the kingdom on the death of his father on 4 December 1214, being crowned at Scone on 6 December the same year.
* 1241 – Isabella of England, wife of Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor ( b. 1214 )
* 1162 – Leonora of England, Queen of Castile ( d. 1214 )
The conflict was decided by the Battle of Bouvines on 27 July 1214, which pitted Otto, allied to King John of England against Philip II Augustus.
Roger Bacon was born in Ilchester in Somerset, England, possibly in 1213 or 1214 at the Ilchester Friary.
* October 13 – Leonora of England, queen of Alfonso VIII of Castile ( d. 1214 )
* December 1 – Isabella of England, wife of Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor ( b. 1214 )
* Eleanor of England, Queen of Castile ( 1162 – 1214 ), wife of Alfonso VIII, who brought the name into the Castilian Royal Dynasty
The Angevin property having been partly his own lands whose control was lost in the aftermath of the Battle of Bouvines ( 1214 ), King John of England would not allow a French subject to take ownership of such an estate in England, a policy maintained by the following Regency, so the lands were split between the boys, Simon's elder brother Amaury taking the French holding ( which he promptly lost, not having his father's military accumen ) and Simon taking the English, when King Henry eventually changed the policy on his accession to power on arriving at an age of majority in 1227: both he and Simon were virtually contemporary and both had seen their lands abused by their elders during their minority.
The counts of Flanders, Boulogne, and Hainaut came together with England and the Holy Roman Empire of Germany and declared war on France and Philip II of France, a war that ended with the French victory at Bouvines in 1214.
In 1214 King John of England began his final campaign to reclaim Normandy from Philip II August.
It was a serious blow for the resistance, and in 1214 the situation became worse: Raymond was forced to flee to England, and his lands were given by the Pope to the victorious Philippe II, a stratagem which finally succeeded in interesting the king in the conflict.
After Innocent pardoned de Gray, the pope recommended his election as Bishop of Durham in 1213 ; but de Gray died during his journey back to England on 18 October 1214, at Saint-Jean-d ' Angély in Poitou.
* Isabella of England ( 1214 – 1241 ), Holy Roman Empress to Frederick II and his queen consort of Germany and of Sicily
* Leonora of England ( 1161 – 1214 ), wife of Alfonso VIII of Castile
In 1213 Walter de Lacy wrote to John asking to return to England, and by 1214 his property in England and Wales ( which had been under the control of Engelard de Cigogné ) except for the borough and castle of Ludlow had been returned to him.
Eleanor of England ( known in Castilian as Leonor ) ( 13 October 1162 – 31 October 1214 ) was Queen of Castile and Toledo as wife of Alfonso VIII of Castile.
In 1214 King John of England had assembled a formidable coalition against the French.
When John made his peace with Innocent, Eustace was allowed to return to England, and it was Eustace who formally lifted the excommuication of John on 2 July 1214.
After the king returned to England after 1214, Neville remained in royal service until at least May 1216, although without custody of the Great Seal.
Isabella of England, also called Elizabeth ( 1214 – 1 December 1241 ) was an English princess and, by marriage, Holy Roman Empress, German Queen, and Queen consort of Sicily.

1214 and are
Enfield was recorded in Domesday Book in 1086 as Enefelde, and as Einefeld in 1214, Enfeld in 1293, and Enfild in 1564: that is ' open land of a man called Ēana ', or ' where lambs are reared ', from the Old English feld with an Old English personal name or with Old English ēan ' lamb '.
It was by virtue of the Magna Carta that the legal precepts due process and habeas corpus were concurrently established in 1214 thus commencing with their eventual enshrinement in judicial procedures which required that persons suspected of crimes are required to be judged in a court of law before punishment can be legally rendered.
Pasilege ( 1182 ) and Paslie ( 1214 ) are recorded previous spellings of the name.
), and the Testamento de D. Afonso II ( 27 June 1214 ) are most certainly Galician-Portuguese.
There are currently 1554 Marilyns in Britain: 1214 in Scotland, 180 in England, 156 in Wales and 5 on the Isle of Man ( Black Mountain is in both England and Wales ).

1214 and believed
It is believed to be the birthplace of Roger Bacon, possibly in 1213 or 1214.

1214 and have
John paid some of the compensation money he had promised the church, but he ceased making payments in late 1214, leaving two-thirds of the sum unpaid ; Innocent appears to have conveniently forgotten this debt for the good of the wider relationship.
The 1214 birth date assumes he was not being literal, and may have meant 40 years had passed since he matriculated at Oxford at the age of 13.
The actual nucleus of the early part of Roger ’ s Flowers of History is supposed to have been the compilation of John de Cella ( also known as John of Wallingford ), who was abbot of St Albans from 1195 to 1214, although that is inconclusive.
The date above conflicts a little with the account we have by an eminent inhabitant of Arles, Gervais de Tibury, who was passing through Beaucaire in 1214.
This nucleus of the early part of Flores Historiarum is supposed to have been the compilation of John de Cella ( also known as John of Wallingford ), abbot of St Albans from 1195 to 1214, although that is inconclusive.
From 2004 to 2010, 1214 students have graduated from NSC, over 500 of them earning nursing degrees.
For what was left of the season, he caught fifteen games and had a batting average of. 294 He also acquired the nickname " Noisy John ," because he kept up a constant chatter on the field ; some baseball historians have noted this was part of his skill in waging " psychological warfare " on his opponents ( Bogen and Anderson, http :// bioproj. sabr. org / bioproj. cfm? a = v & v = l & pid = 7608 & bid = 1214 ) By all accounts he was an exceptional defensive catcher, praised for his skill in throwing out runners who were caught stealing.
The death of the Prince Palatine, in 1214, may be said to have opened to him a more splendid succession than what belonged to the very circumscribed patrimony of his father ; but as his uncle Henry hesitated between a desire to aggrandize his own children ( daughters ) and a sense of what was due to the male representative of his name and family, Otto reaped little advantage from these enlarged prospects.

1214 and Abbey
* John of Ford ( ca. 1140 – 1214 ), English religious leader who, from 1191 until his death, served as abbot of Dorset Cistercian monastery Forde Abbey ; ally of King John
William died in Stirling in 1214 and lies buried in Arbroath Abbey.

0.319 seconds.