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Bernard and Cornwell's
The Grail has been used as a theme in fantasy, historical fiction and science fiction ; a quest for the Grail appears in Bernard Cornwell's series of books The Grail Quest, set during The Hundred Years War.
* Lindisfarena plays an important role in Bernard Cornwell's Saxon Stories.
* Bernard Cornwell's The Saxon Stories series of books features her, most prominently in Sword Song ( 2007 ISBN 978-0-00-721971-1 ) and The Burning Land ( 2009 ISBN 978-0-00-721975-9 ).
Another can be found in Warren Ellis ' graphic novel Crécy or in Bernard Cornwell's fictional account of an archer in the Hundred Years ' War, The Archer's Tale ( US title ) or Harlequin ( UK title ).
* Edward appears as a participant in the Crecy campaign in Bernard Cornwell's novel Harlequin ( published in the U. S. as The Archer's Tale ).
** Bernard Cornwell's novel Gallows Thief
Manawydan appeared as a vengeful sea god in Bernard Cornwell's Warlord Chronicles.
In Bernard Cornwell's series of novels Sharpe, the protagonist Richard Sharpe's mother was killed during the riots when he was three.
In 1993, he was cast as Richard Sharpe, the lead character in the Sharpe series of made-for-TV movies based on Bernard Cornwell's novels, however he injured his knee while playing football just days into filming Sharpe's Rifles in the Ukraine.
In Bernard Cornwell's The Warlord Chronicles, Mordred is the club-footed, legitimate grandson and heir of Uther Pendragon, and Arthur serves as the kingdom's regent during his minority.
* Bernard Cornwell's series of historical novels, The Saxon Stories: The Last Kingdom, The Pale Horseman, The Lords of the North and Sword Song.
In Bernard Cornwell's series the Grail Quest, the Earl of Northampton plays a minor role as Thomas of Hookton's lord.
In Bernard Cornwell's The Warlord Chronicles, many of the legendary deeds of Bedivere ( such as throwing Excalibur into the Lake ; or in Cornwell's story, the sea ) are instead carried out by Derfel Cadarn.
The 16-episode Sharpe television series was based on Bernard Cornwell's novels about the Peninsular War, and the fictional experiences of a band of soldiers in the famed 95th Rifles.
The island featured in Bernard Cornwell's novel Sharpe's Regiment as the camp ground for the fictional second battalion of the South Essex Regiment.
* In Bernard Cornwell's The Warlord Chronicles Mordred, King of Dumnonia, has a club foot that is often used as a symbol for his ugliness and weakness as a ruler.
* Thaddeus Bird, a character in Bernard Cornwell's Starbuck Chronicles.
Lancelot and Galahad are portrayed as having similar ages, whereas according to traditional versions they are father and son respectively ( the film's approach is also found in modern Arthurian fiction — such as Bernard Cornwell's The Warlord Chronicles, in which they are brothers ).
* Bernard Cornwell's novel Sharpe's Devil features a meeting between Napoleon, and the fictional Richard Sharpe.
Talavera is the setting for Sharpe's Eagle, the first book written in Bernard Cornwell's " Sharpe " series, and is depicted in the conclusion of the film adaptation of the same name.
Bernard Cornwell's fictional character Richard Sharpe was named after him.
* Ivar is a minor character in Bernard Cornwell's historical fiction novel, The Last Kingdom.
The battle also features in Bernard Cornwell's novel The Last Kingdom.

Bernard and Warlord
* Bernard Cornwell: Sharpe series set in 19th century Europe and India, the Starbuck Chronicles, set during the American Civil War, the Saxon Stories set in Alfred the Great's pre-England, the Grail Quest Novels set in mid-14th century England / Normandy, and The Warlord Chronicles, set in Arthurian Britain.
It is also a setting in the Warlord Chronicles a trilogy of books about Arthurian Britain written by Bernard Cornwell.
* Bernard Cornwell is one of today's best-known historical novelists, with his Sharpe and The Warlord Chronicles.
Bernard Cornwell names him as a rival of Aelle of Sussex, in his Warlord Chronicles.
A warrior by the name of Culhwch appears prominently in the Warlord Chronicles trilogy by Bernard Cornwell.
Bernard Cornwell also duplicated Wellington's tactics, in this battle, in his re-telling of Arthur's victory at the Battle of Mount Badon, in The Warlord Chronicles.
* Excalibur: A Novel of Arthur, a 1997 novel by Bernard Cornwell in his series The Warlord Chronicles
The Warlord Chronicles is a trilogy of books about Arthurian Britain written by Bernard Cornwell ( perhaps best known for his Richard Sharpe adventures ).
In the Warlord novels, by English author Bernard Cornwell, based on the Arthurian legend, a secondary character named Melwas is mentioned many times, here as the king of the tribe of the Belgae, who inhabited the region roughly corresponding to modern Hampshire with its capital at Venta Belgarum ( modern Winchester ).
After World War II most Tristan texts were in the form of prose novels or short stories, although Bernard Cornwell includes a " historical " interpretation of the legend as a side story in The Warlord Chronicles.

Bernard and Chronicles
* Copperhead, the second volume in the U. S. Civil War series The Starbuck Chronicles by Bernard Cornwell
* Nathaniel Starbuck, the main character in The Starbuck Chronicles novels by Bernard Cornwell
* The Starbuck Chronicles, a series of historical novels by Bernard Cornwell

Bernard and Uther
In Bernard Cornwell's The Winter King Owain is the chief warlord of Uther Pendragon and the champion of Dumnonia.

Bernard and is
Bernard Heuvelmans also treats of the largest snakes, but on the third level, and is chiefly concerned with the anaconda.
The Councilman, who is the Administration floor leader, also criticized Bernard L. Werner, public works director, for `` halting snow operations '' on Tuesday night after the Sunday storm.
* Dr. Bernard Rieux: Dr. Bernard Rieux is the narrator of the novel, although this is only revealed at the end.
He is notably the builder of Alcobaça Monastery, to which he called the Cistercian Order of his uncle Bernard of Clairvaux of Burgundy.
This divergence between American English and British English once caused George Bernard Shaw to say that the United States and United Kingdom are " two countries divided by a common language "; a similar comment is ascribed to Winston Churchill.
The Abbey, which was the richest in Scotland, is most famous for its association with the 1320 Declaration of Arbroath, believed to have been drafted by Abbot Bernard, who was the Chancellor of Scotland under King Robert I.
He is also known to quote thinkers such as Saint Bernard, and Richard of Saint-Victor.
Her husband Bernard d ' Ormale is a former adviser of the Front National, the main nationalist party in France.
Bernard Allan Federko ( born May 12, 1956 ) is a retired professional ice hockey centre who played fourteen seasons in the National Hockey League from 1976 through 1990.
Bernard G. Campbellin wrote: " That Gigantopithecus is in fact extinct has been questioned by those who believe it survives as the Yeti of the Himalayas and the Sasquatch of the north-west American coast.
* Bernard Lee ( poker player ) is a poker professional / media personality who has also written for ESPN. com and CardPlayer Magazine and hosts his own radio show.
The coining of the word cryptozoology is often attributed to Belgian-French zoologist Bernard Heuvelmans, though Heuvelmans attributes coinage of the term to the late Scottish explorer and adventurer Ivan T. Sanderson.
Bernard Rosenthal laments that Mather is so often portrayed as the rabid witch hunter.
Generally believed to have been written in the Arbroath Abbey by Bernard of Kilwinning, then Chancellor of Scotland and Abbot of Arbroath, and sealed by fifty-one magnates and nobles, the letter is the sole survivor of three created at the time.
* 2008 – Bernard Madoff is arrested and charged with securities fraud in a $ 50 billion Ponzi scheme.
A point of interest is that it is probably Daniel Jones ( and not as is often thought Henry Sweet ) who provided George Bernard Shaw with the basis for his fictional character Henry Higgins in " Pygmalion ".
He was " the creator of ... that cage which is the theatre of Shakespeare's Othello, Racine's Phèdre, of Ibsen and Strindberg ," in which "... imprisoned men and women destroy each other by the intensity of their loves and hates ", and yet he was also the literary ancestor of comic dramatists as diverse as Menander and George Bernard Shaw.
ELIZA was named after Eliza Doolittle, a working-class character in George Bernard Shaw's play Pygmalion, who is taught to speak with an upper-class accent.
The second wedding is that of Bernard ( David Haig ) and Lydia ( Sophie Thompson ), a couple who got together at the previous wedding.
* 12th century – Bernard of Clairvaux, commenting on Mark 16: 17 (" they will speak in new tongues "), asked: " For who is there that seems to have these signs of the faith, without which no one, according to this Scripture, shall be saved?

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