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Kett's and Oak
Having listened to the rioters ' grievances, Kett decided to join their cause and helped them tear down his own fences before taking them back to Hethersett where they destroyed Flowerdew's enclosures. Kett's Oak, beside the B1172, near Hethersett, Norfolk The following day, Tuesday 9 July, the protesters set off for Norwich.
Known as Kett's Oak, it has been preserved by Norfolk County Council, and a new plaque was unveiled in 2006.
Kett's council, which consisted of representatives from the Hundreds of Norfolk and one representative from Suffolk met under the Oak of Reformation to administer the camp, issuing warrants to obtain provisions and arms and arrest members of the gentry.
Neville was secretary to Matthew Parker, who had preached to Kett's followers under the Oak of Reformation on Mousehold, unsuccessfully appealing to them to disperse.
Kett's rebellion has featured in novels, including Frederick H. Moore's Mistress Haselwode: A tale of the Reformation Oak ( 1876 )), F. C.
Tansley's For Kett and Countryside ( 1910 ), Jack Lindsay's The Great Oak ( 1949 ), Sylvia Haymon's children's story The Loyal Traitor ( 1965 ), and Margaret Callow's A Rebellious Oak ( 2012 ); plays, including George Colman Green's Kett the tanner ( 1909 ); and poetry, including Keith Chandler's collection Kett's Rebellion and Other Poems ( 1982 ).

Kett's and be
According to the leaders of Kett's Rebellion ( 1549 ), " all bond men may be made free, for God made all free with his precious blood-shedding.
In 1550 the Norwich authorities decreed that in future 27 August should be a holiday to commemorate " the deliverance of the city " from Kett's Rebellion, and paid for lectures in the cathedral and parish churches on the sins of rebellion.

Kett's and for
The first creation, as Baron Sheffield of Butterwick, was in the Peerage of England in 1547 for Edmund Sheffield ( 1521 – 1549 ), second cousin of Henry VIII, who was murdered in Norwich during Kett's Rebellion.
In 1549 he assisted in suppressing Kett's Rebellion, and received £ 272, 19. 6 for his services.
In 1549 Robert Kett, rebelling against agricultural hardships, led a large group of men who camped for six weeks on the heath before the uprising, known as Kett's Rebellion, was suppressed.

Kett's and rebellion
* July – Kett's Rebellion in East Anglia, against land enclosures ; rebellion in Oxfordshire against landowners associated with religious changes.
Kett's rebellion ended on 27 August when the rebels were defeated by an army under the leadership of the Earl of Warwick at the Battle of Dussindale.
Kett's rebellion in Norfolk was the most serious of these.
Kett's rebellion, or " the commotion time " as it was also called in Norfolk, began in July 1549 in the small market town of Wymondham, nearly ten miles south-west of Norwich.
Two or possibly three of Kett's brothers were dead by 1549, but his eldest brother William joined him in the rebellion.
Kett's wife, Alice, and several sons are not recorded as having been involved in the rebellion.
The rebellion is remembered in the names of schools, streets, pubs and a walking route in the Norwich and Wymondham area, including the Robert Kett Junior School in Wymondham, Dussindale Primary School in Norwich, the Robert Kett pub in Wymondham and Kett's Tavern in Norwich, and in a folk band, Lewis Garland and Kett's Rebellion, and a beer, Kett's Rebellion, by Woodforde's Brewery in Norwich.
During Kett's rebellion in 1549 the house was broken into and looted.

Kett's and on
In 1549 Robert Dudley participated in crushing Kett's Rebellion and probably first met Amy Robsart, whom he was to wed on 4 June 1550 in the presence of the young King Edward.
Kett's Rebellion is remembered on Wymondham's town sign
Mount Surrey, a house built by the Earl of Surrey on the site of the despoiled St Leonard's Priory, had lain empty since the Earl's execution in 1547 and was used to hold Kett's prisoners.
Kett's artillery, now on the slopes of Mousehold Heath, opened fire on the city.
George Kett's son, also George, was mayor of Cambridge on three occasions and compiled a genealogy of the Kett family.

Kett's and Wymondham
Kett's Rebellion was evidence of an undercurrent of ferment in sixteenth-century Wymondham.

Kett's and .
Kett's Rebellion in Norfolk and the Prayer Book Rebellion in Devon and Cornwall simultaneously created a crisis during a time when invasion from Scotland and France were feared.
Instead of heading to London from her residence at Hunsdon, Mary fled into East Anglia, where she owned extensive estates and Dudley had ruthlessly put down Kett's Rebellion.
* August 26 – Battle of Dussindale in England: Kett's Rebellion quashed.
Kett's Rebellion was a revolt in Norfolk, England during the reign of Edward VI, largely in response to the enclosure of land.
Kett set up his headquarters in St Michael's Chapel, the ruins of which have since been known as Kett's Castle.
George Kett, a descendant of Kett's younger brother Thomas, moved to Cambridge and co-founded the architectural masonry company of Rattee & Kett.

Oak and said
However, there is also a ditheistic theme within traditional Wicca, as the Horned God has dual aspects of bright and dark-relating to day / night, summer / winter-expressed as the Oak King and the Holly King, who in Wiccan myth and ritual are said to engage in battle twice a year for the hand of the Goddess, resulting in the changing seasons.
The language was initially called Oak after an oak tree that stood outside Gosling's office ; it went by the name Green later, and was later renamed Java, from Java coffee, said to be consumed in large quantities by the language's creators.
The Queen Elizabeth Oak on the grounds of the estate is said to be the location where Elizabeth was told she was Queen following Mary's death, but is considered unlikely as Mary died in November.
The Michigan group, working with Blankenship, has said it will resume operations on Oak Island in the hope of discovering buried treasure and the mystery of Oak Island.
In Waterfall Road is Christ Church, a building of stone which has a tower and spire and was built in 1862 by Sir Gilbert Scott, In the grounds stands the Minchenden Oak, said to be the largest oak tree in England, and perhaps 800 years old.
Fishguard's ancient Royal Oak pub was the site of the signing of surrender after the Battle of Fishguard in 1797, said to be the last invasion of Britain, when a force of 1, 400 French soldiers landed near Fishguard but surrendered two days later.
Also the Bowthorpe Oak in Lincolnshire, England is estimated to be 1, 000 years old making it the oldest in the UK, although there is Knightwood Oak in the New Forest which is also said to be as old.
The charter was said to have been hidden in a nearby oak tree ( referred to afterward as the Charter Oak ) so that a search of nearby buildings would not locate the document.
" My children are half black, and we thought Oak Bluffs would give them an opportunity to summer around other kids like them ," Norton said in a 2007 interview with Laura D. Roosevelt for Martha's Vineyard Magazine, alluding to Oak Bluff's reputation as a popular summer spot among black people.
An ancient oak, said to be the Shire Oak, stood to the north of St Michael's Church until 1941, and gives its name to two pubs, The Original Oak and The Skyrack.
At that time, he said, " Scientists at Oak Ridge were very anxious to find real honest-to-goodness scientific uses for the information and technology that had been developed during the war at Oak Ridge and at other places associated with the wartime Manhattan Project.
The charter was said to have been hidden in a nearby oak tree ( referred to afterward as the Charter Oak ) so that a search of nearby buildings would not locate the document.
* The Charter Oak, the oak tree said to have hidden the charter of the Connecticut Colony
The village has three concentrations of buildings: around Easterton Manor House and the Royal Oak ( locally known simply as the Oak and said to be haunted by a miserable old ghost called the body warmer ); near the Church of England parish church, and at Eastcott along a secondary road ( B3098 ) and interspersed with modern housing.
In particular, Druids were said to be able to consult Oak trees for divinatory purposes, as were the Streghe with Rowan trees.
* Beginning at a point on State Road No. 10 where said road intersects and crosses the Eastern boundary line of the Northwest quarter of Section 11, in Township 4 South, Range 14 West, which is Panama City corporate limits on the East, and running thence Northwesterly and Westerly along State Road No. 10 as constructed by the State Road Department to the Street known as Cherry Street in Milville ; thence continuing Westerly along the concrete paved street constructed by Panama City and known as Panama City and Millville Road to Oak Avenue in plat of Old Orchard ; thence continuing Westerly and Northwesterly along the concrete paved street and bridge as constructed by the State Road Department across Watson Bayou, thence along the asphalt slag paved street as constructed by the State Road Department to Magnolia Avenue ; thence Westerly along the concrete paved streets constructed by City of Panama City as follows: Along Sixth Street to Seaview Avenue or Beach Drive ; thence along Seaview Avenue to Frankford Street ; thence along Frankford Street to Buna Vista Avenue ; thence along Buna Vista Avenue to Chestnut Street ; thence along Chestnut Street to Commerce Avenue ; thence along Commerce Avenue to Beck Street ; thence along Beck Street to Wyoming Avenue ; thence Westerly along the asphalt slag street as constructed by State Road Department to the Hathaway Bridge across St. Andrews Bay.
It is said that the poet Stephen Vincent Benét ( the author of " John Brown's Body " and " The Devil and Daniel Webster " sat beneath the branches of the Arsenal Oak as a boy as he wrote his poetry.
Beside the green, the Tilford Oak is said to be at least 800 years old.

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