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Knighton and wrote
The king had no option but to return to captivity — the English chronicler Henry Knighton wrote of the event: < div style = " font-size: 90 %;">< span style =" color :# eee ;"></ span > ... the Scots refused to have their King unless he entirely renounced the influence of the English, and similarly refused to submit themselves to them.
The current academic view agrees with Galbraith in that the Continuator most likely never existed, and Knighton wrote the entire Chronicle.

Knighton and chronicle
Knighton's Chronicon ( Knighton ’ s Leicester Chronicle, Henry Knighton's chronicle ) is an English chronicle written by Henry Knighton in the fourteenth century.
The Continuator of Knighton ( or " Knighton's Continuator ") was a supposed late 14th century continuator of Knighton's chronicle.

Knighton and first
Marcedes Lewis went to his first pro bowl and the Jags had one of the best young defensive tackle duo with Terrance Knighton and rookie Tyson Alualu.
1260 ), Ranulf Higden ( before 1352, and the first to misname him " Oliver ") and the English translators of his work, Henry Knighton ( before 1367 ), John Nauclerus of Tübingen ( c. 1500 ), John Wilkins ( 1648 ), John Milton ( 1670 ), and John Wise ( 1850 ).
Knighton first prospered as a centre of the wool trade in the 15th century and was later an important point on the two drover routes from Montgomery to Hereford, and from London to Aberystwyth.
His first Broadway role, however, came when composer Frank Wildhorn and lyricist Nan Knighton approached him in hopes of finding a male lead for their new musical, The Scarlet Pimpernel.
During his final season at Arsenal, Knighton was involved in one of the first recorded cases of doping ; before a January 1925 FA Cup first round tie against West Ham United, Knighton gave the players what he described as " little silver pills ", given to him by a Harley Street doctor who was a fan of the club ; although the pills were successful in increasing the players ' energy, the side-effects caused them to have raging thirst.
Norris denied this and instead cited Arsenal's poor record that season ( having finished 20th and knocked out of the FA Cup first round ), but later regretted his dismissal, stating it was the one mistake in his career and in his will left Knighton £ 100.
The term " Merciless Parliament " was first employed by a local chronicler, Henry Knighton, who was referring to the ruthless manner in which many were convicted and executed.

Knighton and published
In the early years of the 15th century, Henry IV ( De haeretico comburendo ), Archbishop Thomas Arundel, and Henry Knighton published criticism and enacted some of the severest religious censorship laws in Europe at that time.
The initial report of the Boundary Commission for England dated October 1947 and published in December 1947 recommended that Leicester retain three seats, including a revised Leicester South constituency consisting of the wards of Aylestone, De Montfort, Knighton, North Braunstone and Spinney Hill, giving an electorate of 67, 574 as of the review date of 15 October 1946.

Knighton and England
The Offa's Dyke Centre is a purpose-built information centre in the town of Knighton, situated on Offa's Dyke on the border between England ( Shropshire ) and Wales ( Powys ).
It was founded by Captain H. M. Knighton, a native of New England, in 1845 as " Plymouth ".
The Dyke still exists, and can best be seen at Knighton, close to the modern border between England and Wales.
Gorges was born in Ashton Phillips, Somerset, England, descended from a cadet branch of the Russells of Kingston Russell, Dorset, which had changed its name to the metronymic Gorges, which family had died out in the male line on the death of Ralph de Gorges of Knighton, Isle of Wight, 2nd Baron Gorges, in 1331.
Chudleigh Knighton is a small village in Devon, England, near to Newton Abbot and Bovey Tracey.
Chudleigh Knighton Church of England Primary School currently has around 80 pupils, aged 5 to 11.
The Heath was once the village's main football pitch and was the venue for many sports days for Chudleigh Knighton Church of England Primary School.
In Great Britain, F. exsecta can be found only in a few scattered heathland locations in South West England — principally Chudleigh Knighton Heath and nearby Bovey Heath which are both managed by the Devon Wildlife Trust, and in the central Scottish Highlands ( including Rannoch Moor ).
The River Teme ( Welsh Afon Tefeidiad ) rises in Mid Wales, south of Newtown in Powys, and flows through Knighton where it crosses the border into England down to Ludlow in Shropshire, then to the north of Tenbury Wells on the Shropshire / Worcestershire border there, on its way to join the River Severn south of Worcester.
It flows across the border into England through Knighton.
Lying on the River Teme, the town straddles the English-Welsh border ; Knighton railway station, as well as a small part of the town's built-up area, is located in Shropshire, England.
St. Mary Magdalen Church and churchyard cemetery, Knighton, Leicester, England
In 1969 the Second Periodical Report of the Parliamentary Boundary Commission for England reduced Leicester from four seats to three, and recreated Leicester South as a borough constituency consisting of the Aylestone, De Montfort, Knighton, Spinney Hill, The Castle and Wycliffe wards of Leicester.
West Knighton is a village in south Dorset, England, situated three miles southeast of the county town of Dorchester.
* Knighton, Leicestershire, a suburb of Leicester, England
** Knighton, Stafford, Staffordshire, a village in the Borough of Stafford, England
* Knighton, Isle of Wight, a hamlet in England
* Knighton, Oxfordshire, a hamlet in England
* Knighton Woods, part of Epping Forest near Buckhurst Hill in Essex, England.
Knighton is a hamlet part of the parish of Adbaston in the county of Staffordshire, England.
Knighton which borders Wales and England is the deep south of Shropshire and has a railway station situated in Shropshire as well as part of the built up area.
* West Knighton, Dorset, a village in England
* West Knighton, Leicestershire, a suburb of Leicester, England
New Invention is a small village in Shropshire, England on the A488 between Clun and Knighton.

Knighton and from
from :-1300 till :-1200 shift :( 0, 5 ) text: Knighton Heath
She was the daughter of a country doctor from the Welsh border town of Knighton, and had was Arnold's second wife.
Chudleigh Knighton is served by transport links in the form of bus services both from Newton Abbot and Exeter.
Kington may have derived from King's-ton, being Anglo-Saxon for " King's Town ", similar to other nearby towns such as Presteigne meaning " Priest's Town " and Knighton being " Knight's Town ".
There is no main road running through the town, though the A488 runs north-south just to the east of the town, on its way from Shrewsbury, Pontesbury and Minsterley to Clun and Knighton.
The name Knighton probably derives from the Old English words cniht and tūn meaning, respectively, "... a soldier, personal follower, young man, servant, thane, freeman " and "... farm, settlement, homestead ".
from Knighton.
Otherwise, Knighton was remote from the centres of commerce.
The Knighton Railway Company was formed by local landowners and businessmen to build a line from Craven Arms to the town.
Veolia Transport Cymru provide a service ( Monday to Saturday ) to Kington with connections from there to Hereford on services operated by Sargeants, and buses in the opposite direction to Knighton.
Alternatively, the location that inspired the novel could be the Black Hill between Knighton and Clun and a few miles from Lurkenhope.
It has a number of anomalies-for instance, it separates Knighton from its railway station, virtually cuts off Church Stoke from the rest of Wales, and divides the village of Llanymynech where a pub straddles the line.
Also shown here are the arms of the Gorges family of Knighton, Isle of Wight and Wraxall, Somerset, from a co-heiress of which the Cheyney's were descended, blazoned as Argent, a gurges azure.
The Shropshire Union Canal runs through the parish, to the southwest of the villages of High Offley and Woodseaves, with the Shebdon aqueduct and wharf in the west of the parish, from Shebdon towards Knighton.
When Knighton signed the 5 ' tall Hugh " Midget " Moffatt from Workington in 1923, Norris was furious when he found out ; he overruled his manager and promptly sold the player to Luton Town before he'd played a League game.
Knighton later alleged that Norris has only sacked him to avoid paying him a bonus ( estimated at up to £ 4, 000 ) from a benefit match that he was due.
After leaving the Gunners, Knighton went on to manage Bournemouth ( 1925 – 28 ), Birmingham ( 1928 – 33 ), whom he led to the 1931 FA Cup Final, Chelsea ( 1933 – 39 ) taking over from the long serving David Calderhead, and Shrewsbury Town ( 1945 – 48 ), before their election to the Football League.
The club went public in 1990 and was the subject of takeover bids from property trader Michael Knighton and Rupert Murdoch's BSkyB corporation before Malcolm Glazer's stake was announced in September 2003.
However, the club's lack of progress on the pitch over the next decade, along with the subsequent departure of ambitious owner Michael Knighton, meant that the stadium remained unchanged from that date.
It breeds mainly in peat bogs and flies ( in the UK ) from June to September including places like Chudleigh Knighton Heath.

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