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Page "Salisbury" ¶ 38
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Salisbury and holds
Salisbury holds a market on Tuesdays and Saturdays and has held markets regularly since 1227.
King Penguins form huge breeding colonies ; for example, the colony on South Georgia Island at Salisbury Plain holds over 100, 000 breeding pairs and the one at St. Andrew's Bay over 100, 000 birds.
Nevertheless the link with St George continues today, for example Salisbury holds an annual St George ’ s Day pageant, the origins of which are believed to go back to the thirteenth century In recent years the popularity of St George's Day appears to be increasing gradually.
" Edward of Salisbury holds Ludgershall.
* Hurtmore-Tesselin holds Hurtmore for Edward of Salisbury, before the conquest it was Alwin who held it from king Edward.

Salisbury and annual
The subsequent annual series of Sarum Theological Lectures are unconnected, being organised by Sarum College and taking place in Salisbury Cathedral.
In a charter dated 7 June 1300, King Edward I granted the Bishop of Salisbury the right to hold a weekly market and an annual fair in the town.
In Britain, in 1914, the Public Schools Officers ' Training Corps annual camp was held at Tidworth Pennings, near Salisbury Plain.
In February 1610, Salisbury proposed a scheme, known as the Great Contract, whereby Parliament, in return for ten royal concessions, would grant a lump sum of £ 600, 000 to pay off the king's debts plus an annual grant of £ 200, 000.
During the TPF's ' annual manoeuvres ' on Salisbury Plain, Wolfie, Ken, Tucker and Speed decide to camp down after an evening of heavy drinking, unbeknown to them that they are in the middle of a military live firing area.
In 1397 Richard II and the Bishop of Salisbury confirmed an order dated the 29th April 1221 allowing an annual fair to be held in the town.
In 1914, the Public Schools Officers ' Training Corps annual camp was held at Tidworth Pennings, near Salisbury Plain.
In 1337, he was created Earl of Salisbury, and given an annual income of 1000 marks to go with the title.
War on the Shore: The annual men's lacrosse game, held in late spring between Washington College and Salisbury University, two of Maryland's Eastern Shore's undergraduate schools.
The annual lacrosse rivalry between Washington College and Salisbury University is known as The War on the Shore.
Regular field trips are held, including an annual weekend on Salisbury plain.
Impositions were among the prerogative rights that King James I was to give up under the Great Contract of 1610, as drawn up by Lord Treasurer Robert Cecil, then Lord Salisbury, in return for an immediate sum to pay off Royal debt and an annual subsidy that would greatly increase income.
In 1985 the The Salisbury Review was accused of scientific racism during the annual congress of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, and thereafter, Scruton wrote in 2002, the magazine's writers were ostracized in the academic world.
The city of Tampa, which provides a portion of the zoo's annual budget, demanded an audit detailing the relationship between Lowry Park, Salisbury, and his outside business ventures.

Salisbury and St
He had a house built in 1770 at St John ’ s Hill, Edinburgh, overlooking Salisbury Crags.
The known biographers are John of Salisbury, Edward Grim, Benedict of Peterborough, William of Canterbury, William fitz Stephen, Guernes of Pont-Sainte-Maxence, Robert of Cricklade, Alan of Tewkesbury, Benet of St Albans, and Herbert of Bosham.
Wedgwood was chairman ; also present were William Townsend Aiton ( successor to his father, William Aiton, as Superintendent of Kew Gardens ), Sir Joseph Banks ( President of the Royal Society ), James Dickson ( a nurseryman ), William Forsyth ( Superintendent of the gardens of St. James's Palace and Kensington Palace ), Charles Francis Greville ( a Lord of the Admiralty ) and Richard Anthony Salisbury, who was to become the Secretary of the new society.
The bridge passed over the riverine island of St. Antoine, an optimal location for Salisbury to position English cannon within range of Orleans city center.
After his education at St John's College, Cambridge, Salisbury was made Secretary of State following the death of Sir Francis Walsingham in 1590, and he became the leading minister after the death of his father in 1598, serving both Queen Elizabeth and King James as Secretary of State.
There is a gravestone for one of the le Bretons from Jersey in St. Thomas Church in Salisbury, Wiltshire, England, among its many hatchments and memorial stones.
The first Salisbury Cathedral was built on the hill by St Bishop Osmund between 1075 and 1092.
* St. Nicholas ' Hospital, Salisbury, Wiltshire: restoration, 1854
* St. George's parish church, West Harnham, Salisbury, Wiltshire: restoration, 1874
It was built in 1884 and features statues of St Aldhelm, Bishop Roger of Salisbury ( Roger de Caen ), Abbot Bradford and Sir Walter Raleigh.
A small private church dedicated to St. Audrey was built by Lord Sackville Cecil, son of the Marquess of Salisbury, on the site of Olive's Mill in 1889 ; The church and other mill premises came into the possession of the parish in 1908, and since 1925 the former Olive's Mill House has been used as the rectory.
Many inaccurately attribute this to Salisbury Cathedral, however they introduced boys and girls on an equal basis, whereas St David's used girls as their ‘ main ’ cathedral choristers.
Following his second marriage in 1833, Pugin moved to Salisbury with his wife, and in 1835 bought half an acre of land, at Laverstoke, about a mile-and-a-half outside the town, On this he built a medieval-inspired house for his family, called " St Marie's Grange ".
Another famous visitor was aviator Charles A. Lindbergh, whose " Spirit of St. Louis " passed low over Salisbury shortly after taking off from Roosevelt Field on his immortal May 1927 solo flight from New York to Paris.
Lacock Abbey, dedicated to St Mary and St Bernard, was founded in 1229 by the widowed Lady Ela the Countess of Salisbury, who laid the abbey's first stone 16 April 1232, in the reign of King Henry III, and to which she retired in 1238.
Lacock Abbey was founded on the manorial lands by Ela, Countess of Salisbury and established in 1232 ; and the village — with the manor — formed its endowment to " God and St Mary ".
The resident houses in the historical district on Salisbury St. were given an ordinance to renovate their homes to match the current renovations done to the roads leading into downtown along with the new bank and park added further downtown.
There are currently ten on-campus residence halls at Salisbury University: Pocomoke, Nanticoke, Wicomico, Manokin, Choptank, Chester, Severn, Chesapeake, and St. Martin Halls and Dogwood Village.
The so-called Vita S. Swithuni of Lantfred and Wulfstan, written about 1000, hardly contain any biographical fact ; all that has in later years passed for authentic detail of Swithun's life is extracted from a biography ascribed to Goscelin of St Bertin's, a monk who came over to England with Hermann, bishop of Salisbury from 1058 to 1078.
The Salisbury in St. Martin's Lane was built as part of a six-storey block around 1899 on the site of an earlier pub that had been known under several names, including the Coach & Horses and Ben Caunt's Head ; it is both Grade II listed, and on CAMRA's National Inventory, due to the quality of the etched and polished glass and the carved woodwork, summed up as " good fin de siècle ensemble ".
In 1502 he became prebendary of Salisbury, in 1505 prebendary of St Paul's, and immediately afterwards its dean, having previously taken the degree of doctor of divinity.
He then returned to Balliol as a Snell Exhibitioner ; became Vicar of High Ercall, Shropshire in 1750 ; Canon of the Eleventh Stall at St George's Chapel, Windsor in 1762 ( to 1776 ); a member of the chapter of St Paul's Cathedral in 1777 ; Bishop of Carlisle in 1787 ( and also Dean of Windsor in 1788 ); and Bishop of Salisbury in 1791.

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