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castellan and de
On 5 June 1154 the archbishop of Tarragona gave two-thirds of Reus to Bertran de Castellet, as a castellan, with the order to build a church.
On 2 June 1186 the camerlengo Joan de Santboi confirmed the rights given by the castellan Bernard de Bell-lloc.
The dynasty of Bell-lloc castellans became extinct in 1327 and then Bernard de Cabrera became the new castellan, but in 1335 the castellan was sold to Pere Mulet, who lost it on 1345.
Hubert and William's two younger brothers were Geoffrey de Burgh and Thomas de Burgh ; Geoffrey became Archdeacon of Norwich ( 1202 ) and then bishop of Ely ( 1225 ), while Thomas was castellan of Norwich ( 1215 – 16 ).
However, the castellan Brian de Lisle refused to hand them over.
In 2011, he was part of a medieval epic, Ironclad, which also starred James Purefoy and Paul Giamatti, as the ineffectual Reginald de Cornhill, castellan of Rochester castle.
The last of the family, Claude Mayor de Lutry died in 1598 and was replaced by a castellan.
The castellan, Gerard de Camville, had sworn allegiance to John and stated he would no longer recognise the chancellor's authority.
comes Andreas, castellanus de Miculow ), the castellan of Miculow, showing that Mikołów was already an administrative center.
* Jan de Czernina-starosta of Wschowa and Kościan, castellan of Międzyrzecz
From 1359 to 1398 the castellan domain of Lyons was part of Blanche de Navarre's dower after she became widow of king Philip VI of France.
In an effort to alleviate the pressure on the castle's supplies, Roger de Lacy, the castellan, evicted 500 civilians ; this first group was allowed to pass through the French lines unhindered, and a second group of similar size did the same a few days later.
He may have been the Guy de Couci who was castellan of Château de Coucy from 1186 to 1203.

castellan and gave
The price of his son's release, however, was the castle of Saint-Céneri which Duke Robert gave to Robert Giroie as castellan.
The appointed time found him punctual ; and Antonio, having drawn him, as if for the convenience of conversation, on to the bridge, gave a signal to his men, who immediately raised it, and in a moment the cardinal, from being a commander of armies, found himself a prisoner of the castellan.

castellan and title
* The title is originally equivalent to that of castellan () or châtelain, meaning keeper of a castle and / or fortified town ( both can be called Burg in German, burg in Dutch ).
The title châtelain continued also to be applied to the inferior officer, or concierge châtelain, who was merely a castellan in the English sense.

castellan and town
Founded by Jan Tarnowski, the castellan of Kraków, who built a castle near the town.
The castellan ruled over the town as well as the estates of Corsier unti1 1798.
There were four judicial courts over the town and the surrounding villages ; the courts of Letry and Savigny, the court of the castellan and the court of the Lords of Corsier.
The town became a seat of a separate castellan by the beginning of the 13th century.
It is known that his elder brother Sułek did not hold any official posts while his uncle Jan Świnka was mentioned in 1286 as the castellan of a tiny town of Spicymierz.
In 1421 the Castellan of Nocera, Pietro di Rasiglia, suspecting his wife of adultery with Niccolò I Trinci, invited the whole Trinci family to a hunting party and had them all killed, except the young Corrado, who took revenge for the murder of his relatives, attacking the town and killing the treacherous castellan.

castellan and on
There is a comic scene based on the play on words ( Castilian / castellan ) in Don Quijote.
All these fortresses were controlled either directly by the count or by a castellan who also controlled the appendici or surrounding territory on certain specific terms.
In February 1495, with the arrival of Charles VIII, Ferdinand II landed on the island and took possession of the castle, and, after having killed the disloyal castellan Giusto di Candida with his own hands, left the island under the control of Innico d ' Avalos, marquis of Pescara and Vasto, who ably defended the place from the French flotilla.
It was bestowed on the locality in 1616 by the castellan Krzysztof Koryciński.
Based on a grant of privilege to a monastery, Paprocki cites as the most ancient member of this house Mszczuj, Sandomierz castellan, in 999, the time of Boleslaw the Brave ; his two sons Mszczuj and Jan, who signed their names as " from Jakuszewice ," were Kraków canons, made such by Bishop Lambert in 1061.
The patriarch, having determined to go into Tuscany, prepared to leave Rome on the following day, and ordered the castellan to be upon the drawbridge of the fortress in the morning, for he wished to speak with him as he passed.
He served as a voyevoda of Volhyn ( 1584-1593 ), as a castellan of Kraków ( from 1593 on ), and as a starosta of Bohuslav ( from 1591 ), Biała Cerkiew ( since 1592 ), Czerkasy and Kaniów ( from 1594 ), Perejasław ( 1604 on ) and Włodzimierz.
Senator castellan of the Polish Kingdom in 1824, chamberlain of Napoleon I, Knight of the Order of the White Eagle awarded on 24 May 1829
She ordered that all those involved in the Orsi conspiracy were to be imprisoned, among them the Pope's governor, Monsignor Savelli, all the pontifical generals, and the castellan of the fortress of Forlimpopoli, on account of their treachery, and also all women of the Orsis and other families who had assisted in the conspiracy.
Jan was Wojski of Lwów from 1555 to 1554, courtier on the royal court since 1554, secretary of the King since 1556, castellan of Małogoszcz since 1563 and of Radom since 1565, voivode of Lublin Voivodeship since 1574 and starost of Łomża and Pilzno.

castellan and August
Tomasz became Colonel of the Crown Army in 1765, Chamberlain of King Stanisław August Poniatowski in 1767, castellan of Czersk since 1777, Court Treasurer since 1791, Marshal of the Sejm of the Duchy of Warsaw in 1809 and later President of the Senate of the Duchy of Warsaw and the Kingdom of Poland.
It once was a substantial Jewish shtetl, which dated from the 17th century, as appears from a charter granted to the Jews January 11, 1667, by Michael Casimir Pacz, castellan of Vilna, and confirmed by King August III.

castellan and for
A further complication for Longchamp arose in September 1191, when Henry II's illegitimate son Geoffrey, Archbishop of York, was arrested by Longchamp's subordinates, led by the castellan of Dover Castle, Longchamp's brother-in-law.
He later became captain and castellan of the castle at Ornans, for the King of Spain.
Usually, a castellan combined the duties of both a majordomo ( responsible for a castle's domestic staff ) and a military administrator ( responsible for maintaining defenses and protecting the castle's lands ).
A castellan of several notable towns, he was an important politician at the royal court in Warsaw and was one of the main supporters of the liberum veto during the diet of 1764, when he became known for his dispute with Szymon Konarski.
The city gates were opened by some of the inhabitants, and he was able to take possession, after having conquered the fortress where the castellan Dionigi Naldi of Brisighella had resisted for several days.
Mikolaj z Bogorii (?- 1381 ), castellan of Zawichów, supporter of Władysław II Jagiello for the Polish throne and co-initiator of the Polish-Lithuanian Union.

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