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chronicler and Robert
Robert the Monk is the only contemporary chronicler of the crusade to report that Godfrey took the title " king ".
Numerous " adulterine ", or unauthorised, castles had been built as bases for local lords — the chronicler Robert of Torigny complained that as many as 1, 115 such castles had been built during the conflict, although this was probably an exaggeration as elsewhere he suggested an alternative figure of 126.
His plans to write an opera with W. H. Auden coincided with a meeting with the musicologist Robert Craft, who became Stravinsky's interpreter, chronicler, assistant conductor and factotum for countless musical and social tasks, living with him until his death.
** Robert Lindsay of Pitscottie, Scottish chronicler ( b. c. 1532 )
** Robert Fabyan, English chronicler
* Robert of Auxerre, French chronicler ( b. 1156 )
According to the Norman chronicler, William of Jumièges, Robert I, Duke of Normandy attempted an invasion of England to place Edward on the throne in about 1034, but it was blown off course to Jersey.
One source, the Burgundian chronicler Philippe de Commines, claims that Robert Stillington, Bishop of Bath and Wells, carried out the ceremony between Edward and Eleanor.
It is with the coronation of Robert II of France as junior co-ruler with his father, Hugh Capet, the first of the Capetian dynasty, that one chronicler of Sens dates the end of Carolingian rule.
Boardman also asserts that much of the negative views held of Robert II find their origins in the writings of the French chronicler Jean Froissart who recorded that ' king had red bleared eyes, of the colour of sandalwood, which clearly showed that he was no valiant man, but one who would remain at home than march to the field '.
A Norman medieval chronicler, claimed that Robert travelled to Normandy in 1051 or 1052 and told Duke William of Normandy, the future William the Conqueror, that Edward wished for him to become his heir.
Godfrey, along with his two brothers, started in August 1096 at the head of an army from Lorraine ( some say 40, 000 strong ) along " Charlemagne's road ", as Urban II seems to have called it ( according to the chronicler Robert the Monk )— the road to Jerusalem.
Robert the Monk is the only chronicler of the crusade to report that Godfrey took the title " king ".
Orderic Vitalis, a medieval chronicler, records that Robert fitzThurstin gave the nickname to Ranulf, because Robert resented the fact that Ranulf, though of low birth, ordered the nobility around.
It was there that he met and befriended Robert Orme, who became his principal chronicler and biographer.
** Robert Lindsay of Pitscottie, Scottish chronicler ( born c. 1532 )
* Robert Fabyan, ( died 1513 ), English chronicler
The contemporaneous Armenian chronicler Matthew of Edessa mentions David's brother Totorme, who, according to the modern historian Robert W. Thomson, was his sister.
King Robert II died at Dundonald Castle in Ayrshire on 19 April 1390 and the chronicler Wyntoun informs that Robert was not buried at Scone until 13 August 1390, only a day before his son John, Earl of Carrick was crowned King as Robert III.
Orderic Vitalis portrays Robert de Bellême as villain especially when compared to Henry I, whose misdemeanors the chronicler felt were excusable.
Robert Manning ( or Robert de Brunne ) ( c. 1275 – c. 1338 ) was an English chronicler and Gilbertine monk.

chronicler and put
Urban had them seized, tortured and put to death, " a crime unheard of through the centuries " the chronicler Egidio da Viterbo remarked.
According to a 17th century chronicler, Ibrahim had asked Suleiman not to promote him to such high positions, fearing for his safety ; to which Suleiman replied that under his reign no matter what the circumstance, Ibrahim would never be put to death.
The chronicler says that Walter " wished to put himself on a par with the king ".
But, as one chronicler put it, " nothing to do with Welles could remain a secret for very long.
After chronicler Hydatius ´ s death in AD 469 no contemporary source exists reporting on the social and political situation in the Vasconias, as put by himself.
A later chronicler says about him that " he was in many ways a serviceable man and put many things right that were wrong.
Mstislav was the last ruler of united Rus, and upon his death, as the chronicler put it, " the land of Rus was torn apart ".
Of the siege – against only 100 rebels, and costing over a thousand pounds a day – the Barnwell chronicler wrote " No one alive can remember a siege so fiercely pressed and so manfully resisted " and that, after it, " There were few who would put their trust in castles ".
In 1377, the allied armies were defeated by the Tatars on the Pyana River, because ( as the chronicler put it ) they were too drunk to fight.
Early in her Chang ' an era ( 701-705 ), the Essence of Pearls from the Three Religions was completed, and the participants were rewarded -- with Zhang Yue becoming You Shi ( 右史 ), an imperial chronicler, as well as an imperial attendant ; he was also put in charge of grading the entries of imperial examination takers.

chronicler and into
Modern interpretations view the concept of bretwaldaship as complex and an important indicator of how a 9th-century chronicler interpreted history and attempted to insert the increasingly more powerful Saxon kings into that history.
The medieval chronicler William of Malmesbury says that the king also seized and depopulated many miles of land ( 36 parishes ), turning it into the royal New Forest region to support his enthusiastic enjoyment of hunting.
A copy of the law was transcribed by a monastic chronicler into the Croyland Chronicle, where it was discovered by Sir George Buck more than a century later during the reign of James I.
* The chronicler known as Florence of Worcester incorporated parts of Asser's Life into his chronicle, in the early 12th century ; again, he may have also used the Cotton manuscript.
The foundation myth of Cornwall originates with the early Brythonic chronicler Nennius in the Historia Brittonum and made its way, via Geoffrey of Monmouth into Early Modern English cannon where it was absorbed by the Elizabethans as the tale of King Leir alongside that of Cymbeline and King Arthur, other mythical British kings.
In his own account: " My father was from a family of Romanian traders from Botoşani, who were later received into the boyar class, while my mother is the daughter of Romanian writer Elena Drăghici, the niece of chronicler Manolache Drăghici [...].
The Galwegians Galloway in South-West Scotland-described by a later chronicler as " men agile, unclothed, remarkable for much baldness ; arming their left side with knives formidable to any armed men, having a hand most skillful at throwing spears and directing them from a distance ; raising their long lance as a standard when they advance into battle "-were in the first line.
It was translated into Latin by the medieval chronicler and historian William of Malmesbury.
As the Italian chronicler Alexander Guagnini wrote: " There is also another, small Tanais, which originates in the Seversky Principality and flows into the big Tanais above Azov ".
According to a contemporary Polish chronicler, John Sigismund wore this cross on his chest till the end of his life, “... because he who possess this cross will again come into possession of the missing parts which, subjected to the power of the cross, had belonged to it ”.
In this novel, Li Kao and Number Ten Ox are attending the execution of a notorious criminal ( about whose capture the less said the better, according to the chronicler ) when into the public square bounds a " vampire ghoul " who soon meets a fiery demise.
In 884, the emir sent two military campaigns into the region and took Zaragoza, although chronicler ibn Hayyan reports that Muhammad ibn Lubb had sold the city to count Raymond I of Pallars and Ribagorza prior to its fall.
The chronicler immediately denied that he admits this pretension of Velázquez's: " we responded to him that what he said was not the command of God nor king, to make free men into slaves ".
The early 15th century chronicler Thomas Walsingham, a monk at St Albans Abbey, records that a child fell into the mill race and was thrown out by the wheel, apparently dead.
Tangermünde can look back at a thousand-year-long history as already in 1009 the medieval chronicler Bishop Thietmar of Merseburg referred to a local lowland castle, which probably had been erected in the early 10th century during the rule of King Henry the Fowler at the border with the lands of the Polabian Slavs incorporated into the Saxon Marca Geronis.
Modern historians assume, however, that Bezprym in fact did exist, and that the chronicler erroneously combined Otto and Bezprym into one person.
It is one in which young men, in country sport, propel a huge ball not by throwing it into the air but by striking it and rolling it along the ground, and that not with their hands but with their feet ... kicking in opposite directions " The chronicler gives the earliest reference to a football field, stating that: " he boundaries have been marked and the game had started.
Although Atahualpa likely had no intention of conceding to their demands, according to chronicler Garcilaso de la Vega he did attempt inquiry into the Spaniards ' faith and their king, but Pizarro's men began to grow impatient.
The Erkelenz chronicler Mathias Baux wrote in the 16th century that " the bushes in the middle period were cleared and the soil turned into fertile fields, so that out of the harsh wilderness a corn-rich land and overall a breezy paradise was established.

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