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contemporary and chronicle
Absalon first appears in Saxo Grammaticus's contemporary chronicle Gesta Danorum at the end of the civil war, at the brokering of the peace agreement between Sweyn III and Valdemar at St. Alban's Priory, Odense.
In modern times various contemporary newspapers or other periodicals have adopted " chronicle " as part of their name.
A live chronicle is where one or more authors add to a chronicle in a regular fashion, recording contemporary events shortly after they occur.
The seeds of heraldic structure in personal identification can be detected in the account in a contemporary chronicle of Henry I of England, on the occasion of his knighting his son-in-law Geoffrey V, Count of Anjou, in 1127.
The only other major contemporary source is the Liber Historiae Francorum, an anonymous adaptation of Gregory's work apparently ignorant of Fredegar's chronicle: its author ( s ) ends with a reference to Theuderic IV's sixth year, which would be 727.
One contemporary chronicle claimed that his death was due to " melancholy ," but it is widely suspected that Edward ordered Henry's murder in order to completely remove the Lancastrian opposition.
* A contemporary account This reference should be to the 1838 translation of a contemporary chronicle on http :// www. hillsdalesites. org / personal / hstewart / war / Ren / 1471-Tewkesbury. htm.
One theory was later recounted in Edward Hall's chronicle, written a few decades after the event, but partly from first-hand sources, and the contemporary Burgundian Jean de Waurin's chronicle.
* A contemporary chronicle, the final meeting of King Richard II and the leader of the Peasants ' Revolt, Wat Tyler.
The chief contemporary chronicle written from a Neustrian perspective is the Liber Historiae Francorum.
Regino's chronicle is an important source on Bulgarian medieval history in that it is the only contemporary text hinting at the organisation of the Council of Preslav ("… < nowiki >< nowiki ></ nowiki > gathered his entire empire and placed his younger son < nowiki >< nowiki ></ nowiki > as prince …").
The chronicle of Thietmar of Merseburg, who died in 1018, could have been regarded as the only contemporary and unbiased account of events, if it were not for the fact that Thietmar's data could have been supplied by Svyatopolk himself during his brief exile at the Polish court.
( An alternative account is given in a Maya chronicle from the Colonial era, claiming that Mayapan was contemporary with Chichen and Uxmal and in alliance with those cities, but archeological evidence shows this version to be less likely.
The first to undertake the versification of the Pahlavi chronicle was Abu-Mansur Daqiqi, a contemporary of Ferdowsi, poet at the court of the Samanids, who came to a violent end after completing only 1, 000 verses.
He narrates the events from 427 onward as a contemporary witness and the text becomes increasingly full as the years progress until it resembles an organic literary work more than a typical chronicle.
The chronicle was compiled during the reign of Alfred the Great and is thus a contemporary record.
Nevertheless, Dionysius appears to have made greater use of the chronicle of Theophilus than his Greek contemporary Theophanes the Confessor and the eleventh-century Christian Arab historian Agapius of Hierapolis, who also used material from Theophilus in their own histories.
Some chronicle accounts of the battle include an invented pre-battle speech on the glorious deeds of the Normans, occasionally quoted as good contemporary evidence of the high opinion the Normans held of themselves.
The physician-scientist George Hoggan spent four months observing and working in Bernard's laboratory and was one of the few contemporary authors to chronicle what actually went on there.
Historical works were even more numerous: the chronicle of Heltai Gaspar ( see on the right ) published by him in Kolozsvar, Zay Ferenc's unpublished work on the siege of Beograd from the 15th century, Kemény János ', Transylvanian Duke's, and Bethlen Miklós ' memoirs with Szalárdy János ' volumeous, that time unpublished, work on contemporary Transylvanian history from the 17th century ( from Bethlen ' reign to 1660s ), and Cserei Mihály's work from the early 18th century highlights the Hungarian-language literature.
Upon his return to his island-kingdom two years later, Haraldr was warmly received by the Manx people, and a contemporary chronicle notes that he peacefully ruled for the rest of his reign.
Of broader interest is Bernold's chronicle, Chronicon, the latter part is a terse record of contemporary events by a knowing and intelligent observer in the extreme Papal camp.

contemporary and recounts
Ferdowsi a contemporary of Mahmud of Ghazni recounts the killing of Yazdegerd by the miller at the behest of Mahuy Suri
One further aspect of King Henry's retinue was the presence of a two royal monkeys covered in gold leaf, these were known to have been gifts from the Ottoman Sultan Selim I and brought much laughter and merriment from Francis I as contemporary Cardinal Wolsey recounts ' The French King was overcome with much curiosity playing with those little knaves that did all they could to steal and pester his advisers, yet he willed them to be present at every banquet '.
The contemporary folk song " On the Road to Fairfax County " by David Massengill, recorded by The Roches and by Joan Baez, recounts a romantic encounter between a highwayman and his female victim.
Because belief in souls returning from the dead was common in the 12th century, Newburghs Historia briefly recounts stories he heard about revenants, as does the work of Walter Map, his southern contemporary.
From a Galician perspective the Historia recounts the reigns of the contemporary sovereigns of Castile: Alfonso VI ( until 1109 ), Urraca ( 1109 – 1126 ) and Alfonso VII ( from 1126 ).

contemporary and bloody
For example, the Thirty Years ' War and the contemporary Wars of the Three Kingdoms, were the most bloody conflicts in the history of Germany and Britain respectively before the First World War.
But this is a grossly over-simplified account of Akbar, whose reign saw some pretty bloody politics and whose position on religion seems not too far removed from that of contemporary European princes with their resort to axe and fire.

contemporary and three-month
Though the initial year of WKBE's new format did well in the ratings, outlasting upstart WHTR, the station soon began to enter a period of decline and in February 1999 Bendat sold his stations to Tele-Media, Inc. After a three-month stunting period, the stations relaunched as modern adult contemporary The Point that May ( with WKLI taking the WCPT calls in the process ).

contemporary and campaign
Public support for unilateralism in September 1982 was 31 %, falling to 21 % in January 1983, but it is hard to say whether this decline was a result of the contemporary propaganda campaign against CND or not.
This tension is one of the great challenges of contemporary democracy and has become more difficult in the era of the permanent campaign, as Gutmann and Thompson show.
Itō's womanizing was a popular theme in editorial cartoons and in parodies by contemporary comedians, and was used by his political enemies in their campaign against him.
He may have been inspired by the First Crusaders, since contemporary accounts of the 1101 campaign call him a " cross-bearer " ( crucifer ).
In May and June 1915, the Ottoman Empire waged a campaign against the Armenian Christian minorities, which by some contemporary accounts looked like genocide or even a holocaust in Anatolia.
They attended the performance and at its conclusion broke into a tirade of catcalls as part of their campaign to rid contemporary music of anything post-Romantic.
The Art Strike campaign caused something of a rumpus in the contemporary London art world ( Home got to talk about the Art Strike at venues such as the Institute of Contemporary Art and Victoria and Albert Museum, as well as on national BBC Radio arts programmes and London area television arts programmes ), but was more seriously discussed in subcultural art networks, especially in Mail Art.
Despite the insinuations of some modern chroniclers, no contemporary account criticises Charle's actions during this campaign.
The mural was painted in 1990 by local resident Mark Francis, drawing a parallel with the contemporary campaign against the Community Charge (' Poll Tax ').
Since under contemporary inheritance law George would have been able to lay claim to Sir John's property on his death, Sir John engaged in a lengthy parliamentary campaign to disinherit his son via a private Act, setting out to " reverse the fundamental laws of hereditary succession ".
In the meantime, left-wing activists, inspired more by contemporary student radicalism and the American civil rights movement than by traditional Irish nationalism, had launched a campaign for civil rights for the nationalist population.
He defeated U. S. Secretary of the Interior and former four-term governor Douglas McKay in a hotly-contested race ; campaign expenditures totaled over $ 600, 000 between the primary and general elections, a very high amount by contemporary standards.
Some contemporary races used orbital bombardment as the primary means of eliminating a base or colony, avoiding a ground campaign altogether.
That label adopted a ' songbook ' approach to recording him, coupling it with a considerable marketing and publicity campaign, which more successfully positioned Henderson at the forefront of the contemporary jazz scene.
Advani, who described it as " valid ," but " inappropriate for our election campaign ... By making them verbal icons of our election campaign, we gave our political opponents an opportunity to highlight other aspects of India's contemporary reality ... which questioned our claim.
Two references to the Levant potentially written during his reign might be contemporary witnesses to such a campaign.
Cameron ran an eight year campaign while in office against the Parliament House contemporary art collection.
It was recognised by many contemporary authorities and later historians that the campaign was a " sideshow " and ( apart from distracting some Japanese land forces from China or the Pacific ) did not contribute to the defeat of Japan, although the recovery of Burma was reckoned a triumph for the British Indian Army.
Prior to the 1968 U. S. presidential election, some commentators have concluded from statements of President Johnson and other contemporary players, the Richard Nixon campaign set out to sabotage the Paris peace negotiations on Vietnam.
The original Citigolf was available in a limited range of solid ( non-metallic ) colours ( a fact highlighted in the contemporary advertising campaign which used a tagline " Red, Yellow, Blue ... Not Green !").
Though he had never studied visual arts in the academic sense, Carigiet's early graphic design was already strongly influenced by contemporary artists, such as El Lissitzky, whose use of photomontage in a poster announcing the exhibition of Russian avant-garde artists in Zurich, in 1928, inspired the design of a political campaign poster for Zurich's mayor Emil Klöti.
Modern historians note that other contemporary Iberian sources, including John's own Chronicle do not attest a Visigothic campaign of persecution of Catholics until the revolt of Hermenegild divided Visigothic loyalties.
The lyrics criticize the George H. W. Bush administration and the social problems of contemporary American life, directly referencing Bush's famous " thousand points of light " remark from his 1989 inaugural address and his 1988 presidential campaign promise for America to become a " kinder, gentler nation.
The Second Boer War is strongly represented and subsequently almost every major campaign in which British troops have fought, including the Korean and Falklands Wars and the Gulf Crisis ; the latter two are covered by contemporary interview transcripts.

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