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marcher and rebellion
The opposition soon crumbled, and the king decided to move against Thomas of Lancaster, who had been supporting the marcher rebellion all along.

marcher and war
Art critic Alexis Gray wrote :" Reginald Murray Pollack, who studied at New York City's High School of Music and Art before serving in the U. S. Army Air Force during World War II, was described by his twin brother in a June 1977 Esquire article as " a fine artist, humanist, poetically inclined anti-Vietnam war peace marcher, participant, with other artists, in an antiwar coalition, occasional user of pot and sympathizer with hippies and yippies and most youthful rebels.

marcher and forced
) Legend has it that if you look a night marcher straight in the eye, you will be forced to walk among them for eternity, but if you have a relative taken by them, you will be spared.

marcher and king
The king was supported by a team of leading barons with military expertise, including William Longespée, William the Marshal, Roger de Lacy and, until he fell from favour, the marcher lord William de Braose.
The king used the marcher lords and the native Welsh to increase his own territory and power, striking a sequence of increasingly precise deals backed by royal military power with the Welsh rulers.
From then until his death Llywelyn was the dominant force in Wales, though there were further outbreaks of hostilities with marcher lords, particularly the Marshall family and Hubert de Burgh, and sometimes with the king.
Aprisio grants ( the first ones were in Septimania ) emanated directly from the Carolingian king, and they reinforced central loyalties, to counterbalance the local power exercised by powerful marcher counts.

marcher and exile
In 1323 Mortimer went into exile after he and several other marcher lords raided the lands of Hugh le Despenser.

marcher and Despenser
It was less easy to work in the opposite way, and establish a position among the hereditary marcher families, as Hugh Le Despenser discovered.
Hereford and the other marcher lords used Llywelyn Bren's death as a symbol of Despenser tyranny.

marcher and was
Royal power in Wales was unevenly applied, with the country divided between the marcher lords along the borders, royal territories in Pembrokeshire and the more independent native Welsh lords of North Wales.
Rosamund was the daughter of the marcher lord Walter de Clifford and his wife Margaret Isobel de Tosny ( referred to as " de Toeni " on the Page of her husband, Walter de Clifford ).
One of Matilda's most loyal followers was Brian Fitz Count, like Miles a marcher lord from Wales.
Fishguard was a marcher borough and in 1603 was described as one of five Pembrokeshire boroughs overseen by a portreeve.
St David's was once a marcher borough, within which lay the hundred of Dewisland.
The proposition that Haverfordwest Castle was founded by Tancred, a Flemish marcher lord is questionable.
The Marcher Lords were progressively tied to the English kings by the grants of lands and lordships in England, where control was stricter, and where many marcher lords spent most of their time, and through the English kings ' dynastic alliances with the great magnates.
The jurisdiction of the remaining marcher lords was thus an anomaly.
The meetings consisted of northern and marcher lords, as well as Lancaster's own retainers, but little assistance was forthcoming from the northerners.
The changes of the period made little difference in the substantial swathe of land from Pembrokeshire through South Wales to the Welsh Borders which was already in the hands of the marcher lords.
He was also granted the marcher lordship of Montgomery by the queen.
It seems more likely that before the mid-15th century, the most important factor in determining the pattern of sanjaks was the existence of former lordships and principalities, and of areas where marcher lords had acquired territories for themselves and their followers.
The word " cadence " was applied to these work songs because of an earlier meaning, in which it meant the number of steps a marcher or runner took per minute.
It was a marcher borough.
Also in 1190, he sent an army against Rhys ap Gruffydd, a Welsh prince who was attempting to throw off the control of the marcher lords that surrounded Wales.
It was a marcher borough.
A Bonus marcher was killed on the site of the Apex Building.
It was once a marcher borough, controlled by the Norman de Vale family from the 13th century Dale Castle.
It was once a marcher borough.

marcher and within
The 1535 Laws in Wales Act had the effect of abolishing the marcher lordships within and on the borders of Wales.

marcher and .
The most infamous case, which went beyond anything considered acceptable at the time, proved to be that of William de Braose, a powerful marcher lord with lands in Ireland.
He had stockpiled money to pay for mercenaries and ensured the support of the powerful marcher lords with their own feudal forces, such as William Marshal and Ranulf of Chester.
Edward's nephew, Earl Ralph, who had been one of his chief supporters in the crisis of 1051 – 52, may have received Sweyn's marcher earldom of Hereford at this time.
It received its first marcher charter from William Marshall, 1st Earl of Pembroke some time between 1213 and 1219, and obtained the lucrative trading privileges of an English borough.
Over the next four centuries, Norman lords established mostly small marcher lordships between the Dee and Severn, and further west.
Meanwhile an inheritance dispute had broken out in the Welsh Marches between the Despensers and certain marcher lords, including Humphrey de Bohun, Earl of Hereford.
In January 1322 Edward crossed the River Severn, and secured the surrender of several of the marcher lords while Lancaster remained passive.
The future kingdoms of Portugal and Castile were founded as marcher counties intended to protect the Kingdom of Asturias from the Cordoban Emirate to the south and east respectively.
Following his conquest Edward I erected four new marcher lordships in northeast Wales, Chirk, Bromfield and Yale, Duffryn Clwyd and Denbigh ; and one in South Wales, Cantref Bychan.

rebellion and threat
The rebellion became a real threat to the Empire when the conflict escalated to northern Gaul and Germania.
Longshanks, worried by the threat of the rebellion, sends the wife of his son Edward, the French princess Isabella, to try to negotiate with Wallace in hopes that Wallace kills her in order to draw the French king to declare war on Wallace in revenge.
With the treasury and emergency reserve fund of 1, 000 talents dwindling away, the Athenians were forced to demand even more tribute from her subject allies, further increasing tensions and the threat of further rebellion within the Empire.
In late 1143, Stephen faced a new threat in the east, when Geoffrey de Mandeville, the Earl of Essex, rose up in rebellion against the king in East Anglia.
The Senate did not initially take the slave rebellion seriously, until it became clear that Rome itself was under threat.
The Jacobite threat was ended, soon after Walpole's term ended, by the defeat of the rebellion of 1745.
For the first few years, this rebellion posed no economic or strategic threat to the new masters of Iberia, whose seat of power had been established at Cordoba.
The threat of rebellion slowed his progress in Normandy, and is one reason he could not intervene in England.
Not only did the uprising mean that Louis could not pay Charles some of the monies due to him under previous treaties, the scale of the rebellion represented a wider threat to the feudal order in France itself and to some it might appear that Charles was actually unable, rather than unwilling, to intervene to protect his vassal.
They were in charge of discovering any threat of rebellion.
In late 1143, Stephen faced a new threat in the east, when Geoffrey de Mandeville, the Earl of Essex, rose up in rebellion against the king in East Anglia.
Robert joined a rebellion against David in 1363, but submitted to him following a threat to his right of succession.
However, the Irish were ultimately unable to rid the island of the English threat, the rebellion being crushed after the English defeated O ' Neill's and O ' Donnell's combined forces in 1601 at the battle of Kinsale.
There was formerly access to the Nether Bailey from Ballengeich to the west, until the postern was blocked in response to the threat of Jacobite rebellion.
The Han armies had gained a glorious victory, and it was a remarkable achievement that they removed so quickly the threat of Zhang Jue's rebellion.
But Hoel was under threat of rebellion in Nantes, sponsored by Geoffrey Fitzempress, and he could not send any aid to Eudas.
The rebellion in Germania was now a real threat to the Empire.
Newcastle awoke to the threat posed by the Jacobites, much faster than George II or many of his colleagues who dismissed the rebellion as a farce, and organised a response.
This made him a threat to Mary's reign ; Edward was also implicated in Wyatt's rebellion and again locked up in the Tower.
Thutmose had to face one more military threat, another rebellion by Nubia in his fourth year.
After the Russian defeat in the Crimean War in 1856 and the Polish rebellion of 1861, Tsar Alexander II increased Russification to reduce the threat of future rebellions.
The rebellion posed a considerable threat to Company power in that region, and was contained only with the fall of Gwalior on 20 June 1858.
Along the way, they make offworld allies including the Tok ' ra and the Asgard, support a growing rebellion amongst the Jaffa, and encounter a dangerous new threat from another galaxy, the mechanical Replicators.
The Special Republican Guard was controlled by the Special Security Organization and charged with protecting President Saddam Hussein, presidential sites, Baghdad, and responding to any rebellion, coup, or other threat to his power.

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