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chronicle and list
A dead chronicle is one where the author gathers his list of events up to the time of his writing, but does not record further events as they occur.
It is a testimony to this lack of influence that there are thousands of runestones commemorating commoners, but no chronicle about the Swedish kings, prior to the 14th century ( though a list of kings was added in the Westrogothic law ), and only a few runestones that may mention kings: Gs 11 ( Emund the Old ), U 11 ( Haakon the Red ) and U 861 ( Blot-Sweyn ).
The chronicle account of the battle was included in Hector Boece's Historia Gentis Scotorum ( 1527 ) with an abbreviated list of personnel.
Rajmala, a chronicle of Tripuri kings that was first penned in the fifteenth century, provides a list of 186 kings from antiquity to the present day.
The history section consists of a fragment of a list of Danish kings and a chronicle beginning with the legendary Danish king Hadding's son Frode and ending with Eric VI of Denmark.
Blue Highways, which spent 42 weeks on the New York Times bestseller list in 1982-83, is a chronicle of a three-month-long road trip that Least Heat Moon took throughout the United States in 1978 after losing his teaching job and separating from his first wife.
Æthelweard and Ælfweard re-appear as brothers and thegns ( ministri ) in the witness list of a spurious royal charter dated 974 This appears to be the same Æthelweard who regularly attests royal charters between 958 and 977 as the king's thegn and may have moved on to become the illustrious ealdorman of the Western Provinces and author of a Latin chronicle, in which he claimed descent from King Æthelred of Wessex ( d. 871 ), fourth son of King Æthelwulf.
Gədur is listed as the third king in list C, Zegduru ( ze meaning ' of ' in Ge ' ez ) appears as the sixth in list E, and Zegdur appears as the third in list B, after the legendary Menelik I. Zegdur also is mentioned in at least one hagiography and short chronicle.
There is also a local chronicle of Zaria itself, written in the 19th century ( it goes up to 1902 ) and published in 1910 that gives a list of the rulers and the duration of their reigns.
According to the chronicle of John of Biclaro, as co-king Liuvigild initiated the first of several campaigns to expand the territory of the kingdom of the Visigoths, which Peter Heather describes as a " list of striking successes ".
The only part of the general story presented by the Alfonso III that is otherwise backed up is the claim that he was bishop of Seville, since a late tenth-century manuscript mentions a bishop of that city named Oppa in the correct time period, but the chronicle may have been the list compiler's source.

chronicle and rulers
Fernando Alvarado Tezozómoc, who wrote the Crónica Mexicayotl, was a grandson of Moctezuma II and his chronicle mostly relates the genealogy of the Aztec rulers.
Brut y Tywysogion (" Chronicle of the Princes "), a major chronicle for the Welsh rulers from the 7th century to loss of independence, is a purely historical work containing no legendary material but the title reflects the influence of Geoffrey's work and in one sense can be seen as a " sequel " to it.
This chronicle describes the opposition of the local rulers Gelou, Glad and Menumorut in Transylvania at the arrival of the Magyars in the 10th century.
According to a very old Kirat chronicle, Patan was founded by Kirat rulers long before the Licchavi rulers came into the political scene in Kathmandu Valley.
According to that chronicle, the earliest known capital of Kirat rulers was Thankot.
According to that 11th-century chronicle, Abd ar-Rahman III made peace in 939-940 with a number of Frankish rulers and sent copies of the peace treaty to Nasr ibn Ahmad, described as the commander of Farakh shanit, as well as to the Arab governors of the Balearic Islands and the seaports of al-Andalus — all of them subject to the Umayyad caliphate.
The chronicle ascribes blame to Salīh, stating that it was he " who gathered the Muslim troops, kings, and rulers " against the Emperor.

chronicle and back
Also the first major Polish chronicle written by one Gallus Anonymus dates back to the reign of Prince Bolesław III.
The chronicle traditional is first attested in the compositions of the early Iron Age which hark back to earlier times, such as the Chronicle of Early Kings, the Dynastic Chronicle, Chronicle P and the Assyrian Synchronistic History.
The idea that the crusades were a response to Islam dates back as far as 12th-century historian William of Tyre, who began his chronicle with the fall of Jerusalem to Umar.
One chronicle tells of how four shoemakers brought it to Warwick, who refused to accept it, and ordered them to take it back outside his jurisdiction.
He asks why a writer would go back to a chronicle source to add a piece of information which is of no importance dramatically, and brings nothing to the scene.
Valmiera was first mentioned as a town in a chronicle dating back to 1323.
The custom of hanami dates back many centuries in Japan: the eighth-century chronicle Nihon Shoki ( 日本書紀 ) records hanami festivals being held as early as the third century CE.
As he did not begin writing his chronicle until back in Spain, he had to rely on memory.
The earliest mention of the term bandura dates back to a Polish chronicle of 1441, which states that the Polish King Sigismund III had a court bandurist known as Taraszko who was of Ukrainian ethnicity and was also the king's companion in chess.
According to the Annales Londonienses chronicle, four shoemakers brought the corpse back to Warwick, but he refused to accept it, and ordered them to take it back to where they found it.
According to the c. 800 chronicle The Life of Kings, Parnavaz had a distinguished genealogy, tracing back to Kartlos, the mythical ethnarch of Kartli.
The subsequent episodes chronicle Arislan's plans on finding an army to back him up.
Since this took place, according to the same chronicle, after Roderic's defeat, either the defeat must be moved back to 711 or the conquest of Toledo pushed back to 712 ; the latter is preferred by Collins.
Liz Phair has stated that the songs on Whip-Smart chronicle the beginning, middle and end of a relationship: " a rock fairy tale, from meeting the guy, falling for him, getting him and not getting him, going through the disillusionment period, saying ' Fuck it ,' and leaving, coming back to it.
Its chronicle dates back to the 14th century.
It is notable that Crowley's 1559 continuation of the Lanquet-Cooper chronicle looks back on this period — Somerset's fall, then Dudley's, and the accession of Mary — as precisely a time of judgement that befell England due to the failings principally of the secular leaders such as Somerset.
In addition to The Boys of Summer, recently optioned for a Broadway play, Kahn wrote books such as Good Enough to Dream, a chronicle of his year as the owner of a minor league baseball franchise ; The Era 1947-57, an examination of the decade during which the three New York clubs-the Dodgers, Yankees and Giants-dominated Major League Baseball ; and Memories of Summer, a look back at his youth and early career, plus extended pieces on New York baseball legends Willie Mays and Mickey Mantle.
Since the battle of Guadalete took place, according to the same chronicle, in 712 and the conquest of Toledo in 711 but after Roderic's defeat, either the battle of Guadalete must be pushed back or the conquest of Toledo pushed forward ; the latter is preferred by Roger Collins.
Most of the letters date back to 1953 and chronicle Burroughs ' visit to the Amazon rainforest in search of yagé ( ayahuasca ), a plant with near-mythical hallucinogenic and some say telepathic qualities.

chronicle and tenth
The Annales Cambriae, a tenth century chronicle, records that in 722 the British defeated their enemies at the Battle of Hehil.
Balbinus was the first to edit the ancient vernacular chronicle of the tenth century known as the Life of St. Ludmilla and Martyrdom of St. Wenceslas, which is considered the oldest historical work written in Bohemia by a Bohemian.

chronicle and century
The idea has also some backing in German legend, for example the Gesta Treverorum ( a 12th century German medieval chronicle ) makes Trebeta son of Ninus the founder of Trier.
The first recorded use of the term Bretwalda comes from a West Saxon chronicle of the late 9th century that applied the term to Ecgberht, who ruled from 802 to 839.
The latest research shows that the Annales Cambriae was based on a chronicle begun in the late 8th century in Wales.
During Polish rule of the area in the late 10th century, the chronicle of Thietmar of Merseburg ( 975-1018 ) mentions salsa Cholbergiensis as the see of the Diocese of Kołobrzeg, set up during the Congress of Gniezno in 1000 and placed under the Archdiocese of Gniezno.
As an Egyptian with links to Scotland, Al-Fayed was intrigued enough to fund a 2008 reprint of the 15th century chronicle Scotichronicon by Walter Bower.
The oldest Vamshavali or chronicle, the Gopalarajavamsavali, was copied from older manuscripts during the late 14th century, is a fairly reliable basis for Nepal's ancient history.
After Aramudi, who is mentioned in the Kashmirian chronicle, the Rajatarangini of Kalhana ( 1150 CE ), many Thakuri kings ruled over the country up to the middle of the 12th century AD.
The first mention of the female pope appears in the chronicle of Jean Pierier de Mailly, but the most popular and influential version was that interpolated into Martin of Troppau's Chronicon Pontificum et Imperatorum, later in the 13th century.
The earliest mention of the female pope appears in the Dominican Jean de Mailly's chronicle of Metz, Chronica Universalis Mettensis, written in the early 13th century.
Up to the 13th century the Scandinavians and Henry of Livonia in his chronicle called the town Lindanisa: Lyndanisse in Danish, Lindanäs in Swedish, also mentioned as Ledenets in Old East Slavic.
According to the genesis chronicle of the majority Sinhala people, the Mahavamsa (" Great Chronicle "), written in 5th century CE, the Pulindas believed to refer to Veddas are descended from Prince Vijaya ( 6th-5th century BC ), the founding father of the Sinhalese nation, through Kuveni, a woman of the indigenous Yakkha clan whom he had espoused.
The chronicle Gesta Hungarorum provides insight from the Hungarian side ; however this chronicle was written in only the 12th century.
This case is supported only by the Jüngere Hochmeisterchronik, a late-15th century chronicle, mentioning Narimantas as half-brother to Algirdas.
Frederick Barbarossa in a 13th century chronicle
Sacking of Suzdal by Batu Khan in February 1238: a Miniature ( illuminated manuscript ) | miniature from the 16th century chronicle
The Later Han Dynasty Chinese chronicle, the Hou Hanshu, 88 ( covering the period 25 – 220 and completed in the 5th century ), mentioned a report that the steppe land Yancai was now known as Alanliao ( 阿蘭聊 ):
Their versions attempted to reconstruct the pre-Nestorian chronicle, compiled at the court of Yaroslav the Wise in the mid-11th century.
Later, the 14th century war chronicle Taiheiki contained many references to shinobi, and credited the destruction of a castle by fire to an unnamed but " highly skilled shinobi ".
A little more is known of Pontian than his predecessors, apparently from a lost papal chronicle that was available to the compiler of the Liberian Catalogue of bishops of Rome, made in the fourth century.
But, as is told in the Rotensian Chronicle ( chronicle of Alfonso III of Asturias in which Pelayo is considered the successor of the kings of Toledo, with clear goals of political legitimacy ) as well as in that of Al-Maqqari ( a Moroccan historian of the 16th century who died in Cairo, Egypt, and who could have used the Rotensian Chronicle and rewrite it eight centuries later, making it useless as a historical document ), Pelayo escaped from that city during the governorship of Al Hurr ( 717-718 ) and his return to Asturias triggered a revolt against the Muslim authorities of Gijon.
The main source for his life is the twelfth century chronicle of William of Malmesbury, but historians are cautious about accepting his testimony, much of which cannot be verified from other sources.
However, Fordun's chronicle was not written until the later 14th century, and the near-contemporary account of the life of St Margaret, by Bishop Turgot, makes no mention of a castle.
The history of the town in the later Middle Ages was recorded in a chronicle by Albert Suho, one of the most important Osnabrück clerics of the 15th century.

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