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William and Stubbs
George Stubbs, William Blake, John Martin, Francisco Goya, Sir Thomas Lawrence, John Constable, Eugène Delacroix, Sir Edwin landseer, Caspar David Friedrich, JMW Turner
This Germanic origin theory was also shared by William Stubbs in the nineteenth century.
According to William Stubbs:
William Stubbs, 2 vols, ( London, 1867 ), available at Gallica.
William Stubbs, 4 vols, ( London, 1868 – 71 ), available at Gallica.
William Stubbs, 2 vols ( London, 1876 )
* Stubbs, William ( ed.
William Stubbs focused on these constitutional aspects of Stephen's reign in his 1874 volume the Constitutional History of England, beginning an enduring interest in Stephen and his reign.
* Stubbs, William.
Freeman convinced Evans ' tutors, George Kitchen and John Richard Green, and they convinced the Regius professor, William Stubbs, that, in view of his special other knowledge and interests, and his father's " high standing in learned society ," Evans should not only be passed, but receive a first.
Bishop William Stubbs, in his Constitutional History ( 1873 – 78 ), emphasised Edward I's contribution to the English constitution.
Modern historians have been more divided in their view of Edward I. Bishop William Stubbs, working in the whig tradition of historical writing, praised Edward as a king deliberately working towards the goal of a constitutional government.
Unlike Justinian, Edward did not codify the law, but as William Stubbs pointed out, " if it be meant to denote the importance and permanence of his legislation and the dignity of his position in legal history ", the comparison is still a valid one.
Admired in his own time and for centuries after, Edward was denounced as an irresponsible adventurer by later Whig historians such as William Stubbs.
:::::::::::::: William Stubbs, The Constitutional History of England
* William Stubbs, Constitutional History of England
William Stubbs, following in this " Whiggish " tradition, analysed the political aspects of the period in his 1874 volume the Constitutional History of England.
The first modern historians to deal with the reign of Edward II – William Stubbs, Thomas Frederick Tout and James Conway Davies – added little to the understanding of Gaveston.
* Andrew Cruickshank as Captain William Stubbs, SS Doric Star
In the nineteenth century, the question of authorship had been discussed by T. D. Hardy, William Stubbs and Liebermann.
William Stubbs ) ( 2 vols., Rolls series, 1867 ), available at Gallica.
Memoirs of Thomas Dodd, William Upcott, and George Stubbs, R. A ( Liverpool: D. Marples, 1879 ).
J. W. Burrow proposed that Freeman, like William Stubbs and John Richard Green, was an historical scholar with little or no experience of public affairs, with views of the present which were Romantically historicised and who was drawn to history by what was in a broad sense an antiquarian passion for the past, as well as a patriotic and populist impulse to identify the nation and its institutions as the collective subject of English history, making
William Stubbs ( 21 June 1825 – 22 April 1901 ) was an English historian and Bishop of Oxford.
The son of William Morley Stubbs, a solicitor, he was born at Knaresborough, Yorkshire, and was educated at Ripon Grammar School and Christ Church, Oxford, where he graduated in 1848, obtaining a first-class in Literae Humaniores and a third in mathematics.

William and Rolls
* William Atte Slade mentioned in the Banco Rolls 1327.
According to the late 13th-century Hundred Rolls, King Henry II of England ( d. 1189 ) gave William of Wrotham lands at North Petherton.
Among the most notable examples of his work for the Rolls series are the prefaces to Roger of Hoveden, the Gesta regum of William of Malmesbury, the Gesta Henrici II, and the Memorials of St. Dunstan.
According to the late 13th century Hundred Rolls, King Henry II of England ( d. 1189 ) gave William of Wrotham the office of steward of Exmoor.
A notice of Richard de Bury by his contemporary Adam Murimuth ( Continuatio Chronicarum, Rolls series, 1889, p. 171 ) gives a less favourable account of him than does William de Chambre, asserting that he was only moderately learned, but desired to be regarded as a great scholar.
In fact, it seem likely that William Curtis did not know the date of the grant / charter as the Calendars of Charter Rolls were not published until 1903-1927.
Other subjects included two Lord Chancellors ( the Earl of Selborne in 1882 and the Earl of Halsbury ) in 1897 ; The Speaker of the House of Commons, William Gully, ( 1897 ); senior legal figures the Lord Chief Justice Lord Alverstone ( 1912 ) and the Master of the Rolls Sir George Jessel ( 1881 ).
The 1296AD Ragman Rolls also references a variant of the name: Patrik de Dundemor and William de Dundemor, landholders in Fife.
It was created in 1897 for the prominent lawyer and judge William Brett, 1st Baron Esher, upon his retirement as Master of the Rolls.
The attribution of Joscelin as a son of William X has been caused by a mistaken reading of the Pipe Rolls pertaining to the reign of Henry II, where ' brother of the queen ' has been taken as Queen Eleanor, when the queen in question is actually Adeliza of Louvain.
The earliest written record of the surname Geddes is of William Ged, from Shropshire, England, recorded within the Pipe Rolls in the year 1230.
* William Stubbs, edition of Benedictus Abbas ( Rolls Series )
William Stubbs ) ( 2 vols., Rolls series, 1867 ), available at Gallica.
William Stubbs ) ( 4 vols., Rolls series, 1868 – 71 ), available at ( and then " visualiser ") and TannerRitchie Publishing.
On 12 July 1284 William was granted by King Edward I ( 1272 – 1307 ) a market and free warren as the following entry in the Charter Rolls records:
William was Keeper of the Rolls for Scotland from 1328 to 1331.
Sir William Grant ( 13 October 1752 – 23 May 1832 ) was a British lawyer, Member of Parliament from 1790 – 1812 and Master of the Rolls from 1801 – 1817.
From the beginning to 688, and again from 1399 to 1471, the text was edited for the Rolls Series ( 5 vols, London, 1864 – 1891 ), by William Hardy and E. L. C. P. Hardy, who also translated most of it into English.
Thousands did so, as recorded on the " Convert Rolls ", and this allowed for the successful careers of Irishmen such as that of William Conolly, but the majority decided not to convert.
Samways, the local constable, William and Danny herd the groggy birds onto Mr. Hazell's Rolls Royce, where the birds scratch the paintwork and defecate on his car.
William Stubbs,, Chronicles and Memorials of the Reign of Richard, Rolls series ( London: Longmans, 1864 ), I, clv-clvi, clx-clxi, clxiv, clxvi, clxxviii-clxxx, 20-23, translated by James Brundage, The Crusades: A Documentary History, ( Milwaukee, WI: Marquette University Press, 1962 ), 97-104
The first noticed proprietors of Corstorphine were David le Mareschall, in the reign of Alexander II, and Thomas le Mareschall and William de la Roche, whose names occur in Ragman Rolls of 1296.
* William Stubbs's edition of Walter of Coventry ( Rolls series, 2 vols, 1872 – 1873 )
They petitioned the Master of the Rolls, Sir William Grant, complaining that the master, the Reverend Daniel Davies, was lavishing privileges upon the boarders.

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