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Francis II, Holy Roman Emperor (X) Sociology (X)

       
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John Keble's Parishes a History of Hursley and Otterbourne

By: Charlotte Mary Yonge

...al of these urns were deposited in the Hartley Museum, Southampton. Of the Roman times we know nothing but that part of the great Roman road between C... ...art of the great Roman road between Caer Gwent (or V enta Belgarum, as the Romans called Winchester) and Sorbiodunum (Old Sarum). It can still be trac... ...her, King Stephen, died in 1154, he fled from England, and the young Henry II. in anger dismantled Merdon, together with his other castles of Wolvesey... ... meal a day, and spending the surplus in charity. He died in 1174. CHAPTER II CHAPTER II CHAPTER II CHAPTER II CHAPTER II MEDIAE MEDIAE MEDIAE MEDIAE ... ...the manor; but in 1265 it had passed, by what means we do not know, to Sir Francis de Bohun—a very early specimen of this Christian name which was der... ...of the Saint of Assisi, whose Christian name was John. From the son of Sir Francis in 1279 Simon the Draper obtained the Manor of Otterbourne for 600 ... ...d the response, “Thanks be to Thee, O Lord,” at the end of the Gospel. The Holy Communion was celebrated four times a year, 35. 7d. being paid each ti... ...ngels, and with two groups of kneeling figures; on one side, apparently an Emperor with his crown laid down, and the collar of the Golden Fleece aroun... ...erweave expressions of his own as guidance to meaning. His belief was that Holy Scripture is so many-sided, and so fathomless in signification, that t...

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The Religious Dimension

By: Donald Broadribb

...ights. Copyright © 1995 and 2006 by Donald Broadribb. Typeset in Times New Roman and Futura, using the program Mellel, with an Apple iMac. ACKNOWLEDG... ... Christian Belief Before The Nicaean Council The Centrality Of Beliefs The Holy Rituals Exclusive Allegiance The Social Bases Of Religious Divergence ... ...unique to himself is in The Republic section 496c. THE RELIGIOUS DIMENSION ii Aristotle’s writings made good sense, but I could never feel that his h... ...many readers will remember that within the general Christian tradition the Roman Catholic Church, until very recently, retained some vestiges of food ... ..., Oxford, 1961. 1 Details in Henri Frankfort, Book II, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1948. Egyptian + Palestinian + Ar... ...d the master: “It is some time since I came to you to be instructed in the holy path of the Buddha, but you have never given me even an inkling of it.... ... year 325 in the city of Ni- caea, in what is now Turkey, at the behest of Emperor Constan- tine. Christian belief, and organized Christian groups, ha... ...uniform, official religion of the Roman Empire had long been a goal of the emperors. Emperor Constantine had cast his lot in with the Christian moveme... ...rom Buddhism or Taoism. Some Christian radicals and mystics (such as Saint Francis) have demonstrated the truth of such relationship to dogma-bound ch...

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Essays of Michel de Montaigne Book the Second

By: William Carew Hazilitt

...R ACTIONS ...................................................... 5 CHAPTER II OF DRUNKENNESS ............................................................ ...TO A GOOD END .................................... 206 CHAPTER XXIV OF THE ROMAN GRANDEUR ............................................................... ...“We are turned about like the top with the thong of oth- ers.”—Idem, Sat., ii. 7, 82.] We do not go, we are driven; like things that float, now leisur... ... up”; truly, a man must confess that there is some phrenzy, some fury, how holy soever, that at that time possesses those souls. When we come to these... ...rth sufficient to die upon can never be wanting, as Boiocalus answered the Romans.”—[Tacitus, Annal., xiii. 56.]—Why dost thou com- plain of this worl... ... soldiers, and the last also killed herself to avoid being ravished by the Emperor Maxentius. It may, peradventure, be an honour to us in future ages,... ... date, Philip de Commines. What we have here is rather an apology for King Francis, against the Emperor Charles V., than history. I will not believe t... ...le defect. In fine, whoever has a mind to have a perfect knowledge of King Francis and the events of his reign, let him seek it elsewhere, if my advic... ...d are set before us. ’Tis an effect of the divine Providence to suffer the holy Church to be afflicted, as we see it, with so many storms and troubles...

...Contents CHAPTER I OF THE INCONSTANCY OF OUR ACTIONS ...................................................... 5 CHAPTER II OF DRUNKENNESS .............................................................................................. 14 CHAPTER III A CUSTOM OF THE ISLE OF CEA .................................................................. 24...

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Chicago Manual of Style

By: University of Chicago

...fanciful or popular appel- lation used as if a real geographical name: (I) Holy Roman Empire, German Empire (-Dmtschw Reich), French Republic (=Rt?... ...ful or popular appel- lation used as if a real geographical name: (I) Holy Roman Empire, German Empire (-Dmtschw Reich), French Republic (=Rt?pdliq... ...he Confederacy], the Dominion (=Canada); (4) Celestial Empire (Celestials), Holy (Promised) Land, Badger State, Eternal City, Garden City. But do n... ... (but: scribe); Epicurean, Stoic, Gnosticism, Neoplatonism, Literalist; the Romantic movement; the Sym- bolic school of painters. But do not capita... ...tand- ing alone, when referring to the president of the United States, the emperor of Russia, the emperor of Germany, the sultan of Turkey, and the... ...42); Ferdinand W. Peck, commis- sioner-general to the Paris Exposition; the emperor of Germany, the vice-president, the secretary of the interior, t... ...e senator, the archbihop of Canterbury, the mayor of Chicago; the archduke Francis Ferdinand, the apostle Paul. 20. Abljreviationske Ph.D., M.P., a... ...lize such minor subdivisions of publications as- set. 4, scene I; chap. z (ii), p. 7 (vii), vs. 11, 1. s, n. 6. (On the abbreviation of these words... ...on each page. 74 The Unrversit y of Chicago Press TABULAR WORK 221. In II-pt. and IO-pt. matter open (unruled) tables should ordinarily be set ...

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Young Folks, History of England

By: Charlotte Mary Yonge

................................................................... 6 CHAPTER II THE ROMANS IN BRITAIN. A.D. 41—418 ........................................ ............................................................ 6 CHAPTER II THE ROMANS IN BRITAIN. A.D. 41—418 ............................................... ...066—1087 ......................................... 19 CHAPTER VIII WILLIAM II., RUFUS. A.D. 1087-1100 ................................................... ... He could not bear that there should be any place that his own people, the Romans, did not know and subdue. So he commanded the ships to be prepared, ... ...never left off trying till they had done what they undertook. One of their emperors, named Claudius, sent his soldiers to conquer the island, and then... ...ing the wild place into fields, full of wheat. Others used to copy out the Holy Scriptures and other good books upon parchment—because there was no pa... ...ave kings. But Alfred was not only a brave warrior. He was a most good and holy man, who feared God above all things, and tried to do his very best fo... ...gements with foreign princes had this end in view. The new king of France, Francis I., was young, brilliant and splendid, like Henry, and the two had ... ...he Cloth of Gold. However, nothing came of it all. Cardinal Wolsey thought Francis’s enemy—the Emperor Charles V.—more likely to help him to be pope, ...

.................. 6 CHAPTER I JULIUS CAESAR. B.C. 55 ........................................................................................ 6 CHAPTER II THE ROMANS IN BRITAIN. A.D. 41?418.......................................................... 8 CHAPTER III THE ANGLE CHILDREN A.D. 597.................................................................... 10 CHAPTER IV THE N...

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Droll Stories Collected from the Abbeys of Touraine Volume III : The Third Ten Tales

By: Honoré de Balzac

...E ..................................................................... 51 II HOW BERTHA BEHA VED, KNOWING THE BUSINESS OF LOVE ......................... ......................................................................... 115 II HOW THIS MARRIAGE ENDED ................................................... ...f which God has placed in us to aid that faith due to the mysteries of our holy religion; so it is needful to demon- strate abundantly the secret caus... ...dren born of this union. And for this I will make you a receptacle for the Holy Eucharist, so elaborate, so rich with gold, precious stones and winged... ... raised up the Princess Judith for the Hebrews, and Queen Lucretia for the Romans, would keep his most illus- trious abbey of T urpenay, and indulged ... ... the Italians came with their balls and merry-makings. T o these practices Francis the First and his successors, whose easy ways did as much harm to t... ...any—a precious picture, painted by a V enetian named Titian (artist to the Emperor Charles, and in very high flavour), in which there were portraits o... ...e lived. One day Madame Catherine took with her to the king’s room her son Francis and little Margot, who began to talk at random, as children will. N... ... the ambassadors wrote to their masters on the subject. The Emperor of the Romans was much cut up about it, because he had loved her to dis- traction ...

........................ 51 I HOW BERTHA REMAINED A MAIDEN IN THE MARRIED STATE ..................................................................... 51 II HOW BERTHA BEHAVED, KNOWING THE BUSINESS OF LOVE .................................................................... 59 III HORRIBLE CHASTISEMENT OF BERTHA AND EXPIATION OF THE SAME, WHO DIED PARDONED ..... 72 HOW THE PRE...

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The Prince

By: Nicolo Machiavelli

...llowing the choice of the College to fall on Giuliano delle Rovere (Julius II), who was one of the cardinals that had most reason to fear the duke. Ma... ... himself. Julius did not rest until he had ruined Cesare. It was to Julius II that Machiavelli was sent in 1506, when that pontiff was commencing his ... ...e influ- enced by such motives, would have been ruined. The 7 Machiavelli Emperor Maximilian was one of the most interesting men of the age, and his ... ...entire policy of the Republic. When, in 1511, Julius II finally formed the Holy League against France, and with the assistance of the Swiss drove the ... ...that year the battle of Pavia destroyed the French rule in Italy, and left Francis I a prisoner in the hands of his great rival, Charles V. This was f... ...trattenere,” employed by Machiavelli to indicate the policy adopted by the Roman Senate towards the weaker states of Greece, would by an Elizabethan b... ...r through excess of ambition or through fear, as one has seen already. The Romans were brought into Greece by the Aetolians; and in every other countr... ...ht hold the cities both for his security and his glory; as also were those emperors who, by the corruption of the soldiers, from being citizens came t... ...hey are at once ob- *Maximilian I, born in 1459, died 1519, Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire. He married, first, Mary, daughter of Charles the Bold; a...

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Travels in England during the Reign of Queen Elizabeth

By: Paul Hentzner

...ut Earl of Leicester, Lincoln, and Derby, of whose race are descended many emperors, kings, princes, and nobles. His second wife 9 was Constance, who... ...quitain, High Steward of England, died in the twenty-first year of Richard II., A.D. 1398. A little farther, almost at the entrance of the choir, in a... ...nd, having conquered Scotland, brought it from thence. The tomb of Richard II. and his wife, of brass, gilt, and these verses written round it: Perfec... ...ver which is put over it, you see it in its true proportions; Charles V ., Emperor; Charles Emanuel, Duke of Savoy, and Catherine of Spain, his wife; ... ...seen the statues of two giants, said to have assisted the English when the Romans made war upon them: Corinius of Britain, and Gogmagog of Albion. Ben... ...orinius of Britain, and Gogmagog of Albion. Beneath upon a table the *This romantic inscription probably alluded to Philip II., who wooed the Queen af... ...ver, the first thing that struck us was the ship of that noble pirate, Sir Francis Drake, in which he is said to have surrounded this globe of earth. ... ... shadowings and droppings, for the clouds of Spain, and the vapours of the Holy League, began to disperse and threaten her felicity. Moreover, she was... ... to speak more of him were to make them less. *Poland. 67 WALSINGHAM. SIR FRANCIS WALSINGHAM, as we have said, had the honour to be Sir Philip Sidney...

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The Amazing Marriage

By: George Meredith

...ING MARRIAGE By George Meredith 1895 BOOK 1 I. Enter Dame Gossip as Chorus II. Mistress Gossip T ells of the Elopement of the Countess of Cressett wit... ...t still of his fame as a four-in- hand coachman. They say he once drove an Emperor and a King, a Prince Chancellor and a pair of Field Marshals, and s... ...in those days! And now for the elopement. 14 The Amazing Marriage CHAPTER II MISTRESS GOSSIP TELLS OF THE ELOPE- MENT OF THE COUNTESS OF CRESSETT WIT... ...nds on her, giving her the likeness of one under condemnation of ‘the Most Holy Inqusition, in the ranks of an ‘auto da fe’; and singularly resembling... ...him, and instantly urged Lord Fleetwood not to think of dismissing his man Francis. ‘I beg it, Fleetwood! I beg you to take the man. Her ladyship will... ...Fleetwood aside. A word was whispered, and they broke asunder with a snap. Francis was called. His master gave him his keys, and despatched him into t... ... to be a mili- tary quite as much as a naval commander like the Greeks and Romans, he says. We took the bruised man into our carriage and drove him to... ...us to see it! means to build a mansion there! “He said it must be the most romantic place on earth.” ‘I suppose I slept. I woke with my last line to y... ...of Fleetwood, surpassed the nobility of common nobles. But, by all that is holy, he pays for his distinction. The creature beside him is a franked iss...

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Information Technology Tales

By: Brad Bradford

...Project Gutenberg co-founder Preface ―Knowledge is power,‖ a quote by Francis Bacon. . CHAPTERS 1. Did Water Monkeys Swim before We Spoke? F... ...he peoples of ancient eras, such as the Sumerians, Egyptians, Greeks, and Romans, on to those of the French, Germans, English, and eventually worldw... ... front of you. All you have to do is open it. ―Knowledge is power. ― —Francis Bacon ―Expanding the sharing of knowledge upset the balance of... ...coupling of those two words was in 1978, the same year I bought the Apple II desktop computer that introduced me to modern Information Technology. ... ...oduced me to modern Information Technology. Aware that owners of Apple II desktop computers might have learned something about digital word proce... ...ian system. The Golden Alphabet Age Passed on to the Etruscans and Romans, the enormously enriched Greek alphabet fueled Rome‘s golden alphab... ...control of their secret of papermaking, but the arrogance of one of T‘ang Emperor Hsuan-tsung‘s generals opened the way near Samarkand for the secre... ...eighth through the tenth centuries and was crowned the first ruler of the Holy Roman Empire in 800. Before recalling their accomplishments, let‘s ... ... been too old to advance personally very far in such studies. Became the Holy Roman Emperor Charlemagne, who had expanded the Frankish kingdoms i...

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The History of Henry Esmond, Esq. : A Colonel in the Service of Her Majesty Queen Anne : Written by Himself

By: William Makepeace Thackeray

...ESMOND OF CASTLEWOOD HALL ..................................... 14 CHAPTER II RELA TES HOW FRANCIS, FOURTH VISCOUNT, ARRIVES A T CASTLEWOOD ............. ...WOOD HALL ..................................... 14 CHAPTER II RELA TES HOW FRANCIS, FOURTH VISCOUNT, ARRIVES A T CASTLEWOOD ............................. ...TER V MY SUPERIORS ARE ENGAGED IN PLOTS FOR THE RESTORA TION OF KING JAMES II. ...... 42 CHAPTER VI THE ISSUE OF THE PLOTS.—THE DEA TH OF THOMAS, THIR... ...hion. CHAPTER I AN ACCOUNT OF THE FAMILY OF ESMOND OF CASTLEWOOD HALL WHEN FRANCIS, fourth Viscount Castlewood, came to his title, and presently after... ...h his hand on his sword, and his order on his cloak, which he had from the Emperor during the war on the Danube against the Turk. Seeing the great and... ...ng’s army, who afterwards joined the Usurper’s Government; and Francis, in holy orders, who was slain whilst defending the House of Castlewood against... .... She was maid of honor to the Queen Henrietta Maria; she early joined the Roman Church; her father, a weak man, following her not long after at Breda... ...lt used, 47 Thackeray according to his custom, to laugh, and say that the Holy Church throughout all the world, and the noble Army of Martyrs, were v... ...man, with a wart upon her nose. But having been early taught a part of the Roman religion, he never had the horror of it that some Protestants have sh...

.....................................11 CHAPTER I AN ACCOUNT OF THE FAMILY OF ESMOND OF CASTLEWOOD HALL ..................................... 14 CHAPTER II RELATES HOW FRANCIS, FOURTH VISCOUNT, ARRIVES AT CASTLEWOOD........................... 19 CHAPTER III WHITHER IN THE TIME OF THOMAS, THIRD VISCOUNT, I HAD PRECEDED HIM AS PAGE TO ISABELLA .....................................

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Catherine : A Story

By: William Makepeace Thackeray

...n the crowd. It was noon in Chepe. And George de Barnwell was alone. V ol. II. WE HA VE SELECTED the following episodical chapter in prefer- ence to a... ...rs are familiar. Up to this passage (extracted from the beginning of V ol. II.) the tale is briefly thus: The rogue of a Millwood has come back every ... ...ining his wan but noble features, “why speak to thee in the accents of the Roman poet, which thou comprehendest not? Bright One, there be other things... ...sm: the above sentiment is expressed much more eloquently in the ingenious romance of Eugene Aram:—”The burning desires I have known—the resplendent v... ...bove thoughts passed through the young noble’s mind as he came in sight of Holywell Street. The occupants of the London Ghetto sat at their porches ba... ...ith Lord Codlingsby. But we are lingering on the threshold of the house in Holywell Street. Let us go in. III GODFREY AND RAFAEL passed from the stree... ...er in a gray coat and a cocked hat, came to the wall, and I recognized the Emperor Napo- leon and the famous Joachim Murat. “We are hardly pressed, me... ... must exercise my old trade as an artilleryman;” and Murat loaded, and the Emperor pointed the only hundred-and-twenty- four-pounder that had not been... ...her howl, of serpents and trom- bones, the Latin canticles of the Reverend Franciscus O’Mahony, lately canonized under the name of Saint Francis of Co...

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The Prelude of 1805 in Thirteen Books

By: William Wordsworth

...ook Thirteenth Conclusion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 228 ii The Prelude of 1805 Book First Introduction: Childhood and School tim... ...ess in an honorable field, Pure passions, virtue, knowledge, and delight, The holy life of music and of verse. Thus far, O friend, did I, not used to m... ... as it might seem, Book First Introduction: Childhood and School time 3 For holy services. Great hopes were mine: My own voice cheared me, and, far m... ...de swellings for a regular sea, I settle on some British theme, some old 180 Romantic tale by Milton left unsung; More often resting at some gentle pl... ... the cloud of years, became That Odin, father of a race by whom Perished the Roman Empire; how the friends 190 And followers of Sertorius, out of Spai... ...e, name now slipped From my remembrance, where a lady lodged 490 By the first Francis wooed, and bound to him In chains of mutual passion—from the towe... ...to close And rivet up the gains of France, a Pope Is summoned in to crown an Emperor— 940 This last opprobrium, when we see the dog Returning to his v...

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Democracy in America

By: Alexis de Tocqueville

...sted with the grace of poetry, and the driest statistics with the charm of romance. Western emigration seemed commonplace and prosaic till M. de Tocqu... ...where the love of order is confounded with a taste for oppression, and the holy rites of freedom with a contempt of law; where the light thrown by con... ...800 to 1,000 miles in length, viz., the Illinois, the St. Peter’s, the St. Francis, and the Moingona; besides a countless multitude of rivulets which ... ...the destruction of their coun- try; and they braved death like the ancient Romans when their capital was sacked by the Gauls. Further on, p. 150, he t... ...800 to 1,000 miles in length, viz., the Illinois, the St. Peter’s, the St. Francis, and the Moingona; besides a countless multitude of rivulets which ... ... had not been prepared by the history of the past. 43 Tocqueville Chapter II: Origin Of The Anglo-Americans – Part I Chapter Summary Utility of knowi... ...nd’s Memorial,” p. 13; Boston, 1826. See also “Hutchinson’s History,” vol. ii. p. 440. 50 Democracy in America mouth; how that God brought a vine int... ...t onely so, but also that he hath guided his people by his strength to his holy habitation and planted them in the mountain of his inheritance in re- ... ...Thus the province of Holland in the republic of the Low Countries, and the Emperor in the Germanic Confedera- tion, have sometimes put themselves in t...

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What Is Man and Other Essays of Mark Twain

By: Mark Twain

...here no shadow nor suggestion of benefit to one’s self can result from it. II M M M M Man an an an an ’’ ’’’s S s S s S s S s S ole Impulse—the S ole ... ...tunate. I have examined many fine and apparently self sacrificing deeds in romances and biographies, but— O.M. Under searching analysis the ostensible... ...alists? And why were the Congregationalists not Baptists, and the Baptists Roman Catholics, and the Roman Catholics Buddhists, and the Buddhists Quake... ...e since, when it was tenantless and silent and forlorn, but to me it was a holy place and beautiful. It seemed to me that the spirits of the dead were... ...d thank fully glad, too, though I never cared anything about it be fore. II TO ME, THE MOST IMPORTANT feature of my life is its literary feature... ... ous matter that helped me to another link. It made me notorious, and San Francisco invited me to lecture. Which I did. And profitably. I had long ha... ...ing; its duty was to remind me when it was time to begin to talk about San Francisco weather, where there is no lightning—nor thunder, either—and it ... ..., the Duke of Reichstadt. Hereabouts was a Roman camp, once, and in it the Emperor Marcus Aurelius Mark T wain 115 died a thousand years before the f... ...n gallery, in which princes are displayed. It is sacred to them; it is the holy of holies. As soon as the filling of the house is about complete the s...

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Familiar Studies of Men and Books

By: Robert Louis Stevenson

................................................. 4 CHAPTER I – VICTOR HUGO’S ROMANCES ..................................................................... .................................................................. 15 CHAPTER II – SOME ASPECTS OF ROBERT BURNS............................................. ...myself, seek to disarm the wrath of other and less partial critics. HUGO’S ROMANCES. – This is an instance of the “point of view.” The five romances s... ...e can render just as easily the flourish of trum- pets before a victorious emperor and the gossip of country market women, the gradual decay of forty ... ... what it has ever entered into the heart of any other man to imagine (vol. ii. p. 180): “Il souffrait tant que par instants il s’arrachait des poignee... ...anic, if not an incoherent, presentation of both the poems and the man. Of Holy Willie ’s Prayer, Principal Shairp remarks that “those who have loved ... ...eme so uncongenial. When we find a man writing on Burns, who likes neither Holy Willie, nor the Beg- gars, nor the Ordination, nothing is adequate to ... ...al. The hangman, as is not uninteresting to note in connection with Master Francis, was kept hard at work in 1431; on the last of April and on the 4th... ...s. Of this uncle and his money-box the reader will hear once more. In 1448 Francis became a student of the University of Paris; in 1450 he took the de...

... PREFACE BY WAY OF CRITICISM. ........................................................................................... 4 CHAPTER I ? VICTOR HUGO?S ROMANCES ........................................................................ 15 CHAPTER II ? SOME ASPECTS OF ROBERT BURNS.......................................................... 34 CHAPTER III ? WALT WHITMAN..............

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