Proceedings, 第 20~22 巻 |
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12 ページ
... Henry Drummond , in his inaugural address at the foundation of the Surrey Archæological Society , in 1854 , spoke of the use of local societies like ours , to obtain accurate materials for the general history of our country , and told ...
... Henry Drummond , in his inaugural address at the foundation of the Surrey Archæological Society , in 1854 , spoke of the use of local societies like ours , to obtain accurate materials for the general history of our country , and told ...
30 ページ
... Henry I. Bishop Roger's character and actions as a statesman belong to English history . All that it is here necessary to say is that he was the builder of the strong Castles of Devizes , Malmesbury , and Sher- borne , and at one time ...
... Henry I. Bishop Roger's character and actions as a statesman belong to English history . All that it is here necessary to say is that he was the builder of the strong Castles of Devizes , Malmesbury , and Sher- borne , and at one time ...
32 ページ
... Henry's followers hardly knew that he had began before he had ended . Henry said that he was the fittest chaplain for soldiers that he had ever seen , and at once took him into his favour . Those who have read the Constitutional History ...
... Henry's followers hardly knew that he had began before he had ended . Henry said that he was the fittest chaplain for soldiers that he had ever seen , and at once took him into his favour . Those who have read the Constitutional History ...
33 ページ
... Henry II , rather than Henry I. This shows how far great architects like William and Roger were in advance of their times , and how long it VOL . XX . , 1874 , part 1 . e took smaller men to come up to them . In SHERBORNE CASTLE , 33.
... Henry II , rather than Henry I. This shows how far great architects like William and Roger were in advance of their times , and how long it VOL . XX . , 1874 , part 1 . e took smaller men to come up to them . In SHERBORNE CASTLE , 33.
34 ページ
... Henry I was a time of peace in England , and so men who had the will and the means could build freely without any great fear that what they built would be soon upset . What you see here is something more than a castle , something more ...
... Henry I was a time of peace in England , and so men who had the will and the means could build freely without any great fear that what they built would be soon upset . What you see here is something more than a castle , something more ...
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多く使われている語句
Abbey Abbot Ælfred Ammonites ancient arch Archæological Athelme Bath belonged Bishop Bishop of Sherborne bishoprick Boniface Bradford Bradford Abbas Bridgwater Bristol British Britons building built called Castle Castle Cary century Centwine Cenwealh Cephalopoda bed chancel chapel charter Chasteleyn church Coker Congresbury Conquest Crediton D'Orbig Danes Devonshire diocese district Domnonia Dorchester Dorset doubt Eadgar Ealdhelm Earl east ecclesiastical Edward England English Exeter feet Freeman Frome Gerard Glastonbury held Henry Hill Ilminster Inferior Oolite interest John King land limestone London Lord Malet Manor House meeting Members Mendip minster monastery monks nave Norman original paper parish Plegmund Poyntington present probably quarry remains remarkable restoration Richard Roger Roman Saint Saint Boniface Sands Saxon Scarth Sherborne Sherborne Castle shire side Somerset Somersetshire stone Taunton tower town transept Walter Wessex West-Saxon wife William of Malmesbury Winchester window Yeovil
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35 ページ - From the evidence it would appear that the submergence took place at the end of the fourteenth or the beginning of the fifteenth century.
11 ページ - Keep not standing fixed and rooted, Briskly venture, briskly roam ; Head and hand, where'er thou foot it, And stout heart are still at home, In what land the sun does visit, Brisk are we, whate'er betide : To give space for wandering is it That the world was made so wide.
66 ページ - Richard by the grace of God king of England, Duke of Normandy and Aquitaine, and Count of Anjou, to all his men who are about to go to Jerusalem by sea, greeting.
69 ページ - ... dwelling side by side within the same enclosure, but separated again by enclosures of their own, Britons and Englishmen each forming a city within a city. To this state of things the Lord of all Britain, the conqueror of Scot and Northman, the lawgiver of England, deemed it time to put a stop, and to place the supremacy of the conquering nation in the chief city of the western peninsula beyond all doubt. Hitherto we may be sure that the English burghers had formed a ruling class, a civic patriciate....
51 ページ - Vicecomitibus, praepositis, ministris, et omnibus Ballivis et fidelibus suis, salutem. Sciatis nos concessisse et hac carta nostra confirmasse pro nobis et heredibus nostris...
111 ページ - Surrey, where the judge was keeping the general assizes for that county; and, to the unspeakable dishonour of the public justice of the kingdom, and the scandal of all ministers or lovers of justice, in that violent manner took the judge from the bench, and carried him prisoner to Westminster; from whence, by the two houses, he was committed to the tower of London ; where he remained for the space of above two years, without ever being charged with any particular crime, till he was redeemed by his...
90 ページ - ... votes of the members present, and in case of an equal division of votes the chairman shall have a casting vote in addition to his vote as a member of the committee.
141 ページ - Midford Sands "), which has been regarded by most authors as belonging to the Lias. From an investigation of the Cephalopoda-bed in quarries at Bradford Abbas in Dorsetshire, the author comes to the conclusion that it is quite distinct from the Cephalopoda-bed of Gloucestershire, and that it is the representative of the Rubbly Oolite at the top of Leckhampton Hill and Cold Comfort, and of the Gryphite and Trigonia-beds of the neighbourhood of Cheltenham.
59 ページ - Edsy the king's-reve, went against them with the forces which they were able to gather together ; and they there were put to flight, and there were many slain : and the Danish-men had possession of the place of carnage. And the morning after, they burned the village of Pen and at Clifton, and also many goodly towns which we are unable to name, and then went again east until tbej came to the Isle of Wight...