| Charles Vallencey - 1786 - 704 páginas
...throne were ftill poflefled of the right of chief military command ; but by another hiftorical fad, very authentically recorded, we find that they preferved...king of all Ireland, fubfcribes to the election of Malchus firft bilhop of Waterford in the following ftile, Ego Dermod Dux frater Regis fubfcripfi ;... | |
| Charles Vallencey - 1786 - 714 páginas
...prefumptive fuccefTors to the throne were ftifl poflefled of the right of chief military command j but by another hiftorical fact, very authentically...century* and the beginning of the twelfth. Towards tte year 1096, Dermod O'Brien, brother and afterwards fucceffor of Mortogh O'Brien king of all f \... | |
| New voyages - 1823 - 726 páginas
...Madschar, or Madjar, which may indicate their pristine residence. Their history becomes more apparent about the end of the eleventh century, and the beginning of the twelfth, when king Stephen, to recompeuce their valour, in wars against the Greek emperor, assigned them a district... | |
| 1839 - 674 páginas
...fatal precipice to which the genius of idealism pushes it. Such were the two schools represented, at the end of the eleventh century and the beginning of the twelfth, by Roscelin and St. Anselm. — Introd. p. cviii. Great as was the fame of William of Champeaux among... | |
| Thomas Wright - 1846 - 328 páginas
...fatal precipice to which the genius of idealism pushes it. Such were the two schools represented, at the end of the eleventh century and the beginning of the twelfth, by Roscelin and St. Anselm." (Introd. p. cviii.) Great as was the fame of William of Champeaux among... | |
| Jacques Claude Demogeot - 1874 - 408 páginas
...civilised conquerors, suffered less than the North. The independent kingdom of Aries 01 Provence passed in the end of the eleventh century and the beginning of the twelfth, from the successors of Charlemagne to the Counts of Toulouse and Barcelona. The polished court of the... | |
| John Henry Parker - 1881 - 412 páginas
...from the usual blunder of naming the centuries by the figures. The common opinion is, that because at the end of the eleventh century and the beginning of the twelfth, many Norman priests and monks became bishops in England, the same system was continued through the... | |
| Eugène-Emmanuel Viollet-le-Duc - 1881 - 514 páginas
...Romans, we wavered for several centuries indeterminately between very diverse modes of building. At the end of the eleventh century and the beginning of the twelfth, we went to the East for models, and succeeded in producing a kind of RomanoGreek Renaissance, which... | |
| Eugène Emmanuel Viollet-le-Duc - 1881 - 556 páginas
...Romans, we wavered for several centuries indeterminately between very diverse modes of building. At the end of the eleventh century and the beginning of the twelfth, we went to the East for models, and succeeded in producing a kind of RomanoGreek Renaissance, which... | |
| John Henry Parker - 1882 - 290 páginas
...that we have in this country are of the Norman period, and the designs of the Norman architects, at the end of the eleventh century and the beginning of the twelfth, were on so grand a scale, that many of our finest cathedrals are built on the foundations of the church... | |
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