History of England and France Under the House of Lancaster: With an Introductory View of the Early ReformationJ. Murray, 1852 - 473 Seiten |
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Seite viii
... 1418. Henry's great difficulties De Lore's achievements Negotiations at Alençon Bad faith of all parties 1419. Siege of Rouen 162 • 163 . 166 • 167 Sufferings of Inhabitants Their good conduct . Cruel treatment Henry's viii CONTENTS .
... 1418. Henry's great difficulties De Lore's achievements Negotiations at Alençon Bad faith of all parties 1419. Siege of Rouen 162 • 163 . 166 • 167 Sufferings of Inhabitants Their good conduct . Cruel treatment Henry's viii CONTENTS .
Seite 116
... Rouen , whither the court had come upon the fall of Harfleur . A difference of opinion prevailed , but the great ma- jority ' were clear that the English must not be suf- fered to reach Calais without a battle . Their reso- lution to ...
... Rouen , whither the court had come upon the fall of Harfleur . A difference of opinion prevailed , but the great ma- jority ' were clear that the English must not be suf- fered to reach Calais without a battle . Their reso- lution to ...
Seite 128
... Rouen . The French , under Armagnac , had set upon him with a superior army , retaken all the booty and the prisoners captured by him , pursued him with great loss , forced him to seek shelter under the walls of Harfleur , and had only ...
... Rouen . The French , under Armagnac , had set upon him with a superior army , retaken all the booty and the prisoners captured by him , pursued him with great loss , forced him to seek shelter under the walls of Harfleur , and had only ...
Seite 161
... Rouen , the capital of the province , alone remained to be subdued ; and before this strong place the King sat down , collecting under his own immediate command all the troops he could spare from his other conquests , reinforced as he ...
... Rouen , the capital of the province , alone remained to be subdued ; and before this strong place the King sat down , collecting under his own immediate command all the troops he could spare from his other conquests , reinforced as he ...
Seite 162
... with the loss of three score men left on the field . At length this brave man was taken prisoner in an action against an English force fourfold superior to his own men , who were entirely cut to 162 HENRY THE FIFTH . Siege of Rouen.
... with the loss of three score men left on the field . At length this brave man was taken prisoner in an action against an English force fourfold superior to his own men , who were entirely cut to 162 HENRY THE FIFTH . Siege of Rouen.
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Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
adversaries afterwards Alençon appears Armagnac Armagnac party army attack attended authority barons Bedford Bishop body brother Burgundian Calais Charles Charles's chief church clergy Cobham command conduct Constable Council Council of Constance court crown Dauphin death declared doctrines dominions doubt Duke Duke of Brittany Duke of Burgundy enemy England English favour feelings force France French garrison gave give given Gloster granted Harfleur Henry Henry's heresy King King's Loire Lollards Lords marched ment Monstrel Monstrelet Montereau murder negotiation never Normandy Note obtained offence opinion Orleans Paris Parl Parliament party peace persons Philip possession prelates priests Primate prince prisoners proceedings promise Queen Reformers refused Regent reign Richard Rouen royal says Scots sent sentence siege sovereign statute success suffered surrender taken tion took towns treaty treaty of Arras Treaty of Troyes troops Troyes Wals whole wholly Wycliffe Wycliffe's
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 412 - In reply, the king granted that " from henceforth nothing be . enacted to the petitions of his commons that be contrary to their asking, whereby they should be bound without their assent...
Seite 408 - You would then have seen pillagers, active to do mischief, running through the town, slaying men, women and children, according to their orders. It was a most melancholy business; for all ranks, ages and sexes cast themselves on their knees before the prince, begging for mercy; but he was so inflamed with passion and revenge that he listened to none...
Seite 355 - drawen children fro Christ's religion into their private " order by hypocrisie, lesings, and steling. For they " tellen that their order is more holy than any other ; " that they shullen have higher degree in the bliss of " heaven than other men that been not therein ; and " seyn, that men of their order shullen never come to " hell, but shullen dome other men with Christ at
Seite 74 - ... into hell with themselves. For Christ saith plainly unto you, ' If one blind man leadeth another, they are like both to fall into the ditch...
Seite 28 - The opinions which they maintained even assumed a bolder form after Wycliffe's decease. They denied that there had been any Pope whose title to the office was valid since Sylvester in the fourth century. All indulgences they utterly rejected as corruption; confession and absolution they regarded as sinful, and even impious ; pilgrimages, the invocation of saints, the keeping of saints' days, the use of images in worship, they plainly treated as various forms of idolatry ; all Church dignities, from...
Seite 26 - Zuinglius, who had cost off errors of Romanism to which himself still adhered. The courage that inspired both reformers to break loose from the papacy, supported them in sustaining long continued conflicts with the secular arm. But Wycliffe, though he never made any recantation, yet showed a disposition to reconcile his doctrines with those of orthodox believers when he was abandoned by his patron, Lancaster ; whereas Luther never betrayed the least desire to soften the shades of his dissent: a merit...
Seite 27 - Koieirhal easier by the advantage which he enjoved above ui pndtteMor, of steady support from the Elector of Saxony. The temporal lot of the two men differed accordingly. Luther gave up all preferment, and indeed surrendered entirely his station in the Church which he opposed. Wycliffe retained both his parochial and cathedral benefices to the end of his life. In their private character both were without a stain : the sanctity of their lives attested the purity of their doctrine. The utmost rancour...
Seite 326 - VII., they blindly followed the dictates of the faction which had the upper-hand — the prince whose success in the field had defeated his competitors, the powerful chief whose authority prevailed at the moment. The history of their proceedings is a succession of contrary decisions on the same question, conflicting laws on the same title, attainders and reversals, consigning one day all the adherents of one party to confiscation and...
Seite 355 - Chil" dren fro fader and moder, sometime such as ben unable " to the Order, and sometime such as shullen susteyn their "fader and moder by the commandment of God; and " thus they ben blasphemers takin upon full councel in " * douty things that ben not expressly commanded ne far- * doubtful.
Seite 326 - ... the field had defeated his competitors, the powerful chief whose authority prevailed at the moment. The history of their proceedings is a succession of contrary decisions on the same question, conflicting laws on the same title, attainders and reversals, consigning one day all the adherents of one party to confiscation and the scaffold, reinstating them the next, and placing their adversaries in the same cruel predicament. Thus, in 1461, on Edward IV.'s victory, they unanimously attainted Henry...