Introduction to the Study of English History |
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Anglo-Saxon Chronicle Annals authority bishops Britain Camden Society Catholics century CHAP character Charles Chronicle Church classes clergy collection compiled connexion Conquest constitutional contains contemporary Correspondence court Cromwell crown doctrine DUCTORY Earl ecclesiastical Edited Edward Edward III Elizabeth English Englishmen facts feudal foreign France French George hands Hardy Henry VIII History of England House of Commons ideas illustration important institutions interest INTRO Ireland James James Gairdner John king labour land Lanfranc Letters Lives London Lord medieval Memoirs ment monastery moral narrative nation Norman Norman Conquest organisation original Papers parlia parliament party period political pope printed Protestant Protestantism published Puritan Queen Reformation reign of Henry relating religious Revolution Richard Richard III Rolls Series Roman Rome S. R. Gardiner Saxon Scotland Society spirit struggle supra thegns Thomas thought tion valuable vols volume Whig whilst William William Stubbs writers СНАР
Popular passages
Page 220 - AUTHORITY OF HER MAJESTY'S TREASURY, UNDER THE DIRECTION OF THE MASTER OF THE ROLLS. ON the 26th of January 1857, the Master of the Rolls submitted to the Treasury a proposal for the publication of materials for the History of this Country from the Invasion of the Romans to the Reign of Henry VIII.
Page 381 - GRAHAM. Annals and Correspondence of the Viscount and First and Second Earls of Stair. By JOHN MURRAY GRAHAM, 2 vols. demy 8vo, with Portraits and other Illustrations.
Page 238 - In this edition, the text of each manuscript is printed in columns on the same page, so that the student may see at a glance the various changes which occur in orthography, whether arising from locality or age. 24.
Page 354 - History of England from the Accession of James I. to the Disgrace of Chief Justice Coke
Page 222 - THE PARKER SOCIETY" was instituted in 1840. In carrying out its object, it aims first at. the reprinting, without abridgement alteration or omission, of the best Works of the Fathers and early Writers of the Reformed English Church, published in the period between the accession of King Edward VI.
Page 357 - LIVES OF THE LAST FOUR PRINCESSES OF THE ROYAL HOUSE OF STUART. Forming an appropriate Sequel to the ' Lives of the Queens of England.
Page 222 - Of these, the first had for its main object 'the reprinting, without abridgment, alteration, and omission, of the best works of the Fathers and early Writers of the Reformed English Church, published in the period between the accession of king Edward VI. and the death- of queen Elizabeth'; the labours of the second were to be bestowed on the collection and printing of our ancient ballads ; those of the third, on the publication of literature illustrative of the works of our great dramatist.
Page 285 - ... miniatures, vignettes, and initial letters. It was written towards the end of the fifteenth century, having been expressly executed for Louis de Bruges, Seigneur de la Gruthuyse and Earl of Winchester, from whose cabinet it passed into the library of Louis XII.
Page 82 - But the matters which are to be established for the Estate of our Lord the King and of his Heirs, and for the estate of the Realm and of the People, shall be treated, accorded, and established in Parliament by our Lord the King and by the Assent of the Prelates, Earls, and Barons and the commonalty of the Realm, according as it hath been heretofore accustomed.
Page 380 - The growth or decline of the monarchy, the aristocracy, and the democracy, of the Church and of Dissent, of the agricultural, the manufacturing, and the commercial interests ; the increasing power of Parliament and of the press ; the history of political ideas, of art, of manners, and of belief; the changes that have taken place in the social and economical condition of the people ; the influences that have modified national character ; the relations of the mother country to its dependencies, and...