LondonJ. B. Lippincott Company, 1914 - 381 σελίδες |
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Σελίδα vii
... England was in the earliest period outside all that Anglo - Saxon polity could hold . Its existence and its continuance were never parts of the English settlement of the country , and it is because the non - English elements of London ...
... England was in the earliest period outside all that Anglo - Saxon polity could hold . Its existence and its continuance were never parts of the English settlement of the country , and it is because the non - English elements of London ...
Σελίδα 1
... England ; more even than the awakened head city of commercial England under the Tudors . She was more than a walled city of the Commonwealth , or than a pleasure city of the Stuarts ; something more , too , than the government centre of ...
... England ; more even than the awakened head city of commercial England under the Tudors . She was more than a walled city of the Commonwealth , or than a pleasure city of the Stuarts ; something more , too , than the government centre of ...
Σελίδα 6
... England - recognised by the Roman military system , by the great Anglo - Saxon kings , by the Danes , by William the Norman , by the later military commanders during the Wars of the Roses , and during the Civil War . But this im- mense ...
... England - recognised by the Roman military system , by the great Anglo - Saxon kings , by the Danes , by William the Norman , by the later military commanders during the Wars of the Roses , and during the Civil War . But this im- mense ...
Σελίδα 11
... thing 1 Palgrave , English Commonwealth , vol . i . p . 414 . 2 Kemble , Saxons in England , vol . ii . pp . 266 ( and see note on p . 267 ) , 291 et seqq . wholly of English growth , and nothing can be more THE POINT OF VIEW 11.
... thing 1 Palgrave , English Commonwealth , vol . i . p . 414 . 2 Kemble , Saxons in England , vol . ii . pp . 266 ( and see note on p . 267 ) , 291 et seqq . wholly of English growth , and nothing can be more THE POINT OF VIEW 11.
Σελίδα 12
... , Western Europe in the Fifth Century , p . 143 , for an appreciation of the vacuum in English history . 3 Stubbs , Const . Hist . of England , vol . i . pp . 404 , 62 . and no evidence remain of its capture or surrender . 12 LONDON.
... , Western Europe in the Fifth Century , p . 143 , for an appreciation of the vacuum in English history . 3 Stubbs , Const . Hist . of England , vol . i . pp . 404 , 62 . and no evidence remain of its capture or surrender . 12 LONDON.
Άλλες εκδόσεις - Προβολή όλων
Συχνά εμφανιζόμενοι όροι και φράσεις
ages aldermen ancient Anglo-Saxon Anglo-Saxon Chronicle belonging boundary Bridewell Britain building Cæsar Celtic Celts centre century chapter Church city institutions city of London city-state civilisation Common Council continuity Court cult custom Diana dominant election England evidence expansion fact feet folkmoot force gild Governance of London Gresham College Guildhall Guildhall Museum hall Henry VIII Hist House important James Burbage king king's Londinium London history London Wall Lord Mayor Lydney Lydney Park Majesty mediæval ment modern municipal Norman organisation origin palace Park Parliament period Plantagenet position possessed Ralph Agas recognised record remains remarkable river Roman city Roman Empire Roman London Rome royal Saxon sheriffs side Southwark sovereign sovereignty St Paul's Street struggle Stuart London survival temple Thames things tion Tower tradition tribal Tudor Tudor London View of London walls Westminster Whitehall worship
Δημοφιλή αποσπάσματα
Σελίδα 219 - I think verily that many a man taketh his death in Paul's Churchyard, and this I speak of experience ; for I myself, when I have been there...
Σελίδα 201 - ... men were full of pity and compassion, but now there is no pity ; for in London their brother shall die in the streets for cold, he shall lie sick at...
Σελίδα 202 - There was never anything pleased me better than the seeing the enemy flying with a southerly wind to the northwards. God grant you have a good eye to the Duke of Parma; for with the grace of God, if we live, I doubt it not but ere it be long so to handle the matter with the Duke of Sidonia as he shall wish himself at St. Mary Port among his orange trees.
Σελίδα 356 - Saxons, as it appeared, were accustomed to line their graves with chalk-stones ; though some, more eminent, were entombed in coffins of whole stones. Below these were British graves, where were found ivory and wooden pins, of a hard wood, seemingly box, in abundance, of about six inches long. It seems the bodies were only wrapped up, and pinned in woollen shrouds, which being consumed, the pins remained entire. In the same row, and deeper, were Roman urns intermixed. This was eighteen feet deep,...
Σελίδα 117 - In 1262 we have the following remarkable passage. "The mayor, Thomas FitzThomas, during the time of his mayoralty, had so pampered the city populace, that, styling themselves the 'commons of the city,' they had obtained the first voice in the city. For the mayor, in doing all that he had to do, acted and determined through them, and would say to them, 'Is it your will that so it shall be?' and then, if they answered 'Ya, ya,
Σελίδα 319 - Your Committee have thus given a picture in detail of human wretchedness, filth, and brutal degradation, the chief features of which are a disgrace to a civilized country, and which your Committee have reason to fear, from letters...
Σελίδα 344 - A city in our conception is not the buildings — walls, temples, docks, and so forth; these are no more than the local habitation that provides the members of the community with shelter and safety; it is in the citizens that we find the root of the matter; they it is that replenish and organize and achieve and guard, corresponding in the city to the soul in man. Holding this view, we are not indifferent, as you see, to our city's body; that we adorn with all the beauty we can impart to it; it is...
Σελίδα 163 - Oxford scarcely, I will not say satisfies, but sustains, its clerks. Exeter supports men and beasts with the same grain. Bath is placed, or rather buried, in the lowest parts of the valleys, in a very dense atmosphere and sulphury vapour, as it were at the gates of hell.
Σελίδα 354 - Roman causeway of rough stone, close and well rammed, with Roman brick and rubbish at the bottom for a foundation, and all firmly cemented.
Σελίδα 272 - Next to be noted, the most beautiful frame of fayre houses and shoppes, that bee within the Walles of London...