A History of England: In the Eighteenth Century, Svazek 1D. Appleton & Company, 1888 |
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Strana xi
... Treaty Its failure weakens the Ministry General Election . Clerical and Jacobite agitation Divergence of Oxford and Bolingbroke · · Attitude of the opposing parties . Intentions of Bolingbroke Policy of Swift Dismissal of Oxford ...
... Treaty Its failure weakens the Ministry General Election . Clerical and Jacobite agitation Divergence of Oxford and Bolingbroke · · Attitude of the opposing parties . Intentions of Bolingbroke Policy of Swift Dismissal of Oxford ...
Strana xiii
... Treaty of Limerick 301 The Irish penal code not due to any rebellion 303 Laws depriving the Irish Catholics of all civil life Laws prohibiting Catholic education 307 309 Laws affecting property 310 Laws preventing intermarriage of ...
... Treaty of Limerick 301 The Irish penal code not due to any rebellion 303 Laws depriving the Irish Catholics of all civil life Laws prohibiting Catholic education 307 309 Laws affecting property 310 Laws preventing intermarriage of ...
Strana xiv
... Treaty between Spain and Austria in 1725 Siege of Gibraltar Peace of Seville and Peace of Vienna . Military sentiment of the King and country His ascendency not due to great eloquence . Oratory not supreme in Parliament Summary of the ...
... Treaty between Spain and Austria in 1725 Siege of Gibraltar Peace of Seville and Peace of Vienna . Military sentiment of the King and country His ascendency not due to great eloquence . Oratory not supreme in Parliament Summary of the ...
Strana 5
... treaty with France , were scarcely more vehe- ment than those which Fox and Grey directed on the same ground against the commercial treaty negotiated by Pitt in 1786. It is true that the Whigs in the seventeenth , and in the first half ...
... treaty with France , were scarcely more vehe- ment than those which Fox and Grey directed on the same ground against the commercial treaty negotiated by Pitt in 1786. It is true that the Whigs in the seventeenth , and in the first half ...
Strana 18
... Treaty , signed by William without consultation with any English minister except Somers , all added to the flame . The discontent was unreasonably , but not unnaturally , aggra- vated by a long series of bad harvests . From 1690 to 1699 ...
... Treaty , signed by William without consultation with any English minister except Somers , all added to the flame . The discontent was unreasonably , but not unnaturally , aggra- vated by a long series of bad harvests . From 1690 to 1699 ...
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A History of England: In the Eighteenth Century, Volume 4 William Edward Hartpole Lecky Náhled není k dispozici. - 2015 |
A History of England: In the Eighteenth Century, Svazek 1 William Edward Hartpole Lecky Náhled není k dispozici. - 1888 |
Běžně se vyskytující výrazy a sousloví
alliance allies Anne appeared army ascendancy Austrian Bill bishops Bolingbroke British Burnet Catholic Charles chiefly Church classes clergy commercial Coxe's Crown danger death Defoe desired Dissenters doctrine dominions Duke Duke of Savoy Dutch ecclesiastical eighteenth century Elector Elector of Bavaria Emperor England English favour foreign France French George George II Godolphin Government Hanover Hanoverian High Church Hist Holland hostility House of Commons House of Lords influence interests Ireland Irish Jacobite King land letter Lewis liberty London Marlborough measure ment military ministers ministry nation natural negotiations never oath obtained opposition Oxford Parliament Peace of Utrecht period Philip political popular position Pretender Prince Protestant succession Queen reign religious Restoration Revolution Sacheverell Scotland secure sentiments sermon Somers soon sovereign Spain Spanish Spanish Netherlands statesmen Stuarts supported Swift throne tion Tory party treaty troops violent voted Walpole Whig party whole William wrote
Oblíbené pasáže
Strana 359 - Seen him, uneumber'd with the venal tribe, Smile without art, and win without a bribe. Would he oblige me? let me only find, He does not think me what he thinks mankind.
Strana 442 - It is now too apparent, that this great, this powerful, this formidable kingdom, is considered only as a province to a despicable Electorate; and that, in consequence of a scheme formed long ago, and invariably pursued, these troops are hired only to drain this unhappy nation of its money.
Strana 296 - This pillar was set up in perpetual remembrance of the most dreadful burning of this protestant city, begun and carried on by the treachery and malice of the popish faction, in the beginning of September, in the year of our Lord 1666. In order to the carrying on their horrid plot for extirpating the protestant religion and old English liberty, and introducing popery and slavery.
Strana 327 - It was a machine of wise and elaborate contrivance ; and as well fitted for the oppression, impoverishment, and degradation of a people, and the debasement, in them, of human nature itself, as ever proceeded from the perverted ingenuity of man.
Strana 307 - Robinson both distinctly laid down from the bench ' that the law does not suppose any such person to exist as an Irish Roman Catholic.
Strana 193 - All civic virtue, all the heroism and self-sacrifice of patriotism spring ultimately from the habit men acquire of regarding their nation as a great organic whole, identifying themselves with its fortunes in the past as in the present, and looking forward anxiously to its future destinies.
Strana 523 - There has lately been the most shocking scene of murder imaginable ; a parcel of drunken constables took it into their heads to put the laws in execution against disorderly persons, and so took up every woman they met, till they had collected five or six-and-twenty, all of whom they thrust into St.
Strana 482 - ... publisher of any printed newspaper of any denomination, to presume to insert in the said letters or papers, or to give therein any account of the debates or other proceedings of...
Strana 519 - Small as is the place which this fact occupies in English history, it was probably, if we consider all the consequences that have flowed from it, the most momentous in that of the eighteenth century — incomparably more so than any event in the purely political or military annals of the country.
Strana 580 - But soon, ah soon, rebellion will commence, If music meanly borrows aid from sense : Strong in new arms, lo! giant Handel stands, Like bold Briareus, with a hundred hands; To stir, to rouse, to shake the soul he conies, And Jove's own thunders follow Mars's drums. Arrest him, empress; or you sleep no more — She heard, and drove him to the Hibernian shore.