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Liam Byrne

  • marilyukhas quoted2 years ago
    a full-scale constitutional revolution was in progress as the group of English leaders known as the ‘Immortal Seven’ invited James’s Dutch son-in-law (and nephew) William of Orange to intervene to restore England’s ‘ancient laws and liberties’.*12 William landed at Brixham on 5 November 1688, with a fleet four times the size of the Spanish Armada, James’s cause melted away, and the old king fled abroad.
    A ‘Convention Parliament’ deemed James to have abdicated, and William was crowned in April 1689. The ‘Glorious Revolution’ was complete; it marked a new relationship between sovereign and subjects
  • b9000542659has quotedlast year
    From the eighth century, the most active traders with England were probably the Frisians of the northern Germanic coast, who bought and sold wine, timber, grain and fish from towns like London and York and, from at least the late seventh century, traded a certain amount of English cloth, known, appropriately, as Frisian.
  • marilyukhas quoted2 years ago
    Sparkling in the Louvre’s Galerie d’Apollon is what many consider the finest diamond in the world. Weighing in at over 140 carats, the Regent diamond is not the world’s largest, but its perfect white brilliance ‘of the first water’ and its unparalleled cut, mark it out as truly unique
  • marilyukhas quoted2 years ago
    Thomas Pitt’s family was not poor – his father’s income was £100 a year – but it was large. Five siblings survived childhood, and Pitt’s elder brother stood to inherit what the family had. As such, when Pitt’s father passed away in 1672, Pitt had little choice but to seek his fortune elsewhere
  • b9000542659has quoted2 years ago
    He told of his opinions and pursuits

    In solemn tones, he harped on his increase
  • b9000542659has quoted2 years ago
    Richard Gresham: ‘the City of London had perhaps never before known a greater benefactor’. When
  • b9000542659has quoted2 years ago
    Warwick and Cavendish departed London for Holland on 17 July. Hearing the news, the Privy
  • b9000542659has quoted2 years ago
    granted by Warwick, in his role as President of the Council of New England – it was probably carved from land of his own in somewhat
  • b9000542659has quotedlast year
    the colonists, while exporting their tobacco, but it neglected
  • b9000542659has quotedlast year
    The first of the vessels paid for with ship money set sail in a nineteen-strong fleet in 1635, by which point the Venetian ambassador was warning of rising tension in Charles’s realm: ‘the situation daily becomes worse and more embittered... unless it ends in some honourable composition there is manifest danger of it resulting in a troublesome rising’.59 He was right.
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