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HEO YR 9

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Britain 1689-1815. Flag of the United Kingdom EuroDocs > History of the United Kingdom: Primary Documents > 1689 - 1815 Anglo-Saxon Cluster JISC-funded project bringing together four searchable databases of Anglo-Saxon sources. ASChart and eSawyer: Anglo-Saxon charters (6th-11th centuries) Langscape: Anglo-Saxon estate boundaries and related data (8th-18th centuries) PASE: Records of inhabitants of England (6th-11th centuries) (6th to 18th centuries; manuscripts & transcriptions) Scriptorium: Medieval and Early Manuscripts Database of manuscripts. . (1450-1720; manuscripts) Treasures of the National Archives: Tudors and Stuarts Historical documentation displayed by various themes and date ranges. (1485 - 1714; facsimiles, transcriptions and images). Treasures of the National Archives: Eighteenth Century (19th century; facsimiles, transcriptions and images).

Treasures of the National Archives: Nineteenth Century (20th century; facsimiles, transcriptions and images). Soundtoll Registers Online = Øresundstoldregnskaber. Y9 Speeches_selected historical documents.docx. Pirate Hunter of the Caribbean: The Adventurous Life of Captain Woodes Rogers: David Cordingly: 9780812980172: Amazon.com. Under the Black Flag: The Romance and the Reality of Life Among the Pirates: David Cordingly: 9780812977226: Amazon.com. Walter Scott Novels Available as E-Texts. Home | Corson Collection | Biography | Works | Image Collection | Recent Publications | Portraits | Correspondence | Forthcoming Events | Links | E-texts | Contact Follow the links below for online texts of the Waverley Novels made available by external sites. Only freely available texts have been listed.

In most cases, the link will take you directly to the text. In others, it will direct you to a clickable list of the Scott texts published by the provider.Where known, we have indicated the source edition for the e-text. The list of texts should not be regarded as comprehensive, but the page editor would be pleased to hear of significant omissions. For online texts of poems extracted from the Waverley Novels, click here. 1. Back to top 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. *For Redgauntlet, see also e-texts of 'Wandering Willie's Tale'. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. Back to Index. Arthur Quiller-Couch Collection at Bartleby.com. Arthurian Passages from Geoffrey of Monmouth. CHAP. I. --Gratian, being advanced to the throne, is killed by the common people. The Britons desire the Romans to defend them against Guanius and Melga.

But Gratian Municeps, hearing of the death of Maximian, seized the crown, and made himself king. After this he exercised such tyranny that the common people fell upon him in a tumultuous manner, and murdered him. When this news reached other countries, their former enemies returned back from Ireland, and bringing with them the Scots, Norwegians, and Dacians, made dreadful devastations with fire and sword over the whole kingdom, from sea to sea. CHAP. CHAP. After this the Romans encouraged the timorous people as much as they could, and left them patterns of their arms. CHAP. Hereupon, after a consultation together, Guethelin, archbishop of London, passed over into Lesser Britain, called them Armorica, or Letavia, to desire assistance of their brethren. CHAP. CHAP. CHAP. CHAP. CHAP. CHAP. History of the Kings of Britain. Merlin dictating his poems, from a 13th century French manuscript Annotated[edit] Wikified and annotated with reference to other translations, sources and analogues Plain text[edit] As printed in Giles's Six Old English Chronicles, with Giles's chapter headings and footnotes, no wikilinks and no added annotation Book 1 - Book 2 - Book 3 - Book 4 - Book 5 - Book 6 - Book 7 - Book 8 - Book 9 - Book 10 - Book 11 - Book 12 Secondary[edit] Bibliography[edit] J.A.

HEO Y9 Kindle Ready Books - NLHome's Compiling Spot. Free To Choose.tv: Streaming the Power of Ideas. Britain 1689-1815. The Battle of the Books. Title page of the first edition The Battle of the Books is the name of a short satire written by Jonathan Swift and published as part of the prolegomena to his A Tale of a Tub in 1704.

It depicts a literal battle between books in the King's Library (housed in St. James's Palace at the time of the writing), as ideas and authors struggle for supremacy. Because of the satire, "The Battle of the Books" has become a term for the Quarrel of the Ancients and the Moderns. Ancients vs. In France at the end of the seventeenth century, a minor furore arose over the question of whether contemporary learning had surpassed what was known by those in Classical Greece and Rome. This literary contest was re-enacted in miniature in England when Sir William Temple published an answer to Fontenelle entitled Of Ancient and Modern Learning in 1690.

William Temple was by that point a retired minister, the Secretary of State for Charles II who had conducted peace negotiations with France. The satire[edit] Moby Dick Big Read. Euclid's Elements, Table of Contents.