Some areas of land and estates became more highly colonised by tenantry than others. |
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Last week the householders in two estates were roused from their slumbers prior to 7 am by workmen who were asking people to move their cars. |
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From the 19th century onwards, it was not uncommon to see flocks of a thousand Southdowns on the large estates in the south. |
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This involved mortgaging those estates heavily to the government and using the capital for development and the hire of wage-labour. |
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Prussia formed a state domain at Eberbach, from its abbatial estates throughout the Rheingau. |
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The housing waiting list was still far too long and he hoped to see more schools completed on the new housing estates. |
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Despite the timing of the sale, the reality is that such internationally acclaimed estates take a long time to find new owners. |
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It's mostly teenagers, but there's youngsters as young as four and five starting fires in the wastelands around the estates. |
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Wichamstow is just one of the more than 3,000 estates in Anglo-Saxon England with a watermill. |
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But a record number of Scotland's sporting estates have been put up for sale this year as their owners cash in on soaring prices. |
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Housing estates which seem half a world away from the footstreets rarely figure on film. |
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Manors and even small keeps abound in the highlands, not tourist attractions but still noble family estates. |
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Investments in real estates both in the commercial and home ownership portfolio totalled K148.8 billion at the close of the year. |
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In the 1990s, enough land was reclaimed from the sea to build extensive housing estates. |
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Under the law, he said it was illegal for recycling businesses to go to housing estates and collect recyclable waste directly. |
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St Germain could have divided and redivided its estates as it chose, and maybe even moved peasants physically to fit. |
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By 1841 the old Carleton Hall estate was worked by three farmers, possibly tenants of Lane Fox estates. |
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The landlord took his estates into his own hands, appointed bailiffs and reeves to run them and sell the surplus on the open market. |
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Most of the property belonging to German-speaking Balts, especially the estates, was confiscated. |
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See the great estates of absentee English landlords patrolled by land agents like Michael Kitchen. |
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Despite several warnings in the Advertiser, yobs are still using estates and parks as racetracks for mini motos, go-peds and scramblers. |
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In the 18th and 19th centuries, there was a vogue for the building of follies on the estates of landowners. |
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When these estates were reoccupied at the end of the century it was as abandoned land given over to settlers imported by government. |
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Despite this industrialisation, a third of the population still worked as agricultural labourers, many in large estates or latifundia. |
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The property is zoned for residential and part commercial use and is located beside The Elms and Braganza housing estates in Carlow town. |
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Caravan sites, military estates, bird and wildlife reserves were all closed yesterday due to fears of contamination. |
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As well as being defensible strongholds and elite private residences, most castles were also the hubs of estates. |
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There was generally a good but mixed standard within the residential areas, with some estates practically litter free. |
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There also is fishing available in local lochs, and stalking or grouse shooting on neighbouring estates. |
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As fiscal pressures increased, certain magistrates in the 1760s began to call for lost estates to be restored. |
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The unemployment figures showed fewer Scots signing on, yet there seemed to be no signs of increasing prosperity in our most depressed estates. |
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Today, Apulian estates are distinguishing themselves, profiting from unique varietals, old vines, cheap land, and an influx of winemakers. |
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Manorial lords typically held many estates throughout England, the estates being run on a day to day basis by bailiffs or stewards. |
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Estates with relatively more grazing were more efficient than estates with relatively more arable or mixed farming. |
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In addition to rubbish collection and street sweeping, they clear litter from the open spaces in twelve of the council's estates. |
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The movement of families from older estates to the new ones is also a very live issue and that is happening on a regular basis. |
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Much of this had been granted in the form of hereditary manorial estates to aristocratic families or important monasteries. |
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Most of the estates include salmon and trout fishing rights, grouse moors and deer stalking grounds as well as rambling lodges and outbuildings. |
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New industrial estates for life sciences are being developed at a rapid rate throughout the Asia-Pacific region. |
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He said the expense was ruinous, and certainly if all estates were in the same predicament, the condition of the planters must be very critical. |
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The council is organising similar events in association with residents' associations, at estates around the town. |
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The revised Mercedes-Benz C Class saloons, estates and Sports Coupe have now gone on sale in Ireland, alongside a brand new SLK roadster. |
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The corporation is very active at the moment in tarring roads in many housing estates. |
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I work on estates in Brent in west London which have a mainly black and Asian population. |
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Few estates have a history as colourful as Mourne Park in Co Down, where gossip and scandal have been par for the course over the centuries. |
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Such estates were entrusted to bailiffs who all too often were dishonest and tyrannical. |
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There are also special circumstances such as wills, separate estates, joint property, and divided or undivided possession of an estate. |
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Developers up to now got away with murder and only provided the minimum facilities when they were developing new housing estates. |
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Alongside the new housing estates the thriving Rowallan Business Park is the other overt sign of an upturn in economic fortunes. |
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With rental income dwindling to a mere trickle on many estates in 1880-81, signs of alarm in the Big House were not hard to find. |
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Laws passed in 1928 encouraged the construction of social housing and regulated housing estates. |
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There is too much bad history whistling through the old slag heaps and neglected estates of Sheffield. |
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The brilliantly gifted heir to landed estates and a fortune, he would seem to have had everything needed for success. |
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When the phrase was first coined the three estates of the body politic were the lords, the clergy and the commons. |
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His great wealth came from Jamaican estates and he was frequently reminded, when tribune of the people, that he was a slave-owner. |
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Industrial estates or undeveloped land are likely to be the most suitable sites. |
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Should the owners of small estates worked by tenants be expropriated, or subjected only to the reduction of rent? |
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But loads of skint people from the estates around here use it, and it's creaming off cash from them. |
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No-one makes them live in those boxy little flats on sprawling council estates, after all. |
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Residents in these areas had to wait until the second week of August this year for grass to be cut and the estates brought up to basic standard. |
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Having acquired several houses and estates, Salvador built bridle paths up and down the mountains. |
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At the same time, we move further away from the great villas and estates of the Roman world and closer to the family farms of the Middle Ages. |
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In England, married women, children, idiots and distracted persons were prohibited from transferring property out of their estates. |
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More than a dozen previously unknown Iron Age or Romano-British settlements and three possible Roman villa estates were found. |
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Officially, all right-thinking people have forsworn racism, now believed to fester principally among the no-hopers on rough estates. |
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The long-awaited share-out of the large estates among peasants was postponed until the Constituent Assembly was in being. |
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The idea that house buyers on new estates should purchase their own wheelie bins is ludicrous. |
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The route soon turns into hairpin bends where the area is dotted with tea estates. |
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Other than at the region's two famous castles, most estates of some size have vineyard holdings in a number of villages. |
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When he runs out of his own trees, he will buy in supplies from neighbouring estates. |
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The previous Victorian act, the Land Tax Act 1877, was directed to lands owned by squatters, what were known as landed estates. |
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The family was of the purest blue blood, and at his birth they were lords of three estates in central Scotland. |
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The second feature is the high degree of variability of an input shadow price across estates. |
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Satisfied with their enquiries, the members agreed to set the wheels in motion to take the 14 housing estates in charge. |
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They took advantage of their large estates, and the feeble position of emancipated serfs, to supply urban markets in western Europe. |
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Her tocher was a mere thirty chalders of victual from the Oliphant estates. |
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It is quickly becoming nothing more than a mesh of housing estates and a street lined with discount retailers, takeaways and empty shops. |
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Villas here tend to be clustered into gated estates, but if you want something more authentically Mexican, try a hacienda. |
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We had posters displayed on most estates, taped or stuck up with Blu-Tack, and they stayed up. |
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In Southall campaigners toured local estates with a loudspeaker car, with speakers in Punjabi and Somali as well as English. |
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Highland Game, which sells venison from deer shot on Highland estates, said the demand for the meat was increasing. |
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Schools in sink estates send more pupils into unemployment than to further or higher education. |
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A dimension where everyone lives in climate controlled gated estates and they don't like lost midwestern lunatics. |
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In the last years most tourist estates have been equipped with swimming and natatory activity facilities. |
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But he also put in train measures to tackle the chronic shortage of smallholdings in the island by dividing up some of the large estates. |
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Representative provincial estates would give the Third Estate the political voice all enlightened Frenchmen believed it deserved. |
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Thousands of English thegns, between the mid-ninth and the mid-eleventh centuries, came into possession of their own small estates. |
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The idea for the business came from a number of tenants from different estates in inner Rochdale and elsewhere in the borough. |
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And later still, when I ambled around the estates, listening to the sweet tweet of the birds and the occasional joy-rider, there was no nip in the air. |
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Picturesque surroundings and marvellous weather provided the ideal setting in which to celebrate the beautification of the thirteen estates which took part in the competition. |
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There, to the side of the conservation area of elegant Victorian villas, lie the town's large housing estates whose social statistics read like an index of deprivation. |
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An area of Ferrybank is also known to be a trouble spot and in private estates on the other side of the city anti-social behaviour is taking place. |
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Police are putting the squeeze on car crime on two Bradford estates. |
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They rearranged their estates to create larger tenant farms on rack rents, with a decline in small yeomen farmers with customary tenure or freeholds. |
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Before the loss of Normandy and most of the other Angevin lands in France by King John, the Angevins understandably devoted their attention to their primary French estates. |
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Miniature motorbikes are mainly being raced around estates, while scramblers and scooters are being ridden in areas such as the Seven Fields Nature Reserve. |
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The site borders the River Spey and residents are concerned that precious soakaway or catchment land will be removed, sending high waters flooding on to the new estates. |
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One by one, lidos closed and became garden centres, bowling greens, fish farms, car parks, supermarkets, housing estates or just rectangles of grass. |
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Instead we are going out onto the estates as quickly as possible, putting the arguments and producing leaflets and a broadsheet carrying the arguments. |
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Round's view was largely based on a somewhat unsystematic and subjective review of the distribution of the assessments across estates, vills and the hundreds of counties. |
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But as property prices soar and demand for second homes rises, unprofitable sporting estates are worth more when broken up and assets are sold off. |
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Country dwellers often had precise knowledge of the quality and value of their neighbours' properties and estates, in relation to both moveables and immoveables. |
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Even the bleak tower blocks of Hume are caught in limpid Northern sunlight, breaking through the clouds, making the estates look like places of hopeful promise. |
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The patients and their estates agree not to bring legal action against caregivers, pharmaceutical companies, and insurers. |
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In addition, an ill-prepared but nevertheless aggressive land reform resulted in the breakup of the hacienda estates and brought chaos to the countryside. |
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At the other end of the social scale were the king and a tiny group of powerful men, all of them rentiers who lived in style on the revenues of their great estates. |
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Examples include the division of inherited property, the division of matrimonial estates, and in particular the seizure and sale of property in the course of execution. |
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And later still, when I ambled with Faraday around the estates, listening to the sweet tweet of the birds and the occasional joy-rider, there was no nip in the air. |
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For example, he said, the government could permit minibuses and taxis to pick up and drop off passengers in restricted areas in public housing estates. |
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Plans for a massive renovation of Hong Kong's ageing public housing estates have hit a snag with most tenants at one estate staunchly opposed to the idea. |
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Despite repeated attempts by architects to squeeze us into little boxes on top of one another, the proliferation of suburban estates shows what most people want today. |
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Gifts to the university come to us as cash, stock transfers, property, pledges to be paid over time, wills, estates, trusts and life insurance policies. |
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It's hopeless for the Housing Commission to build estates of this kind. |
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He lives as a virtual recluse on a rural estate near Andover, Hampshire, but owns shooting estates in Rosedale, North Yorkshire and other parts of Northern England. |
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By the time Brady arrived, the city was a veritable Tetris game of villas fit into a grid of staunchly protected private estates. |
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But in the sink estates and poor areas of Great Britain drugs like this nearly always lead onto harder ones and cause devastating effects little reported. |
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The countryside was dominated by giant estates or latifundia. |
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They divided the common lands and sold off the grand-ducal estates, to raise production by creating a class of independent smallholders in place of the poor tenant farmers. |
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A game shooting organisation has condemned an intensive method of rearing pheasants so that country estates can charge visitors high prices to shoot the birds for sport. |
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Labour leader Councillor Stuart King argued for a competitive scheme in which estates would fight to recycle the most in return for financial rewards. |
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The whole resort featured 156 luxurious Malaysian-style villas, with various suites and estates scattered amidst the lush rainforest, white beaches and rocky headlands. |
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We transported some Chelsea nobs to the art galleries up Piccadilly and we delivered a smiling kid with an Incredibles balloon to the estates of Highbury. |
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His grandfather, alfonso XIII, fled the country during the civil war in 1931 and abandoned his estates and most of his fortune. |
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The dissolution of the feudal estates by the Revolution produced a purely atomistic society, characterized by the assertion of individual property right. |
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Housing estates have been burnt down, schools ransacked, shops looted. |
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In May vandals went on the rampage trashing cars in a spate of incidents on the estates, including smashing windows, slashing sunroofs, tyres and scratching paintwork. |
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Following the 2004 competition, a number of estates were regraded. |
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There has been a marked decrease in the number of dogs roaming loose on local roads and housing estates since the Dog Warden service swung back into action. |
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Pilgrimage to such a distant site was inevitably expensive, and often laymen are found mortgaging their estates to religious houses in order to raise the necessary finance. |
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Oxford is a much larger city and has, lying beyond the ring road, heavy industrial areas nestling next to one of Europe's largest housing estates. |
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In the 1980s and 1990s a number of single estates or quintas have also emerged, making high-quality varietal wines from grapes such as Alvarinho, Loureiro, and Avesso. |
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Many poor fell into debt because of this, forced to sell their land to the wealthy, which led to the exponential growth of large estates. |
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Several years later he issued another decree forbidding them to inherit the estates of recruits to the orders. |
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As one of example of the measure he took, he deprived the nobles of their right to administer justice on their estates. |
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A great confiscation of estates followed and enriched the crown, which now became the dominant power of the realm. |
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Upon examination, it was found that the chief cause of the nation's poverty was the wholesale alienation of royal estates during Henry's reign. |
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To make money, Henry had sold off royal estates at prices well below their value. |
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It was decided that the Cardinal of Spain would hold an enquiry into the tenure of estates and rents acquired during Henry IV's reign. |
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While many of the nobility were forced to pay large sums of money for their estates, the royal treasury became ever richer. |
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The revenues from these estates needed to be transferred to wherever the Court was residing. |
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They worked on sugar estates, factories, in transport and on construction sites. |
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As in the Caribbean, black slave labor became crucial to the development of sugar estates. |
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Many renters retained ties to the estates, diversifying their household's sources of income and level of economic security. |
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A delegation of Norman gentry boldly requesting in 1771 the calling of the Normandy estates was despatched prestissimo to the Bastille. |
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He demanded that he should be able to execute and confiscate the estates of traitors without interference from the boyar council or church. |
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From around 1400 we hear of Rostov granting estates west of the lower Dvina in what was Novgorod territory. |
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Land estates were confiscated by the government, fragmented, and rented out. |
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From its foundation, the Court of Chancery could administer estates, due to its jurisdiction over trusts. |
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The common law courts also had jurisdiction over some estates matters, but their remedies for problems were far more limited. |
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The Lord Chancellor had, since the 15th century, been tasked with administering estates where the estate was to be used for charitable purposes. |
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Many other small, rural centres are served by private fields on sugar estates or bauxite mines. |
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It is also prominent in 'overspill' towns and estates such as Hattersley, Gamesley, Handforth and Birchwood. |
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This was a general assembly of the estates of the Holy Roman Empire that took place in Worms, a town on the Rhine. |
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His power base was his household, particularly the network of lawyers and stewards who held his estates together. |
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The ecclesiastical courts formerly had jurisdiction over the personal estates of deceased persons to grant probate or administration. |
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Estate in land can also be divided into estates of inheritance and other estates that are not of inheritance. |
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Coercive temporal authority over their bodies or estates could only be given by concession from the temporal ruler. |
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The word patroonship was used until the year 1775, when the English redefined the lands as estates and took away the jurisdictional privilege. |
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Later expansion came after the First and Second World Wars, when large urban estates were built in the region. |
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Richard Brereton later married Dorothy Egerton, and upon his death the estates passed into the Egerton family. |
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The home was a central unit of production and women played a central role in running farms, and some trades and landed estates. |
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Merchants became the dominant class in the towns, with the nobility largely limited to countryside estates. |
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However, he resurrected the estates as a political class and elevated a large number of people to the nobility. |
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In 1735 the Crown granted the income from the estates to support the Greenwich Hospital, London. |
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Land to the south and west were part of Greenwich Hospital's forestry and farming estates until the 19th century. |
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Adjoining Scaws are the privately owned Barcohill and Meadow Croft housing estates. |
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The town comprises various districts, many of which were established as housing estates. |
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She is amazed and delighted to learn that her book sales have made her wealthy enough to buy several estates and a house in town if she wishes. |
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After the rebellion was put down, the de Ferrers were forced to forfeit their estates to the crown. |
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The adscription system tied rural laborers to their place of birth and required them to rent farms on the estates. |
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He set up the very basics of a state administration with stewards in the most important former chieftain estates. |
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Developers such as Bovis, Barratt and Wainhomes built large housing estates, predominantly on greenfield land. |
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Traditionally, the vast majority of public houses were owned or controlled as brewers' tied estates, usually operated on a regional basis. |
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On all estates, the boiling goes on night and day, except sunday. But well-handed estates have three spells, and intermissions accordingly. |
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Work is expected to start on site at the beginning of November on Lukes Lane, Viking and in the Brockley Whins estates. |
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Life estates given to the decedent by others in which the decedent has no further control or power at the date of death are not included. |
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The estate appeared on the Bona Vacantia list of unclaimed estates in the UK and its value is currently unknown. |
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But that is a small price to pay for what is one if the most sizzlingly good looking sports estates around. |
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All the family wealth, included several large estates and saltworks, were passed to Anikey. |
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Many of the big estates survived. Nor was the peasantry a broken reed in terms of demand for manufactured products. |
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God hath imprinted his authority in several parts, upon several estates of men. |
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Herod on his birthday made a supper to his lords, high captains, and chief estates of Galilee. |
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The three estates of feudal lords, clergy and royal officers met in separate chambers, and exercised an advisory role. |
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The finching yards of the country estates were important meeting points of the elite. |
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Give me the pliant minde, whose gentle measure Complies and suits with all estates. |
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The home was a central unit of production and women played a vital role in running farms, and in some trades and landed estates. |
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Large estates with significant buildings were constructed at Brodsworth Hall, Temple Newsam and Wentworth Castle. |
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Landlords generally resided in cities and left their estates in the care of farm managers. |
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She was born into a powerful ruling class of Normans, who traditionally owned extensive estates in both England and Normandy. |
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The revenue from the York and March estates also made him the wealthiest magnate in the land. |
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They were proclaimed traitors, and many exiled Lancastrians returned to reclaim their estates. |
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However, he declared her titles forfeit and transferred her estates to Stanley's name, to be held in trust for the Yorkist crown. |
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Aside from making William his chamberlain, he bestowed the earldom of Derby upon Lord Stanley along with grants and offices in other estates. |
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For his part, Buckingham raised a substantial force from his estates in Wales and the Marches. |
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Mary inherited estates in Norfolk, Suffolk and Essex, and was granted Hunsdon and Beaulieu as her own. |
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For most of Edward's reign, Mary remained on her own estates and rarely attended court. |
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This made him one of the principal landowners in Munster, but he had limited success inducing English tenants to settle on his estates. |
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Raleigh's management of his Irish estates ran into difficulties, which contributed to a decline in his fortunes. |
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Their estates were forfeited, and the Orkney and Shetland islands were annexed to the Crown. |
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William Cavendish, Marquess of Newcastle, returned and was able to regain the greater part of his estates. |
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This included the construction of large tower block estates, such as Castle Vale. |
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Existing communities were relocated to tower block estates like Castle Vale. |
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In the ancien regime, new opportunities for nuns as charitable practitioners were created by devout nobles on their own estates. |
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Between 1844 and 1848, five estates were purchased, subdivided, and built on, and then settled by lucky shareholders, who were chosen by lot. |
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The organisation of the region remained based on the shires and Church estates, which were largely unchanged throughout the period. |
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Significant rebuilding followed the war, including massive housing estates and the Seaforth Dock, the largest dock project in Britain. |
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In that novel, Chatsworth House in Derbyshire is named as one of the estates Elizabeth Bennet visits before arriving at Pemberley. |
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About three quarters of the park is privately owned, made up of numerous private estates. |
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The west of the city is mainly council estates such as Buckland, Landport, and Portsea. |
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Since the 1980s several large industrial estates have been built to the north, and warehousing and distribution have become major employers. |
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The Oxford Canal runs along the north edge of Rugby, but south of the new housing estates round Brownsover. |
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They were wealthy and owned large estates with huge longhouses, horses and many thralls. |
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Once in England, Anselm was ordered by Henry to do homage for his Canterbury estates and to receive his investiture by ring and crozier anew. |
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Under the heading of viae privatae were also included roads leading from the public or high roads to particular estates or settlements. |
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Percy had found employment with his kinsman the Earl of Northumberland, and by 1596 was his agent for the family's northern estates. |
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Landlords generally resided in cities and their estates were left in the care of farm managers. |
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Raleigh acquired other nearby Munster estates confiscated in the Second Desmond Rebellion. |
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Perhaps because of this, Filmer was imprisoned for some years in Leeds Castle and his estates were sequestered. |
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He was the heir to extensive family estates located in the area where the sisters had grown up. |
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Astor's family owned Scottish estates in the area and a fellow Old Etonian Robin Fletcher had a property on the island. |
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The highest estates, generally those with the most wealth and social rank, were those that held power. |
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To the west lie Ely, Caerau and Fairwater which contain some of the largest housing estates in the United Kingdom. |
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These include taxes on income, payroll, property, sales, imports, estates and gifts, as well as various fees. |
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The first, he says, about thirty years before, had many inhabitants, many holding leasehold estates under the lord of the manor for three lives. |
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In the aftermath of the second world war, public housing was dramatically expanded to create a large number of council estates. |
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In the wake of the rebellion, the clan system was broken up and islands of the Hebrides became a series of landed estates. |
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This involved the mass demolition of the city's infamous slums and their replacement with large suburban housing estates and tower blocks. |
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Areas in the south and east of the city tend to be flat and fertile with some housing estates and industrial areas reclaimed from marshland. |
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The urban area is continuing to expand rapidly with new housing estates continuing to be built. |
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The post war period saw expansion of industry to estates along the Kingsway. |
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John Lilburne was the son of Richard Lilburne, a landowner of estates at Thickley Punchardon and elsewhere in County Durham. |
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In 1651 the committee for compounding delinquents' estates had confirmed Hesilrige's decision. |
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The first two estates being the nobility and clergy and everybody else comprising the third estate. |
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He lived quietly on his estates, and died at the monastery of Cong in 1198 and was buried at Clonmacnoise. |
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This was a committee chosen by the three estates to draft legislation which was then presented to the full assembly to be confirmed. |
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Mar died suspiciously in 1480 and his estates were forfeited and possibly given to a royal favourite, Robert Cochrane. |
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Lairds reigned over their estates like princes, their castles forming a small court. |
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Amongst Sir Andrew's estates at Petty were lands at Alturile, Brachlie and Croy, and at Boharm were lands at Arndilly and Botriphnie. |
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Records show early members of the family as holding estates at Riccarton, Tarbolton, and Auchincruive in Kyle, and Stenton in East Lothian. |
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The Bruces also held substantial estates in Aberdeenshire, County Antrim, County Durham, Essex, Middlesex and Yorkshire. |
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On his way, he granted the Scottish estates of Bruce and his adherents to his own followers and had published a bill excommunicating Bruce. |
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Some later clearances replaced agriculture with sporting estates stocked with deer. |
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However, the Crofters' Act did not grant security of tenure to cottiers or break up large estates. |
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After this rebellion the clan system was broken up and Skye became a series of landed estates. |
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In the wake of the rebellion the clan system was broken up and islands of the Hebrides became a series of landed estates. |
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Employment can be found in industrial estates located within several towns. |
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Glasgow would also undertake the development of its peripheral housing estates. |
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Industrial estates are concentrated on the outskirts of the town, in northern, western and southern directions. |
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Separating industry as far as possible from housing areas in planned industrial estates was a key element of early plans. |
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These would connect each precinct to the purposely designed town centre and to the industrial estates. |
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The main industrial estates were developed to the east and west along the A80 at Castlecary, Wardpark and Westfield. |
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The Court and the government were also very mobile, and each dynasty favoured its own castles and estates. |
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The number of exploitations tends to diminish, but as a result, they are merged into very large estates. |
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Virtually nothing remains from the war era at the airport due to expansion and development of the industrial estates around it. |
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Here, there is a large number of country houses and estates with parkland, estate woodlands, plantations and game coverts. |
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Following his service at Hastings, he was rewarded with large estates in Yorkshire. |
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His brothers Cadell and Merfyn received large estates as well, sometimes said to include the kingdoms of Ceredigion and Powys, respectively. |
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They could confiscate the estates of traitors and felons, and regrant these at will. |
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He began by exchanging estates he held in England and by obtaining grants in the Welsh Marches from the King. |
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Des Roches used his new authority to begin stripping his opponents of their estates, circumventing the courts and legal process. |
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Many were given estates along the contested Welsh Marches, or in Ireland, where they protected the frontiers. |
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The major landowners looked eastwards towards Henry's court for political leadership, and many also possessed estates in Wales and England. |
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Edward and the Despensers strengthened their grip on power, formally revoking the 1311 reforms, executing their enemies and confiscating estates. |
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Edward was able to reward his loyal supporters, especially the Despenser family, with the confiscated estates and new titles. |
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One such example would be the large number of industrial estates located along the River Thames in the Thames Gateway area of London. |
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These were frequently in large estates of houses, such as Howarth Close, Haven Drive and The Glebelands Estate. |
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Each obedientiary held his own rural estates as well as properties in the city and was supported by various unlanded officials. |
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Molland subsequently sued the other members and their estates to recoup his expenses plus a producer's royalty. |
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Outside the walls, residential estates have been built to the north towards Pembroke Dock, to the east towards Lamphey, and to the south. |
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The improved communications also allowed Liverpool merchants to buy up and develop large estates in the Wirral. |
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Mostly they caught fluke, which would then be sold from barrows pushed around the housing estates. |
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Hermitages on the islands became centres of communities which later became monasteries with massive estates. |
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He kept the biggest estates, and where he lacked troops to overawe the natives he evicted the natives and made a game reserve. |
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Rollo shared out the large estates with his companions and gave agricultural land to his other followers. |
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In 1175 he appropriated the estates of the late Earl of Cornwall and gave them to John. |
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In many cases, individual institutions were able to negotiate terms for managing their own properties and keeping the produce of their estates. |
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New housing estates were established in the acquired areas, including Moulsecoomb, Bevendean, Coldean and Whitehawk. |
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Industrial estates also growing in towns on northern coast of Java, especially around Cilegon, Tangerang, Bekasi, Karawang, Gresik and Sidoarjo. |
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In the autumn of 1467, Warwick withdrew from the court to his Yorkshire estates. |
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Mar died suspiciously in Edinburgh in 1480 and his estates were forfeited, possibly given to a royal favourite, Robert Cochrane. |
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Their roles on larger estates also included working in boiling houses and tending cattle. |
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Other categories were sentenced to banishment with whole or partial confiscation of their estates. |
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There were also freehold estates not of inheritance, such as an estate for life. |
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William Rufus sequestered Henry's new estates in England, leaving Henry landless. |
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He met with the King but was unable to persuade him to grant him their mother's estates, and travelled back to Normandy in the autumn. |
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Henry attempted to win over other members of the Normandy nobility and gave other English estates and lucrative offers to key Norman lords. |
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Matters escalated, with Anselm going back into exile and Henry confiscating the revenues of his estates. |
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Fulk returned from the Levant and demanded that Henry return Matilda and her dowry, a range of estates and fortifications in Maine. |
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Natural England takes its finance, human resources and estates services from the Defra Shared Services organisation. |
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During his time in North Africa, he found himself in financial difficulties and was forced to mortgage his estates to his brother. |
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King Henry's son, Edward, later King Edward I, was granted the other two thirds of the estates and the marriage of the heir. |
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He later lived on the Camp Hill and Albany prison estates on the outskirts of Newport. |
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The dukes yielded half their estates for the maintenance of the king and his court in Pavia. |
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The feudal system was gradually abolished in the late 18th century, starting with the crown lands in 1765 and later the estates of the nobility. |
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Lithuanians and Poles controlled vast estates in Ukraine, and were a law unto themselves. |
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Noble estates, on the other hand, gradually came to descend by primogeniture in much of western Europe aside from Germany. |
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In Eastern Europe, by contrast, with the exception of a few Hungarian estates, they usually descended to all sons or even all children. |
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The few surviving Merovingian edicts are almost entirely concerned with settling divisions of estates among heirs. |
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Charlemagne had residences across his kingdom, including numerous private estates that were governed in accordance with the Capitulare de villis. |
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The Habsburg Emperors focused on consolidating their own estates in Austria and elsewhere. |
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