He also painted a tondo of the Pieta bearing Philip's coat of arms on the back, and he painted and gilded Sluter's statues. |
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King Philip's War, waged between the English and an alliance of Wampanoag, Nipmuk, and Narragansett Indians, devastated Eliot's missions. |
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The history of the decoration of the Escorial is a record of Philip's sometimes reluctant accommodation to circumstances beyond his control. |
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Philip's mother, Carol, said that instead of a dummy he was given a sheepdog whistle as a baby, and he's never looked back. |
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The hectic design would hardly have conformed with Philip's conservative taste. |
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Philip's voice is completely casual, like he's just had this sudden thought out of the blue. |
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At St Philip's Church he was a former trustee, vicar's warden and a lay reader. |
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Philip's statement brought a ripple of laughter from the crowd of assembled contestants gathered around the archery range. |
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And Philip's paintings often remember the region's past, originally an inland sea, now feeling the effects of prolonged drought. |
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Philip's rhetoric was also existential, and it strongly influenced my thinking. |
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Some files in the museum are bulging with information, others, like Philip's, have remained empty. |
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Later, during King Philip's War, the colonists battled the Narragansetts with the aid of Mohegan fighters. |
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And, upon enlargement by the Daily Beast's photo team, we can even see that a speech bubble has been stuck into Philip's mouth! |
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Most of Philip's cheese comes from the west country, and once a month he gets up at the ungodly hour of 4.30 am for a round trip of the region in his refrigerated van. |
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Philip's gloom deepens when he finds a letter from Mr Plumb to his mother. |
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Lowering her longing eyes from Philip's splendid home, Agnes turned down a narrow alley-like road squeezed between a storehouse and a two-storey building. |
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The Macedonian phalanx was Philip's creation, extended by Alexander. |
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I think Philip's words provide an almost laboratory-pure example of just such a polemical tendency. |
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Prince Philip's uncle was an Admiral of the Fleet, former Viceroy of India and a Second World War hero who had survived having a ship blown up beneath him. |
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Between 1422 and 1425 a new reliquary was made for Saint Philip's arm. |
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John successfully devastated much of Brittany, but did not deflect Philip's main thrust into the east of Normandy. |
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The attack was a success, destroying Philip's vessels and any chances of an invasion of England that year. |
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His father went on pilgrimage to the Shrine of Thomas Becket to pray for Philip's recovery and was told that his son had indeed recovered. |
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Philip's eldest son Louis was born on 5 September 1187 and inherited the County of Artois in 1190, when his mother Isabelle died. |
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Notified of Philip's impending approach with 2,000 knights, he turned around and headed back to Flanders. |
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The death of Henry's eldest son, Henry the Young King, in June 1183, began a dispute over the dowry of Philip's widowed sister Margaret. |
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Not having heard anything directly from their sovereign, FitzRalph and the Norman barons rejected Philip's claim to Vexin. |
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Here, Philip's advance was halted by a defence led by the Earl of Leicester. |
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Throughout June, while Philip's campaign ground to a halt in the north, Richard was taking a number of important fortresses to the south. |
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Richard countered Philip's thrust with a counterattack in Vexin, while Mercadier led a raid on Abbeville. |
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To seal the treaty, a marriage between Blanche of Castile, John's niece, and Louis the Lion, Philip's son, was contracted. |
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By the end of 1204, most of Normandy and the Angevin lands, including much of Aquitaine, had fallen into Philip's hands. |
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He disembarked with his army at La Rochelle during one of Philip's absences, but the campaign was a disaster. |
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Philip's army numbered some 15,000, while the allied forces possessed around 25,000 troops. |
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Philip's decisive victory was crucial in shaping Western European politics in both England and France. |
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It was agreed that Gascony should be taken back into Philip's hands, thus precipitating the Hundred Years War between England and France. |
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His beliefs about Philip's character led Polybius to reject historian Theopompus' description of Philip's private, drunken debauchery. |
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Upon Philip's return, he dispatched Alexander with a small force to subdue revolts in southern Thrace. |
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Alexander was the first to break the Theban lines, followed by Philip's generals. |
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News of Philip's death roused many states into revolt, including Thebes, Athens, Thessaly, and the Thracian tribes north of Macedon. |
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Elizabeth of Valois, Philip's third wife and Isabella's mother, had already ceded any claim to the French Crown with her marriage to Philip. |
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There was discontent in the Netherlands about Philip's taxation demands and the incessant persecution of Protestants. |
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The Dutch gained an advantage over the Spanish because of their growing economic strength, in contrast to Philip's burgeoning economic troubles. |
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The marriage treaty also provided that England would not be obliged to provide military support to Philip's father in any war. |
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The coat of arms of England was impaled with Philip's to denote their joint reign. |
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The storm that smashed the Armada was seen by many of Philip's enemies as a sign of the will of God. |
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Philip's first wife was his first cousin, Maria Manuela, Princess of Portugal. |
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She was a daughter of Philip's maternal uncle, John III of Portugal, and paternal aunt, Catherine of Austria. |
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Philip's second wife was his first cousin once removed, Queen Mary I of England. |
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The marriage produced no children, although there was a false pregnancy, and Mary died in 1558, ending Philip's reign in England and Ireland. |
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Philip's third wife was Elisabeth of Valois, the eldest daughter of Henry II of France and Catherine de' Medici. |
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Impressed by the massive support for the compromise, she suspended the placards, awaiting Philip's final ruling. |
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Zwingli accepted Philip's invitation fully believing that he would be able to convince Luther. |
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King Philip's War ended in 1678, and much of it was fought without significant assistance from England. |
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However, French Revolutionaries seized the plant, along with the rest of Louis Philip's estate, in 1794, and publicized Leblanc's trade secrets. |
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The confederation was designed largely to coordinate mutual defense, and gained some importance during King Philip's War. |
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These, along with the entire town, were later destroyed during King Philip's War. |
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In 1675, King Philip's War broke out throughout New England with the Nipmuc Indians coming to the aid of Indian leader King Philip. |
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The writings of Mary Rowlandson, captured in the brutal fighting of King Philip's War, are an example. |
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The ratbags also nicked Philip's car, but at least that was later found abandoned. |
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John's relief operation was blocked by Philip's forces, and John turned back to Brittany in an attempt to draw Philip away from eastern Normandy. |
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Philip's troops conquered the important trading cities of Bruges and Ghent. |
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However, Rome discovered the agreement when Philip's emissaries were captured by a Roman fleet. |
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Richard demanded Philip surrender the Vexin but then the issue was settled when Richard announced he would marry Alys, Philip's sister. |
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Richard also recognised Auvergne as being in Philip's royal demense and not as part of the Duchy of Aquitaine, as Henry had claimed. |
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They married in 1191 in Limassol, Cyprus, therefore repudiating Alys, Philip's sister, but the issue had been settled earlier in Messina. |
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Philip's nobles refused to attack the lands of an absent crusader, though Philip instead gained lands in Artois. |
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In exchange for Philip's help against his father, Richard promised to concede to him his rights to both Normandy and Anjou. |
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The following year, Richard attempted to take the throne of England for himself by joining Philip's expedition against his father. |
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Edward responded to the confiscation of Aquitaine by challenging Philip's right to the French throne. |
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The army crossed at a tidal ford at Blanchetaque, leaving Philip's army stranded. |
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Furthering the Tudor conquest of Ireland, under Mary and Philip's reign English colonists were settled in the Irish Midlands. |
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She turned down Philip's own hand early in 1559 but for several years entertained the proposal of King Eric XIV of Sweden. |
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For several years she also seriously negotiated to marry Philip's cousin Archduke Charles of Austria. |
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A number of Georgian buildings survive, including St Philip's Cathedral, Soho House, Perrott's Folly, the Town Hall and much of St Paul's Square. |
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Acts which made it high treason to deny Philip's royal authority were passed in England and Ireland. |
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Some of the papers played long and loud tunes on the string of Philip's foreign origin. |
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The treaty would be sealed by the arranged marriage of John's son Edward and Philip's niece Joan. |
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There was a revolt against Philip's rule and disease and hunger became rampant. |
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He agreed to set aside his wife, Isabella of Gloucester, and marry Philip's sister, Alys, in exchange for Philip's support. |
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Haynes suggested that Philip's behaviour savoured of unpatriotism, and that the one thing needful was the immediate appointment of a caterpillar controller. |
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Philip's fourth and final wife was his niece, Anna of Austria. |
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Philip's gravest mistake over the long run was his attempt to violently eradicate Protestantism from the Netherlands, which was a major economic asset for the empire. |
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The defeat of Protestantism was always uppermost in Philip's mind. |
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Philip's constant involvement in European wars took a significant toll on the treasury and caused economic difficulties for the Crown and even bankruptcies. |
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During the ensuing Battle of Chaeronea, Philip commanded the right wing and Alexander the left, accompanied by a group of Philip's trusted generals. |
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During Philip's absence, the Thracian Maedi revolted against Macedonia. |
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Philip's son by Isabella of Hainaut, Louis VIII, was his successor. |
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The Count of Flanders had denied Philip's right to declare war on England while King John was still excommunicated, and that his disobedience needed to be punished. |
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The main source of funding for Philip's army was from the royal demesne. |
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John used some of this money to pay for new alliances on Philip's eastern frontiers, where the growth in Capetian power was beginning to concern France's neighbours. |
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Michael Benthall, who was renowned for his association with Tyrone Guthrie in a 1944 production of Hamlet, sought Philip's help to entice Burton into accepting it. |
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