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Charles V, Monarchia Universalis and the Law of Nations (1515-1530)
+(,121/,1( Citation: 71 Tijdschrift voor Rechtsgeschiedenis 79 2003 Content downloaded/printed from HeinOnline Mon Jan 30 03:58:51 2017 -- Your use of this HeinOnline PDF indicates your acceptance of HeinOnline's Terms and Conditions of the license agreement available at http://heinonline.org/HOL/License -- The search text of this PDF is generated from uncorrected OCR text. -- To obtain permission to use this article beyond the scope of your HeinOnline license, please use: Copyright Information CHARLES V, MONARCHIA UNIVERSALIS AND THE LAW OF NATIONS (1515-1530) by RANDALL LESAFFER (Tilburg and Leuven)* Introduction Nowadays most international legal historians agree that the first half of the sixteenth century - coinciding with the life of the emperor Charles V (1500- 1558) - marked the collapse of the medieval European order and the very first origins of the modem state system'. Though it took to the end of the seven- teenth century for the modem law of nations, based on the idea of state sover- eignty, to be formed, the roots of many of its concepts and institutions can be situated in this period2 . While all this might be true in retrospect, it would be by far overstretching the point to state that the victory of the emerging sovereign state over the medieval system was a foregone conclusion for the politicians and lawyers of * I am greatly indebted to professor James Crawford (Cambridge), professor Karl- Heinz Ziegler (Hamburg) and Mrs. Norah Engmann-Gallagher for their comments and suggestions, as well as to the board and staff of the Lauterpacht Research Centre for Inter- national Law at the University of Cambridge for their hospitality during the period I worked there on this article. -
Scenario Book 1
Here I Stand SCENARIO BOOK 1 SCENARIO BOOK T A B L E O F C O N T E N T S ABOUT THIS BOOK ......................................................... 2 Controlling 2 Powers ........................................................... 6 GETTING STARTED ......................................................... 2 Domination Victory ............................................................. 6 SCENARIOS ....................................................................... 2 PLAY-BY-EMAIL TIPS ...................................................... 6 Setup Guidelines .................................................................. 2 Interruptions to Play ............................................................ 6 1517 Scenario ...................................................................... 3 Response Card Play ............................................................. 7 1532 Scenario ...................................................................... 4 DESIGNER’S NOTES ........................................................ 7 Tournament Scenario ........................................................... 5 EXTENDED EXAMPLE OF PLAY................................... 8 SETTING YOUR OWN TIME LIMIT ............................... 6 THE GAME AS HISTORY................................................. 11 GAMES WITH 3 TO 5 PLAYERS ..................................... 6 CHARACTERS OF THE REFORMATION ...................... 15 Configurations ..................................................................... 6 EVENTS OF THE REFORMATION -
Mary, Queen of Scots at the Palace of Holyroodhouse Information for Teachers
PALACE OF HOLYROODHOUSE Mary, Queen of Scots at the Palace of Holyroodhouse Information for Teachers Planning Your Visit We hope you enjoy your visit to the Palace of Holyroodhouse. Before you arrive, please read this information to help you make the most of your time here. Frequently Asked Questions Is my booking confirmed? The attached letter is your confirmation. Please read it carefully and if the details are not correct please telephone us on 0131 557 2500. If there are any fees due on your booking, your letter will confirm the date by which full payment must be received. All bookings are made subject to our terms and conditions, which are available on request. Can I make changes to the size of my group? You can confirm any increase in the number of your group up to 24 hours in advance of your visit. Please note, if you would like to book additional accompanying adults, above the stated ratios, a reduced-rate admission fee of £3 per adult will be payable. How do I arrange a complimentary planning visit? If you and a colleague would like to make a planning trip before your group visit, please contact the Learning Bookings Team to arrange this. Two complimentary tickets will be booked for you, for collection on the day. If you would like to meet a member of the Learning Team or see the Learning Rooms during your planning visit, please advise us during booking. Is there a lunch room at the Palace? There is limited space for eating packed lunches in the Learning Rooms. -
The Historical Context of the Age of Gold: France 1560–1660
Vincentian Heritage Journal Volume 11 Issue 1 Article 1 Spring 1990 The Historical Context of the Age of Gold: France 1560–1660 James Hitchcock Follow this and additional works at: https://via.library.depaul.edu/vhj Recommended Citation Hitchcock, James (1990) "The Historical Context of the Age of Gold: France 1560–1660," Vincentian Heritage Journal: Vol. 11 : Iss. 1 , Article 1. Available at: https://via.library.depaul.edu/vhj/vol11/iss1/1 This Articles is brought to you for free and open access by the Vincentian Journals and Publications at Via Sapientiae. It has been accepted for inclusion in Vincentian Heritage Journal by an authorized editor of Via Sapientiae. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Professor James Hitchcock The Historical Context of the Age of Gold: France 1560-1660 B JAMES HITCHCOCK French history as defined for these purposes has a quite precise beginning - 30 June, 1559, when King Henry II, in the midst of the celebrations of his daughter's marriage to Philip II of Spain, entered the lists to try his knightly skills. His opponent's lance broke. A splinter 4 slipped through the visor of the king's helmet and penetrated his eye. He lingered for almost two weeks, then left his kingdom in the hands of his widow, Catherine de Medici, with the throne nominally occupied by his fifteen-year-old son Francis II. Although the strong foundation of French monarchy had already been laid, in fact the century 1560-1660 was largely one of turmoil and apparent disintegration, except for a few decades at the precise time of the greatest flourishing of the seventeenth-century Catholic revival. -
Richard Guise: Englishman Or French Duke
Richard Guise: Englishman or French duke ROSLYN CARTWRIGHT 1 n 1793 the name Guise appears in New South Wales colonial records. It continued to be noteworthy for more than 60 years until the traumatic events of Ithe early 1850s crushed the family’s dynastic aspirations and plunged them into erroneous folklore and, ultimately, obscurity. However, with the development of the south-western Sydney area, the name has been resurrected with the naming of Guise Public School at Macquarie Fields and Guise Avenue at Casula, both on old Guise land grant sites. These now join the lesser known Guy Forest, Guises Creek, ‘Guises Flat’, Guys Hill, Guise Hill, Guises Lake, Guises Ridge, Guises Waterholes and 2 Guise Road as reminders of an unusual and mysterious family. The mystery begins in 1789, in England, when Richard Guise joined the newly formed New South Wales Corps and was eventually promoted to the rank of 3 sergeant. (Sergeant Richard had two descendants also named ‘Richard’. To distinguish between the three of them they are hereafter designated as Richard; his son, Richard senior; and his nephew, Richard junior.) The combination of the significant year of 1789 and the French origins of the surname ‘Guise’ helped create a fallacy that is perpetuated in inadequately researched histories, articles and guides until the present. On 14 July 1789 the Paris mob raided the Bastille prison and many French nobles became émigrés fleeing the revolutionaries. On 14 October of that year 4 Richard was enlisted in the British Army. This timetable of events proved too convenient an explanation of his obscure background: Because of the destruction of records at the time of the French Revolution, it is a hopeless task to trace the parents of Sergeant Richard Guise, born in 1757. -
Pedigree of the Wilson Family N O P
Pedigree of the Wilson Family N O P Namur** . NOP-1 Pegonitissa . NOP-203 Namur** . NOP-6 Pelaez** . NOP-205 Nantes** . NOP-10 Pembridge . NOP-208 Naples** . NOP-13 Peninton . NOP-210 Naples*** . NOP-16 Penthievre**. NOP-212 Narbonne** . NOP-27 Peplesham . NOP-217 Navarre*** . NOP-30 Perche** . NOP-220 Navarre*** . NOP-40 Percy** . NOP-224 Neuchatel** . NOP-51 Percy** . NOP-236 Neufmarche** . NOP-55 Periton . NOP-244 Nevers**. NOP-66 Pershale . NOP-246 Nevil . NOP-68 Pettendorf* . NOP-248 Neville** . NOP-70 Peverel . NOP-251 Neville** . NOP-78 Peverel . NOP-253 Noel* . NOP-84 Peverel . NOP-255 Nordmark . NOP-89 Pichard . NOP-257 Normandy** . NOP-92 Picot . NOP-259 Northeim**. NOP-96 Picquigny . NOP-261 Northumberland/Northumbria** . NOP-100 Pierrepont . NOP-263 Norton . NOP-103 Pigot . NOP-266 Norwood** . NOP-105 Plaiz . NOP-268 Nottingham . NOP-112 Plantagenet*** . NOP-270 Noyers** . NOP-114 Plantagenet** . NOP-288 Nullenburg . NOP-117 Plessis . NOP-295 Nunwicke . NOP-119 Poland*** . NOP-297 Olafsdotter*** . NOP-121 Pole*** . NOP-356 Olofsdottir*** . NOP-142 Pollington . NOP-360 O’Neill*** . NOP-148 Polotsk** . NOP-363 Orleans*** . NOP-153 Ponthieu . NOP-366 Orreby . NOP-157 Porhoet** . NOP-368 Osborn . NOP-160 Port . NOP-372 Ostmark** . NOP-163 Port* . NOP-374 O’Toole*** . NOP-166 Portugal*** . NOP-376 Ovequiz . NOP-173 Poynings . NOP-387 Oviedo* . NOP-175 Prendergast** . NOP-390 Oxton . NOP-178 Prescott . NOP-394 Pamplona . NOP-180 Preuilly . NOP-396 Pantolph . NOP-183 Provence*** . NOP-398 Paris*** . NOP-185 Provence** . NOP-400 Paris** . NOP-187 Provence** . NOP-406 Pateshull . NOP-189 Purefoy/Purifoy . NOP-410 Paunton . NOP-191 Pusterthal . -
James I Biography
JAMES I OF ENGLAND (JAMES IV OF SCOTLAND) 1566-1625 1566 (June 19) Born at Edinburgh Castle, only son of Mary, Queen of Scots and Lord Darnley (Henry Stuart), grandson of Margaret Tudor (Hen VIII sister) 1566 (March 9) David Rizzio, Mary’s private secretary, murdered in the presence of Queen Mary, by a group that included Darnley 1567 (Feb. 10) explosion in the night, Darnley found dead at Kirk O’Field, Edinburgh 1567 (June) Mary imprisoned by Protestant rebels; forced to abdicate. 1567 (July 29) James, 13 mos, crowned King of Scots; coronation sermon John Knox 1568 Mary escaped; her troops defeated at the Battle of Langside, fled to England; Elizabeth, Elizabeth's "guest" for next 19 years. They never meet. 1582 James imprisoned in Ruthven castle for 10 months by Protestant earls due to James’ close (intimate?) relationship with the Catholic Duke of Lennox 1583 (June) James freed, reestablished his royal authority 1586 Signed the Treaty of Berwick with England; securing English succession. 1587 Mary, Queen of Scots executed by Elizabeth I, James now Eliz' successor. 1589 Married Anne of Denmark, age 14; seven live children, three grow to adulthood. 1597 Wrote Daemonologie, the basis for Shakespeare’s Tragedy of Macbeth 1603 (March 24) Queen Elizabeth dies; James proclaimed king in London. 1604 (October) Assumed the title “King of Great Britain” 1605 Gunpowder Plot; Catholic Guy Fawkes & others try to blow up whole Parliament. 1611 Completion of the Authorized King James Version of the Bible. (James planned) 1612 death of Prince of wales, Henry. Now Charles becomes successor. -
History of the Chapel Royal of Scotland, with the Register of the Chapel
THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES PR I HISTORY OF THE CHAPEL EOYAL OF SCOTLAND WITH THE EEGISTER OF THE CHAPEL EOYAL OF STIRLING INCLUDING DETAILS IN EELATION TO THE RISE AND PROGRESS OF SCOTTISH MUSIC respecting th* (Drto 0f tht thistle REV. CHARLES EOGEES, D.D., LL.D. Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, and of the Koyal Society of Northern Antiquaries, Copenhagen, Associate of the Imperial Archaeological Society of Russia, Member of the Historical Societies of Pennsylvania and Quebec, Honorary Member of the Historical Societies of Michigan, Chicago, and New Jersey, and of the Antiquarian Society of Montreal, And Corresponding Member of the Royal Society of Bohemia, Of the Historical Society of Berlin, of the American Ethnological Society, And of the Historical Societies of New York, Maine, Virginia, Rhode Island, Maryland, Minnesota, South Carolina, Missouri, Vermont, and New Brunswick, Of the Numismatic and Antiquarian Society of Philadelphia, Of the Historical and Genealogical Society of New England, Of the Royal Society of Tasmania, Of the Royal Heraldic and Genealogical Society of Italy, And of the Natural History Society of Montreal EDINBURGH PRINTED FOR THE GRAMPIAN CLUB 1882 EDINBURGH : PRINTED BY M'FARLANE AND ERSK1NE, ST JAMES SQUARE. MUSIC CONTENTS. PAGE INTRODUCTION, \ HISTORY OF THE CHAPEL ROYAL OF SCOTLAND, XClii REGISTRUM CAPELLE REGIME STRIVELINENSIS, . APPENDIX : I. GRANT TO THE CHAPEL ROYAL BY THE REGENT, DUKE OF ALBANY, 95 II. PRESENTATION BY JAMES V. OF THE TREASURERSHIP OF THE CHAPEL ROYAL TO MR ANDREW DURIE, . 97 III. APPOINTMENT OF JAMES CAMPBELL AS A MUSICIAN IN THE CHAPEL ROYAL, 98 IV. -
The Holy Republic and Its Kings
THE HOLY REPUBLIC AND ITS PRINCES : The Habsburg Pact of Kingship and the Political Theology of the City in Sixteenth Century Segovia Seonghek Kang PhD Student, Department of History Project Preliminaries • Problematization: In the historiography of the Golden Age Spain, how does one account for the coexisting phenomena of expanding central royal authority, and the salience of the participatory, republican political culture? • Parameters: mid-late sixteenth century Segovia, networks of urban Alcázar (royal castle) of elites & administration, civic religiosity, state ideology & political Segovia & stained-glass culture, rebellions and political negotiation seal of the Crown of Castile in the • Keywords: early modern Castile, Habsburg Spain, political throne room theology, republicanism, School of Salamanca, Comunidades of Castile • Historiography: • Maravall, José Antonio, Las comunidades de Castilla: una primera revolución moderna (1963), Martínez Gil, Fernando, La ciudad inquieta: Toledo comunera, 1520-1522 (1993) • Nader, Helen, Liberty in Absolutist Spain: The Hasburg Sale of Towns, 1516- 1700 (1990), Thompson, I. A. A., Crown and Cortes: Government, Institutions and Representation in Early-Modern Castile (1993) • Sources: • National archives: Archivo Histórico Nacional, Archivo de Real Chancillería de Valladolid, Biblioteca Nacional de España • Municipal archives: Archivo Municipal de Segovia, Archivo de la Catedral de Segovia • Printed manuscripts The Place and the Period: The Sixteenth Century Segovia • About 15,000 population, 3rd -
IRS 2016 Proposal Valladolid, Spain
CANDIDATE TECHNICAL DOSSIER FOR International Radiation Symposium IRS2016 In VALLADOLID (SPAIN), August 2016 Grupo de Optica Atmosférica, GOA-UVA Universidad de Valladolid Castilla y León Spain 1 INDEX I. Introduction…………………………………………………………............. 3 II. Motivation/rationale for holding the IRS in Valladolid………………....….. 3 III. General regional and local interest. Community of Castilla y León…......... 4 IV. The University of Valladolid, UVA. History and Infrastructure………….. 8 V. Conference environment …………………………………………………. 15 VI. Venue description and capacity. Congress Centre Auditorium …….…… 16 VII. Local sites of interest, universities, museums, attractions, parks etc …... 18 VIII. VISA requirements …………………………………………………….. 20 2 IRS’ 2016, Valladolid, Spain I. Introduction We are pleased to propose and host the next IRS at Valladolid, Spain, in August of 2016, to be held at the Valladolid Congress Centre, Avenida de Ramón Pradera, 47009 Valladolid, Spain. A view of the city of Valladolid with the Pisuerga river II. Motivation/rationale for holding the IRS in Valladolid Scientific Interest In the last decades, Spain has experienced a great growth comparatively to other countries in Europe and in the world, not only in the social and political aspects but also in the scientific research. Certainly Spain has a medium position in the world but it potential increases day by day. The research in Atmospheric Sciences has not a long tradition in our country, but precisely, its atmospheric conditions and geographical location makes it one of the best places for atmospheric studies, in topics as radiation, aerosols, etc…. , being a special region in Europe to analyse the impact of climate change. Hosting the IRS’2016 for the first time in Spain would produce an extraordinary benefit for all the Spanish scientific community, and particularly for those groups working in the atmospheric, meteorological and optics research fields. -
A Little Tour in France
A LITTLE TOUR IN FRANCE with ninety-four illustrations by JOSEPH PENNELL LONDON WILLIAM HEINEMANN 1900 Preface Preface The notes presented in this volume were gathered, as will easily be perceived, a number of years ago and on an expectation not at that time answered by the event, and were then published in the United States. The expectation had been that they should accompany a series of drawings, and they themselves were altogether governed by the pictorial spirit. They made, and they make in appearing now, after a considerable interval and for the first time, in England, no pretension to any other; they are impressions, immediate, easy, and consciously limited; if the written word may ever play the part of brush or pencil, they are sketches on "drawing-paper" and nothing more. From the moment the principle of selection and expression, with a tourist, is not the delight of the eyes and the play of fancy, it should be an energy in every way much larger; there is no happy mean, in other words, I hold, between the sense and the quest of the picture, and the surrender to it, and the sense and the quest of the constitution, the inner springs of the subject—springs and connections social, economic, historic. One must really choose, in other words, between the benefits of the perception of surface—a perception, when fine, perhaps none of the most frequent—and those of the perception of very complex underlying matters. If these latter had had, for me, to be taken into account, my pages would not have been collected. -
King James IV, Continental Diplomacy and the Guelders' War
JAMES P. WARD King James IV, Continental Diplomacy and the Guelders' War In Western Europe the years 1506-1515 were marked by confrontations between Denmark and the Baltic city of Lübeck, between Lübeck and Holland, and between Holland and the Duke of Guelders.1 The background to these struggles includes (very briefly) the resistance offered to successive kings of Denmark by their rebellious subjects in Sweden, who in their bid for independence were aided and abetted by Lübeck;2 Lübeck's opposition to the incursions into the Baltic Sea area of merchants and shipping interests from the Low Countries (mainly from Amsterdam) who were sympathetic to Denmark;3 and the duke of Guelders' attempts to recover the duchy which had effectively been lost a generation earlier by his father and grandfather to Burgundian-Habsburg domination.4 Each of the contending parties had powerful allies. Overriding all their quarrels was the dynastic struggle between the imperial house of Habsburg and the kings of France. On the basis of a treaty which had been made with Charles the Bold (1433-1477), last Valois Duke of Burgundy, King John of Denmark (1481-1513) called on the Habsburg authorities in the Low Countries for help against Sweden (see below). Lübeck allied with the Swedes tried to mobilize help from the other Wendic and Baltic cities which were joined in the Hanseatic League. 1 This is a revised part of the author's doctoral thesis `The Cities and States of Holland (1506-1515). A participative system of government under strain' (University of Leiden, 2001), based on sources in Holland concerning the regency of Margaret of Austria between the death of her brother Philip the Fair (1506) and the accession of her nephew, later Emperor Charles V, to Philip's titles (1515).