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  1. Parliament only met when summoned by king. James rebuffed Puritan demands and vowed to maintain religious status quo. Puritans left England in 1620 for Holland and in 1630 for Massachusetts. Court nobles were angered over the selling of titles. 1604 England and Spain reach a peace treaty, and this is viewed by the people

  2. James I, Count of La Marche. Beatrice, Queen of Bohemia. House. Bourbon. Father. Robert, Count of Clermont. Mother. Beatrix of Burgundy. Louis I, called the Lame (1279 – 1341) was a French prince du sang, Count of Clermont-en-Beauvaisis and La Marche and the first Duke of Bourbon, as well as briefly the titular King of Thessalonica from 1320 ...

  3. Judith of Brittany. Robert I of Normandy (22 June 1000 – July 1035), also known as Robert the Magnificent and by other names, was a Norman noble of the House of Normandy who ruled as duke of Normandy from 1027 until his death in 1035. He was the son of Duke Richard II; the brother of Duke Richard III, against whom he unsuccessfully revolted ...

  4. But this has been challenged. Caligula wanted his army to invade Britain. Rome being superstitious and scared of the Britannia which was on the fringes of the world made the soldiers mutiny. Caligula in rage ordered them to collect seashells and March in a triumph to humiliate them for cowardice.

  5. His father died in February 1191 and his older brother in May 1191, which made him the new count of Alençon. During his life, the war raged between the king of France Philip II and the kings of England Richard the Lionheart and John. In 1203, Robert abandoned his English liege and joined the Capetian camp. In May 1203 the French entered Alençon.

  6. Charles the Good (1084 – 2 March 1127) was Count of Flanders from 1119 to 1127. His murder and its aftermath were chronicled by Galbert of Bruges . He was beatified by Pope Leo XIII in 1882 through cultus confirmation .

  7. As sovereign of the Pyrenean Principality he took up a neutral stance in the war which was reflected in its motto ni Anglais, ni Français (Neither England, nor France). John became Count of Bigorre in 1415 by agreement with Bernard VII, Count of Armagnac , the title was finally recognised by the King of France by letters dating from 18 November 1425, which definitively stabilized John's new ...