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  1. Hace 3 días · The best Wikipedia experience on your Mobile device. Ad-free and free of charge, forever. With the official Wikipedia app, you can search and explore 40+ million articles in 300+ languages, no...

  2. Hace 5 días · After the Castilian conquest of the city in 1248, the site was progressively rebuilt and replaced by new palaces and gardens. Among the most important of these is a richly-decorated Mudéjar-style palace built by Pedro I during the 1360s. (thanks, Wikipedia for the help explaining this).

  3. Hace 3 días · In 1316 it was held in dower by the first Sir John Grey's relict Margaret and her husband Robert Morby, from the 1330s to 1360s all or part was held by Sir Ralph de Grey, presumably a relative, and in the later 1360s the 2nd Lord Grey leased the quarter for their lives to Edmund Giffard and his wife; a small part was held by the Quatremayns family in the late 14th century and early 15th.

  4. Hace 3 días · The third published edition of an anonymous Middle English translation of Christine de Pisan’s L’Epistre d’Othéa, a story based in the legend of Troy, is edited from a single surviving fifteenth-century manuscript (London, British Library, MS Harley 838) and titled for the first time An Epistle of Noble Poetrye.

  5. Hace 16 horas · 1950s. 1959 in art – Birth of Caio Fonseca, Death of Frank Lloyd Wright, Sir Jacob Epstein. 1958 in art – Frank Stella begins black pinstripe paintings; Birth of Brian O'Connor (artist) and Don Yeomans. 1957 in art – Death of David Bomberg, Diego Rivera, Jack Butler Yeats; Birth of Lawrence Paul Yuxweluptun.

  6. Hace 4 días · Stepney church stood roughly midway between the Thames and the Colchester road by 1180, (fn. 32) and may imply a parsonage and possibly other residents nearby. Excavations in Stepney High Street opposite the church showed no trace of habitation between 700 B.C. and c. 1300, (fn. 33) but two customary cottages owing smokepennies lay on the west ...

  7. Hace 5 días · Introduction. The town of Witney, (fn. 1) by the river Windrush some 10 miles (16 km.) west of Oxford, originated as a planned medieval market town and borough, laid out by a bishop of Winchester in probably the late 12th or early 13th century within a large pre-Conquest estate.