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A History of the County of Oxford
… son Roger. 42 He joined the rebellion against William Rufus in 1095 and Begbroke again escheated to the Crown but …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… of William the Conqueror, and his successor, William Rufus, who had a palace here. In 1089, a priory for Cluniac … Archbishop of Canterbury. To this monastery William Rufus and some of his successors were great benefactors. …
Old and New London
… were both traceable as late as the year 1876. William Rufus enriched the abbey by the grant of the manor of …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… ancestor Bideford had been granted in the reign of William Rufus, obtained for it a market and a fair; and, in 1573, …
Old and New London
… a horse-trough at the "White Horse" inn, Leicester; and Rufus's stirrup, from a descendant of the charcoal-burner who …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… Earl of Buckingham, possessed by grant from William Rufus the whole landed property of this parish, which was …
A Topographical Dictionary of Wales
… the appellation of Brycheiniog. In the reign of William Rufus, Bernard Newmarch, encouraged by the success of his …
A New History of London
… of William the Conqueror in 1087, his second son William Rufus, or the red haired, under the sanction of his father's … called Godwin's sands. The accidental death of William Rufus afforded his young brother Henry, then in England, …
A New History of London
… or in what manner, is no where recorded. Indeed William Rufus is said to have exempted all ships entering the river …
A New History of London
… and Commons. This hall was originally built by William Rufus as an addition to the palace of Westminster; and was …
Displaying 41 - 50 of 620