Examples of Edward the Confessor in the following topics:
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- William the Conqueror's rule was marked by struggles to consolidate his hold over England, which led to the compiling of the Domesday Book, a manuscript surveying the land of England in order to understand the holdings of each household.
- The lands of the resisting English elite were confiscated; some of the elite fled into exile.
- Other effects of the conquest included the introduction of Norman French as the language of the elites and changes in the composition of the upper classes, as William reclaimed territory to be held directly by the king and settled new Norman nobility on the land.
- The survey's ultimate purpose was to determine what taxes had been owed under Edward the Confessor.
- The Domesday survey therefore recorded the names of the new landholders and the assessments on which their taxes were to be paid.
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- William's claim to the English throne derived from his familial relationship with the childless Anglo-Saxon King Edward the Confessor, who may have encouraged William's hopes for the throne.
- Edward died in January 1066 and was succeeded by his brother-in-law Harold Godwinson.
- The king also had a group of personal armsmen known as housecarls, who formed the backbone of the royal forces.
- Other sources stated that no one knew how Harold died because the press of battle was so tight around the king that the soldiers could not see who struck the fatal blow.
- The tapestry depicts the loss of the Anglo-Saxon troops to the Norman forces.
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- Norman invaders arrived at the mouth of the river Seine in 911.
- The construction of the present building took place between the early 13th and the 16th centuries.
- Its west portal, the decoration of the spire of the tower, and its stained glass are among the features which make it one of the finest churches of the Rouen diocese.
- Edward the Confessor was brought up in Normandy, and in 1042 he brought masons to work on Westminster Abbey, the first Romanesque building in England.
- The Church of St.
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- The reign of Henry III's son Edward I (1272–1307), was rather more successful.
- After the disastrous reign of Edward II, which saw military losses and the Great Famine, Edward III reigned from 1327–1377, restoring royal authority and transforming the Kingdom of England into the most efficient military power in Europe.
- Edward had inherited the duchy of Aquitaine, and as duke of Aquitaine he was a vassal to Philip VI of France.
- Edward III and his son the Black Prince led their armies on a largely successful campaign across France.
- After the treaties of London failed, Edward launched the Rheims campaign.
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- This was presumably in error, as that elector also separately voted for Edwards for vice president.
- On July 6, 2004, John Kerry selected John Edwards as his running mate, shortly before the 2004 Democratic National Convention in Boston held later that month.
- Heading into the convention, the Kerry/Edwards ticket unveiled their new slogan—a promise to make America "stronger at home and more respected in the world."
- Red denotes states won by Bush/Cheney, Blue denotes those won by Kerry/Edwards.
- The split vote in Minnesota denotes an elector's vote counted for Vice President nominee John Edwards.
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- Lawrence Gronlund and Edward Bellamy were two thinkers whose ideas about socialism were influential in the last decades of the 19th century.
- He graduated from the Law School of the University of Copenhagen in 1865, and moved to the United States in 1867.
- The only obstacle he saw was the nation's race problem.
- Edward Bellamy was an American author and socialist, most famous for his utopian novel, Looking Backward, a Rip Van Winkle-like tale set in the distant future (the year 2000).
- For the next three and a half years, Bellamy devoted his time to politics, published his magazine, worked to influence the platform of the People's Party, and publicized the Nationalist movement in the popular press.
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- Jonathan Edward's congregation was involved in a revival later called the "Frontier Revivals" in the mid-1730s.
- The leaders of the Great Awakening, such as Jonathan Edwards and George Whitefield, had little interest in merely engaging parishioners' intellects; rather, they sought a strong emotional response from their congregations that might yield the workings and experiential evidence of saving grace.
- Joseph Tracy, the minister, historian, and preacher who gave this religious phenomenon its name in his influential 1842 book The Great Awakening, saw the First Great Awakening as a precursor to the American Revolution.
- The evangelical movement of the 1740s played a key role in the development of democratic thought, as well as the belief of the free press and the belief that information should be shared and completely unbiased and uncontrolled.
- These concepts ushered in the period of the American Revolution.
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- Edward earned a 1400 on his SAT.
- Edward's percentile is the proportion of people who do not get as high as a 1400.
- Edward is at the 37th percentile.
- Use the results of Example 3.11 to compute the proportion of SAT takers who did better than Edward.
- 3:12: If Edward did better than 37% of SAT takers, then about 63% must have done better than him.
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- Interest in this type of learning, spearheaded by Edward C.
- Edward Tolman (1886–1959) first documented this type of learning in a study on rats in 1930.
- The first group received no reward for finishing, the second received a reward, and the third received no reward for the first 10 days but then received a reward for the final eight.
- Tolman theorized that the rats in the third group had indeed been learning a "cognitive map" of the maze over the first ten days; however, they'd had no incentive to run the maze without any errors.
- Edward Tolman was a behavioral psychologist who first demonstrated latent learning in rats.
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- Lawrence Gronlund and Edward Bellamy were two thinkers whose ideas about socialism were influential in the last decades of the 19th century.
- He graduated from the Law School of the University of Copenhagen in 1865, and moved to the United States in 1867.
- The only obstacle he saw was the nation's race problem.
- Edward Bellamy was an American author and socialist, most famous for his utopian novel, Looking Backward, a Rip Van Winkle-like tale set in the distant future (the year 2000).
- For the next three and a half years, Bellamy devoted his time to politics, published his magazine, worked to influence the platform of the People's Party, and publicized the Nationalist movement in the popular press.