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  1. However, several attempts have been made to differentiate chronological phases within the La Jolla Complex: -- Malcolm J. Rogers (1945) proposed two developmental phases, which at various times he designated as La Jolla and Encinitas, Littoral I and II, and La Jolla I and II (Harding 1951). La Jolla II was said to be distinguishable from La ...

  2. The immediate practical cause of the rebellion was Henry II's decision to bequeath three castles, which were within the realm of the Young King's inheritance, to his youngest son, John, as part of the arrangements for John's marriage to the daughter of the Count of Maurienne.

    • April 1173-30 September 1174
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  4. I've read my textbook which says that the English King Henry the III gave up all other English lands except for Gascony and swore loyalty to the French king. I don't understand his reasoning though. Wouldn't giving up these lands and being a vassal of the French reduce how much power his kingdom has?

  5. In the internal politics, Henry III could maintain his Duchy far away from the wars where he was constantly involved, and in consequence, the economy improved and with this the prestige and wealth of Głogów increased.

  6. son Edward I. Henry III (born October 1, 1207, Winchester, Hampshire, Eng.—died November 16, 1272, London) was the king of England from 1216 to 1272. In the 24 years (1234–58) during which he had effective control of the government, he displayed such indifference to tradition that the barons finally forced him to agree to a series of major ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  7. Henry III (born Oct. 28, 1017—died Oct. 5, 1056, Pfalz Bodfeld, near Goslar, Saxony [Germany]) was the duke of Bavaria (as Henry VI, 1027–41), duke of Swabia (as Henry I, 1038–45), German king (from 1039), and Holy Roman emperor (1046–56), a member of the Salian dynasty. The last emperor able to dominate the papacy, he was a powerful ...

  8. English Society and the Crusade (Oxford, 1988), 219-32 and B. K. U. Weiler, Henry III of England and the Staufen Empire 1216-1272 (Woodbridge, 2006), ch.7 ‘The Sicilian business’. This chapter is an expanded version, with a different emphasis, of Weiler’s earlier ‘Henry III and the Sicilian business: a reinterpretation’,

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