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32 Sentences With "lieges"

How to use lieges in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "lieges" and check conjugation/comparative form for "lieges". Mastering all the usages of "lieges" from sentence examples published by news publications.

His lieges make fools of themselves trying to justify or interpret his transcendentally nutty tweets and willfully ignorant comments.
Led by perhaps the most villainous antagonist of the series, Negan regularly takes half of everything his lieges produce in exchange for safety (mostly from himself).
Ministerials fulfilled a range of offices that ran their lieges' fiefs for them. They were found in the four traditional offices of a household: chamberlain, marshal, butler and seneschal. Conrad II von Kuchl served his succession of archbishop lieges as a financial adviser for forty years,Freed, NB 62. Werner von Lengfelden was master of Hohensalzburg Castle's huge kitchen,Freed, NB 53.
The Indian Penal Code (sect. 159) adopts the old English common law definition of affray, with the substitution of "actual disturbance of the peace for causing terror to the lieges".
It is the first 3D Iranian movie. It received two awards, the Grand Prix at the Lieges 3D festival as well as the jury’s prize at the Korean international 3D film festival..
In historical records the village was first mentioned in 1409. The first mention about Háj is from 1357 and 1409. In last decades of 18th century was property of family Keglevich. In the year 1715, there were 14 lieges families.
Sinestro: Annual #1 A charm that would be honed, refined and become more focused with age eventually growing in power and magnitude that it'd enabled her to bolster her lieges armies and could potentially have wrested control of his throne if tested.
The title indicates a person who is a sovereign ruler over other princes, and not a vassal. In contrast, the Indian titles of Maharaja or Raja, Yuvraj, Rajkumar or Kumar, and Senapati, reflect a range of European equivalent meanings, from King, Crown Prince, and Prince, to Duke, Count, or Lord. Shivaji adopted 'Chhatrapati' since other titles were bestowed by other lieges and paramount rulers, like the Adilshahis or Mughals.
Nobility was a social distinction, so even the unfree ministerials were considered higher in precedence than a free commoner.Delbrűck, 230. Being of a noble estate, ministerials were exempt from the more odious of corvée duties that other types of serfs performed, though some lieges would reserve the right to commandeer plow-teams and draft horses. Some ministerial women did perform household duties but were well-compensated for the chores.Arnold, 66.
John Deviock or Devyok (born c. 1420) was a Cornish gentleman and pirate from Ethy in the parish of St Winnow in Cornwall. In 1473 he was issued a Commission of array for the lieges of Cornwall to capture St Michael's Mount, which had been taken by the John de Vere, 13th Earl of Oxford and William Beaumont, 2nd Viscount Beaumont during a siege of twenty-three weeks against 6,000 of Edward IV's troops.
Woodger, 'Haute, Sir Nicholas', History of Parliament online. He had a notable Commission of array in July 1405, "for the resistance of the king's enemies in France and others, at present assembled with no small force in the parts of Picardy, who propose to besiege and destroy the king's castles and towns in those parts and harm the king's lieges and to go to Wales to strengthen the rebels there."Calendar of Patent Rolls, Henry IV, Vol. III: 1405–1408 (HMSO 1907), p.
Assach, in Welsh law, was an ancient form of compurgation used in Wales. A person on trial was allowed to call in 300 compurgators, including neighbors and acquaintances, who would swear that the accused person was speaking truth in making oath of his innocence. A statute from 1413 (I Henry V., c. 5), refers to the then late rebellion in Wales and complains that the Welshmen are still taking revenge for the deaths of their kinsmen against the king's faithful lieges.
Some of such lieges they keep in prison until they have paid ransom, or until they have purged themselves of the death of the said rebels, :"...par un assach selonc la custume de Galles, cest a dire par le serement de CCC hommes." :"...by an assach according to the custom of Wales, that is to say by the oath of 300 men." While the Welshmen were doing as they wished, they were still in part acting according to their notions of law by requiring three hundred compurgators.
Historians disagree about what to call the Normans in Ireland at different times in its existence, and in how to define this community's sense of collective identity. In his book Surnames of Ireland, Irish historian Edward MacLysaght makes a distinction between Hiberno-Norman and Anglo-Norman surnames. This sums up the fundamental difference between "Queen's English Rebels" and the Loyal Lieges. The Geraldines of Desmond or the Burkes of Connacht, for instance, could not accurately be described as Old English, for that was not their political and cultural world.
John was forfeited as a traitor by the Parliament of Scotland on 5 December 1548, for his crimes in January 1548 of assisting Grey of Wilton, keeping the House of Saltoun, and persuading lieges of Scotland to form leagues against Mary, Queen of Scots. On 5 December 1558, the forfeiture was reversed on the grounds that the procedure was flawed because Alexander was out of the country at the time. The sentence against Crichton of Brunstane was withdrawn in the same terms on the same day.National Archives of Scotland, PA2/10, f.38r-41v.
Anne Hill made her American début as an actor and dancer at New York's Park Theatre on 2 September 1840. She was a success, and considered as “one of the most versatile and useful actresses.” The Hills made their debut in Canada at the Theatre Royal, Montréal, 26 June 1843, and continued to be active at that theatre for six years. She was given good reviews and called the “most graceful dancer we have seen” and that she “astonished and delighted the lieges of Montreal by her charming performances.” During the theatre's closing periods in winter, the Hills ran a dancing academy.
This makes the relationship between lords very important, as some are vassals of others, and may only be recruited by their lieges. Recruiting a liege does not automatically recruit all his vassals, nor their respective vassals but it offers additional armed strength as well as access to the Lord's city or fortress. Lords may also cooperate, recruit and fight each other independently, making the world much more dynamic than the previous game. Hostile fortresses or cities may be sacked and taken ownership of, which become important sources of manpower as they slowly generate troops that can be used to replace those lost in battle elsewhere.
Following Seoan's death in 1400, his brother and chosen successor Giolla Iosa died just one month into his reign. Giolla Iosa's unexpected death so shortly after his inauguration left a power vacuum which Maelmordha, son of King Cu Chonnacht (1349-1365), exploited to proclaim himself king with the support of the clans of East Breifne. This was in competition to Eoghan na Feosaige, Seoan's son, who was supported by the English government in Dublin and the Anglo-Normans in Meath. Eoghan na Feosaige reaffirmed his acknowledgement that he and his kingdom were lieges to England and vowed to observe and fulfill all agreements made between them and his late father.
Providing free legal assistance in Scotland is based on the Poor's Roll of 1424: > "and gif there bee onie pure creature, for faulte of cunning, or expenses, > that cannot, nor may not follow his cause, the King for the love of GOD, > sall ordain the judge to purwey and get a leill and a wise Advocate, to > follow sik pure creatures causes" This was reinforced by a 1587 Act of the Scots Parliament: > "quhatsumever lieges of this Realme accused of treason, or for quatsumever > crime... full libertie to provide himselfe of Advocates and Praeloquutoures, > in competent numbers to defend his life, honour and land, against > quhatsumever accusation".
Patricia Cornwell, Portrait of a Killer: Jack the Ripper – Case Closed, p. 198. Berkeley Books, 2003. In his Dictionary of London, Charles Dickens Jr commented on the smallness of the tunnel: "there is not much head-room left, and it is not advisable for any but the very briefest of Her Majesty's lieges to attempt the passage in high-heeled boots, or with a hat to which he attaches any particular value." The Tower Subway in 1870 The Italian writer Edmondo De Amicis (1846–1908) gave a description of a passage through the subway in his Jottings about London: Tower Subway northern entrance kiosk at Tower Hill.
Retrieved 18 December 2014. The opera was performed in Hanover and Bad Pyrmont in 1790 using a German translation of the libretto entitled Der Geizige oder Die Liebe ist sinnreich ("The Miser, or Love is Ingenious"). There was a French version entitled Le Tuteur avare ("The Miserly Tutor") with a very freely adapted libretto by Jean-Louis Gabiot and additional music composed by Giuseppe Maria Cambini. It premiered at the Théâtre des Beaujolais in Paris in 1787 and was later performed in Versailles and Lieges. Another freely adapted libretto, this time in Spanish and written by Luciano Comella, was used for performances in Madrid in 1796 under the title El avaro.
Old Soteska Castle as depicted by Johann Weikhard von Valvasor (1679) The ruins of an older castle, known as Old Soteska Castle (, ), stand on a nearby hill. It was initially owned by the Lords of Soteska, and then by the Istrian branch of the Counts of Gorizia from 1335 to 1374. A nobleman was killed at the castle in the peasant uprising of 1573. The Lords of Scheyer, lieges of the Habsburgs, held the castle after this; they were enthusiastic Protestants during the Reformation, and one of them even supervised the Protestant schools and received a red leather-bound copy of the Dalmatin Bible in 1584.
The Yorkists, for their part, were declared to be the King's "true lieges", although any reassurance they took from this, comments the medievalist John Watts, may have been tempered by the knowledge that so also had been the three dead lords of St Albans. The Yorkists agreed to endow St Albans Abbey with a new chantry and £45 a year for two years for the monks to say masses for the slain. The Lancastrian lords, as the injured parties, had to make no reciprocal concessions to York and his allies. Egremont was required to make an independent bond of 4,000 marks towards the Nevilles to keep the peace with them in Yorkshire for ten years.
Alexander was forfeited as a traitor by the Parliament of Scotland on 14 December 1548, for his crimes in January of assisting Grey of Wilton, keeping the House of Saltoun, and persuading lieges of Scotland to form leagues against Mary, Queen of Scots. After his death, the date of which has not been established,Rogers, Charles (1876), 285 on 5 December 1558, the forfeiture was reversed in favour of his heir, John Crichton, on the grounds that the procedure was flawed because Alexander was out of the country at the time. The sentence against John Cockburn of Ormiston was withdrawn in the same terms on the same day.National Archives of Scotland, PA2/10, f.38r-41v.
Also said to be granted was Common of pasture throughout the forest, sufficient wood for their buildings, and freedom from toll throughout the whole of England. It was also claimed that Rufus had granted to the nuns, within their nunnery and lands adjoining, all the liberties which he had conceded to the monastery of Westminster without molestation of any of the king's sheriffs, escheators, bailiffs or lieges. A claim to the liberty of sanctuary was also made, which was probably related to a square pillar, inscribed with a cross and the words 'Sanctuarium 1088,' which was placed on rising ground above the nunnery.According to Wilson, a drawing of the 'sanctuary stone or pillar at Nunnery,' is in B.M. Add.
On October 27, 1473 Commission to John Arundell, knight, John Colshyll, knight, Robert Willoughby, knight, John Crocker, knight, John Fortescue, Henry Bodrugan, John Sturgeon, Thomas Whalisburgh, John Trenowith, Thomas Trefrye, John Arundell, John Tremayne, John Carmynowe Richard Eggecombe, John Devyok, Oliver Wyse, Edward Assheton, John Pentyre, John Moyle, William TreTenoar, John Penpons, John Wydeslade the younger and William Horde to array the king's lieges of the county of Cornwall, and of other counties adjacent if necessary, to conquer John, late earl of Oxford, and other rebels who have entered St. Michael's Mount, Co. Cornwall, and to bring back the mount into the king's hands and provide for its safe-custody and defence.
Gussalli was born in Bologna (Northern Italy) on Dec. 18, 1885. From his earliest years he evinced a knack for mechanical engineering, building as he was a teenager, mechanical toys, steam-engined model cars and real model aeroplanes capable of flight. Like many astronautic pioneers, he was a keen reader of Science Fiction literature and “in his backyard he experimented with the launching of rockets, single, multiple, loaded with ballast, registering their behaviour in flight, their ascent, more or less straight, and extracting theories from such observations” as his friend Luigi Rossetti reports. Judging engineering diplomas ‘too much theoretical and mathematical’, he studied physics at Pavia and later at the Glons-Lieges Polytechnic in Belgium where he became an industrial engineer.
King Henry I's Latin charter of 1133 is summarised as follows in English: :"Charter of Henry I addressed to the Archbishop of Rouen and all his officers and lieges. He [as king of the English and of Normandy] gives for the weal of the souls of his father and mother, his relatives (Latin: parentes) and his sons and for the remission of his sins and the [good] estate and safety of his realm, to the church of St. John the Baptist and the Hospital of Falaise, founded by Goinfrid, and the clerks there serving God, according to the rule of the blessed Augustine, for their use and that of Christ's poor, whom they may receive there the mill etc. [as in the preceding charter]".
James V had confirmed him as the owner of several estates, and in April 1538 created a free-barony of Over Barnton. The gift narrated; > "his great services to the navy in time of war for the defence of Scots > lieges and merchants against the English and other pirates, occasionally > bringing himself into great expense, and other praiseworthy acts in the time > of James IV and himself in his minority, as a comptroller and treasurer. > largis sumptibus naves tempore guerre pro liegiorum et marcatorum suorum > contra Anglos et alios piratos defensione, ejus personam quibusvis > temporibus necessariis periculis exponendo: et pro aliis laudabilibus actis > patri suo et sibbi in minori sua etate factis in thesaurarie et compotorum > rotulatoris officiis."Register of The Great Seal, 1513-1546, (1883), 396, > no. 1779.
Sanudo portrays this as the origin of the Venetian assistance to the triarchs, and claims that the triarchs remained imprisoned until after Villehardouin himself was captured at Pelagonia in 1259, but this may in fact reflect a brief imprisonment, since the two triarchs were clearly at liberty in June 1256 and January 1257. On 14 June 1256, a treaty was signed between the Lombard triarchs and Gradenigo at Thebes, the chief residence of Guy I de la Roche. The triarchs repudiated their vassalage to Achaea and declared themselves lieges of the Commune of Venice, as token of which they would send an annual gift of cloths of gold to Venice, one each for the Doge and St. Mark's Cathedral, and hold festive liturgies in Venice's honour at Christmas, Easter, and the feast-day of St. Mark. The previous agreements of 1209 and 1216 were renewed, but, while the triarchs and their domains were freed from any duties and the considerable tribute that they paid to Venice until then, they in turn gave up the rights to all customs revenue to the Republic.
Based on an agreement concluded in October 1205, the Podestà and his councillors (consiliarii) formed part of the executive council (consilium) of the Latin Empire, which was responsible for defence and foreign policy matters, as well as adjudicating disputes between the Emperor and his feudal lieges, alongside the Emperor and the "Frankish magnates" (magnates Francigenarum). However, the Venetian position was ambiguous: as Filip Van Tricht explains, Venice was "at one and the same time an independent state and a feudal partner in the empire". Thus the Podestà conducted his own negotiations and concluded trade agreements with neighbouring rulers, although this independence did not extend to other areas of foreign policy, and the commercial agreements appear to have been largely aligned with the Latin Empire's policy at the time. The tension between Venice and the Emperor is evident in the frequent attempts by the emperors and powerful barons of the Latin Empire to intrude in nominally Venetian jurisdictions, and restrict and even revert Venetian claims and rights deriving from the Empire's foundational treaties of 1204–1205.
If the player has many characters, the most active character would be allowed for wizardhood. As a wizard, he will have to choose a domain in which to serve, and once his application is accepted by the Liege of the domain, he will be allowed to code for it. Immortal players are specifically divided into different groups: apprentices (players who are currently not linked to any domain available), wizards (the majority of immortals assigned to domains), archwizards (head of a group of wizards with a determined task, like the Arch of Players in charge of verifying abuse of rules and solve conflicts between mortal players, the Arch of Events in charge of creating special events for the players to participate in, and the Arch of Balance, in charge of keeping the balance between the players and the MUD, and between the guilds themselves), lieges (wizards in charge of a domain), stewards (liege's assistants), keepers (wizards who maintain the physical hardware, update the operating system where the MUD is running, the gamedriver and the mudlib), mages (retired or not active wizards) and pilgrims (invited people).

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