「Marcher」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

Marcher

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  • Thyra had fallen in love with Vilhelm Frimann Marcher, a Lieutenant in the Cavalry, which resulted
  • Marcher au charbon, Gallimard, 1978
  • It replaced an earlier castle built by the Marcher baron Philip de Braose, who claimed the area
  • am de Braose, 4th Lord of Bramber, a powerful Marcher baron and court favourite of King John of Eng
  • Lordships of the Marcher barons
  • It was a marcher borough founded by the Knights Hospitaller in
  • it was the civil parish corresponding to the marcher borough of Laugharne.
  • It is a marcher borough.
  • It was a marcher borough.
  • It was once a marcher borough.
  • rve Anglesey and Gwynedd as a whole, although Marcher Coast 96.3 had been broadcasting to a small p
  • l weekday drivetime show from Wrexham for the Marcher, Coast and Wirral areas, although Coast retai
  • espite the changes in ownership, Classic Gold Marcher continued to share facilities with the GWR Gr
  • when the county of Glamorgan (as well as the Marcher county of Monmouthshire) formed a separate li
  • imer, 1st Baron Wigmore another very powerful Marcher dynasty.
  • stations in the network were re-branded, and Marcher Gold became Classic Gold Marcher.
  • Gold North Wales and Cheshire (originally Marcher Gold and later Classic Gold Marcher) is a Bri
  • s on how many stations one company could own, Marcher Gold became part of the Classic Gold radio ne
  • In November 2005 it was announced that the Marcher Group's radio stations, including Marcher, we
  • d slightly again in 2001 after GWR bought The Marcher Group, to Wirral's Buzz 97.1, in line with GW
  • It has been suggested that marcher jurisdictions even overlapped within province
  • Marcher killed himself on 4 January 1872 after a conf
  • -Preceding unsigned comment added by Marcher Lord (talk • contribs) 17:14, 12 November 200
  • William Marshal was the next Marcher Lord to strengthen Usk castle.
  • 29) was an Anglo-Norman nobleman, active as a marcher lord on the border with Wales.
  • I de Clifford (1113-1190) was an Anglo-Norman marcher lord of Bronllys Castle on the Welsh border,
  • he powerful Cambro-Norman de Braose dynasty), Marcher Lord of Gower and husband to Margaret Ferch L
  • anch (1962) (1230 William De Braose, a Norman Marcher Lord was hanged for an affair with Joan, lady
  • The powerful Marcher Lord Pain Fitz John acquired Grosmont in the
  • In the play William de Braose, a young Marcher Lord, is discovered with Siwan in Llywelyn's
  • r 1330), was an English nobleman and powerful Marcher lord, who had gained many estates in the Wels
  • d another supporter in the Earl of Arundel, a marcher lord.
  • ith the tacit understanding of Cadwaladr, the marcher lords mounted incursions into Wales.
  • h of the territory was divided up between the Marcher Lords including Roger de Montgomerie, Ralph d
  • ebellion, aided by some of the more prominent Marcher Lords in 1316.
  • r" claims Simon lost the support of the Welsh marcher lords due to his alliance with Llywelyn ap Gr
  • s a baronial revolt between 1321-2 led by the Marcher Lords Roger Mortimer, Baron Mortimer and Hump
  • such as the specifics of inheritance, and the marcher lords retained most of their independence, as
  • n the Welsh and the Mortimer family of Norman Marcher Lords in 1146.
  • finally relieved from the interference of the Marcher Lords until the reign of William and Mary.
  • he Tower of London in 1322 for having led the Marcher lords in a revolt against King Edward II in w
  • gles against King Edward I of England and the Marcher Lords and because of this the abbey suffered
  • Initially created by the Marcher Lords of Pembroke in the 14th century from th
  • He founded the Mortimer dynasty of Marcher Lords who held power in the Welsh Marches thr
  • f three important border castles built by the Marcher Lords after the Norman invasion of Wales to c
  • gland and the Principality of Wales, in which Marcher lords had specific rights, held to some exten
  • se for the Welsh to recover lands lost to the Marcher lords after Stephen de Blois had displaced hi
  • entury as the border stronghold of one of the Marcher Lords, Roger de Lacy.
  • de Braose, of the de Braose dynasty of Welsh Marcher Lords, who inherited the tenancy.
  • Mortimer, a member of the Mortimer family of Marcher Lords, many of whom were Earl of March.
  • is named after the Mortimer family of ruling Marcher Lords, often titled Earl of March, whose rise
  • ude a Castle Mound that was owned by powerful Marcher Lords, who had a base in Ludlow.
  • family dynasty of Norman and medieval English Marcher Lords, holding key posts and vital Lordships
  • h-century stronghold garrisoned by one of the Marcher Lords.
  • Bramber, another important Norman dynasty of Marcher Lords.
  • Llywelyn the Great of Gwynedd and married two Marcher lords.
  • Before 1536 Longtown was in the marcher lordship of Ewyas.
  • Before 1536 Clodock was in the marcher lordship of Ewyas.
  • Pratt, Derek, "The Marcher lordship of Chirk, 1329-1330", Trans of Denbi
  • "Barons Grey de Ruthyn" and the head of their marcher lordship of Dyffryn Clwyd.
  • St. David's was firmly occupied by the Norman Marcher lordship of Pembroke by the early 12th centur
  • at Newport, Pembrokeshire as a seat for his ' Marcher Lordship' of Cemais and Llangynllo Church.
  • s a cantref of Medieval Wales and from 1282 a marcher lordship.
  • See also: List of Marcher lordships
  • in Wales Act, 1535, converting the remaining Marcher Lordships into counties.
  • Only then were the marcher lordships (covering the rest of Wales) brough
  • Glamorgan County History:The Middle Ages: The Marcher Lordships of Glamorgan and Morgannwg and Gowe
  • ed to be administered separately, rather like marcher lordships.
  • Traditionally Skansen marcher on Sundays, but this was changed to Saturdays
  • Marcher Radio Group was purchased by GWR Group in 200
  • These stations were owned and operated by the Marcher Radio Group until the GWR Group's purchase in
  • It was previously part of the Marcher Radio Group, but was rebranded as Heart 103 o
  • It remained as Marcher Sound until 1989 when the FM and AM frequenci
  • inally broadcast as three separate stations - Marcher Sound began broadcasting to North East Wales
  • Marcher Sound's final logo
  • Heart Cheshire and North East Wales (formerly Marcher Sound), Heart Wirral (formerly Wirral's Buzz)
  • is the "sister" station to local FM station, Marcher Sound, launched by Marcher Radio Group in 198
  • In the early days of Marcher Sound, the evening programmes of the station
  • n 983, Zeitz was overrun by the Sorbs and the marcher territory fell into the hands of the Slavs.
  • Sales' fellow marcher, white Episcopal seminarian Jonathan Myrick D