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Book
A most exact list of the names of the knights, citizens, burgesses, and barons of the Cinque-Ports of England and Wales : for the Parliament begun at Westminster the eighth day of May, in the thirteenth year of the reign of King Charles the Second, 1661.
Author:
Year: 1663 Publisher: London : Printed for Tho. Walkley, and are to be sold by most book-sellers,

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eebo-0203


Book
The great and ancient charter of the Cinque-Ports of our lord the King, and the members of the same
Authors: ---
Year: 1682 Publisher: London : printed by T.N. for the Mayor and jurats of Hasting,

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Keywords

Cinque Ports --- Charters


Book
The barons of the Cinque Ports, two ancient towns, and their members breviat, which they humbly offer to the honorable the knights and burgesses of the House of Commons of Parliament concering their grieuances : First, that they are restrained to trade into the Low Countries and Germany: Secondly, that they are restrained of free buying and selling in London:.
Year: 1621 Publisher: [London? : s.n.,

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Book
A shedule for the Masters of the Cinque Ports
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Year: 1627

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Digital
A collection of the statutes relating to the Cinque Ports
Authors: ---
Year: 1726 Publisher: London Printed by John Baskett ...

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Book
The personal history of Walmer Castle and its lords warden
Authors: ---
Year: 1927 Publisher: London, : Macmillan,

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Book
Art of the Amistad and The Portrait of Cinqué
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ISBN: 144225341X 9781442253414 9781442253407 Year: 2016 Publisher: Lanham : Rowman & Littlefield,

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Tracing the revolutionary creation of what art historian Stephen Eisenman calls "a highly individualized, noble portrait of an African man," Art of the Amistad and The Portrait of Cinqué is built around visual and material culture, and thus does not use images merely as illustration, but tells its story through the wide range of images and materials presented. While the Portrait of Cinqué seems to sit quietly behind Plexiglass at a local history museum, the impact of this 175-year old painting is palpable; very few portraits from the 19th century-let alone a portrait of a black man-remain a re


Book
To all mayors, iurates, constables, bayliffes, ministers, churchwardens, and to all other his maiesties officers within the libertie of the Cinque Ports, as it shall appertain
Author:
Year: 1619 Publisher: [London : T. Purfoot],

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Book
13 July 1617. The Lords of the Councell to the L. Le[ut?] of the Cinque Ports

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Book
The world the plague made : the Black Death and the rise of Europe
Author:
ISBN: 9780691215662 0691215669 9780691222875 0691222878 Year: 2022 Publisher: Princeton : Princeton University Press,

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In 1346, Europe and its neighbours were beset by a terrible plague. In proportion to population, it may have been the most lethal catastrophe in human history. A sudden halving of the population that would not recover for centuries. It came to be called 'The Black Death' and it marked the onset of Western Europe's global expansion. This startling paradox is central to Plaguing History, offering as it does a new two-word answer to an old two-word question: Why Europe? Y. Pestis. The Black Death not only halved populations, but also doubled the average per capita endowment of everything. For the first time in history large proportions of Europe's population had a disposable income. Demand for goods - silks, sugar, spices, furs, gold - grew. So too for slaves. Europe expanded across the globe to satisfy such demands. But as well as providing the motives for expansion, plague added the means. Labour scarcity drove a turn towards more use of water-power, wind-power and gunpowder. Innumerable technologies - water-powered blast furnaces, the Atlantic sailing ship, musketry, eye-glasses - were 'pressure-cooked' into existence or improvement by the consequences of plague. If plague had this effect in Europe, why not in the Middle East too, which also suffered from the Black Death pandemic? This books answer is that it did: Ottoman and Safavid empires also flourished in the wake of plague. Morocco, Oman, and the Iran-based Mughals established colonial empires, at a distance from their metropolises, just like those of Europe. Plague-boosted European expansion was actually West Eurasian, and entangled with still other peoples, notably the Chinese, to reconfigure global history. In this book, James Belich of Oxford aims to deliver a new type of global history, one that ranges economic, ecological, bio-technological and cultural questions alongside one another to better understand the transformative connectivity of globalization. --

Keywords

Black Death. --- 476-1492. --- Europe --- Europe. --- History --- History of Europe --- anno 1300-1399 --- anno 1400-1499 --- anno 1500-1599 --- Epidemics --- Medicine, Medieval --- Plague --- Peste noire. --- 476-1492 --- Council of Europe countries --- Eastern Hemisphere --- Eurasia --- Northern Europe --- Southern Europe --- Western Europe --- Abolitionism. --- Adultery. --- Amor Vincit Omnia (Caravaggio). --- Antonine Plague. --- Black rat. --- Bribery. --- Bruges. --- Bubonic plague. --- Burnt Norton. --- Child mortality. --- Cinque Ports. --- Civil war. --- Colonialism. --- Communism. --- Contraband. --- Coromandel Coast. --- Corruption in India. --- Cossack host. --- Death. --- Debasement. --- Devaluation. --- Disaster. --- Disease. --- Edward VIII. --- Enfilade and defilade. --- Epidemic. --- Euboea. --- Eunuch. --- Eurasia. --- Extortion. --- Funeral Blues. --- Greek tragedy. --- Habitat destruction. --- Harry Ransom Center. --- Idiosyncrasy. --- Indian Ocean. --- Industrialisation. --- Infection. --- Inflation. --- Influenza. --- Institution. --- Journey to a War. --- London. --- Lübeck. --- Maghreb. --- Malaria. --- Mamluk Sultanate (Cairo). --- Mamluk. --- Marxism. --- Massacre of the Innocents. --- Measles. --- Mortal sin. --- Mughal Empire. --- Muhammad. --- Nawabs of Bengal and Murshidabad. --- Ottoman Empire. --- Outbreak. --- Pamphlet. --- Pandemic. --- Pathogen. --- Peasant. --- Persecution. --- Phrygia. --- Plague (disease). --- Plague of Justinian. --- Plague pit. --- Pneumonic plague. --- Poetry. --- Pogrom. --- Postal order. --- Privateer. --- Racism. --- Robin Skelton. --- Rodent. --- Safavid dynasty. --- Sapping. --- Second plague pandemic. --- Serfdom. --- Ship. --- Slash-and-burn. --- Smallpox. --- Smuggling. --- Spice trade. --- Stanza. --- Stephen Spender. --- Sumptuary law. --- Sylvatic plague. --- The Bacchae. --- Triangular trade. --- Typhoid fever. --- Typhus. --- Typographical error. --- War of succession. --- War. --- Warfare. --- World War I. --- World history. --- Yellow fever. --- Yersinia pestis.

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