10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «KINGDOM OF ARLES»
Discover the use of
Kingdom of Arles in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
Kingdom of Arles and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Northern Europe: International Dictionary
of Historic Places
In the late twelfth century the kingdom began to be called the Kingdom of Arles,
with the name Burgundy reserved for the duchy.) The city of Arles regained some
of its former splendor as the capital of the new kingdom, ruled first by Rudolf II.
Trudy Ring, Noelle Watson, Paul Schellinger, 2013
2
Medieval France. A Companion to French Studies
there was still hesitation between the two possible ways of acquiring the kingdom
of Arles — whether to acquire it gradually by the detachment and absorption of
small parts, or to acquire it as a whole by the concession of the crown of Arles to ...
3
Concise Encyclopeida
Of World History
In 936 Welf II of Bavaria formed the kingdom of Arles, including Transjurane
Burgundy (later mostly Switzerland, south of the French duchy of Burgundy) and
embracing also the future provinces of Lyonnais, Dauphine, Franche Comte, and
...
Carlos Ramirez-Faria, 2007
4
Mysteries
of Templar Treasure & the Holy Grail: The Secrets ...
Shortly before 1200 he was employed by Emperor Otto IV, who promoted him to
be Marshall of the Kingdom of Arles, where, despite being in holy orders, he
married a rich and beautiful young heiress. His Otia Imperialia trilogy was written
for ...
Lionel Fanthrope, Patricia Fanthrope, 2004
5
The New Cambridge Medieval History: Volume 5, C.1198-c.1300
Apart from the inclusion of Narbonne, this description is a reasonably accurate
one of what in the thirteenth century was usually called the 'kingdom of Arles',
although, as Howden also quite correctly noted, 'the emperor was never able to ...
David Abulafia, Rosamond McKitterick, 1999
6
Time Out South
of France: Provence and the Cote D'Azur
At its height, the kingdom of Arles included Burgundy and part of Provence – and
in 1178, Holy Roman Emperor Frederick Barbarossa pitched up and was
crowned King of Arles in the newly finished cathedral. Gradually, as the sea
retreated, ...
Orange was no part of France then; it was a member of the kingdom of Arles, and
its counts were vassals of the Emperor under the Counts of Toulouse, who
claimed the imperial fief of the Provencal March. The greatest of the Crusading
counts ...
Theodore Andrea Cook, 2001
8
Historical Atlases: The First Three Hundred Years, 1570-1870
Le Long's Bibliothèque lists Gerard Mercator as producing a map called “The
Kingdom of Arles.” The full map title, in theGallia volume of the original Mercator
atlas, is less exclusive: “Southern Aquitaine. Kingdom of Arles.” The map
endured ...
9
The Origins
of Modern Germany
... away from Germany, was pliable and resourceful; it was willing at all times to
barter imperial pretensions in exchange for tangible territorial concessions in the
German Netherlands and in Lorraine, in Burgundy or the kingdom of Arles.
Geoffrey Barraclough, 1984
10
The French in the
Kingdom of Sicily, 1266–1305
well knew that such arrangements could be a preliminary to a renewed claim of
the house of Anjou to the traditional kingdom of Arles, a claim Philippe was
determined to refute.31 On the other hand, he must have been pleased with the
rapid ...