Example sentences of "of england [conj] the " in BNC.

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1 Among these tracts were two written by a Scotsman , James Harryson or Henderson , merchant of Edinburgh , who had joined Somerset in 1544 and been an English pensioner since 1546 : An Exhortion to the Scottes ( 1547 ) and The Godly and Golden Booke for Concorde of England and Scotland ( 1548 ) , which remained unprinted because , ironically enough , the Scot was continuing the propaganda battle on behalf of England after the English had withdrawn from it .
2 A FRESH row brewed last night over the contentious Channel Tunnel rail link through the south-east of England after the Labour Party claimed it had obtained full details of the route .
3 Chroniclers and poets in their embittered criticism of papal initiatives for peace were scarcely less vehement than the lords and commons in parliament , and when at last , in 1378 , an Italian pope was elected , an Englishman at Rome rejoiced because ‘ Previous popes and their cardinals had been greater enemies of the kingdom of England than the king of France himself . ’
4 Neither the extreme north of England nor the south coast had to endure the kind of onslaught that brought a plaintive cry from the Prior of St Thibaut-des-Brûlês , south-east of Paris , describing how an English force had burnt his village and ransomed the inhabitants and asking those who dwelt in towns and castles whether their suffering was anything like his .
5 On 27 April 1991 the applicant informed the Bank of England that the company was in financial difficulty .
6 This is the main issue of principle which I have to decide , and is one on which the defendants side with the plaintiffs against the submission on the part of the Bank of England that the answer to this question is in the affirmative .
7 When the Secretary of State announced in August this year the route that would be followed by the high-speed link , it was a tremendous disappointment to the local authorities and consortiums in the north of England that the link would come from the east through Stratford to King 's Cross .
8 This was common to much of England but the local feature was the use of flints as a building material rather than the freestone carved out of quarries elsewhere .
9 The chairman and deputy chairman of the Panel are appointed by the Governor of the Bank of England but the Panel 's day-to-day functions are carried out by the Director General and his executive staff who are seconded from the Bank of England and various organisations within the City of London .
10 When he spoke about north Yorkshire , my right hon. Friend the Member for Selby ( Mr. Alison ) said that it would be unwise for any Government to impose the same pattern on every part of England because the differences between one part of the country and another are so great .
11 It meant he could go and talk to the governor of the Bank of England and the chairmen of any of the clearing banks whenever he felt the need .
12 Both the Bank of England and the Audit Commission had blessed swaps as tools for managing interest-rate risk .
13 The BBC is rather like a cross between the Church of England and the Post Office .
14 For example , it may come as something of a surprise to find that , during the English Civil War , the Parliamentarian party , which controlled London and the mint in the Tower , emphasised its legitimacy by continuing to issue coinage in the king 's name , whereas at the Royalist mint of Oxford the king 's coinage proclaims : ‘ RELIG PROT LEG ANG LIBER PAR ’ ( ’ The religion of the Protestants , the laws of England and the liberty of Parliament ’ ) .
15 Roman Catholic bishops and clan chieftains would even up the balance , and Ireland might boast a Second Chamber that would be the envy of England and the world .
16 Annual Councils continued and there were special conferences on the Education Bill of 1896 , the Armenian massacres , the ‘ Ritualist Crisis ’ in the Church of England and the 300th anniversary of Cromwell 's birth .
17 Also during 1963 , there were conversations about unification between the Church of England and the Methodist Church , but they came to nothing .
18 He was a fervent high-churchman but abhorred any association between the high-church wing of the Church of England and the Roman Catholic Church .
19 The General Synod of the Church of England and the Methodist Conference were the events ; as you expect they are quite different .
20 With particular pride he notes how in the crisis of 1124 , when the king of England and the emperor were allied against him , and Henry V planned an attack on Rheims , Louis put himself dramatically under the protection of St Denis , ‘ the special patron and singular protector after God of the kingdom ’ ; how he came to the saint and begged him to defend his kingdom , preserve his person and resist his enemies , as the saint was accustomed to do .
21 ‘ His , er , surcoat has both the lions of England and the lilies of France because we were laying claim to the disputed French throne at the time .
22 It says a great deal for Saxon resilience that the Sussex settlements do not seem to have reverted to wholesale waste , and the pressure was greatly liked in 1017 when Cnut was elected king of England and the country passed under a Scandinavian aegis for the next half century or so .
23 ‘ The Church of England and the monarchy are connected and a crisis in one is mirrored by a crisis in the other , ’ says William Oddie , a former Anglican clergyman who converted to Catholicism last year .
24 A third question , which would have to be solved , is whether regulatory bodies , such as the Securities and Investments Board , the Bank of England and the Department of Trade and Industry , would be deterred from providing confidential documents and reports without receiving in return a guarantee that they would not be publicly disclosed .
25 Copies were sent to the Bank of England and the DTI , but no comments were received from either .
26 However , on reflection , he decided that the question of the relationship between client , auditor and supervisor would be better settled by Parliament than by the Bank of England and the accounting profession .
27 When Johnson Matthey Bankers collapsed suddenly and unexpectedly in 1984 , there were a lot of thinly veiled accusations flying about between the Bank of England and the company 's auditors .
28 He believed that if the distribution of an artefact type could be attributed to a particular race it could indicate the course of the invasion and settlement of England and the origins of the settlers on the Continent .
29 The other site referred to is presently subject to negotiations between a local authority in the North West of England and the BMC , and due to the need to avoid jeopardising negotiations between the council and the present landowner , no further details can be given at present .
30 On the other hand , there are some regional variations in economic terms which may have increasing impact on the resources available to be shared in families , especially the rising value of property in the south of England and the better job opportunities there .
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