A Dictionary of British and Irish History. Группа авторов. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

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Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited
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Aug.). In NORTH CAROLINA they fought at Guildford Courthouse (15 March 1781). After resting at Wilmington (April), they moved N into VIRGINIA, but were besieged at YORKTOWN, where George CORNWALLIS surrendered (19 Oct.). See also AMERICAN INDEPENDENCE.

      AMERICAN WAR OF INDEPENDENCE, IMPACT ON IRELAND

      The war (1775–81) dramatically affected Ireland, partly because of inept reactions by the British and Irish governments. After war began, the British government imposed additional restrictions on Irish food exports (3 Feb. 1776), to sustain supplies to Britain. This plus a trade recession caused resentment, eventually provoking the NON-IMPORTATION MOVEMENT (1778–9). The Irish government's refusal to fund a militia in 1778, after troops were redeployed to coastal areas (following France's alliance with the USA, Feb. 1778), resulted in the formation of the VOLUNTEERS (voluntary militia), who became politically active.

      After a British army in N America surrendered at YORKTOWN (1781), PATRIOT members of the Irish Parliament (e.g., Henry GRATTAN; earl of CHARLEMONT) recruited Volunteer support and pressed for greater autonomy for Ireland. The result was the CONSTITUTION OF 1782. See also PROTESTANT ASCENDANCY; BUCKINGHAMSHIRE, 2ND EARL OF.

      Historians’ term for territories in France and the British Isles accumulated in the 11th–12th centuries by the ‘Angevins’, i.e., counts of Anjou (vassals of the king of France).

      Count Fulk IV (ruled 1068–1109) conquered Touraine, and Fulk V (1109–29) acquired Maine by marriage to an heiress. His son Geoffrey Plantagenet acquired a claim to NORMANDY and England through marriage (1128) to MATILDA, daughter of HENRY I. Geoffrey succeeded as count in 1129 (father’s abdication) and conquered Normandy (1142–4; see STEPHEN).

      Henry and his successors RICHARD and JOHN allowed territories to retain their customs and governments. John lost most of his French lands in 1202–4 (seized by Philip II of France), retaining only the CHANNEL ISLANDS, part of Poitou and GASCONY (latter two territories from duchy of Aquitaine). Poitou was lost in 1224, though attempts were made to recover it in 1225–7, 1230 and 1242 (see HENRY III). See also NORMAN EMPIRE; FRANCE, CLAIMS BY RULERS OF ENGLAND.

       ANGLES

      Name applied in the 7th–10th centuries (OE, Engle) to inhabitants of Germanic culture in eastern parts of Britain, roughly (N–S) from the Firth of Forth to the R. Stour (in East Anglia). According to BEDE (in 731), they were derived from Continental Angles, who lived in and were named after Angeln on the Jutland peninsula (in modern N Germany), and who were one of three Continental peoples who produced migrants to Britain (5th–6th