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| | Encyclopedia: <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>> of England |
 | | <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>> (29 May 1630â6 February 1685) was the King of England, King of Scots, and King of Ireland from 30 January 1649 (retrospectively de jure) or 29 May 1660 (de facto) until his death. |  | | <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>>'s eldest son, the Duke of Monmouth, led a rebellion against James <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>>, but was defeated at the battle of Sedgemoor on 6 July 1685, captured, and executed. |  | | <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> himself soon came to hate his Scottish hosts (or jailers, as he came to see the dour Covenanters), and supposedly celebrated at the news of the Covenanters' defeat at Dunbar in September 1650. |
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http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/Charles-II-of-England
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| | <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>> - Columbia Encyclopedia® article about <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>> |
 | | James defended Sicily against the claims of <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>> of Naples until 1295, when he relinquished the island in exchange for the title to Sardinia and Corsica. |  | | Oates, who had been briefly a convert to Roman Catholicism, claimed that there was a Jesuit-guided plan to assassinate <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>> and to hasten the succession of the Catholic James, duke of York (later James <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>>). |  | | His personal popularity increased after the exclusion crisis and particularly after the unsuccessful Rye House Plot Rye House Plot, 1683, conspiracy to assassinate <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>> of England and his brother James, duke of York (later James <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>>), as they passed by Rumbold's Rye House in Hertfordshire on the road from Newmarket to London. |
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http://columbia.thefreedictionary.com/Charles+II
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| | All Abbey Ancestors - pafg31 - Generated by Personal Ancestral File |
 | | <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> <<b>bb>>Ii<b>bb>>, King of France [Parents] was born Jun 13 823 in Frankfort on Main, Germany. |  | | Hugh <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>> of Dagsbourg was born WFT Est. |  | | <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> of Lorraine Duke of Lower Lorraine [Parents] was born 953 in Laon, France. |
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http://www.soft-light.com/abbeyall/pafg31.htm
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| | Spain |
 | | <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>> of Spain, the most grotesque monarch of the 17th century, was a travesty of a king. |  | | Consequently, Spain became involved disastrously in the Wars of the French Revolution (1792-95) and was forced to cede (1800) to France the territory of Louisiana in America. |  | | Recognized by Carlists as <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> VI (1845); fought hopeless war in Catalonia (1846-48); made prisoner during insurrection (1860); released on signing renunciation of claims; died without issue, claims passing to youngest brother, Don Juan. |
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http://website.lineone.net/~johnbidmead/Spain.htm
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| | CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Emperor <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> V |
 | | <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> had now to consider whether he would allow liberty of action to the Protestant princes of Germany, to whom, under pressure of war, he had made concessions, especially at the Diet of Spires in 1544. |  | | <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> escaped, but abandoned his plan for the reorganization of the imperial government. |  | | <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>, eager to push the war against the Turks, as well as to restore the unity of Christendom, was ready to partly forego his strict rights both in the Milanese and Burgundy, and to consider the question of the balance of power between his house and that of Valois. |
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http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/03625a.htm
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| | Articles - <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>> of England |
 | | <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>, the eldest surviving son of <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> I of England and Henrietta Maria of France, was born in St. |  | | <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>> or The Merry Monarch (29 May 1630–6 February 1685) was the King of England, King of Scots, and King of Ireland from 30 January 1649 (retrospectively de jure) or 29 May 1660 (de facto) until his death. |  | | <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>>'s eldest son, the Duke of Monmouth, led a rebellion against James <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>>, but was defeated at the battle of Sedgemoor on 6 July 1685, captured, and executed. |
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http://www.ranau.net/articles/Charles_II_of_England
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| | FRANCIA |
 | | After the deaths of René the Good (1480), whose male heirs had predeceased him, and of <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> III, René's nephew, Louis XI secured the return of the Duchy of Anjou, the County of Provence, and, according to some sources, the French part of the Duchy of Bar. |  | | <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> IV The Capetians are usually reckoned to begin with Hugh Capet, but his family (the house of Paris or "Robertians," after Robert the Strong) had been nudging the Carolingians for some time, and his uncle (by marriage), grandfather, and great uncle had already been Kings of France. |  | | It is a sad comment on the state of the Carolingian dynasty that <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> the Fat should have ended up as the most vigorous and successful member of his generation. |
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http://www.friesian.com/francia.htm
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| | 51. The Emperor <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> V. Wells, H.G. 1922. A Short History of the World |
 | | And if <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> had lost his living interest in the administration of European affairs, there were other motives of a more immediate sort to stir him. |  | | But the Protestant princes, the German princes who were resolved to break away from Rome, had formed a league, the Schmalkaldic League, against the Emperor, and in the place of a great campaign to recover Hungary for Christendom <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> had to turn his mind to the gathering internal struggle in Germany. |  | | <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>, muffled in a dark mantle, and bearing a lighted candle in his hand, mingled with his household, the spectator of his own obsequies; and the doleful ceremony was concluded by his placing the taper in the hands of the priest, in sign of his surrendering up his soul to the Almighty. |
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http://www.bartleby.com/86/51.html
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| | World War <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>> [encyclopedia] |
 | | World War <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>> is the most extensive and costly war in the history of the world, involving most of the world's nations, being fought simultaneously in several major theaters, and costing approximately 50 million lives. |  | | World War <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>> is the most extensive and costly armed conflict in the history of the world, involving the great majority of the world's nations, being fought simultaneously in several major theaters, and costing approximately 50 million lives. |  | | Three-fifths of France came under German occupation, while the remainder became a neutral state, L'Etat Français, under the collaborative governments of Pétain and later Pierre Laval (1942), based in Vichy. |
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http://artzia.com/History/Wars/WWII
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| | Frederick <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>>, Holy Roman Emperor - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Frederick <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>> (December 26, 1194 – December 13, 1250), Holy Roman Emperor of the Hohenstaufen dynasty, was pretender to the title of King of the Romans from 1212, unopposed holder of that monarchy from 1215, and Holy Roman Emperor from 1220 until his death in 1250. |  | | He invaded Italy in 1268 to reclaim his Kingdom from <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> of Anjou, but was defeated and captured by <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> at the Battle of Tagliacozzo and publicly executed at age 16 on October 29, 1268 in Naples. |  | | In his period in Jerusalem, this behaviour was much to the dislike of the Muslims too, who grew mistrustful of a Christian which was not a Christian. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederick_II,_Holy_Roman_Emperor
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| | boys clothing: European royalty--Spain |
 | | The ensuing Carlista War pitted the loberals who backed Isabella's claim against the more reactionary forces who backed <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>' claim to the throne. |  | | <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> was the son of King Philip V by his second marriage with Queen Isabella Elizabeth (Farnese) and was a grandson of French King Louis XIV. |  | | <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> III had twosons, the elder of whom became King CharlesIV (q.v.) of Spain; the younger becameKing Ferdinand IV of Naples, founder ofthe Neapolitan (Italian) House of Bourbon. |
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http://histclo.com/royal/spa/royal-sp.htm
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| | Royal family owes throne to fake will? : HTTabloid.com |
 | | The will of <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>> had as a consequence the War of the Spanish Succession (1710-1714) which brought France and the whole continent to its knees," they said. |  | | <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>> died childless and in his will designated Philip of Anjou, nephew of Louis XIV, his heir. |  | | His aim was to prevent a member of the Hapsburg family, rulers in much of Europe, succeeding the Hapsburg King <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>> of Spain. |
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http://www.hindustantimes.com/news/7242_1060370,00180007.htm
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| | <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>>, Holy Roman Emperor - definition of <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>>, Holy Roman Emperor in Encyclopedia |
 | | <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> the Bald (<<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>> of France and Holy Roman Emperor <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>>) (823-877), Roman emperor and king of the West Franks, was the son of the emperor Louis the Pious and his second wife Judith. |  | | <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> was recalled to Francia, and after the death of Louis the German (August 28, 876), in his turn made an attempt to seize his kingdom, but at Andernach met with defeat (October 8, 876). |  | | <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> was succeeded by his son, Louis, the child of Ermentrude, daughter of Odo, Count of Orleans and his wife Ermentrude, whom <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> had married in 842, and who had died in 869. |
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http://encyclopedia.laborlawtalk.com/Charles_II,_Holy_Roman_Emperor
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| | T.<<b>bb>>B<b>bb>>. Macaulay - History of England, Vol. I, Ch. <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>> (part 3) |
 | | <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>, though incapable of love in the highest sense of the word, was the slave of any woman whose person excited his desires, and whose airs and prattle amused his leisure. |  | | <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> did not think himself a King while an assembly of subjects could call for his accounts before paying his debts, and could insist on knowing which of his mistresses or boon companions had intercepted the money destined for the equipping and manning of the fleet. |  | | <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> must descend to the rank of a great vassal, and must make peace and war according to the directions of the government which protected him. |
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http://www.strecorsoc.org/macaulay/m02c.html
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| | Britannia: Monarchs of Britain |
 | | <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>>, second son of <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> I and Henrietta Marie of France, was born in 1630. |  | | His oldest child, James Scott, Duke of Monmouth, made a failed bid to capture the crown at the time of his father's death and was executed by James <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>>, brother of <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>> and Uncle to Monmouth. |  | | The Whigs used Catholicism to undermine <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>; England was in the throes of yet another wave of anti-Catholicism, with the Whigs employing this paranoia in an attempt to unseat the heir apparent, <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>' Catholic brother James, from succeeding to the throne. |
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http://www.britannia.com/history/monarchs/mon49.html
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| | History of the Monarchy > The Stuarts > <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>> |
 | | Although those who had signed <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> I's death warrant were punished (nine regicides were put to death, and Cromwell's body was exhumed from Westminster Abbey and buried in a common pit), <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>> pursued a policy of political tolerance and power-sharing. |  | | Parliament's reaction to the Popish Plot of 1678 (an allegation by Titus Oates that Jesuit priests were conspiring to murder the King, and involving the Queen and the Lord Treasurer, Danby) was to impeach Danby and present a Bill to exclude James (<<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>'s younger brother and a Roman Catholic convert) from the succession. |  | | <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> was a patron of Christopher Wren in the design and rebuilding of St Paul's Cathedral, Chelsea Hospital (a refuge for old war veterans) and other London buildings. |
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http://www.royal.gov.uk/output/Page92.asp
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| | Spain's Rulers of the 18th century |
 | | In 1808 a conspiracy headed by <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>' son, the future Ferdinand VII, attempted to overthrow the Chief Minister of France. |  | | This war, known as the War of the Spanish Succession was fought over who would rule Spain in <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>>'s stead. |  | | The grandson of Louis XIV of France and great-grandson of Philip IV of Spain, Philip V gained his throne through the War of the Spanish Succession (1701-14) and founded the Bourbon Dynasty in Spain. |
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http://www.history1700s.com/articles/article1054.shtml
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| | King <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>> |
 | | However, as Parliament and about 90% of the people in England were Protestants, <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> had to keep this a secret. |  | | <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> and his wife Catherine of Braganza did not have any children. |  | | In 1662 <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> married Catherine of Braganza, the daughter of the King of Portugal. |
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http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/STUcharles2.htm
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| | AllRefer.com - <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> VI, Holy Roman emperor (German History, Biography) - Encyclopedia |
 | | Although <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>, with the aid of British troops, invaded Spain and proclaimed himself king as <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> III in 1704, he was able to maintain himself only in Catalonia, with his capital at Barcelona. |  | | <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> VI 16851740, Holy Roman emperor (171140), king of Bohemia (171140) and, as <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> III, king of Hungary (171240); brother and successor of Holy Roman Emperor Joseph I. |  | | On his deathbed, however, <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>> left his throne to Philip of Anjou (Philip V), grandson of King Louis XIV of France; Philip was proclaimed king in Nov., 1700. |
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http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/C/Charles6HRE.html
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| | Encyclopedia: Joseph <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>>, Holy Roman Emperor |
 | | Holy Roman Emperor Leopold <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>> Leopold <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>> (born Peter Leopold Joseph) (Vienna, May 5, 1747 â Vienna, March 1, 1792) was Holy Roman Emperor from 1790 to 1792 and Grand-duke of Tuscany. |  | | The overweening character of the Emperor was obvious to Frederick <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>> of Germany, who, after their first interview in 1769, described him as ambitious, and as capable of setting the world on fire. |  | | In these, he did not differ from Frederick, Catherine of Russia, or his own brother and successor Leopold <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>>, all enlightened rulers of the 18th century stamp. |
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http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/Joseph-II,-Holy-Roman-Emperor
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| | CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Philip <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>> (King of Spain) |
 | | King of Spain, only son of the Emperor <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> V, and Isabella of Portugal, <<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>. |  | | At a solemn conference held at Brussels, 22 Oct., 1555, <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> V ceded to Philip the Low Countries, the crowns of Castille, Aragon, and Sicily, on 16 Jan., 1556, and the countship of Burgundy on the tenth of June. |  | | Apparently Philip <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>> failed to grasp the situation, since he continued for two years more the war against Henry IV, but his fruitless efforts were finally terminated in 1595 by the absolution of Henry IV by Clement VIII. |
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http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/12002a.htm
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| | Chronologie 1700 - 1799 Chronology |
 | | <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> Melancon always kept in contact with the governor of Boston, proven by his many letters which kept the Bostonian aware of French designs. |  | | La riviere Amazone est explorée par une expedition Francaise conduite par <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> de la Condamini. |  | | Philip is recognized as King of Spain, and Spain cedes Spanish Netherlands to Holland and Gibraltar to Britain. |
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http://www.users.nac.net/comeauje/family/chrono/1700.htm
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| | 2.7 The Anglo-Dutch Wars |
 | | The English were not happy with this, as they believed that <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>> was behaving according to the wishes of Louis XIV. |  | | Prince William of Orange, a close relation of <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>> was not allowed to become the ruler of Holland by the Dutch. |  | | The Foreign policy of <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>> of England was not impressive. |
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http://www.pinkmonkey.com/studyguides/subjects/euro_his/chap2/e0202701.htm
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| | Pepys' Diary: Stuart, <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> (<<b>bb>>II<b>bb>>, King) |
 | | After the execution of the king the jprince was declared <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>> by all royalists and he was determined to recover his birthright. |  | | <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>> was born on May 29th 1630 at Saint James’s palace in London.He was the first surviving child of <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> I and his French Queen Henrietta Maria. |  | | After the royalist defeat at Naseby in 1645 his father urged him to go to France for his personal safety. |
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http://www.pepysdiary.com/p/344.php
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| | Pepys' Diary: Stuart, <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> (<<b>bb>>II<b>bb>>, King) |
 | | After the execution of the king the jprince was declared <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>> by all royalists and he was determined to recover his birthright. |  | | <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>> was born on May 29th 1630 at Saint James’s palace in London.He was the first surviving child of <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> I and his French Queen Henrietta Maria. |  | | “The motives which governed the political conduct of <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> the Second differed widely from those by which his predecessor and his successor were actuated. |
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http://www.pepysdiary.com/p/344.php
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| | <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> V, Holy Roman Emperor - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | 1524 to 1526 saw the Peasants' Revolt in Germany and the formation of the Lutheran Schmalkaldic League, and <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> delegated increasing responsibility for Germany to his brother Ferdinand while he concentrated on problems abroad. |  | | <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> later signed a humiliating treaty with the Ottomans, to gain him some respite from the huge expenses of their war. |  | | <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> V's reign also introduced the first documented use of the styles of His Majesty or His Imperial Majesty. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_V,_Holy_Roman_Emperor
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| | Brewer, E. Cobham. Dictionary of Phrase & Fable. Two. |
 | | of Spain who sent against England the Invincible Armada; it was Francesco <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>>. |  | | of Spain ended his dynasty, and left his kingdom a wreck; <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>>. |  | | of the Two Sicilies who was driven from his throne by Garibaldi; it was Romulus <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>>. |
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http://www.bonus.com/contour/bartlettqu/http@@/www.bartleby.com/81/16884.html
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| | Family |
 | | Upon the death of his nephew, Lothar <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>> on 8 August 869, <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> sped to Lotharingia and had himself crowned King of Lotharingia annointed on 9 September in the cathedral at Metz by Bishop Adventius of Metz and Archbishop Hincmar of Rheims. |  | | Not liking Pepin <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>>, the people of Aquitaine request <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>' help, and he obliges by accepting the Crown, and on 6 June 848 is consecrated King of Aquitaine, though he could not defend his kingdom against the Normands. |  | | On 24 July 840, the new Emperor, Lothar, in Strasburg, refuses to support the land claims of <<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>>Charles<<b>bb>>b<b>bb>>> (from the agreement of Worms on 30 May 839). |
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http://xpda.com/family/fam00149.htm
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| | Spain |
 | | Subsequent failure to embrace the mercantile and industrial revolutions caused the country to fall behind Britain, France, and Germany in economic and political power. |  | | Spain remained neutral in World Wars I and <<b>bb>>II<b>bb>>, but suffered through a devastating civil war (1936-39). |  | | Spain's powerful world empire of the 16th and 17th centuries ultimately yielded command of the seas to England. |
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http://ehistory.osu.edu/world/CountryView.cfm?ID=197
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