Liegance — Lieg ance (l[=e] jans), n. Same as {Ligeance}. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Ligeance — Li geance (l[=e] jans), n. [OF. ligeance, ligance. See {Liege}.] (O. Eng. Law) The connection between sovereign and subject by which they were mutually bound, the former to protection and the securing of justice, the latter to faithful service;… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
ligeancy — Ligeance Li geance (l[=e] jans), n. [OF. ligeance, ligance. See {Liege}.] (O. Eng. Law) The connection between sovereign and subject by which they were mutually bound, the former to protection and the securing of justice, the latter to faithful… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Jacobite succession — The Jacobite succession is the line through which the crown in pretence has descended since the flight of James II VII from London at the time of the Glorious Revolution. James and his Jacobite successors were traditionally toasted as The King… … Wikipedia
Acknowledgments — Until the mid twentieth century, the nature and consequences of the series of civil conflicts fought in England in the late fifteenth century were not in doubt. These civil wars, which in the nineteenth century were termed the “Wars of the… … Encyclopedia of the Wars of the Roses