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    The regime of Isabella and Mortimer 1326 - 1330

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    The rule of the Despensers was brought to an end in 1326 by a coalition of magnates, churchmen and Londoners, drawn together by the invasion of Isabella and Mortimer. A carefully orchestrated demand for the removal of Edward II led to his deposition and ultimately to his murder at Mortimer's direction. Power was centralised in the hands of Isabella and Mortimer who took no steps to broaden the basis of their government. While returning confiscated lands to their supporters, they offered them little else in the way of reward but accumulated land to their own use, Crown land in the case of Isabella and an empire on the Welsh March in the case of Mortimer. Disillusioned by this and by their exclusion from government, the constituent parts of the coalition fell apart. Active opposition which had begun in Edward II's lifetime culminated in Lancaster's abortive rebellion of 1328-29. The effective suppression of this meant that opposition was stifled by the imposition of recognisances and because several barons fled abroad. This success merely served to increase Mortimer's arrogance and in 1330 he successfully engineered the downfall of Edward III's uncle, the earl of Kent. In foreign affairs, the failure of the Weardale campaign against the Scots and the unpopular peace of Northampton, coupled with a temporising and indecisive policy towards France over the questions of Gascony and homage, increased hostility towards the government. At home violent unrest continued and an improvident and irresponsible attitude to national finance involved heavy borrowing at a time when Mortimer lived in extravagant state. Faced by this misgovernment and fearing that Mortimer now aimed at royal power, Edward III built his own supporting group around him. When the opportunity came he struck swiftly at Mortimer, sending him to execution and Isabella into retirement

    IlluminierteUrkunden 1326-09-21_Muenster

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    Bischofsammelindulgenz (12 Aussteller) für die Alte Kirche in Ahlen 1326-12-16:Bischof Ludwig von Hessen genehmigt die Ablaßverleihung und fügt einen weiteren Ablaß von 40 Tagen hinzu

    1326

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    1326 - 1

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    1326, gener 4. Venda. -

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    Pere Serra, de Girona, ven a fra Joan, comanador de la casa de Santa Maria de la Mercè, un hort, que es troba al puig de Sant Martí de la Costa, al lloc anomenat ""Vilanova"", pel preu de 37 lliures de Barcelona de tern (4 de gener de 1326).El document va seguit de l'acte de presa de possessió (14 de gener de 1326) i de l'àpoca de rebut (14 de gener de 1326

    1326 - 2

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    SEB 1326 MEASUREMENTS 14D SEP

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    SEB 1326 MEASUREMENTS 14D SE

    SEB 1326 MEASUREMENTS 14D JAN sup

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    SEB 1326 MEASUREMENTS 14D JAN su

    78. Imagawa Sadayo (1326- ?)

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    Iwao Seiichi, Iyanaga Teizō, Yoshida Shōichirō, Ishii Susumu, Fujimura Jun'ichirō, Fujimura Michio, Yoshikawa Itsuji, Akiyama Terukazu, Iyanaga Shōkichi, Matsubara Hideichi. 78. Imagawa Sadayo (1326- ?). In: Dictionnaire historique du Japon, volume 9, 1983. Lettre I. pp. 42-43
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