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Philological Museum De Jure
Regni Apud
Scotos,
online text
Archived 7
November 2012 at the
Wayback Machine De Jure
Regni Apud
Scotos, The
Rights of the
Crown in...
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Columba (/kəˈlʌmbəˌ ˈkɒlʌmbə/) or
Colmcille (7
December 521 – 9 June 597 AD) was an
Irish abbot and
missionary evangelist credited with
spreading Christianity...
- The term
Scoto-Norman (also Franco-Scottish or Franco-Gaelic) is used to
describe people, families,
institutions and
archaeological artifacts that are...
- others, James's
childhood tutor George Buchanan (in De Jure
Regni apud
Scotos, 1579 ), that held the idea that
monarchs rule in
accordance of some sort...
- Hiberno-Norse or Hiberno-Scandinavian for
those in Ireland, and Norse-Scots or
Scoto-Norse for
those in Scotland. The Norse–Gaels
originated in
Viking colonies...
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limitations of monarchy, as
outlined in his
treatise De Jure
Regni apud
Scotos. In 1568, Mary
escaped from
Lochleven Castle,
leading to
several years of...
- of this article, see Abate, Giuseppe, “La
tomba del ven.
Giovanni Duns
Scoto (…)”,
Miscellanea francescana, Rome, 45 (1945), pp. 29–79,
which refers...
- Hiberno-Latin was a
learned style of
literary Latin first used and
subsequently spread by
Irish monks during the
period from the
sixth century to the twelfth...
-
North West
Trading Company. John
McLean (c. 1799 – 8
September 1890), a
Scoto-Canadian
trapper and
trader who
successfully crossed the
entire Labrador...
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David I in the
twelfth century, the
Scottish monarchs are best
described as
Scoto-Norman,
preferring French culture to
native Scottish culture. Alexander...