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William the
Conqueror (c. 1028 – 9
September 1087),
sometimes called William the ****, was the
first Norman king of
England (as
William I), reigning...
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Norse name
Vilhjalmr and a West
Germanic borrowing into
Medieval Latin Willelmus. The Proto-Germanic name is a
compound of *wiljô "will, wish, desire"...
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Admiral Sir
William de
Leybourne (French:
Guillaume de Leybourne; Latin:
Willelmus de
Leyburnia or Leyburna; c. 1242–1310) was an
English knight and military...
- England,
Sumer is i****en in.
Wycombe is
variously identified as W de Wyc,
Willelmus de Winche****be,
Willelmo de Winche****be, or
William of Winchcombe. He...
- Griffini,
Roger de
Clifford Junior,
Willelmus de Lindeseye,
Willelmus le Butiler,
Thomas de Halton,
Willelmus de Oudingishelys,
Petrus de la Quarere...
- State, 94–6. For his
later disavowal: Suger, Admin., 44. Suger, VLG, 200.
Willelmus, Vita., 394. Honour, H. and J. Fleming, (2009) A
World History of Art...
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William of Tyre (Latin:
Willelmus Tyrensis; c. 1130 – 29
September 1186) was a
medieval prelate and chronicler. As
archbishop of Tyre, he is sometimes...
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William de
Haseley (fl. 1266; died in or
before 1283) was an
English monastic writer. He was sub-prior of the
Benedictine community at
Westminster Abbey...
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William Rishanger (born 1250),
nicknamed "Chronigraphus", was an
English annalist and
Benedictine monk of St. Albans.
Rishanger quite likely wrote the...
- dictionary.
Nutting is an
English surname,
first recorded in 1379, when a
Willelmus Nuttyng (William Nutting) is
mentioned in the Poll Tax
rolls of Yorkshire...