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| | Pope <b>Alexanderb> <b>IIIb> - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | This antipope, and his successors Paschal <b>IIIb> (1164-1168) and Callixtus <b>IIIb> (1168-1178), had the imperial support; but after the defeat of Legnano, Barbarossa finally (in the peace of Venice, 1177) recognized <b>Alexanderb> as pope. |  | | On the 12th of March 1178 <b>Alexanderb> returned to Rome, which he had been compelled to leave twice, namely, from 1162 until the 23rd of November 1165, and again in 1167. |  | | By the judicious use of money, however, <b>Alexanderb> got him into his power, so that he was deposed in January 1180. |
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http://www.northmiami.us/project/wikipedia/index.php/Pope_Alexander_III
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| | CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Pope <b>Alexanderb> <b>IIIb> |
 | | In the estimation of Rome, Italy, and Christendom, <b>Alexanderb> <b>IIIb>'s epitaph expresses the truth, when it calls him "the Light of the Clergy, the Ornament of the Church, the Father of his City and of the World." He was friendly to the new academical movement that led to the establishment of the great medieval universities. |  | | Pope <b>Alexanderb> refused to submit his clear right to this iniquitous tribunal, which, as was foreseen, declared for the usurper (11 February, 1160). |  | | To crown and seal the triumph of religion, <b>Alexanderb> convoked and presided over the Third Lateran Council (Eleventh Ecumenical), in 1179. |
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http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/01287a.htm
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| | Royalty.nu - <b>Alexanderb> the Great, King of Macedon |
 | | <b>Alexanderb> the Great's father, Philip, was the brother of King Perdiccas <b>IIIb> of Macedon or Macedonia, in northern Greece. |  | | When <b>Alexanderb> was sixteen his father went away to war, leaving <b>Alexanderb> to serve as regent of Macedon. |  | | Presents forensic evidence that <b>Alexanderb> was poisoned by a member of his court. |
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http://www.royalty.nu/Europe/Balkan/Alexander.html
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| | History of the Monarchy > Descendants of Malcom <b>IIIb> > <b>Alexanderb> <b>IIIb> |
 | | <b>Alexanderb> <b>IIIb> sits at the right hand of his brother-in-law, Edward I of England. |  | | His younger son David died in 1281 at the age of eight; his daughter Margaret, who had married King Eric of Norway, died in childbirth in 1283; and his elder son <b>Alexanderb> died childless in 1284 after a long illness. |  | | <b>Alexanderb> established good relations with his brother-in-law Edward I. On 19 August 1274, <b>Alexanderb> and Margaret attended the coronation of her brother in Westminster Abbey. |
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http://www.royal.gov.uk/output/Page115.asp
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| | <b>Alexanderb> the Great (<b>Alexanderb> of Macedon) Biography |
 | | <b>Alexanderb> <b>IIIb> the Great, the King of Macedonia and conqueror of the Persian Empire is considered one of the greatest military geniuses of all times. |  | | <b>Alexanderb> entered the temple of Melcart, and had his sacrifice. |  | | <b>Alexanderb> was born in 356 BC in Pella, the ancient capital of Macedonia. |
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http://www.historyofmacedonia.org/AncientMacedonia/AlexandertheGreat.html
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| | <b>Alexanderb> Palace <b>Alexanderb> <b>IIIb> bio |
 | | As a result of the assassination, <b>Alexanderb> <b>IIIb> would not consider granting the constitution. |  | | On March 1, 1881, on the eve of the signing into law Russia's first constitution, two assassins threw bombs at the Tsar's carriage in St. Petersburg. |  | | <b>Alexanderb> Alexandrovich Romanov, Tsar of all the Russia's, died of Nephritis on October 20, 1894 (OS) at the summer palace at Livadia in the Crimea. |
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http://www.alexanderpalace.org/palace/alexbio.html
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| | George Munro's Descendants - gmug02.htm - Generated by Personal Ancestral File |
 | | Ann married Thomas Munro son of <b>Alexanderb> Munro and Helen McKay on 9 Jun 1898 in Free Church,Ness Walk,Inverness. |  | | Ann Munro was born on 22 Aug 1860 in Poyntzfield, Resolis Parish, Ross/Cromarty. |  | | John Munro was born on 7 Dec 1856 in Poyntzfield, Resolis Parish, Ross/Cromarty. |
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http://www.btinternet.com/~fraser.hamilton2/gmug02.htm
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| | alex-synopsys.html |
 | | <b>Alexanderb> confirmed his Panhellenic policy, confirmed in the sending of 300 panoplies, i.e. |  | | <b>Alexanderb> was born at Pella in Macedonia in late July of 356 BC, on the same day on which the famous Temple of Artemis at Ephesus was destroyed by fire. |  | | <b>Alexanderb> from age 13 to 16, together with the other boys belonging to the Macedonian aristocracy, was taught by Aristotle at the Mieza temple- about 30 kilometers from the royal palace at Pella; it was the great Greek philosopher himself who introduced them to the world of arts and sciences. |
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http://www.1stmuse.com/alex3/alex-synopsys.html
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| | Medieval Sourcebook: Barbarossa and <b>Alexanderb> <b>IIIb> |
 | | In 1165 Frederick and a number of nobles took a solemn oath at Wurzberg never to acknowledge Roland, or a pope elected by his party. |  | | <b>Alexanderb> was chosen pope by a majority of cardinals, but his rival, Victor, besides a strong minority, had the people of Rome - whose vote they claimed, was still necessary to the election - on his side; Victor also enjoyed the priority of consecration. |  | | <b>Alexanderb> was the very chancellor Roland who, as Pope Adrian VI's envoy, had so angered the emperor at Besançon; he was known too, to favour Frederick's enemy, William of Sicily. |
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http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/source/barbarossa1.html
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| | CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Pope Lucius <b>IIIb> |
 | | On 1 September, 1181, a day after the death of <b>Alexanderb> <b>IIIb>, he was elected pope at Velletri where he was also crowned on the following Sunday, 6 September. |  | | Neither did Lucius <b>IIIb> yield to the emperor who demanded that the German bishops, unlawfully appointed by the antipopes during the pontificate of <b>Alexanderb> <b>IIIb>, should be reconsecrated and retain their sees. |  | | Under Eugene <b>IIIb> he was sent as legate to Sicily and on 1 January, 1159, he became Bishop of Ostia and Velletri. |
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http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/09412b.htm
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| | <b>Alexanderb> <b>IIIb> of Scotland - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | <b>Alexanderb> <b>IIIb> (September 4, 1241 – March 19, 1286), king of Scots, also known as <b>Alexanderb> the Glorious, ranks as one of Scotland's greatest kings. |  | | At the marriage of <b>Alexanderb> to Margaret of England in 1251, Henry <b>IIIb> seized the opportunity to demand from his son-in-law homage for the Scottish kingdom, but <b>Alexanderb> did not comply. |  | | Towards the end of <b>Alexanderb>'s reign, the death of all three of his children within a few years made the question of the succession one of pressing importance. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_III_of_Scotland
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| | <b>Alexanderb> the Great Coins - <b>Alexanderb> <b>IIIb> Coins |
 | | <b>Alexanderb> <b>IIIb> was the greatest conqueror of all time. |  | | They're tangible, and tactile, documentation of <b>Alexanderb>'s life and times, a way to hold a part of the man, his power, his foibles, and his legacy. |  | | <b>Alexanderb>'s military conquests are just one part of his timeless allure. |
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http://rg.ancients.info/alexander
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| | <b>Alexanderb> the Great. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-05 |
 | | <b>Alexanderb>s Macedonian officers balked at his attempt to force them to intermarry with the Persians (he had himself married Roxana, a Bactrian princess, as one of his several wives), and they resisted his Eastern ways and his vision of an empire governed by tolerance. |  | | In 330 a conspiracy against <b>Alexanderb> was said to implicate the son of one of his generals, Parmenion; <b>Alexanderb> not only executed the son but also put the innocent Parmenion to death. |  | | <b>Alexanderb> had no part in the murder of his father, although he may have resented him because he neglected Olympias for another wife. |
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http://www.bartleby.com/65/al/AlexGreat.html
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| | <b>Alexanderb>, <b>IIIb> Biography / Biography of <b>Alexanderb>, <b>IIIb> Biography Biography |
 | | <b>Alexanderb> <b>IIIb> (1845-1894) was emperor of Russia from 1881 to 1894. |  | | <b>Alexanderb> married Princess Sophie Frederica Dagmar of Denmark (known in Russia as Maria Fedorovna) and was a devoted husband and the father of five children. |  | | <b>Alexanderb> issued an imperial manifesto on April 29, 1881, which ended the constitutional reforms of his father and proclaimed the absolute power of the emperor. |
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http://www.bookrags.com/biography-alexander-iii
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| | Descendants of Hector Munro |
 | | <b>Alexanderb> Mcleod MUNRO was born on 25 Apr 1835 in Parish of Cromarty, County of Ross and Cromarty, Scotland and died on 6 Mar 1924 in Braelangwell, Parish of Resolis, County of Ross and Cromarty, Scotland, at age 88. |  | | Daniel married Margaret Isabel MATHESON, daughter of John <b>Alexanderb> MATHESON and Jessie Ann GRANT. |  | | Elizabeth MUNRO was born on 28 Jun 1917 in Black Dam, Urquhart, County of Elgin, Scotland and died in Whitechurch, Shropshire, England. |
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http://homepage.ntlworld.com/jockmunro/tmdescendants/d1.htm
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| | Part <b>IIIb> - HOUSES OF CLAN MAC INTYRE |
 | | <b>Alexanderb> Campbell was the brother and Ann was the niece of the famous (infamous) Colin Campbell of Glenure. |  | | Ann’s father, <b>Alexanderb>, was a Lieutenant in Lord Loudon’s Highlanders, and the fifth son of Patrick, 4 |  | | Part <b>IIIb> is a more detailed account of the Houses of Clan MacIntyre, and the lives of individual Chiefs and Chieftains. |
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http://www.electricscotland.com/WEBCLANS/m/macintyre/part3.htm
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| | <b>Alexanderb> <b>IIIb> on Encyclopedia.com |
 | | <b>Alexanderb> had already (1174) received the penance of Henry II of England for the murder of St. Thomas Becket, whom <b>Alexanderb> had canonized in 1173. |  | | <b>Alexanderb>'s election to the papacy was opposed by a few cardinals, who elected an antipope, Victor IV. |  | | <b>Alexanderb> was forced (1162) by Emperor Frederick I into exile in France. |
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http://www.encyclopedia.com/html/a/alexand3.asp
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| | Clan MUNRO |
 | | Robert Munro of Foulis, the eighth laird, who was in tutelage at the time of this conflict, and was slain in an obscure skirmish in 1369, married a niece of Euphemia, daughter of the Earl of Ross and second wife of King Robert II. |  | | Another conjecture as to the origin of the name Munro is that, from having acted as bailiffs or stewards to the Lord of the Isles in the earldom of Ross, they were called "Monrosses". |  | | By this marriage the Munro chiefs became nearly related, not only to the royal house of Stewart but to Robert II.s grandson, Donald, Lord of the Isles, who married the sister of the last northern Earl of Ross, and claimed the earldom in her right. |
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http://www.electricscotland.com/webclans/m/munro2.html
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| | Who had the biggest Impact on Russia <b>Alexanderb> II or <b>Alexanderb> <b>IIIb>? |
 | | However, <b>Alexanderb> <b>IIIb> did rid the government of all liberal ministers after his fathers death. |  | | This meant that <b>Alexanderb> not only had a big impact but a long term impact on Russia. |  | | <b>Alexanderb> <b>IIIb> father, <b>Alexanderb> II, was also in very strong belief of an autocratic ruling just like the rulers before, and neither where prepared to sacrifice their power. |
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http://www.coursework.info/i/26.html
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| | HUGH MUNRO I of Coull |
 | | Hector Munro <b>IIIb> of Linside was married to Janet MacKay (d/o Neil MacKay of Achness and Janet Munro). |  | | Hector Munro was married to Elizabeth Fraser (d/o Thomas Fraser <b>IIIb> of Struy and Elizabeth Dunbar). |  | | George Munro II of Linside was married to Jane Innes (d/o <b>Alexanderb> Innes of Calrossie and unknown). |
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http://www.irishclans.com/cgi-bin/net.Thread.pl/message/4/1/87/248?user=&email=&depth=4&detail=description&lastread=7
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| | Amazon.co.uk: Books: <b>Alexanderb> <b>IIIb>: King of Scots |
 | | Marion Campbell's "<b>Alexanderb> <b>IIIb>" is an exception and has been well worth waiting for. |  | | Marion Campbell manages well to revive the political struggles during <b>Alexanderb>'s minority to the times when he considered himself old enough to take government of his realm into his own hands, his reign itself (incl. |  | | The book begins with the death of King <b>Alexanderb> II on Kerrera in Argyll in 1249, and the ascension of his son, a 7 year old boy also named <b>Alexanderb>, to the Scottish throne. |
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http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/1899863559
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| | <b>Alexanderb> <b>IIIb> of Scotland - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | <b>Alexanderb> had married Princess Margaret of England, a daughter of King Henry <b>IIIb> of England and Eleanor of Provence, on December 26, 1251. |  | | <b>Alexanderb> <b>IIIb> (September 4, 1241– March 19, 1286), King of Scots, also known as <b>Alexanderb> the Glorious, ranks as one of Scotland's greatest kings. |  | | Towards the end of <b>Alexanderb>'s reign, the death of all three of his children within a few years made the question of the succession one of pressing importance. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_III_of_Scotland
(591 words)
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| | <b>Alexanderb> <b>IIIb> - Britannica Concise |
 | | <b>Alexanderb> <b>IIIb> - pope from 1159 to 1181, a vigorous exponent of papal authority, which he defended against challenges by the Holy Roman emperor Frederick Barbarossa and Henry II of England. |  | | <b>Alexanderb> <b>IIIb> - king of Scotland from 1249 to 1286, the last major ruler of the dynasty of kings descended from Malcolm <b>IIIb> Canmore (reigned 105893), who consolidated royal power in Scotland. |  | | <b>Alexanderb> <b>IIIb> - emperor of Russia from 1881 to 1894, opponent of representative government, and supporter of Russian nationalism. |
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http://concise.britannica.com/ebc/article-9354946
(486 words)
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| | The Descendants of <b>Alexanderb> Cameron and Ann Martin |
 | | There is a tombstone in the Uigg Baptist Cemetery on PEI for <b>Alexanderb> and Catherine, daughter of Norman MacLeod and his first wife all born on the Isle of Skye. |  | | Notes for CAPTAIN <b>ALEXANDERb> CAMERON: Captain <b>Alexanderb>'s wife died when their three sons were small boys and the captain brought them up with the aid of his sister-in -law. |  | | There entered into rest prepared for the people of God on December the first at Bellevue, Christy Cameron, wife of the late <b>Alexanderb> McDonald. |
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http://www.islandregister.com/cameron2.html
(486 words)
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| | Scotland |
 | | <b>Alexanderb> <b>IIIb> (of Scotland) (1241-86), king of Scotland (1249-86), son of <b>Alexanderb> II and his second wife, Mary of Coucy. |  | | <b>Alexanderb> II (of Scotland) (1198-1249), king of Scotland (1214-49), the son of William the Lion. |  | | <b>Alexanderb> consolidated royal authority in Scotland and was a generous patron of the church. |
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http://website.lineone.net/~johnbidmead/Scotland.htm
(8480 words)
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| | Robert MUNRO |
 | | The same authority says that <b>Alexanderb>, Earl of Ross, married Lady Isabella Stewart, daughter of the Duke of Albany, with issue.... |  | | states that the wife of Robert Munro of Fowlis was a daughter of Forrester of Corstorphine, while Sir Rober Gordon infers, but somewhat obscurely, that Gerse, or Grace, sister of Sir John Forrester of Corstorphine, married "Munroe of Fowlis" alluding apparently to George, Robert's father, though the reference might possibly apply to Robert. |  | | One day, Thomas Munro met the Governor, who was popularly known as "The Black Captain" where the village of Maryburgh now stands. |
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http://www.theknowltons.com/ps01/ps01_241.html
(8480 words)
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| | 1200 - 1300 |
 | | <b>Alexanderb> II of Scotland marries Henry <b>IIIb> of England's sister Joan. |  | | <b>Alexanderb> <b>IIIb> of Scotland's wife (daughter of the King of Norway) dies. |  | | <b>Alexanderb> <b>IIIb> of Scotland dies falling from a cliff during a storm. |
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http://www.medievaltymes.com/courtyard/1200_-_1299.htm
(1795 words)
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| | The History Bookshop |
 | | <b>Alexanderb> <b>IIIb> of Scotland is married to Margaret, daughter of Henry <b>IIIb>. |  | | Treaty of Salisbury, following the death of <b>Alexanderb> <b>IIIb> of Scotland commissioners from Norway, Scotland and England agree terms for Margaret, maid of Norway, to rule in Scotland with a regent. |  | | 12 June: Henry <b>IIIb> renounces the Provisions of Oxford and dismisses his baronial officials. |
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http://www.historybookshop.com/timelines/british-isles-1250-99.htm
(1610 words)
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