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Reprint of the original, first published in 1871. The publishing house Anatiposi publishes historical books as reprints. Due to their age, these books may have missing pages or inferior quality. Our aim is to preserve these books and make them available to the public so that they do not get lost.
About this BookSomewhere in the 1780s, three Shillingfords landed in Dominica. They were Thomas, William, and their nephew Charles, blacksmiths out of England in search of their fortune. Imbued with the Protestant Ethic, these Shillingfords were variously blacksmiths, government employees, overseers for absentee estate owners, and later, estate owners in their own right. And one hundred and fifty years after their arrival, the Shillingfords were among the most successful and prominent families on the island. This is their Narrative and Family Tree. The Tree contains more than 2,000 entries, collected over several years, and sets out detailed family connections. The Narrative, on the other ha...
A thrilling quixotic adventure for anyone who enjoys an epic fantasy escape like "A Song of Ice and Fire", "The Rage of Dragons" or "The Lord of the Rings". This is Book One of "The King Series" set in the world of Dayconis, a tale inspired by classic fantasy with a twist of West Indian folklore and mythology. Ten-year-old Prince Beaumont has lived a peaceful and secluded life, hidden from his enemies in Mount Hope, waiting for the day he can safely return to the Middle Islands and reclaim his father's crown. With his faithful and loving cousin Julius by his side, he tries to learn everything he needs to know to be a great king. As civil war wages in the Middle Islands, a high-ranking member...
The Middle Ages saw numerous local conflicts between the church and the state in England. This is a translation of the documents of one of the most famous of these conflicts: that between Edmund Lacy, Bishop of Exeter and John Shillingford, Mayor of the City. In his "Yorkist Age," Paul Kendal describes this conflict as "The most remarkable battle of the age between townsmen and the Church, ... [which] resists time, because the protagonist left a racy account both of the struggle and himself." The City burgesses had long chafed under the church's claimed authority to tax and dispense justice within the city. This came to a head when City serjeants attempted to arrest a felon who had taken ref...