Hundred Years" War - traduzione in italiano
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Hundred Years" War - traduzione in italiano

FIRST PART OF THE HUNDRED YEARS' WAR
Hundred Years' War (1337-1360); Edwardian War; Hundred Years' War (1337-60); Hundred Years' War (1337–60); Edwardian phase of the Hundred Years' War; Edwardian Phase; Hundred Years' War (1337–1360); Hundred Years' War, 1337-1360
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  • Charles of Blois
  • Statue of Edward III's moneylender William de la Pole
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  • Family tree showing background to the dispute
  • John II of France. Known as John the Good
  • 16th Century portrait of King Edward III
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  • Philip VI of France
  • Depiction of Edward III and his son Edward, the Black Prince, following the [[Battle of Crécy]]
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  • Chest that contained the ratified Treaty of Brétigny, known as the Treaty of Calais.<ref name=patourel132 />

Hundred Years' War      
la Guerra dei Cento giorni (fra Inghilterra e Francia nei secoli quattordicesimo e quindicesimo)
the Hundred Days         
  • Napoleon leaving [[Elba]], painted by [[Joseph Beaume]]
  • The Château de Malmaison
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  • Plenipotentiaries at the Congress of Vienna
  • 1st Polish Light Cavalry]] of his Imperial Guard
  • Invasion of France by the Seventh Coalition armies in 1815
  • ''The journey of a modern hero, to the island of Elba.'' Print shows Napoleon seated backwards on a donkey on the road "to Elba" from [[Fontainebleau]]; he holds a broken sword in one hand and the donkey's tail in the other while two drummers follow him playing a farewell(?) march.
  • Sir William Quiller Orchardson]]. Orchardson depicts the morning of 23 July 1815, as Napoleon watches the French shoreline recede.
  • All the participants of the War of the Seventh Coalition. <span style="color:Blue;">Blue</span>: The Coalition and their colonies and allies. <span style="color:Green;">Green</span>: The [[First French Empire]], its protectorates, colonies and allies.
  •  A portion of Belgium with some places marked in colour to indicate the initial deployments of the armies just before the commencement of hostilities on 15 June 1815, with British forces in red, Prussians in green, and French in blue
  • The brig ''Inconstant'', under Captain Taillade and ferrying Napoleon to France, crosses the path of the brig ''Zéphir'', under Captain Andrieux. ''Inconstant'' flies the tricolour of the Empire, while ''Zéphir'' flies the white ensign of the House of Bourbon.
  • fronts]]. In addition, Napoleon had to leave 20,000 men in Western France to reduce a royalist insurrection.
  • Map of the Waterloo campaign
1815 CONFLICT DURING THE NAPOLEONIC WARS
The Hundred Days; Seventh Coalition; War of the Seventh Coalition; Reign of A Hundred Days; 1815 campaign; Cent Jours; Invasion of France (1815); The 100 Days; Napoleon's Hundred Days; Hundred Days of Napoleon; Seventh coalition; War of the 7th coalition; Anglo-French War (1815); War of the Seventh coalition; Cent-Jours; Hundred days; Declaration at the Congress of Vienna; Napoleon's Second Abdication; Napoleon's Return from Elba; Les Cent-Jours
i Cento Giorni (il periodo fra il ritorno di Napoleone in Francia e la sua sconfitta definitiva a opera delle forze nemiche)
war crime         
  • Japanese soldiers]] in [[Suzhou]], China, 1938
  • date=July 22, 2015 }}". [[Deutsche Welle]]. June 30, 2015.</ref>
  • Bodies of some of the hundreds of Vietnamese villagers who were killed by U.S. soldiers during the [[My Lai Massacre]]
  • Palmiry]] near [[Warsaw]] in 1940 for mass execution (''[[AB-Aktion]]'')
  • [[Bodo League massacre]] during the Korean War in 1950
  • [[2013 Shahbag protests]] demanding the death penalty for the war criminals of the 1971 [[Bangladesh Liberation War]]
  • Soviet POWs died in Nazi custody]].
INDIVIDUAL ACT CONSTITUTING A SERIOUS VIOLATION OF THE LAWS OF WAR
War crimes; War criminal; Warcrime; War criminals; Responses of Germany and Japan to World War II crimes; Post-war Germany vs post-war Japan; War Crime; War Crimes; War Criminal; War law; War-crime; War-crimes; War Criminals; War Crimes Law; Inhuman war crime; Wartime atrocities; War crime against civilians; War crimes against civilians
reato di guerra

Definizione

Wapentake
·noun In some northern counties of England, a division, or district, answering to the hundred in other counties. Yorkshire, Lincolnshire, and Nottinghamshire are divided into wapentakes, instead of hundreds.

Wikipedia

Hundred Years' War, 1337–1360

The first phase of the Hundred Years' War between France and England lasted from 1337 to 1360. It is sometimes referred to as the Edwardian War because it was initiated by King Edward III of England, who claimed the French throne in defiance of King Philip VI of France. The dynastic conflict was caused by disputes over the French feudal sovereignty over Aquitaine and the English claims over the French royal title. The Kingdom of England and its allies dominated this phase of the war.

Edward had inherited the duchy of Aquitaine, and as Duke of Aquitaine he was a vassal to Philip VI of France. Edward initially accepted the succession of Philip, but the relationship between the two kings soured when Philip allied with Edward's enemy, King David II of Scotland. Edward in turn provided refuge to Robert III of Artois, a French fugitive. When Edward refused to obey Philip's demands for the expulsion of Robert from England, Philip confiscated the duchy of Aquitaine. This precipitated war, and soon, in 1340, Edward declared himself king of France. Edward III and his son Edward the Black Prince, led their armies on a largely successful campaign across France with notable victories at Auberoche (1345), Crécy (1346), Calais (1347), and La Roche-Derrien (1347). Hostilities were paused until the mid-1350s for the deprivations of the Black Death. Then war continued, and the English were victorious at the Battle of Poitiers (1356) where the French king, John II, was captured and held for ransom. The Truce of Bordeaux was signed in 1357 and was followed by two treaties in London in 1358 and 1359.

After the treaties of London failed, Edward launched the Rheims campaign, which, though largely unsuccessful, led to the Treaty of Brétigny, which settled certain lands in France on Edward for renouncing his claim to the French throne. This was in part caused by Black Monday (1360), the freak storm that devastated the English army and forced Edward III into peace talks. This peace lasted nine years; but then began a second phase of hostilities known as the Caroline War.

Esempi dal corpus di testo per Hundred Years" War
1. This needle match between France and Britain dates back at least to the hundred years war.
2. Most of the Arab world will willingly sustain a Hundred Years’ War to undo its consequences.
3. When the Hundred Years War cut off supplies, they invented sherry, but called it sack.
4. Rather fewer children ever get to hear that, in the end, we lost the Hundred Years’ War.
5. Mrs Dunwoody is a strapping lass, and like the Hundred Years War or Hitler‘s invasion of Russia, the war of her seat covers a lot of territory.