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Baldwin

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Baldwin

Name of several counts of Flanders. Baldwin I (died 879), called ‘Bras de fer’ (Iron Arm), married Judith, the daughter of Charles II (the Bald), without her father's knowledge, which brought about war between Flanders and Aquitaine.

Baldwin V ‘Le Debonnaire’ (died 1067) was guardian to Philip, the young king of France, 1060–67. His daughter Matilda married William the Conqueror, whom he accompanied to England on the Norman Conquest.

Baldwin IX (c. 1171–1205) became the first Latin (Western European) emperor of the Byzantine Empire.

Baldwin (died 1190)

English cleric, archbishop of Canterbury 1184–90. By forbidding bishops from being consecrated at any other cathedral, he established Canterbury as the foremost archbishopric in England. He conducted the investiture of Richard (I) the Lion-Heart at Westminster in 1189, and in the following year joined his king on the Third Crusade. He died at the port of Acre in the Holy Land.

Baldwin became a monk and later abbot in the Cistercian abbey of Ford, Devonshire. In 1180 he became bishop of Worcester. In 1184 Henry II appointed him archbishop of Canterbury.

Baldwin

Municipality in Hempstead town, New York, on the southern shore of Long Island, 45 km/28 mi east of Manhattan; population (1990) 22,700. It was settled by the Dutch in the 1640s. It is now primarily a bedroom community, with some light manufacturing and a boating and fishing industry.

Baldwin

Town in southwestern Pennsylvania, a suburb of Pittsburgh; population (1990) 21,900. It is situated on the Monongahela River in a coalmining region.



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? Mentioned in ? References in classic literature
 
Finding, then, that, in fact he could not move, he thought himself of having recourse to his usual remedy, which was to think of some passage in his books, and his craze brought to his mind that about Baldwin and the Marquis of Mantua, when Carloto left him wounded on the mountain side, a story known by heart by the children, not forgotten by the young men, and lauded and even believed by the old folk; and for all that not a whit truer than the miracles of Mahomet.
``According to the laws of chivalry,'' said the foremost of these men, ``I, Baldwin de Oyley, squire to the redoubted Knight Brian de Bois-Guilbert, make offer to you, styling yourself, for the present, the Disinherited Knight, of the horse and armour used by the said Brian de Bois-Guilbert in this day's Passage of Arms, leaving it with your nobleness to retain or to ransom the same, according to your pleasure; for such is the law of arms.
In the meantime original work of a high order was being produced both in England and America by such writers as Bradley, Stout, Bertrand Russell, Baldwin, Urban, Montague, and others, and a new interest in foreign works, German, French and Italian, which had either become classical or were attracting public attention, had developed.
 
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