Baliol


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Baliol

(ˈbeɪlɪəl) or

Balliol

n
1. (Biography) Edward. ?1283–1364, king of Scotland (1332, 1333–56)
2. (Biography) his father, John. 1249–1315, king of Scotland (1292–96): defeated and imprisoned by Edward I of England (1296)
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
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References in classic literature ?
The exact address is Baliol Cottage, near Dumfries.
Earlier in his career, Dr Stein was a part-time lecturer in Immunology and Pathology at Baliol College, Oxford.
The girl's name was Emma Saul from Baliol Road, We wrote to each other for many years until the early '90s when we both were engaged and married life took over.
Corridors in De Baliol Care Home, in Newbiggin by the Sea, have been transformed to mimic the Northumberland of the 1940s and 50s - when many of the home's residents were in their prime.
The burglary happened at a property on Baliol Croft in Long Newton, Stockton, some time between 5.30pm on Tuesday, September 8, and 6.30am on Wednesday, September 9.
The incident was alleged to have taken place in Baliol Lane on November 27, 2011, which is less than a mile from where Pacteau met Karen Buckley.
Baliol Holloway memorably described the actor's point of view in 1934: "On a clear day you can just about see the boiled shirts in the first row.
The Memorial production of Julius Caesar that premiered on 15 April 1941--directed by Andrew Leigh, and starring the Old Bensonite Gerald Kay Souper as Julius Caesar, George Hayes as Brutus, Baliol Holloway as Cassius and Godfrey Kenton as Antony--has been described by John Ripley as "unremarkable" (1980: 340n6).
Guy, 29, of Wavers Marston, Marston Green, and Taylor, 29, of Baliol House, Grandy's Croft, Chelmsley Wood, were both jailed for 21 months.