1688
sources:
I am learning it right now and I got it directly from my text book, Medieval To Early Modern Times world history, in a timeline
They enforced royal laws that helped people all over England receive equal treatment.
Royal colonies
Royal Colony is the term for a colony under direct control of the English king or queen. Before the Revolutionary Wars, there were several Royal Colonies in North America.
The English Royal Navy's defeat over the Spanish Aramada
The judges will wear a royal purple robe.
The term for a colony under direct control of the English King or Queen is a royal colony, or crown colony. The colony is ruled by a governor appointed by the Monarch.
There were both English redcoats and sailors in the colonies at the time of the war. They numbered around 56,000 soldiers and 171,000 sailors on 78 ships from the Royal Navy.
The English Royal Council is a group of advisers that work for the royal family of England. They advise the royal family about everything that has to do with interaction with the public as a whole.
Henry II introduced significant legal reforms that centralized the English legal system, most notably through the establishment of common law and the development of royal courts. He replaced local feudal courts with a system that allowed royal judges to travel and adjudicate cases, which helped standardize legal practices across the kingdom. These changes diminished the power of feudal lords, as they could no longer exert absolute control over local justice, thus weakening the feudal structure and promoting a more unified national identity under royal authority.
There is no such thing as 'the English royal army'.
Royal Tunbridge Wells and Royal Lemington Spa
royal = royal 40% of English vocabulary comes from French.