In 1432 the English conquered the area and dismantled the castle.
The English could not conquer the racial identity of the Irish for the added reason of the strength of their Catholic faith.
In 1664, the English conquered the area and renamed it New York.
This left the way open for Robert the Bruce to regain land the English had conquered, to the detriment of many English magnates.
After the English conquered Egypt in 1882, English courses were added to the school's curriculum.
When The English came and conquered the area, they adopted the name Sudan from the Arab term to refer to that area.
When the English conquered Jamaica in 1655, they renamed the settlement as Spanish Town.
Young Cheatham had gotten the idea from watching a similar arrangement being used in action by crossbowmen on one of the many other worlds the English had conquered.
The English in turn conquered the Dutch in 1664, and the tiny colony became part of the 1681 land grant to William Penn.
In 1664 the English successfully conquered the Dutch while rivalry with the French continued.