Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
First, he had no taste and little ability for the harrying of a government.
"So long as the harrying is done, what does it matter?
No harrying, no pressure - take it slow, she thought.
He managed a smile, though his wife's constant harrying was becoming increasingly tedious.
This was known as the 'Harrying of the North'.
'Private anxieties may have done that for the moment,' said Clennam, 'but not official harrying.
Light cavalry is best for the harrying.
The harrying of the light infantry apparently proved too much for the Thebans and they started to retreat.
In all seriousness the effect that his physical presence and harrying of defenders has isn't something that can be put into statistics.
Much of the wider area was laid waste in the subsequent Harrying of the North.
This temporarily stopped their harrying of Scotland.
William's Harrying of the North left the region in a severely depressed and depopulated state.
The main purpose of the castle at this time was to maintain control of the area after the harrying of the North.
There had been no monasteries north of Burton-on Trent before the Harrying.
That St Withold's of Burton is a howlet's nest worth the harrying.
This "Harrying of the North" restored sufficient order to allow the rebuilding of the two castles, again in wood.
The long and dangerous harrying of the invaders in their course to Xavier, the loss of the space station, the damage to the Xavieran cities.
This layout had been identified as Norman, probably dating to the rebuilding of the village after William's harrying of the North.
What followed was William's most devastating punitive expedition, the so-called "Harrying of the North", conducted during the winter of 1069/70.
Bruce's subsequent Harrying of Buchan destroyed support for the Comyns in northern Scotland.
After the 1066 Norman Conquest and the harrying of the north, the Normans took Chester, destroying 200 houses in the city.
For example, one of the techniques of persuasion available to late Anglo-Saxon kings was that of harrying. 1041 saw a pretty example.
Not only may churchmen have lost kinsmen in the recent fighting, but enemy harrying had almost certainly resulted in extensive damage to church lands and possessions.
This part of Yorkshire was laid waste in the harrying of the north after the Norman conquest of England.