Account of the Romansh Language - In a Letter to Sir John Pringle, Bart. P. R. S. by Esq. F. R. S. Joseph Planta
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page 9 of 32 (28%)
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with anecdotes of the prowess of the natives in several expeditions into
Italy and Palestine, in which they still voluntarily accompanied the emperors. The repeated acts of tyranny exercised by those arbitrary despots, who had now shaken off all manner of restraint, at length exasperated the people into a general revolt, and brought on the confederacy; in which the bishop and most of the nobles were glad to join, in order to screen themselves from the fury of the insurgents. The first step towards this happy revolution was made by some _venerable old men dressed in the coarse grey cloth_ of the country, who in the year 1424 met privately in a wood near a place called Truns, in the Upper League; where, _impressed with a sense of their former liberties_,[AD] they determined to remonstrate against, and oppose, the violent proceedings of their oppressors. The abbot Dissentis was the first who countenanced their measures; their joint influence gradually prevailed over several of the most moderate among the nobles; and hence arose the league which, from the colour of its first promoters, was ever called the Grey League; which, from its being the first in the bold attempt to shake off the yoke of wanton tyranny, has ever since retained the pre-eminence in rank before the two other leagues; and which has even given its name to the whole country, whose inhabitants, from the circumstances of their deliverance, pride themselves in the appellation of _Grisones_, or the _grey-ones_.[AE] From this period nothing has ever affected their freedom and absolute independence, which they now enjoy in the most unlimited sense, in spite of the repeated efforts of the house of Austria to recover some degree of ascendency over them. From this concise view of the history of the Grisons, in which I have |
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