Conqueror Construction Ltd

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Myra Krallman

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Aug 5, 2024, 10:26:24 AM8/5/24
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ConquerConstruction Inc has offered outstanding general contractor services for many years. Our goal is satisfying our customers by extending affordable, high quality and professional services for your next project because we know how good it feels to watch your dream transform into reality. The central point of our mission is providing an excellent customer experience. We want you to be happy with the workmanship and final product. Regardless of your project type or size, Conquer Construction Inc can create a design, formulate a plan, and deliver fabulous finished results.

The key to the success of any construction project is a company committed to client satisfaction, possessing the skills and experience to exceed expectations. As a fully licensed, insured and bonded general contractor, with a history of delivering work that is perfectly tailored to our clients' vision and goals, Conquer Construction Inc is the ideal company for your next project.


As a contracting company, Conquer Construction Inc is able to work with you from start to finish on any commercial or residential project you have in mind. We take care of everything from A to Z, so there's no need to become overwhelmed trying to keep track of multiple companies, or worry about lines of communication being crossed. With Conquer Construction Inc, your entire project is handled by a single entity: us!


Our team is small enough to maintain a strong dedication to customer service, but experienced enough to be able to offer prices that rival bigger companies. Plus, with our no obligation, free quote option, you'll have a clear sense of how much everything will cost you at the end of the day. Say goodbye to hidden fees and nasty surprises when you get the bill. With Conquer Construction Inc, what you see is what you get.


Since Conquer Construction Inc first set up shop, we've worked on projects ranging from small offices with a few rooms to multi-level business complexes, so no matter what your square footage is we have you covered.


For minor upgrades, like new doors or siding, to larger-scale projects like new roofing or renovation from top to bottom, Conquer Construction Inc's reliable team of hardworking specialists will work tirelessly until the job is done. Even the smallest projects get our full attention, so regardless of how big or small your budget is, Conquer Construction Inc is able to help make some updates to your commercial or residential space.


For small touchups to complete overhauls, we're a staple for any and all general contracting projects. To receive a free quote for our general contracting services, get in touch with Conquer Construction Inc today.


Construction YardGDI RemasteredGDI ClassicNod RemasteredNod ClassicStructureInternal IDFACTFaction Global Defense Initiative Brotherhood of NodRoleBase constructionTier1Tech level99PropertiesHit points400ProductionCost5000Produced byMobile construction vehicleCombatSight range3FunctionProducesSee ProductionThe construction yard was the heart of every GDI and Nod base during the First Tiberium War. It was used to prepare all materials necessary for the construction of the respective faction's buildings. It was unpacked from mobile construction vehicles.


Command & Conquer Gold does not include an updated cameo for the structure in its files. The monochrome one with English text is found on the game manual, while the colored one without text is an unused game file in Renegade.


Playing with friends, I built multiple bases across the map in a tactic aimed at constricting resources for everybody else on the map. My base defences were pretty solid on land, but then I got attacked from the water by a pretty large fleet of cruisers.


By the time I responded, I had lost all of my construction yards and a large quantity of other buildings including war factories. This seemed to leave me in the position where my only option was to storm their base with the units I had remaining and all the foot soldiers I could afford.


The Norman conquest of England, led by William the Conqueror (r. 1066-1087 CE) was achieved over a five-year period from 1066 CE to 1071 CE. Hard-fought battles, castle building, land redistribution, and scorched earth tactics ensured that the Normans were here to stay. The conquest saw the Norman elite replace that of the Anglo-Saxons and take over the country's lands, the Church was restructured, a new architecture was introduced in the form of motte and bailey castles and Romanesque cathedrals, feudalism became much more widespread, and the English language absorbed thousands of new French words, amongst a host of many other lasting changes which all combine to make the Norman invasion a momentous watershed in English history.


The conquest of England by the Normans started with the 1066 CE Battle of Hastings when King Harold Godwinson (aka Harold II, r. Jan-Oct 1066 CE) was killed and ended with William the Conqueror's defeat of Anglo-Saxon rebels at Ely Abbey in East Anglia in 1071 CE. In between, William had to more or less constantly defend his borders with Wales and Scotland, repel two invasions from Ireland by Harold's sons, and put down three rebellions at York.


The consequences of the Norman conquest were many and varied. Further, some effects were much longer-lasting than others. It is also true that society in England was already developing along its own path of history before William the Conqueror arrived and so it is not always so clear-cut which of the sometimes momentous political, social, and economic changes of the Middle Ages had their roots in the Norman invasion and which may well have developed under a continued Anglo-Saxon regime. Still, the following list summarises what most historians agree on as some of the most important changes the Norman conquest brought in England:


The Norman conquest of England was not a case of one population invading the lands of another but rather the wresting of power from one ruling elite by another. There was no significant population movement of Norman peasants crossing the channel to resettle in England, then a country with a population of 1.5-2 million people. Although, in the other direction, many Anglo-Saxon warriors fled to Scandinavia after Hastings, and some even ended up in the elite Varangian Guard of the Byzantine emperors.


The lack of an influx of tens of thousands of Normans was no consolation for the Anglo-Saxon aristocracy, of course, as 20 years after Hastings there were only two powerful Anglo-Saxon landowners in England. Some 200 Norman nobles and 100 bishops and monasteries were given estates which had been distributed amongst 4,000 Anglo-Saxon landowners prior to 1066 CE. To ensure the Norman nobles did not abuse their power (and so threaten William himself), many of the old Anglo-Saxon tools of governance were kept in place, notably the sheriffs who governed in the king's name the districts or shires into which England had traditionally been divided. The sheriffs were also replaced with Normans but they did provide a balance to Norman landowners in their jurisdiction.


The Church was similarly restructured with the appointment of Norman bishops - including in 1070 CE, the key archbishops of Canterbury (to Lanfranc) and York (to Thomas) - so that by 1087 CE there were only two Anglo-Saxon bishops left. Another significant change was the move of many dioceses' headquarters - the main church or cathedral - to urban locations (Dorchester to Lincoln, Lichfield to Chester, and Sherborne to Salisbury being just some examples). This move gave William much greater administrative and military control of the Church across England but also benefitted the Church itself by bringing bishops closer to the relatively new urban populations.


The royal court and government became more centralised, indeed, more so than in any other kingdom in Europe thanks to the holding of land and resources by only a relatively few Norman families. Although William distributed land to loyal supporters, they did not typically receive any political power with their land. In a physical sense, the government was not centralised because William still did not have a permanent residence, preferring to move around his kingdom and regularly visit Normandy. The Treasury did, though, remain at Winchester and it was filled as a result of William imposing heavy taxes throughout his reign.


The Normans were hugely successful warriors and the importance they gave to cavalry and archers would affect English armies thereafter. Perhaps even more significant was the construction of garrisoned forts and castles across England. Castles were not entirely unknown in England prior to the conquest but they were then used only as defensive redoubts rather than a tool to control a geographical area. William embarked on a castle-building spree immediately after Hastings as he well knew that a protected garrison of cavalry could be the most effective method of military and administrative control over his new kingdom. From Cornwall to Northumbria, the Normans would build over 65 major castles and another 500 lesser ones in the decades after Hastings.


The Normans not only introduced a new concept of castle use but also military architecture to the British Isles: the motte and bailey castle. The motte was a raised mound upon which a fortified tower was built and the bailey was a courtyard surrounded by a wooden palisade which occupied an area around part of the base of the mound. The whole structure was further protected by an encircling ditch or moat. These castles were built in both rural and urban settings and, in many cases, would be converted into stone versions in the early 12th century CE. A good surviving example is the Castle Rising in Norfolk, but other, more famous castles still standing today which were originally Norman constructions include the Tower of London, Dover Castle in Kent, and Clifford's Tower in York. Norman Romanesque cathedrals were also built (for example, at York, Durham, Canterbury, Winchester, and Lincoln), with the white stone of Caen being an especially popular choice of material, one used, too, for the Tower of London.

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