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"passim" Definitions
  1. used in the notes to a book or an article to show that a particular name or subject appears in several places in it
"passim" Antonyms

1000 Sentences With "passim"

How to use passim in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "passim" and check conjugation/comparative form for "passim". Mastering all the usages of "passim" from sentence examples published by news publications.

JAY DONAHUEMelrose, Massachusetts Infinitive jest The Economist seems increasingly to prefer actively to write in a way destined consistently to irritate and jar; presumably, so as clearly to demonstrate its commitment consistently to avoid splitting the infinitive (The Economist 2017, passim).
Fink: Höhlen Niederösterreichs, passim as well as Hartmann: Höhlen Niederösterreichs, passim.Höhlenkundliche Mitteilungen, passim.
88-91; Stark, God's Battalions, p. 28; Clarence-Smith, Islam, p. 39, passim; Misra, Identity and Religion, p. 91, passim.
400; Otiman, passim; Tiron, pp. 28, 31 He was inducted as a Banat representative, alongside Babeș—who, in 1883, wrote Mocioni's biography.Otiman, passim; Tiron, p. 31. See also Bugariu, p.
EDIPUCRS, Porto Alegre 2008, passim; Claudia Maria Wolf: Bildsprache Und Medienbilder: Die Visuelle Darstellungslogik von Nachrichtenmagazinen. Vs Verlag, Wiesbaden 2006, pp. 130sqq. et passim. He also pursued his career as artist photographer.Cfr.
Renaud, H., Le Matérialisme et la Nature. Paris, 1870, passim.
Studies in Christian Caucasian History. Washington, D.C.: Georgetown University Press, passim.
44 etc. and Stromberg (2004 passim; 2013, passim but especially pp. 83 etc). About Prague, see Graus 1979, pp. 22-47. About Spain, see Fernández 1981a, pp. 63, 77, 599, 601, 602, 605; Fernández 1981b, pp.
Clancy, "Real St Ninian", p. 24 This is a scribal error taken from the earlier form Ninia, in turn a scribal error from the form Uinniau.Clancy, "Real St Ninian", passim; Fraser, "Northumbrian Whithorn", passim; Yorke, Conversion, pp.
The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz. 2nd edition, ed. Barry Kernfeld. passim.
State Papers, Ireland, Eliz. and James I, passim; Cal. Carew MSS.; Cal.
212–217 & 232–249 passim. The London Naval Treaty, to which the U.S. was signatory,Holwitt, passim. required submarines to abide by prize rules (commonly known as "cruiser rules"). It did not prohibit arming merchantmen,Holwitt, p.6.
Anderman, Joan. Night of gratitude, talent at Passim. Boston Globe, January 18, 1999.
Diacon, pp. 67–70; Freitag & Păun, passim; Gafița (2009), p. 169; Jumară, pp.
574; Porumbăcean, pp. 244–245; Siani-Davies, pp. 125–126, 130; Uilăcan, passim; Țurlea, passim; Zarojanu, pp. 44–46 PCdR internal documents have the PNȚ and PNL together at 52%, with over 70% reached in Dorohoi, Maramureș, Muscel, Olt, and Rădăuți.
Alexiou, passim The Fuller Company's current headquarters are located in White Plains, New York.
"Beauty Beyond the Twilight Zone" in Hot Rod, April 2017, pp.30-43 passim.
Again Cicero claims that while there he carried out robbery and extortion.Cicero, Vatin., passim.
Harvard University Press, p. 312 and passim. ; Sadie, Julie Anne (1998). Companion to Baroque Music.
C. R. Pennell. Morocco since 1830: a history. NYU Press, 2000. Pages 233-322, passim.
16; Drăguț et al., p.169; Ghemeș, passim; Grigorescu, p.427–428; Lascu-Pop, p.
Sasha Abramsky, The House of Twenty Thousand Books, Halban London, 2014, pp. 57-71 & passim.
Shakespeare, the Earl and the Jesuit. Madison & Teaneck, NJ: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 2008, passim.
Penny, 331; Freedberg, 551 and passim in the following pages on the influence of Romano.
5-82 et passim. On Tucci's mission in Japan, idem, Vol. 1, pp. 387-413 .
Philip Robrieux, Domestic History of the Communist Party, especially V. 2, p. 500 ff., also passim.
John Cortland Crandall, Elder John Crandall and His Descendants (New Woodstock, N.Y.: The Author, 1949). passim.
Franklin, passim. European Lutheranism had a similar revival, led by theologians and pastors such as Wilhelm Loehe.
26–27; Karpat, pp. 406, 407; Lăcusteanu & Crutzescu, pp. 231, 259; Maciu, p. 948; Nistor, passim; Zane, p.
361Boia, pp. 246, 286, 290–291; Bolum, pp. 279–281; Chistol, passim; Georgescu, p. 230; Moisa (2012), pp.
About the numerous errors made by the early historians of the College of Cardinals see also; Johannes M. Brixius, Die Mitglieder des Kardinalkollegiums von 1130-1181, Berlin 1912, passim; and Werner Maleczek, Papst und Kardinalskolleg von 1191 bis 1216, Wien 1984, passim They can be divided in four subsequent categories.
Buckingham acknowledged that he had been misled by Savile. cites: cf. Strafford Letters, passim; Fortescue Papers, Camden Soc., pp.
Ellis, passim Among Owen's surviving descendants today, in the female line, is The O'Donovan, through his daughter Joanne/Johanna.
Xenophon LaMotte Sage was the stage name of E. Virgil Neal; see Conroy, (2009), passim, especially pp. 27–40.
T. Corey Brennan, The Praetorship in the Roman Republic (Oxford University Press, 2000), pp. 154 online, 610, et passim.
1954), Club Passim (est. 1958), Café Pamplona (est. 1959), Mr. Bartley's Burger Cottage (est. 1960), Dickson Brothers Hardware (est.
Endnote: In addition to Cicero (passim), see Dio Cassius xxxviii. 16, xxxix. 37; Pliny, Nat. Hist. ix. 8i, x.
129–30; Baillie's Letters and Journals (Bannatyne Club), vol. i. passim; Nisbet's Heraldry, 1722, i. 376–7; Spottiswoode's Hist.
Diocesi di Latina-Terracina-Sezze-Priverno, Il Libro del Primo Sinodo della Chiesa Pontina 2005–2012 (Latina 2012), passim.
Bosworth (1997), passim. Intimidating and dividing the left is now seen as a central purpose of the HUAC hearings.
Erich Heller, 'Rilke and Nietzsche, with a Discourse on Thought, Belief, and Poetry'; in id., The Disinherited Mind; passim.
43d, et passim). It would appear that straps were used to tie up certain objects, as the untying of the strap is often used to designate relaxation (Yer. Bik. i. 64a, et passim). It is very probable that sandals generally were made of thick hide; for wooden sandals are indicated as such (Yeb.
In 2006 she released an album, Blue Glitter Fish. TVGuide.com In 2010 she released a live album of her music, Club Passim, recorded at Club Passim in Cambridge, Massachusetts. In December 2012, McClain announced her engagement to actor, director, writer, and former co-star, Jon Lindstrom. They married on February 14, 2014.
Folia > suprema saepe ovata et perbrevi-petiolata. Spicae passim binatae. Stamina > inaequilonga; unum alterumve sterile. Stylus glaber, circiter lineam > metiens.
"The Pursuit of the House-Boat". Harper's Weekly, vol. 41 part 1 (Jan-Jun 1897), pp. 136–37 and passim.
Retrieved 1 May 2012. passim. funded by the Danish government, works to promote jazz in Denmark and Danish jazz abroad.
U.S. Department of Labor.Stein, passim Most victims died of burns, asphyxiation, blunt impact injuries, or a combination of the three.
The infant was christened the same month at the protestant Grote or Bavokerk in Haarlem.Bos-Bliek, Onze voorouders II, passim.
Paul played Cambridge's Club Passim, a venue that would become his "home" venue, for the first time when he opened for John Gorka in October 1989. Less than four years later he performed his first shows at Passim as a headliner. The three consecutive nights of shows took place on February 19–21, 1993.
1951, pp. 562ff. (passim). Apparently, speaking of public institutions, efficiency, coordination, responsibility, oversight and (democratic) political control matter in democratic contexts.
Andrew D. Radford, The Lost Girls: Demeter-Persephone and the Literary Imagination, 1850–1930 (Editions Rodopi, 2007), p. 22 et passim.
Club Passim website At the event Fitting told the audience Conway had restarted cancer treatment. He was originally diagnosed in 2014.
See New York Times (15 October 1894) p. 2 and (5 June 1891) p. 3; James (2006) p. 144 and passim.
Espenson, passim However, due to the complex nature of the Buffyverse, this chain of events may not, in fact, be canonical.
Accessed online 2 January 2008. Gerry Max, Horizon Chasers, p. 12 et passim. Also Jonathan Root, Halliburton--The Magnificent Myth, p.
G. Hill, 'A history of Cyprus. Vol. IV. The Ottoman province. The British colony. 1571-1948' (Cambridge, 1952), chapter VI passim.
A half-century later, film historians and critics had come to agree on a canon of approximately three hundred films from 1940–58.Silver and Ward (1992) list 315 classic film noirs (passim), and Tuska (1984) lists 320 (passim). Later works are much more inclusive: Paul Duncan, The Pocket Essential Film Noir (2003), lists 647 (pp. 46–84).
152, n. 38), Gethin expresses doubt about translating vicaya as "investigation." "discrimination of states,"Bodhi (2000), SN 46 passim, pp. 1567 ff.
220–221; Lupaș, pp. 187–189; Otiman, p. 28; Păcățian, passim; Tiron, p. 30 By origin, all three were in fact Aromanians.
75–76 et passim.Taylor, Lily Ross. Party Politics in the Age of Caesar (University of California Press, 1949). p. 93 et passim.
2320, pp. 1041–42, and passim (British History Online). and sent him as an envoy to the King of Hungary in 1530.
See also passim. Google Books Book reviews in legal periodicals may be useful to librarians.Deborah S Panella. "Book Reviews in Law Reviews".
GARABIDE ELKARTEA (2010): The Basque experience: some keys to language and identity recovery. S.l.: s.n., pp. 13, 20, 31, 54, 68, passim.
91 et passim. and gained some renown as media theorist, particularly on art communication and semiotics.Cfr. e.g. Edgar Roberto Kirchof: Estética e biossemiótica.
Doris Willens, Lonesome Traveler: The Life of Lee Hays (Lincoln, Nebraska and London: University of Nebraska Press, 1988) pp. 118, 119, and passim.
Retrieved 15 April 2010.hermandadrociosevilla.com , passim. Retrieved 14 April 2010. In recent times the Romería has attracted roughly a million pilgrims each year.
Leslie Paris, Children's Nature: The Rise of the American Summer Camp (NYU Press, 2008),, pp. 127, 186ff., & passim. Excerpts available at Google Books.
Death in the Works of Galway Kinnell. (Amherst, New York: Cambria Press, 2008), passim. Sidney Keyes,Guenther, John. Sidney Keyes: A Biographical Enquiry.
On the continuing pertinency of this monetary explanation for early modern inflation, and its relation to other sorts of explanation, see Mayhew passim.
During this period, the higher schools resumed their business very much as was done during Hospitaller rule.V. Mallia-Milanes, ed. (1988), The British Colonial Experience 1800–1964: The Impact on Maltese Society, passim; and Bonnici, A., (1990–1994), Storja ta’ l-Inkizizzjoni ta’ Malta (History of the Inquisition in Malta), 3 volumes, passim. Again Scholasticism came to the fore and flourished.
Weitzmann 1978, pp. 40–55; Lamberton 1986 passim; Dawson 1992 passim. That is: Dioscorus, influenced by allegorical commentaries on the Homeric epics and Bible, and by the allegorical icons and church art of the 6th century, was praising Christ, Old Testament patriarchs, and the saints in heaven as if they were the Emperor, kings, and dignitaries in a Byzantine court.Kuehn 1995, pp.
Club Passim, Cambridge, Massachusetts, December 31, 2012. Maverick Magazine, Issue 119, March–April 2013, p. 19-20. In early 2006 Black Wolf Records released Live at Club Passim, a recording compiled from Paul's 2005 New Year's Eve shows. In May 2006, Paul toured Europe and England playing to sold-out shows in Paris, France; Twickenham, England; Cheltenham, England and Wasserburg, Germany.
Oram, David I: The King Who Made Scotland, p. 50; Green, "David I and Henry I", passim; Kapelle, 34-49; Barrow, Feudal Britain, pp. 134-145. William II, it was said, had been killed in a hunting accident in the New Forest.Green, "David I and Henry I", passim; Kapelle, Norman Conquest of the North, pp. 34-49; Barrow, Feudal Britain, pp.
1–7 passim. or simply address a chosen set of films they regard as belonging to the noir "canon".See, e.g., Telotte (1989), pp.
From his days in college through the 1940s, Joseph Campbell turned his hand to writing fiction.Larsen and Larsen, op. cit., pp. 96–211, passim.
1st-century Roman wall painting of a harpist #Naerebout, p. 146\. #Ginsberg-Klar, pp. 313, 316. #Habinek, passim. #Habinek, pp. 90ff. #Scott, p. 404\.
23–24, 33. Alfred Tarski's work in truth theory won him world renown.Kazimierz Kuratowski, A Half Century of Polish Mathematics, p. 30 and passim.
Berkeley, George (1948-57, Nelson) Robinson, H. (ed.) (1996). "Principles of Human Knowledge and Three Dialogues", pp ix-x & passim. Oxford University Press, Oxford. .
Bruja (2004), passim; Moldovan, pp. 328–329, 333, 349; Veiga, pp. 247–248; Webb, pp. 152–153 Formal disestablishment came on March 30, 1938.
23–24, 33. Alfred Tarski's work in truth theory won him world renown.Kazimierz Kuratowski, A Half Century of Polish Mathematics, p. 30 and passim.
18 passim. This concept implies applying discernment to body-mind phenomena in order to apply right effort, giving way to entry into the first jhana.
10–11, 15 passim. There is no consensus on the matter.For survey of the lexical variety, see Naremore (2008), pp. 9, 311–12 n. 1.
John Ruskin met him in Venice and had an uneven friendship with him.Norwich op. cit. Chapter V passim. He died at Venice on 25 Aug.
Declan Kiberd, Idir Dhá Chultúr (Baile Átha Cliath, 2002), p. 137.Philip O'Leary, The Prose Literature of the Gaelic Revival, 1881–1921 (Penn, 1994), passim.
Rapp, Stephen H. (2003), Studies in Medieval Georgian Historiography: Early Texts And Eurasian Contexts, passim. Peeters Publishers, . Retrieved on 26 April 2009.Toumanoff, Cyril (1963).
Călinescu, p.564 Authors note that Toni was a passionate and extrovert person, but with a generally weak constitution.Călinescu, p.564; Cosco, passim; Kirițescu, p.
Ancient Sumerian cylinder seal impression showing the god Dumuzid being tortured in the Underworld by galla demons Many myths feature a god who dies and often returns to life.Frankfort, passim; Tortchinov, passim Such myths are particularly common in Near Eastern mythologies.Campbell, The Masks of God, p. 44 The anthropologist Sir James Frazer compared these dying god myths in his multi-volume work The Golden Bough.
Following the collapse of the Republic, laws pertaining to marriage, parenting, and adultery were part of Augustus' program to restore the mos maiorum (traditional social norms), while consolidating his power as princeps and paterfamilias of the Roman state.Edwards, pp. 34ff., 41–42 et passim; and "Unspeakable Professions: Public Performance and Prostitution in Ancient Rome," in Roman Sexualities (Princeton University Press, 1997), pp. 67, 89–90 et passim.
By confessing her hate, she was enabled to say, "all's well".Georges Bernanos, The Diary of a Country Priest (London: Fontana Books, 1956), 126–150 passim.
Beck, Ken, and Jim Clark. The Encyclopedia of TV Pets: A Complete History of Television's Greatest Animal Stars. Rutledge Hill Press, 2002, p. 90-92 & passim. .
Zacour (1956), passim. He was detested, however, by the Florentine chronicler, Giovanni Villani, who was a Guelph and a republican.Baluze (1693), I, pp. 683, 770 [ed.
Robert F. Bruner and Sean D. Carr, The Panic of 1907. Lessons Learned from the Market's Perfect Storm, passim. Hoboken, New Jersey: John Wiley & Sons, 2007.
7 and passim). and eventually settled in nearby Millerton (at the time the seat of Fresno County) where he served as County Judge for twelve years.
Their cultural ties were mostly with nearby Sicily.G.F. Abela, Descrittione di Malta, Malta, 1647, pp. 288ff., passim. Philosophy was mainly studied as a stepping stone to theology.
8 mm longis, omnibus 1-floris v. > partim 2-floris ; indumentum iuventute densissimum, denique passim densum, > breve, e pilis patentibus crassis simplicibus v. basi ramosis compositum. c.
The large amount of sculpture surviving has been analysed in a number of publications.Reichle, 214 and passim briefly considers several of these. Donaldson is one such publication.
314; Epiphanius, "Hæres." lv. 3, passim have stated that Elijah was a priest. Some Rabbis have speculated that he should be identified with Phinehas.Pirḳe R. El. xlvii.
Lucia Elizabeth Vestris was a prominent figure in the history of British theatre and customs in the nineteenth century.Pearce, passim She is buried at Kensal Green Cemetery.
Final Report, p.138sqq; Ancel (2005 b), passim; Deletant, pp.116, 123–126, 141–142, 152–230, 275, 321–341; Ioanid, pp.231, 233–234; Kelso, pp.
Reiser 2011, pp. 243, 330–331, et passim. Such he not only relates to, among scores of other authorities, the toxicology of the Padovan physician and botanist Prospero Alpini (1553–1616), and polymathic writings of the humanists (father) Julius Caesar Scaliger (1484–1558) and (son) Joseph Justus Scaliger (1540–1609) but also discusses Paracelsism and its antagonists.Cfr. Reiser 2011, pp. 15–18, 197–199, 215, 283–284, et passim.
In 2019, Conway, Fitting, and Champagne recorded an album. A live date was announced for January 19, 2020 at Club Passim in Cambridge -- their first appearance together on stage since all were members of Treat Her Right.Club Passim website Conway was unable to participate due to health issues, with Larry Dersch and Jerome Deupree filling in on drums. Fitting told the audience Conway had recently restarted cancer treatment.
Rachlin (2011), passim Virginia Woolf is said to have used Edith Craig as a model for the character of Miss LaTrobe in her novel Between the Acts (1941).
Morelli, passim; Rossini; Toscano, p. 80 In Europe during the 18th century Italian operas did not normally endure very long in theatres, hardly ever getting through one season.
Rosenwein, p. 248 and n8. Some historians have seen his "private defense initiatives" in a more positive light and have found a coherent policy of gift giving.Rosenwein, passim.
Suffolk Chronicle for 1 and 8 May 1875Journals of Royal Agricultural Society, 1st ser. passim, 3rd ser. vol. v. (1894)Annual Monitor, 1869 p. 147, 1876 p. 146.
Hungarians murdered Kuthen and the Cumans returned to the Balkans in 1241, pillaging Syrmia as an act of revenge.Hardi, passim. See also Hévizi, p. 18; Kincses-Nagy, pp.
Cambridge in the 1840s was under severe pressure to reform, being still almost entirely Anglican.Winstanley, pp. 83-96 passim. The Chancellor election was crucial to the University's response.
See also Florescu, pp. 456–457; Heinen, pp. 138–144, 146; Stănescu, passim The former incident in particular was received as a shock by working-class voters.Heinen, p.
Richard Halliburton Papers: Correspondence , Manuscripts Division, Department of Rare Books and Special Collections, Princeton University Library. Accessed online 2 January 2008. Gerry Max, Horizon Chasers, p. 12 et passim.
See Wintermute, Jacob Perry. (1900). The Wintermute Family History. Columbus, Ohio: The Champlin Press : passim. Internet Archive-Open Library in partnership with Brigham Young University-Harold B. Lee Library.
Schaeffer, Casper M.D. (and Johnson, William M.). Memoirs and Reminiscences: Together with Sketches of the Early History of Sussex County, New Jersey. (Hackensack, New Jersey: Privately Printed, 1907), passim.
J. f. Haldon, Byzantium in the Seventh Century, 1990 pp. 96-99A.H.M. Jones, Later Roman Empire, 1964 pp. 724-757Ramsay MacMullen, Corruption and the Decline of Rome, 1988, passim.
86-87; Trașcă, passim The triumphant Antonescu ordered Lecca to contact Manfred Freiherr von Killinger, the new German Ambassador, and inform him about Geißler's dissent.Deletant, p.313; Hausleitner, p.
27–28; Djuvara, pp. 309–310; Eliade, pp. 416–417; Lascu, passim Reportedly, he also finished translated the Iliad, but this work, if it ever existed, remains lost.Cardaș, p.
O'Donovan Rossa, passim (correspondence with John O'Donovan); Ó Murchadha, p. 129 The drip continues to this day, although O'Donovan's direct descendants in the male line died out in 1829.O'Donovan, passim Surveys of Ireland's haunted places regularly include the site and the story has become more elaborate as time has gone by, for example including the element of the O'Donovan family inviting Dorothy Forde to the castle to discuss the matter before seizing her.Jones, p.
Harper's Weekly, vol. 43 part 2 (Jul–Dec 1899), pp. 763–64 and passim. Page 763 (August 5, 1899), from original at University of California, at HathiTrust Digital Library (HDL.handle.net).
Campbell, The Hero with a Thousand Faces, passim Because of its extremely comparative nature, the monomyth hypothesis is currently out of favor with some religious scholars such as Lesley Northup.
Stănescu, p. 25 Researchers of various backgrounds, including ȘornikovȘornikov, passim and Ludmila Rotari,Madgearu, p. 17; Suveică (2010), p. 65 have returned focus on the rebellion's connection with Russian monarchism.
Eusebius, Praeparatio Evangelica, xiv.; Suda, Sillainei, Timon; Athenaeus, passim; Aulus Gellius, iii. 17. Commentaries were written on the Silloi by Apollonides of Nicaea, and also by Sotion of Alexandria.Athenaeus, viii.
Another early interest was photography.An Oxford Childhood, passim. She was sent in 1906 to Miss Batty's, later Wychwood School in Oxford.Josephine Ransom: Schools of Tomorrow in England (London: Bell, 1919).
Page 553. See also passim. The book was translated into French by Lucien Mercier and published under the title Les lance-flammes by Belfond in Paris in 1983.Christian Roinat.
Filitti I, passim. See also Pas, p.28 As noted by his daughter Mira, the signal for this persecution was an article in the fascist newspaper Porunca Vremii.Filitti I, p.
347; Spalding's Memorials of Trubles (Spalding Club), passim; Peterkin's Records of the Kirk, 1843, pp. 26–7, 99–106; Paterson's Hist. of Ayr and Wigton, 1866, ii. 466; Wood's Hist.
Carr (2007) 109–10. See also Field (1981). The Nazis used those parts of Wagner's thought that were useful for propaganda and ignored or suppressed the rest.See Potter (2008) passim.
Balan, passim; Marton, pp. 154–160 Especially through Carp, Junimism condemned the Faction's xenophobia, and called for the protection of Romanian Jews;Gafița, pp. 98, 100–101; Hasdeu & Eliade, pp.
Mercator has given various extracts,Subnot. passim but it is best known from Augustine's elaborate Opus Imperfectum, which was evoked by it,August. Opp. t. x. in Patrologia Latina xlv. 1050.
The Times (Friday, 17 June 1910), p. 12. F.A. Rice, The Granta And Its Contributors, 1889 1914 (1924), passim. Some of his poems were later reprinted in Cambridge Poets 1900–1913.
Robert Fredrick Burk, The Corporate State and the Broker State: The Du Ponts and American National Politics, 1925-1940 (Harvard University Press, 1990), , pp.57 & passim. Excerpts available at Google Books.
University of Illinois Press, 2001 pp. 172-175, 236-237 and passim. He later broke with McLevy over the latter's decision to bolt the SP and join the Social Democratic Federation.
Wood, 307-308. Robert Webking argues that Melancton Smith was probably the author. Webking finds deep similarities between Smith's speeches at the New York ratifying convention and the Federal Farmer.Webking, passim.
117, 120, Maldonado Jiménez 2015, p. 175 and passim. However, sporadically some press titles of the era declared Gómez a Carlist as early as February 1933, see Región 28.02.33, available here.
"Autumn Day in Kui Prefecture" consists of 200 lines of 100 rhymed couplets (Murck, passim). It is called "one-hundred rhymes" because the rhyme is at the end of the couplet.
3 (1974), t. 4 (1975), t. 5 (1976), t. 6 (1977), passim.] and [Abbé L. Diouf, L’homme dans le monde (Vision sereer), communication aux Journées Africaines de Théologie, polygraphié, s. d.
15 & passim. The yellow badge Jews were forced to wear can be seen in this marginal illustration from an English manuscript The Jewish badge was introduced in some places; it could be a coloured piece of cloth in the shape of a circle, strip, or the tablets of the law (in England), and was sewn onto the clothes.Schreckenburg, Heinz, The Jews in Christian Art, pp. 15 & passim, 1996, Continuum, New York, Elsewhere special colours of robe were specified.
He never seemed to have been able to redeem himself in the eyes of the Company, and in London and elsewhere fought a rearguard action against his many opponents within it.William Bolts, Considerations on India Affairs, London, 1772-5, I, passim; Harry Verelst, A View of the Rise, Progress and Present State of the English Government in Bengal, London, 1772, passim; L.S. Sutherland, The East India Company in Eighteenth-Century Politics, Oxford, 1952, pp.219-22,255-8.
76 and many did so over the ensuing decades.Esdaile, passim., especially p. 89 Another term strongly associated with the Carlist faction is apostólicos, a term deriving from their strong ties to clericalism.
The International Socialist Review [Chicago], vol. 1, no. 1 (July 1900), passim. The complete run of International Socialist Review was reprinted in book form and as microfilm by Greenwood Press in 1968.
Various sources for information on Chinese legends and mythology about bird. This includes the Shanhaijing (Stassberg 2002, passim). Also, "Questions to Heaven" (Stassberg 2002, 11 and Yang et al 2005, 8-10).
Capital: NakhchivanEncyclopaedia Iranica. K. A. Luther "Atabakan-e Adarbayjan": Sources such as Ḥosaynī’s Aḵbār (p. 181 and passim) make it clear that members of the family always considered Naḵǰavān their home base.
Isidore of Seville identifies the Inui, plural, with Pan, incubi, and the Gallic Dusios.Isidore of Seville, Etymologiae 8.11.103: Pilosi, qui Graece Panitae, Latine Incubi appellantur, sive Inui ab ineundo passim cum animalibus.
Genesis 37, NIV. Aryeh Kaplan in The Living Torah gives a range of possible explanations: : Kethoneth passim in Hebrew. It was a royal garment; 2 Samuel 13:18 (cf. Ralbag ad loc.).
Batzaria (1987), passim; Karpat, p. 564 Another variant he favored was Moș Ene.Mihaela Cernăuți-Gorodețchi, notes to Hans Christian Andersen, 14 povești nemuritoare, Institutul European, Iași, 2005, pp. 20, 54, 78, 103.
Campbell, O.J. (1938). Comicall Satyre and Shakespeare's Troilus and Cressida. San Marino: Huntington Library. passim. Shakespeare's final plays hark back to his Elizabethan comedies in their use of romantic situation and incident.
Caxaro, apart from his father, had other members of his family, together with many of his townfolk,Cf. Abela, Descrittione: 288ff., and passim. taking part in this same commerce of goods and ideas.
Swafford (1998), pp. 251, 252, 472, for descriptions; Sinclair (1999), passim, for proper dating of Scherzo: Over the Pavements, Concord Sonata, and other named pieces: Second String Quartet (1911–13, prem. 1946, publ.
London: Constable. passim. while Anne Ross believed that they were essentially tribal priests, having more in common with the shamans of tribal societies than with the classical philosophers.Ross, Anne (1967). Pagan Celtic Britain.
Two of these acting governors (John Anderson and John Hamilton) died in office, and were replaced by another acting governor drawn from the members of the provincial council.See Stellhorn, Paul A., and Birkner, Michael J. The Governors of New Jersey 1664–1974: Biographical Essays . (Trenton, New Jersey: New Jersey Historical Commission, 1982), passim; and McCormick, Richard P. New Jersey from Colony to State, 1609–1789. (1st Ed – Princeton: Van Nostrand, 1964; 2nd Ed. — New Brunswick, New Jersey: Rutgers University Press, 1970), passim.
Other versions of lexicostatistical test lists were published e.g. by Robert Lees (1953), John A. Rea (1958:145f), Dell Hymes (1960:6), E. Cross (1964 with 241 concepts), W. J. Samarin (1967:220f), D. Wilson (1969 with 57 meanings), Lionel Bender (1969), R. L. Oswald (1971), Winfred P. Lehmann (1984:35f), D. Ringe (1992, passim, different versions), Sergei Starostin (1984, passim, different versions), William S-Y. Wang (1994), M. Lohr (2000, 128 meanings in 18 languages). B. Kessler (2002), and many others.
There is no surviving record for the early years of Dioscorus. His father Apollos was an entrepreneur and local official.Keenan 1984b passim; Kuehn 1995, pp. 54–58. The commonly accepted date for the birth of Dioscorus is around A.D. 520.Maspero 1911, p. 457; MacCoull 1988, p. 9; Kuehn 1995, p. 59. Although there is no evidence, it is likely that Dioscorus went to school in Alexandria, where one of his teachers might have been the Neoplatonic philosopher John Philoponus.MacCoull 1987 passim.
The names of both Hades and Pluto appear also in the Greek Magical Papyri and curse tablets, with Hades typically referring to the underworld as a place, and Pluto regularly invoked as the partner of Persephone.Hans Dieter Betz, The Greek Magical Papyri in Translation (University of Chicago Press, 1986, 1992), passim; John G. Gager, Curse Tablets and Binding Spells from the Ancient World (Oxford University Press, 1992), p. 12 (examples invoking Pluto pp. 99, 135, 143–144, 207–209) and passim on Hades.
This manner of ruling a country is particularly strongly associated with German history, where the emergence of a capital city took an unusually long time. The German itinerant regime ("Reisekönigtum") was, from the Frankish period and up to late medieval times, the usual form of royal or imperial government. About German conditions, see: Bernhardt 1993, passim; Hermann 2000, passim; Reinke 1987, pp. 225-251. The Holy Roman Emperors, in the Middle Ages and even later, did not rule from any permanent central residence.
Danuta Shanzer, A Philosophical and Literary Commentary on Martianus Capella's De Nuptiis Philologiae et Mercurii Book One (University of California Press, 1986), pp. 14, 136 et passim; Stahl, et al., vol. 1, p. 10.
T Kren & S McKendrick (eds), Illuminating the Renaissance: The Triumph of Flemish Manuscript Painting in Europe, Getty Museum/Royal Academy of Arts, p.518, 2003, . Biography by Richard Gay, pp. 518-9, and passim.
Satiacum was prominent the 1970 action at Seattle's Fort Lawton that resulted in the creation of United Indians of All Tribes and ultimately of the Daybreak Star Cultural Center.Reyes 2006, passim, especially p. 103.
Henry Adams, History of the United States of America during the Administrations of Thomas Jefferson, (The Library of America, 1986, ) pp. 1049-1064 passim. He was the father of Hugh Rose, 1st Baron Strathnairn.
Jean Mesnard, Pascal et les Roannez, (Paris: Desclée de Brouwer, 1965), passim. Mesnard’s findings about Goibaut are succinctly summarized by Thomas M. Carr, Jr., in his Introduction to Réflexions ... et Avertissement ..., pp. 11–21.
The Times, Wednesday, January 4, 1984; pg. 21; Issue 61729; col A Today's television and radio; passim His ecclesiastical career then took him to All Saints, Bromsgrove and after that Kedington Benefice - Great Bradley.
Moțoc, passim; Nastasă (2010), p. 377; Pandrea, p. 356; Șeicaru & Marcovici, pp. 319–322 Blank was also responsible for the Viața Românească editorial office and, in 1920, for a literary club called Societatea Filarmonică.
Mahan, A.T., Captain, U.S. Navy. Influence of Sea Power on History, 1660–1783. Boston: Little Brown, passim. Mahan was highly influential in naval and political circles throughout the age of the battleship,Kennedy, pp.
30, 70, Castro Berrojo 2006, pp. 27, 30, 140 and passim, Checa Godoy 1989, p. 17, Gil Cuadrado 2006, p. 424; the single work which offers a different perspective is Martínez Sánchez 2002, pp.
In the portrait, behind Wentworth is a classical column, suggesting a knowledge of classical antiquity, and associating him with the cult of refinement.Bushman, Richard. The Refinement of America: Persons, Houses, Cities. Vintage Books, 1992. Passim.
As Japanese landings at Timor were expected, S-39 was ordered to the Karimata Strait.Blair, p.176-8 passim. The main Japanese force transited the strait and landed at Java without S-39 sighting it.
Scholars agree that Pinter's dramatic rendering of power relations results from this scrutiny.Cf., e.g., Batty, "Preface" (xvii–xix) and chap. 6–9 (55–221) in About Pinter; Grimes 19, 36–71, 218–20, and passim.
C. H. Beck, Munich 2001, , p. 674 and passim. The parentage of Cleopatra V is not recorded. She may have been a legitimate or illegitimate daughter of Ptolemy IXWerner Huß, Ägypten in hellenistischer Zeit, p.
Other members of the Yeamans family were Quakers, and one of them married Isabel, daughter of Margaret Fell, and stepdaughter of Fox. cites Fox, Journal', 1891, i. 479 passim; Smith, Cat. Friends' Books, p. 968.
Aeliani de instruendis Aciebus liber unus. Modesti de vocabulis rei militaris liber unus. Item pictura bellicae cxx passim Vegetio adjectae. Collata sunt omnia ad antiquos codices, maximè B V D AE I, quod testabitur Aelianus.
24-59; Moore, The First European Revolution, c.970–1215, p. 30ff; see also Barrow, "The Balance of New and Old", passim, esp. 9; this idea of "Europe" seems in practice to mean "Western Europe".
If Thame and Quarrendon formed part of Frithuwald's lands, then they extended over much of modern Berkshire.Blair, "Frithuwold's kingdom", passim, especially pp. 105-107; Kirby, pp. 115-116; but see also Briggs, "Finding the Fullingadic".
165; Kuller, p. 179 Although the Zionist movement experienced a resurgence,Iancu, pp. 56–57; Kuller, passim; Nastasă, pp. 34–37 Zissu's Hasidic discourse and disdain for secularism soon drove away younger activists, including Isou.
Because of the diversity of noir (much greater than that of the screwball comedy), certain scholars in the field, such as film historian Thomas Schatz, treat it as not a genre but a "style".Schatz (1981), pp. 111–15. Alain Silver, the most widely published American critic specializing in film noir studies, refers to film noir as a "cycle"Silver (1996), pp. 4, 6 passim. See also Bould (2005), pp. 3, 4; Hirsch (2001), p. 11. and a "phenomenon",Silver (1996), pp. 3, 6 passim.
In this style, the Father (sometimes seated on a throne) is shown supporting either a crucifixG Schiller, Iconography of Christian Art, Vol. II, 1972, (English trans from German), Lund Humphries, London, figs I;5–16 & passim, and , pp. 122–124 and figs 409–414 or, later, a slumped crucified Son, similar to the Pietà (this type is distinguished in German as the Not Gottes),G Schiller, Iconography of Christian Art, Vol. II, 1972, (English trans from German), Lund Humphries, London, figs I;5–16 & passim, and , pp.
136, 138; Pâslariuc, pp. 4–6, 8; Pilat, passim This account, contested by several historians, is based on Alexander Jagiellon's letter, which also claims that Arbore narrowly escaped an assassination attempt.Pâslariuc, pp. 4–5; Pilat, passim According to Nicolae Iorga, the whole episode, as narrated by the source, is "hard to believe" and "confusing". In 2013, Liviu Pilat argued that the whole controversy about Arbore's claim to the throne stems from a misreading of Alexander's letter, which refers only to the events of 1497.
Runblom and Norman, 315.Norman, passim. Emigration patterns in the Nordic countries-- Finland, Sweden, Norway, Denmark, and Iceland--show striking variation. Nordic mass emigration started in Norway, which also retained the highest rate throughout the century.
New York: Duell, Sloan and Pearce, 1951; pp. 180, 187–188, passim. In 1952, Nathaniel Weyl, another member of the Ware Group, named Peters as head of that spy ring."Another Witness," Time, March 3, 1952.
It has been interpreted as Ovid's challenge to the prevailing orthodoxy of Augustus's religious reforms, which were often innovations of Imperial propaganda under the cloak of archaic revivalism.Newlands, Playing with Time, pp. 126, 144, et passim.
Seals from Norman Roth, op cit. Also Schreckenburg p. 15 & passim. A law in Breslau in 1267 said that since Jews had stopped wearing the pointed hats they used to wear, this would be made compulsory.
24-31, and 9.6 (June 1950), pp. 15-22. which led to his long-enduring legacy.Nancy Reynolds and Malcolm McCormick, No Fixed Points: Dance in the Twentieth Century (New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 2003), passim.
Nature and the Numinous in Mythopoeic Fantasy Literature, e.g., p. ix and passim, Vol. 46, Critical Explorations in Science Fiction and Fantasy (Palumbo, D.E. & Sullivan III, C.W.), Jefferson, NC, USA: McFarland, , see , accessed 17 October 2015.
12–13; Nicolaescu, pp. 149–150; Porumbăcean, p. 234; Scurtu (1973), passim They began in May 1924, as informal talks between Stere and the PNR's Vasile Goldiș, resulting in a preliminary agreement that June.Scurtu (1973), pp.
Since the 1850s the hill was also nicknamed Monte Cruce or Monte Croce.David Kalisch, "Die Besteigung des Monte Cruce bei Berlin" (by 1853), in: David Kalisch, Lustige Werke, Berlin: Hofmann, 1870, pp. 29–32, passim. No ISBN.
Carriers, for all their evident potency, were virtually defenseless at night, and Fletcher might have been dealt a crushing blow by Yamato the night of 6–7 June, had Yamamoto stayed closer.Willmott, Barrier and the Javelin, passim.
D.R. Fisher, History of Parliament 1820–1832, vol. 1, Cambridge University Press 2009, p. 351–360 passim. The new Parliament was summoned to meet on 14 June 1831, for a maximum seven-year term from that date.
The AA regiments of the RA were designated 'Heavy AA' (HAA) from the summer of 1940 (at the time of the Battle of Britain) to distinguish them from the newer Light AA (LAA) units being formed.Litchfield, passim.
Adams, pp. 85–89. Although women's genitals appear often in invective and satiric verse as objects of disgust, they are rarely referred to in Latin love elegy.Richlin (1983), pp. xvi, 26, 68–69, 109, 276 et passim.
Delia Da Sousa Correa, "The Stories of Katherine Mansfield" in Richard Danson Brown & Suman Gupta, eds., Aestheticism & Modernism: Debating Twentieth-century Literature 1900-1960 (Psychology Press, 2005), , pp. 78, 85-96, & passim. Excerpts available at Google Books.
Passim hosts balladeer. The Boston Herald, Friday, February 19, 1993. Paul was particularly moved when he heard Bob Dylan singing "The House of the Rising Sun". It was then that he began to take folk music seriously.
37–38 et passim. Female sexuality was encouraged within marriage. In Roman patriarchal society, a "real man" was supposed to govern both himself and others well, and should not submit to the use or pleasure of others.
John XXIII, Enc. Mater et magistra (1961) Part 3, passim and Enc. Pacem in Terris (1963), 91–97, cf. 125; Second Vatican Council, Constitution on the Church in the Modern World, Gaudium et spes (1965), nn.57f.
Scholars have commonly dated the origin of the Jewish labor movement in the United States to the decade of the 1880s.See, for example, Tony Michels, A Fire in Their Hearts: Yiddish Socialists in New York. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2005, pp. 30-41; Melech Epstein, Jewish Labor in the USA: An Industrial, Political, and Cultural History of the Jewish Labor Movement: Volume 1, 1882-1914. New York: Trade Union Sponsoring Committee, 1950, passim; Gerald Sorin, The Prophetic Minority: American Jewish Immigrant Radicals, 1880-1920. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 1985, passim.
Entrance on Palmer Street Club Passim is an American folk music club in the Harvard Square area of Cambridge, Massachusetts. It was opened by Joyce Kalina (now Chopra) and Paula Kelley in 1958,Cohen, Ronald (2002). Rainbow Quest: The Folk Music Revival and American Society, 1940–1970. University of Massachusetts Press (Amherst) when it was known as Club 47 (based on its then address, 47 Mount Auburn Street, also in Cambridge; it moved to its present location on Palmer Street in 1963), and changed its name to simply Passim in 1969.
Her platform, Changing Keys, connects unused pianos with students and schools in at-risk communities and was selected for the Harvard Legal Entrepreneurship Project, the Club Passim Iguana Music Fund grant and the Miss America Community Service scholarship.
Wood returned to Lowmill in January 1766, but was back at Merthyr in April.Gross, passim He remained there as manager until his death in 1774. His widow stayed there until her death in 1799.Riden in Gross, xxvii.
In China they saw Peking (Beijing), Wuhan and Nanking.Scott and Helen Nearing, The Brave New World. Harborside, ME: Social Science Institute, 1958; passim. They returned to Brooksville to write a book on their experiences, The Brave New World.
Museum of the Cathedral, Mdina, Malta, Archive of the Mdina Cathedral, Misc. 275, Repertorium Mandatorum, B, Compendio dei Mandati, 1587–1645, ff. 71-72v, passim, cited by . In 1638, Rispoli was elected Prior of the community at Valletta.
Reader, Rocky Road, passim. The Unreal Gods were one of the original (2007) inductees of the Oregon Music Hall of Fame.Previous Music Hall of Fame Honorees - 2009 and earlier, Oregon Music Hall of Fame, accessed 2015-10-01.
Orrico et al, 2004, passim Webbing between the digits of the hindfoot is also present in several mammals that spend part of their time in the water.Voss, 1988, p. 455 Webbing accommodates movement in the water.Voss, 1988, p.
Alain Danielou, Introduction to the Study of Musical Scales, Mushiram Manoharlal 1999, Chapter 1 passim. Confucius, like Pythagoras, regarded the small numbers 1,2,3,4 as the source of all perfection.Sir James Jeans, Science and Music, Dover 1968, p. 155.
This continued until Bacon as a member of parliament was disabled from undertaking government contracts in 1782, when the forge and some of the gunfoundry business were leased to Francis Homfray.The National Archives, WO 47/80-100, passim.
Gaul had a long history as a center of rhetoric. It maintained its dominance of the field well into the 4th century.T.J. Haarhoff, Schools of Gaul (London, 1920; rept. Johannesburg, 1958), passim, cited in Nixon and Rodgers, 7.
See also Mitchievici, p.339, 354–357; Teacă, passim Also in 1908, following Iser's proposal, Bogdan-Pitești sponsored a Bucharest exhibit showcasing works by the renowned European painters Demetrios Galanis, Jean-Louis Forain and André Derain.Cernat, Avangarda, p.
Irvine et al. passim (various pages) Only twelve men survived. Amongst the dead were all ten members of his entourage. Kitchener was seen standing on the quarterdeck during the approximately twenty minutes that it took the ship to sink.
The city has an active music scene, from classical performances to the latest popular bands. Beyond its colleges and universities, Cambridge has many music venues, including The Middle East, Club Passim, The Plough and Stars, and the Nameless Coffeehouse.
Philippe Bervas, Ce barde errant Théodore Botrel, Editions Ouest France, 2000, p.4; passim. The song was a central feature of the repertoire of Félix Mayol until his death in 1941. Mayol also showcased many of Botrel's later songs.
Chaucer may have regarded this interpretation of his name as a summons to give up his sinful life and to join the monks of Westminster Abbey.Heiner Gillmeister, Chaucer's Conversion. Allegorical Thought in Medieval Literature, Frankfurt am Main 1984, passim.
25; Wamwere, I Refuse to Die, p. 149, passim; Karimi and Ochieng, The Kenyatta Succession, p. 13; Rutten and Owuor, "Weapons of mass destruction"; Kagwanja, "Courting genocide." Regarding the situation in South Africa, see Ndangam, Lifting the Cloak, pp.
Rutledge Hill Press, 2002, p. 90-92 & passim. . After the Gentle Ben series ended, Bruno made another well-received appearance in the 1972 John Huston-directed film The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean, starring Paul Newman.Mavis, Paul.
At one point, she was also married to Centeotl and Xiuhtecuhtli. By Mixcoatl, she was the mother of Quetzalcoatl. Anthropologist Hugo Nutini identifies her with the Virgin of Ocotlan in his article on patron saints in Tlaxcala.Nutini (1976), passim.
93, 103. For the rest of his childhood and youth, Reyes lived with his father, variously on the Colville Reservation and in Okanogan, Washington,Reyes 2002, passim. where he graduated from high school in 1955.Reyes 2002, p. 186.
The band has toured the northeastern US, selling out various venues, including the Club Passim in Cambridge, Massachusetts. They have performed with similar groups and musical performers, including Lori McKenna, Man Man, and Grammy-nominated country musician, Trace Adkins.
Biographers have generally agreed that Tchaikovsky was homosexual.Poznansky, Quest, 32 et passim. He sought the company of other men in his circle for extended periods, "associating openly and establishing professional connections with them".Wiley, New Grove (2001), 25:147.
636; See also Fortenbaugh, passim. The head of the Roman goddess Minerva (Greek goddess Athena) appeared in the center of an oval. Surrounding it in French was "Sous les lois de Minerve nous devenons tous frères" (). Fortenbaugh (1978), p.
There is still some contention among scholars about the date. Theodor Schieffer (in his 1954 biography of the saint) maintained 743,Schieffer, Winfrid-Bonifatius 213, 333ff. pace Heinz Löwe,Dierkens 14 n.25. as do Kurt- Ulrich JäschkeJäschke passim.
See for example, George Jellinek, Callas: Portrait of a Prima Donna, Dover, 1986, p. 96 and passim. . The designation prima donna assoluta (absolute first lady) is occasionally applied to a prima donna of outstanding excellence.Oxford English Dictionary (Draft revision 2009).
William J. Bouwsma, Venice and the Defense of Republican Liberty: Renaissance Values in the Age of the Counter Reformation (Berkeley, 1968) passim. Having outlived his role during the Counter Reformation as the political Jesuit intellectual, par excellence, he died in 1611.
The Gonfalon of State and Sword of State are carried in the royal procession from Dam Palace to the Church and are held on either side of the royal dais in the Church during the swearing in ceremony.Van Cruyningen, passim.
He was the author of numerous treatises, which are preserved in manuscript in the Barberini collection. Twenty volumes of his work on civil law and canon law are kept in the Vatican Library.Cardella, p. 229. Schweitzer, passim in various notes.
Larissa Bonfante and Judith Swaddling, Etruscan Myths (Series The Legendary Past) British Museum/University of Texas, 2006:76–77 et passim. She is paired with her young lover Atunis (Adonis) and figures in the episode of the Judgement of Paris.
The more Mitre asked the navy to be bold, the more they suspected him. In practice Mitre never attempted to give direct orders to the Brazilian navy, instead seeking to persuade it through the senior Brazilian land commander.Tasso Fragoso, 1956b, passim.
Victoria Woodhull ran in the 1872 election to be President of the U.S., asserting a right to equality.Gabriel, Mary, Notorious Victoria: The Life of Victoria Woodhull, Uncensored (Chapel Hill, N.Car.: Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill, 1st ed. 1998 ()), passim, esp. pp.
Sallis, Eva. 1999. Sheherazade through the looking glass: the metamorphosis of the Thousand and One Nights. pp. 4 passim Muhsin Mahdi's 1984 Leiden edition, based on the Galland Manuscript, was rendered into English by Husain Haddawy (1990).The Arabian Nights, trans.
FAME review of The Day After Everything Changed. Folk and Acoustic Music Exchange, 2010. Retrieved April 7, 2010. Five concerts commemorating Paul's 20th anniversary in the music business took place at Boston's Club Passim the weekend of July 9–10, 2010.
225, 398, & passim. Excerpts available at Google Books. An adjacent building, smaller but similar in shape, is known as "Baby Mabee" and houses a television production studio."Oral Roberts has reason to rejoice", Associated Press at ESPN.com, March 12, 2006.
For examples, see ; , passim. Kladas had been awarded a Venetian knighthood (and a gold robe) just before the 1480 revolt.. Members of the family moved to Kefalonia and continued to lead stratioti in Venetian service for at least another hundred years.
Until 1884, the hounds were owned by the Master, and a change of mastership took place either by purchase or inheritance.Blew, op. cit., passim The hounds are now said to be "owned by the country", that is, by the hunt organization.
In Germany, joining other western war correspondents such as Jack Reed he viewed German hospitals, troop trains, and saw the front from the German side.Poole, The Bridge, pp. 238 and passim. He would spend three months in Europe covering the conflict.
Homer, Odyssey (Book 10, ln. 491; Book 10, ln. 509). Her central myth served as the context for the secret rites of regeneration at Eleusis,Károly Kerényi, Eleusis: Archetypal Image of Mother and Daughter, 1967, passim which promised immortality to initiates.
Davies (2018) interprets the concept of as "the result of action in accord with maat [the proper order of the universe]". (p. 86, and passim). The so-called offering formula begins with "an offering given by the king".Gardiner, Alan. (1957).
Kozinn, Allan, "Magical Mystery Tour Ends for Apple Corps Executive", New York Times, 12 April 2007, passim. (link) One of Aspinall's final tasks at Apple was to oversee the remastering of The Beatles' back- catalogue for an anticipated 2008 release.
University of Massachusetts Press (Amherst) Scott Alarik described Club 47 as being "the hangout of choice for the new folkies" during that time. Today there is a Passim School of Music program, which offers workshops and classes to teens and adults.
He saw his first coffeehouse performance there in 1962, as a sophomore in high school, and described Club 47 during the 1960s as "one of the premier folk venues in the country." Bruce Springsteen was refused a gig at Club Passim.
Lucian, On Mourning (see Greek text); Peter Bolt, Jesus' Defeat of Death: Persuading Mark's Early Readers (Cambridge University Press, 2003) discusses this passage (pp. 126–127) and Greco-Roman concepts of the underworld as a context for Christian eschatology passim.
Esteva's life--as he tells it himself--has been marked by many ruptures;Esteva 2004b, passim there are also many facts to confirm this view. Esteva has worked in very different environments. Esteva's father died early. Esteva worked for different companies.
Jerzy Timoszewicz, "Mała kronika życia i twórczości Leona Schillera, 1887–1924" ("A Brief Chronicle of the Life and Works of Leon Schiller"), in Leon Schiller, Na progu nowego teatru, 1908–1924 (On the Threshold of the New Theater, 1908–1924), passim.
The publication was intended to expose Italian readers, whose horizons had for years been narrowed by Mussolini's censorship, to a broad range of new developments in contemporary literature of all countries.Ludovico, "Renato Poggioli. Between History and Literature": 304 and passim.
Please see chapter 2, passim. In those early days, IBM had 70 foreign branches and subsidiaries worldwide.Black, IBM and the Holocaust, pg. 44. Competitors in the pre-World War II era included Remington Rand, Powers, Bull, NCR, Burroughs, and others.
207–227, passim. The creation of an ideal Nazi community reminded the peoples of Germany of the way the Nazis wanted them to live as a family and as a community; Rothenburg simply exemplified this Nazi ideology as idealized family life.
He subsequently destroyed the Khazar capital of Atil.See, generally Christian 297–298; Dunlop passim. A visitor to Atil wrote soon after Sviatoslav's campaign: "The Rus' attacked, and no grape or raisin remained, not a leaf on a branch."Logan (1992), p.
Ellis, p. 125 According to the law of primogeniture (although not a Gaelic custom in origin) the younger Liam is the senior surviving male member of the family,Ellis, p. 126, and passim however the elder Barry believed he himself was this at the time he applied for recognition.Ellis, p. 127 In any event, the family have a number of male heirs,Ellis, p. 126 and relations among them are amiable.Ellis, passim Liam MacCarthy's pedigree was accepted and registered by Thomas Woodcock, the Norroy and Ulster King of Arms, in July 2009, the document including MacCarthy's children and grandchildren.
Gualterio was nominated Cardinal Protector of Scotland, as of 1706, and England, as of 1717, he was one of the closest advisers to the Stuart Pretender, James Stuart, the would- be James III of England,Edward T. Corp. The Stuart Court in Rome: the legacy of exile, 2003: 72, passim; Corp, The Jacobites at Urbino: An Exiled Court in Transition, 2009: 55 et passim. who conferred upon his brother Giovanni Battista the Jacobite title of Earl of Dundee.Royal Commission on Historical Manuscripts Calendar of the Stuart papers belonging to His Majesty the king, 1902: 204, 25 January 1706.
Caird's career-long preoccupation with the Historical Jesus, known from his commentary on The Gospel of St. Luke and showcased at the end of New Testament Theology, is also reflected in his shorter works Jesus and the Jewish Nation and "Eschatology and Politics: Some Misconceptions," among others. Jesus and the Jewish Nation was one of the groundbreaking works that facilitated a new phase in the study of the subject, according to N. T. Wright, whose book Jesus and the Victory of God is built much on foundations laid by Caird.Wright 1996, passim; cf. also Marcus Borg 1998, passim, and Scot McKnight 1999, pp.
Similarly, in Scotland, a parliament evolved. Before its union with England and Wales in 1707 the Parliament of Scotland was long portrayed as a constitutionally defective bodyR. Rait, 'Parliaments of Scotland' (1928) that acted merely as a rubber stamp for royal decisions, but research during the early 21st century has found that it played an active role in Scottish affairs, and was sometimes a thorn in the side of the Scottish crown.Brown and Tanner, passim; R. Tanner, The Late Medieval Scottish Parliament, passim; K. Brown and A. Mann, History of the Scottish Parliament, ii, passim The enforcement of the doctrine of habeas corpus was widely achieved in the 17th century, however with slavery primarily in the colonies continuing, it was not until the successes of abolitionism in the United Kingdom, the Slave Trade Act of 1807 and Slavery Abolition Act 1833, that equality before the law throughout the Empire was in a formal legal sense achieved in this respect.
This symposium generated a lively debate about, but no consensus on, Diop's theories.UNESCO, (1978), Symposium on the Peopling of Ancient Egypt and the Deciphering of the Meroitic Script; Proceedings, pp. 76–8 and in General Discussion pp. 85–101, 122–4 (passim).
Olar, passim. See also Gane, pp. 457–464 He was a noted forger, who increased his prestige with spurious genealogies. Several of these referred to Andronikos, or Andronicus Cantacuzenus, as a Grand Master of the Sacred Military Constantinian Order of Saint George.
5–6, 8–14, and passim. And historian Barton J. Bernstein has written that "While Borden's suspicions and fears seem exaggerated to a later generation, they were not unusual among government officials and advisors in the 1950s."Bernstein, "Oppenheimer Case Reconsidered", p. 1431.
See also Fred K. Drogula, "Imperium, potestas, and the pomerium in the Roman Republic," Historia 56 (2007) 419–452. Prorogatio has been characterized by modern scholars as a "dodge"Brennan, Praetorship pp. 598 and 602; see also "dodge" or "dodges" et passim.
14 online, 40–42 et passim; Frederic B. Tromly, Playing with Desire: Christopher Marlowe and the Art of Tantalization (University of Toronto Press, 1998), p. 181. Shakespeare,Coppélia Kahn, Man's estate: Masculine Identity in Shakespeare (University of California Press, 1981), p. 53 online.
73 et passim. See also Magna Mater (Great Mother) following. Gods were called Pater ("Father") to signify their preeminence and paternal care, and the filial respect owed to them. Pater was found as an epithet of Dis, Jupiter, Mars, and Liber, among others.
LeWarne, p. 150 passim. The colony's newspaper, the Co-operator stayed in publication from December 1898 to June 1906. Originally an 8-page weekly, it changed to a 32-page monthly in 1902 and to a 16-page magazine in October 1903.
Cathy Silber and Ren Zipang;Women Writers of Traditional China: An Anthology of Poetry and Criticism edited by Kang-i Sun Chang and Haun Saussy. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1999, pp.552-555 and Grace Fong."Writing Self and Writing Lives," passim.
Musser and Carleton, 2005, passim However DNA analysis demonstrated a sister-taxa relationship with Megalomys as an endemic Lesser Antillean radiation within clade D, and also showed that the different island populations showed a high degree of genetic differentiation from each other.
He acted like a parent to "every Indian kid in Seattle", according to his brother.Reyes 2006, passim., esp. p. 118. He gave away most money that came his way to those he considered needier, sometimes borrowing money from his siblings to do so.
In the Pali Canon, the Buddha discusses with different lay persons "well-being and happiness" (hitasukha) "visible in this present life" (diha-dhamma) and "pertaining to the future life" (samparāyika), as exemplified by the following suttas.See Bodhi (2005), pp. 3-4, passim.
Crișan, passim A "Cuman Street" was also attested in medieval Szeged.Hatházi & Szende, p. 395 Nomadic groups still had sporadic clashes with the locals: in 1280, a Borcsol rebel army was defeated by Ladislaus near Hódmezővásárhely, then expelled to what became Wallachia.Kincses-Nagy, p.
From his death in 1857 the banking side was further developed by his sons Richard Seymour and Henry, who went on to arrange advantageous discounting terms in 1873 with the Bank of Ireland.Jones F. The Rise of a Merchant Bank Dublin 1974, passim.
Sterpu, passim In the subtext, the play directly references Caragiale's first avatar, that of "Red" newspaperman, or at the very least his friend and rival Frédéric Damé. As the author explained in old age: Mă, Rică sunt eu ("Lo, I myself am Rică").
8 Ricketts marked the demise of the press by publishing a complete bibliography of its publications.Ricketts (1904), passim Thereafter, he occasionally designed books for friends such as Michael Field (the joint pen name of Katherine Harris and Emma Cooper) and Gordon Bottomley.
Jaynes (1985,Jaynes, E.T. (1985). 2003,Jaynes, E.T. (2003). et passim) discussed the concept of probability. According to the MaxEnt viewpoint, the probabilities in statistical mechanics are determined jointly by two factors: by respectively specified particular models for the underlying state space (e.g.
Sevasti Trubeta, Physical Anthropology, Race and Eugenics in Greece (1880s–1970s) (Brill Publishers, 2013), , pp. 58ff & passim. Excerpts available at Google Books. Stephanos died in 1915, and Ioannis Koumaris became the second director of the museum, a position he held until 1950.
H.S. Versnel, Inconsistencies in Greek and Roman Religion, vol. 2 (Brill, 1993), p. 175 et passim. The obscure goddess Angerona, whose iconography depicted silence and secrecy,Susan Savage, "Remotum a Notitia Vulgari," Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association 76 (1945) p.
Major-General Henry Hughes Wilson, Director of Military Operations, was in regular contact with Opposition leaders (including Bonar Law) and with retired officers who supported the Volunteers.Holmes 2004, p. 169.A. T. Q. Stewart (1967), The Ulster Crisis. London: Faber & Faber. passim.
Pilat, passim Pâslariuc proposes that Bogdan used Arbore, his loyalist and mentor, to solidify his legitimacy.Pâslariuc, pp. 4–7, 8 He also notes that Bogdan punished his nephew Dragoș, who had "ruined a very expensive cannon", by confiscating one of his estates.
James Connolly (;Ó Cathasaigh, Aindrias. 1996. An Modh Conghaileach: Cuid sóisialachais Shéamais Uí Chonghaile. Dublin: Coiscéim, passim 5 June 1868 – 12 May 1916) was an Irish republican and socialist leader. Connolly was born in the Cowgate area of Edinburgh, Scotland, to Irish parents.
62 In addition to his Slavonic writing, the Logothete also used Romanian in translation work, known to include an acclaimed version of the novel Barlaam and Josaphat.Călinescu, pp. 45–46; Gane, p. 239; Nicolescu, pp. 37, 38; Stanciu Istrate, passim; Tănăsescu, p.
Subtle complexities of profound political dissent could then be masked under cover of seemingly innocuous lines about nature scenes in the Xiaoxiang region: indeed a set of 8 conventional scenes evolved (Murck, passim). These are known as the Eight Views of Xiaoxiang.
Peter Mere Latham, portrait c.1850 Peter Mere Latham (1789–1875) was an English physician and "a great medical educator".W. B. Spaulding, Peter Mere Latham (1789-1875): a great medical educator, Canadian Medical Association Journal, 1971 June 19; 104(12): 1109–passim.
362 and passim, Fernández Escudero 2012, pp. 80-81 immediately assuming key position of Carlist "advanced sentry"Canal 1991, p. 59 in the Vascongadas.though not assuming any particular position in formal structures, as there were barely any existing, Real Cuesta 1985, p.
Among the country house auctions that fell under his hammer was that of the contents of Streatham Park, sold for Hester Thrale Piozzi in May 1816.Edward A. Bloom, Lillian D. Bloom eds.The Piozzi Letters, vol. 5: 1811–1816 (1999:423 et passim).
A Roman's masculinity was not compromised by his having sex with males of lower status, such as male prostitutes or slaves, as long as he took the active, penetrating role.Williams, Roman Homosexuality, p. 18 et passim; Skinner, introduction to Roman Sexualities, p. 11.
Williams, Roman Homosexuality, p. 85 et passim. Some older men may have at times preferred the passive role. Martial describes, for example, the case of an older man who played the passive role and let a younger slave occupy the active role.
The committee reported:Journal of the House of Commons 21, 699–708 passim. A bill was introduced accordingly, but had only been passed by the Commons, when the king prorogued Parliament. on 7 May 1731Journal of the House of Commons 21, 751–754.
Rich was educated at Felsted School (1632-1637) under the care of the godly minister Samuel Wharton,For Wharton see T. Webster, Godly Clergy in Early Stuart England. The Caroline Puritan Movement, c.1620–1643 (Cambridge University Press 1997), pp. 33-34 and passim.
32, 33; Potra, p. 563 His term at SART saw the purchase of controlling interest by ITT Corporation, then the construction of the Bucharest Telephone Palace, completed in 1933, and back then the tallest building in Romania.Popescu (2015), passim. See also Popescu (2012), p.
The chief responsibility of an augur was to observe signs (observatio) and to report the results (nuntiatio).Jerzy Linderski, "The Augural Law," Aufstieg und Niedergang der römischen Welt II.16 (1986), pp. 2159–2160, 2168, et passim. The announcement was made before an assembly.
Smith, Grant, pp. 207–12; Schenker, "Ulysses in His Tent," passim; Grant, Memoirs, p. 258; Sherman, Memoirs, pp. 275–76. Grant's experiences during this period have been cited as one reason for his subsequent warm relations with Sherman and his cooler relations with George Thomas.
Reverie and Reality: Poetry on Travel by Late Imperial Chinese Women, Lexington Books, 2014, chapter 4 "A Manchu Woman's Short Excursions." pp.115-145, passim. and Wilt Idema and Beata Grant.The Red Brush: Writing Women of Imperial China, edited by Wilt Idema and Beata Grant.
Sunday Times, 31 October 2004 p3; RTÉ broadcast on 2 November 2004. De Valera is alleged by critics to have helped keep Ireland under the influence of Catholic conservatism.Tom Garvin Preventing the future; why Ireland was so poor for so long. (Dublin 2004) passim; .
Both schools were then affiliated with the Protestant Dutch Reformed faith.McCormick, Richard P. Rutgers: a Bicentennial History. (New Brunswick, New Jersey: Rutgers University Press, 1966), passim. He was appointed by the Synod to a vacancy in both professorates caused by the death of the Rev.
14-43 passim. Ramsden agrees with the consensus of historians that the result was highly influential on the meeting but argues that the by- election had unique characteristics and that the Conservative victory was not primarily motivated by the voters' wish to condemn the coalition.
Rădulescu, passim Marcu's first-ever mention is as a ktitor, or restorer, of Târgoviște's Princely Church, which was in fact a project of his father's.Pascu, p. 43 Rădulescu also distinguishes clues that Petru may have wanted his son to acquire a classical education.Rădulescu, pp.
1, 1987, pp.4-8, passim. As noted by Peter Van Mensch, Stránský would modify the concept of museality over the years, changing its sense from a value category to the “specific value orientation” itself.van Mensch, Peter, Towards a Methodology of Museology, PhD Thesis.
Both glamorized and despised, the gladiator was supposed to exert a compelling sexual allure over women.Hallett, pp. 77–78Michael Carter, "(Un)Dressed to Kill: Viewing the Retiarius," in Roman Dress and the Fabrics of Roman Culture (University of Toronto Press, 2008), p. 114 et passim.
He was an important supporter of Lycoming College and a member of its board of trustees from 1931 to 1963.John F. Piper, Lycoming College, 1812–2012: On the Frontiers of American Education (Lexington Books, 2011), , pp. 405 & passim. Excerpts available at Google Books.
261; Pungă, passim According to Iorga, there was a more discreet note to this program: though his proclamations described the Danube as a frontier, Despot's "grand apotheosis" was to be a restoration of the Byzantine Empire, with himself as "Emperor of all Eastern Christendom".
441 online. For further examples, see for instance Brambach's Corpus Inscriptionum Rhenarum online passim. The equivalent Greek term is plinthos (πλίνθος; see plinth for the architectural use).Anthony Grafton, Joseph Scaliger: A Study in the History of Classical Scholarship (Oxford University Press, 1993), p. 331.
50, note 3. and Francisco Niño is believed to have been a sailor on La Niña.Alice Bache Gould, Nueva Lista Documentada De Los Tripulantes De Colon En 1492, Boletin de la Real Academia de la Historia, Tomo CLXX, Número II, 1973, passim., p. 131–132.
38–57; 45 ("Such was Caesar's policy: consolidation based on a body of supporters as heterogenous in class as possible, among them the plebs urbana").Mouritsen, Henrik. Plebs and Politics in the Late Roman Republic (Cambridge University Press, 2001). pp. 1, 9, et passim.
J. Gwyn Griffiths, The Divine Verdict: A Study of Divine Judgement in the Ancient Religions (Brill, 1991), passim, especially pp. 294–295 on Homeric, Platonic, and Vergilian views; pp. 313–322 online on confession, judgment, and forgiveness. Citations of ancient sources are those of Griffiths.
It appears the decision was taken without the knowledge or prior consent of the government.Holwitt, Joel I. "Execute Against Japan", Ph.D. dissertation, Ohio State University, 2005, pp.212–217 & 232–249 passim. It violated the London Naval Treaty, to which the United States was signatory.
See also Woolf, Pictland to Alba, chapter 2; Downham, Viking Kings, chapters 1-3, especially pp. 17-23 & 64 -67\. Ó Corráin, "Vikings in Scotland and Ireland", passim, sets out the case against the identification. Amlaíb Cuarán was probably a great-grandson of Ímar.
Standley was a constant booster of Seattle, to the point of being described toward the end of his life as a "one-man-chamber- of-commerce". passim, especially p. 220 for the quotation. Not all of his influence in Seattle was through the shop itself.
Stanley posing later (in London) with Kalulu in the "suit he wore" when he found Livingstone. Between 1874 and 1877 Henry Morton Stanley traveled central Africa East to West, exploring Lake Victoria, Lake Tanganyika and the Lualaba and Congo rivers.Jeal 2007, pp. 157–219 passim.
Prominent jazz musicians today include Carsten Dahl, Jørgen Emborg, Thomas Clausen, Fredrik Lundin, Marilyn Mazur, Mads Vinding, Ib Glindemann, Jakob Bro, Chris Minh Doky and his brother Niels Lan Doky.Jazz, Pop and Rock. Undenrigsministeriet. Retrieved 26 September 2007. passim. The organization JazzDanmark,JazzDanmark. jazzdanmark.dk.
42 Another discernible issue is anger over the plight of Romanians in Russia's Bessarabia Governorate, which included the Budjak.Cazacu, pp. 6, 8; Irimia (2003), pp. 140–141; Pleșca, passim As noted by Irimia, the two occupations appear as a continuum in Eminescu's lyrical universe.
96, 126. Other historians, such as R. Andrew McDonald for instance, focus on the violence of David's "Norman" establishment, and partially explain David's troubles in Scotland as non-Celtic tension against the "Celtic" periphery.R. Andrew McDonald, Outlaws of Medieval Scotland, pp. 24–29, et passim.
138; Stănescu, passim All PNȚ cabinets were also confronted by the rise of revolutionary fascism, heralded by the Iron Guard. The latter's "Captain", Corneliu Zelea Codreanu, took up elements from the PNȚ program and planned ahead for its downfall.Butaru, pp. 169, 199; Heinen, p.
110 et passim The Bending of the Bough was staged during the Boer War which begun on 11 October 1899. The Irish Literary Theatre project lasted until 1901,Kavanagh, Peter. "The Story of the Abbey Theatre: From Its Origins in 1899 to the Present".
Jackson gained attention for his work during and after Hurricane Katrina in 2005,Beverly Spicer, "The Ordeal of Ted Jackson and the New Orleans Times-Picayune" in Digital Journalist, 2005 December (retrieved 2009 June 13). a natural disaster"Ted Jackson: Our Lives, Ours to Cover" on Poynter.org for 2006 September 01 (retrieved 2009 June 13). See also Douglas Brinkley, The Great Deluge: Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans, and the Mississippi Gulf Coast (New York: Harper Perennial, 2007), passim; , ; and John McQuaid & Mark Schleifstein, Path of Destruction: The Devastation of New Orleans and the Coming Age of Superstorms (New York: Little, Brown, 2006), passim, , that presented him with many moral and ethical dilemmas.
Ahunbay (2001), passim Today Zeyrek Mosque is - after Hagia Sophia - the second largest extant religious edifice built by the Byzantines in Istanbul. To the East lies the Ottoman Konak (Zeyrek Hane), which has also been restored and is now open as a restaurant and tea garden.
W.F. Jackson Knight ("Jack/Jackson/J.K.") was born in Sutton in Surrey on 20 October 1895, the son of George Knight and his wife, Caroline Louisa Jackson.Birth registered in Epsom Registration District in the last quarter of 1895. George Wilson Knight, Jackson Knight: a biography (1975), passim.
George Boole Modern logic begins with what is known as the "algebraic school", originating with Boole and including Peirce, Jevons, Schröder, and Venn.See e.g. Bochenski p. 296 and passim Their objective was to develop a calculus to formalise reasoning in the area of classes, propositions, and probabilities.
New America, passim. Typical issues of the early publication consisted of 8 tabloid-sized pages. The paper was copiously illustrated. In its early years, New America gave significant coverage to the struggle of African Americans for civil rights and urged an end to nuclear weapons testing.
Kwong, passim. Portraits include Ang Lee, David Henry Hwang, Yeohlee, David Chu, Maxine Hong Kingston and Ti-Hua Chang. Portraits by Chang have been published in several other books. A photograph by Chang appeared on the book cover for But Still Like Air (2010) by Velina Houston.
He is supposed to have been martyred at Cologne with Saint Ursula, who is herself difficult to locate historically.Scott B. Montgomery, St. Ursula and the Eleven Thousand Virgins of Cologne: Relics, Reliquaries and the Visual Culture of Group Sanctity in Late Medieval Europe (Peter Lang, 2010) passim.
Milton and the Puritan Dilemma, 1641–1660. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1942: 338 and passim; Wolfe, Don M. Milton in the Puritan Revolution. New York: T. Nelson and Sons, 1941: 19. He was his own man, but he was anticipated by Henry Robinson in Areopagitica.
Oxford: Oxford Forum, 2003. but also on current social arrangements, such as state education and the monopolistic power of the medical profession, of both of which she is a relentless critic.Green, C., Letters from Exile, Observations on a Culture in Decline. Oxford: Oxford Forum, 2004, passim.
Similarly, Pierre Payer asserted in 1984 that Boswell's thesis (as outlined in his Christianity, Homosexuality and Social Tolerance) ignores an alleged wealth of condemnations found in the penitential literature prior to the 12th century.Pierre J. Payer, Sex and the Penitentials (Toronto, 1984), pp. 135–139 and passim.
Before the end of the month of December, Amda Seyon ravaged the land of Sharkha and imprisoned its governor Yosef.Huntingford, The Glorious Victories, passim. These efforts extended Ethiopian rule for the first time across the Awash River, gaining control of Dawaro, Bale, and other Muslim states.
Temple Beth-El is a Reform synagogue at 5 Old Mill Road in Great Neck, New York. Founded in 1928, it is the oldest synagogue in Great Neck.Judith S. Goldstein, Inventing Great Neck: Jewish Identity and the American Dream (Rutgers University Press, 2006), , pp. 68 et passim.
Bulletin Périodique..., pp. 9, 12; Heinen, p. 175; Tolciu, passim Logo of the Antirevisionist League, to which the Conservatives were affiliated. Shows a Romanian peasant guarding the borders of Greater Romania Also that day, Filipescu reformed the LVȚ, formally reclaiming for the title of "Conservative Party" (PC).
Despite the age difference, which met with disapproval, this marriage too was said to be affectionate, even passionate.Susan Treggiari, Roman Marriage: Iusti Coniuges from the Time of Cicero to the Time of Ulpian (Oxford University Press, 1991), pp. 258–259 online, also pp. 500–502 et passim.
Together with Giovanni Preziosi, Farinacci one of the most prominent Fascist voices of racial antisemitism during the Mussolini regime.Kertzer, David I., The Popes Against the Jews, 283De Felice (1993), passim In the Florestano Vancini's film The Assassination of Matteotti (1973), Farinacci is played by Max Dorian.
British Museums (n.d.-b); Craddock (2009, p. 415). Despite some claims presented in an assortment of popularizing literature, legends of crystal skulls with mystical powers do not figure in genuine Mesoamerican or other Native American mythologies and spiritual accounts.Aldred (2000, passim.); Jenkins (2004, pp. 218–219).
The bad blood generated by the conflict spurred an audit of PDA practices by the City Auditor; the audit was critical of the PDA for occasionally violating the spirit of its Charter, but exonerated it of any wrongdoing., passim, especially iv, 19 (p. 8, 31 of PDF).
2 (Leipzig, 1906), 280. Cp. 298 and chapter 14, passim. Burns, and conditions that in some fashion resemble burns, such as fevers, boils, sore throats and rashes, are naturally the most common objects of blowing among modern folk-remedies,See HddA, i, s.v. "Blasen," cols. 1357-58.
Available for a fee at courant.com archives.Cox-Ife, passim Gilbert's lyrics employ punning, as well as complex internal and two and three-syllable rhyme schemes, and served as a model for such 20th century Broadway librettists and lyricists as P. G. Wodehouse,PG Wodehouse (1881–1975) guardian.co.
Barraclough passim. It should, of course, be noted that by 1066, all of the armies involved in hostilities in the British Isles, Norwegian, English and Norman, were at least nominally Christian. The Normans were in many ways, including linguistically, quite far removed from their Norse origins.
Mayer (1932), passim. This experience was the influence for one of his most famous paintings, “Treaty of Traverse des Sioux, Minnesota” from 1886. Upon his return to Maryland, ten of his watercolors were exhibited by the Artist’s Association of Baltimore at the Maryland Historical Society in 1856.
100–101; Ornea, pp.394–395; Weber, passim Based on an assignment Antonescu handed down to General Ioan Topor,Final Report, p.244; Deletant, pp.153, 322–323 the decision involved specific quotas, and the transports, most of which were carried out by foot, involved random murders.
Zimei, 2004, passim. Nothing is known about his life until he is recorded in Rome, in 1390, as a teacher at the Ospedale di Santo Spirito in Sassia; the document mentions that he was not young at the time of this appointment, but his exact age is not given.
Even women of the working classes or slaves might have their babies nursed,Bradley, "Wet-Nursing at Rome," pp. 201–202 et passim, especially p. 210. and the Roman-era Greek gynecologist Soranus offers detailed advice on how to choose a wet-nurse.Soranus of Ephesus, Gynaecology 2.19.24–5.
There are sixteen Boolean functions associating the input truth values and with four-digit binary outputs.Bocheński (1959), A Précis of Mathematical Logic, passim. These correspond to possible choices of binary logical connectives for classical logic. Different implementations of classical logic can choose different functionally complete subsets of connectives.
Original Letters from India...pp. 202–207 and passim. Fay obtained a legal separation from her husband in August 1781,Virginia Blain, Patricia Clements and Isobel Grundy: The Feminist Companion to Literature in English. Women Writers from the Middle Ages to the Present (Batsford: London, 1990), p. 360.
12.. often accompanied by double axes and bucrania, which are part of the iconography of Minoan bull sacrifice. Horns of consecration are among the cultic images painted on the Minoan coffins called larnakes, sometimes in isolation; they may have flowers between the horns, or the labrys.Watrous 1991, passim.
996),Abū Ṭālib al-Makkī, Ḳūt al- ḳulūb, Cairo 1310, passim Abu Nu`aym (d. 1038),Abū Nuʿaym al-Iṣfahānī, Ḥilyat al-awliyāʾ wa-ṭabaqāt al-aṣfiyāʾ (Beirut 1967–8), 2:131–61 Ali Hujwiri (d. 1077),Ḥud̲j̲wīrī, Kas̲h̲f al-maḥd̲j̲ūb, tr. R. A. Nicholson, GMS xvii, 86 f.
P.S.D.; D.N.B.; B.M., Egerton MS. 3515 (Wyatt family letters); A. Dale, James Wyatt, 1936; The Farington Diary, ed. J. Greig, passim; T. F. Hunt, Architettura campestre, 1827; Hist. MSS. Comm. XVth Report, Appendix VII, pp. 255, 281, 301; Fortescue, viii, 79, 87, 143, 178–9, 181, 204; Gent's Mag.
118–121 et passim. Eduard Schwartz criticized the views of Krusch, asserting that the table of Augustalis was never used in Rome and that it represented an "eccentric version" of the 84-year cycle used by the insular Celtic churches. He places Augustalis in the 5th century.Wallis, Bede, p.
349–350; Dreyfus, p. 348; Mareș, passim; Petrescu, pp. 343–346; Ragsdale & Trommer, pp. 55, 77–78 Petrescu-Comnen was reserved about the Soviets' intervention on Czechoslovakia's side; he insisted that Romanian cooperation with the Red Army would only come with a recognition of Bessarabia as Romanian territory.
During the Istanbul Pogrom in September 1955, "many Greek men, including at least one priest, were subjected to forced circumcision."Zayas, "The Istanbul Pogrom"; see also Vryonis, The Mechanism of Catastrophe, pp. 224-226, passim. As a result of the pogrom, the Greek minority eventually emigrated from Turkey.
Hillberg, pp. 175, 192–198, en passim. They included the Reserve Police Battalion 101 from Hamburg, Battalion 133 of the Nürnberg Order Police, Police Battalions 45, 309 from Koln, and 316 from Bottrop-Oberhausen. Their murder operations bore the brunt of the Holocaust by bullet on the Eastern Front.
Zvenya seem to have survived in some shape or form, whether `underground' or overtly, in the early 1950s. Row- and industrial-crop zvenya continued to be reported favourably in the press.E.g. Kolkhoznoe proizvodstvo, 1950, passim. After Stalin's death the `underestimation' of zvenya in row and industrial crops was condemned.
Davis, passim Family members became known for their philanthropy in diverse areas such as modern art, aviation, and medicine. They donated funds to develop Guggenheim Museums, the Guggenheim Aeronautical Laboratory, and the Guggenheim Pavilion at Mount Sinai Medical Center, designed by I. M. Pei in New York City.
In December 759, he briefly stayed in Tonggu (modern Gansu). He departed on December 24 for Chengdu (Sichuan province),Hung, 159. where he was hosted by local Prefect and fellow poet Pei Di.Chang, 63 Du subsequently based himself in Sichuan for most of the next five years.Hung, passim.
Caro 2012, Part I (passim). Johnson attempted in vain to capitalize on Kennedy's youth, poor health, and failure to take a position regarding Joseph McCarthy.Dallek 1991, p. 570. He had formed a "Stop Kennedy" coalition with Adlai Stevenson, Stuart Symington, and Hubert Humphrey, but it proved a failure.
79 et passim. Catullus received a book of bad poems by "the worst poet of all time" as a joke from a friend.Catullus, Carmen 14; Robinson Ellis, A Commentary on Catullus (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1876), pp. 38–39. Gift-giving was not confined to the day of the Sigillaria.
Brînzeu, p.64-65; Mihăilescu, p.113sqq; Verdery, passim Ornea bowed down to the requirements in at least one instance: his Lovinescu edition was published without some portions of text that the regime found unpalatable, and the introductory note purported that Lovinescu had points in common with historical materialism.
G Schiller, Iconography of Christian Art, Vol. II,1972 (English trans from German), Lund Humphries, London, p. 66, and passim see Index, Although Procula is venerated as a saint in Eastern Christianity, very few images of her come from there. She is frequently depicted in German-speaking Europe.
242-44 (Internet Archive). See Magna Carta Project, passim. By December of 1215 Fulk's name appears in the list of English barons excommunicated by Pope Innocent III's bull, for his part in their opposition to the king.'Excommunicatio specialis in barones Angliae', in T. Rymer and R. Sanderson, ed.
The Oddly Compelling Art of Denis Kitchen (Milwaukie, OR: Dark Horse Books, 2010), p. 26, 29, and passim. On February 22, 1975, the Bugle's office on Bremen Street in the Riverwest neighborhood was firebombed. About the same time, the car of Kaleidoscope's editor John Kois was also bombed.
31–32, 457, et passim. Freeborn women of ancient Rome were citizens who enjoyed legal privileges and protections that did not extend to non- citizens or slaves. Roman society, however, was patriarchal, and women could not vote, hold public office, or serve in the military.A.N. Sherwin-White, Roman Citizenship (Oxford University Press, 1979), pp. 211 and 268; Bruce W. Frier and Thomas A.J. McGinn, A Casebook on Roman Family Law (Oxford University Press, 2004), pp. 31–32, 457, et passim. Women of the upper classes exercised political influence through marriage and motherhood. During the Roman Republic, the mothers of the Gracchus brothers and of Julius Caesar were noted as exemplary women who advanced the careers of their sons.
The word passim can be translated as 'colorful' (Radak; Septuagint), embroidered (Abraham ibn Ezra; Bahya ibn Paquda; Nachmanides on Exodus 28:2), striped (Jonah ibn Janah; Radak, Sherashim), or with pictures (Targum Jonathan). It can also denote a long garment, coming down to the palms of the hands (Rashbam; Ibn Ezra; Tosafot; Genesis Rabbah 84), and the feet (Lekach Tov). Alternatively, the word denotes the material out of which the coat was made, which was fine wool (Rashi) or silk (Ibn Janach). Hence, kethoneth passim, may be translated as "a full-sleeved robe", "a coat of many colors", "a coat reaching to his feet", "an ornamented tunic", "a silk robe", or "a fine woolen cloak".
See also, for instance, J.J.L. Smolenaars, Statius. Thebaid VII: A Commentary (Brill, 1994), passim, or John G. Fitch, Seneca's 'Hercules Furens' (Cornell University Press, 1987), passim, where the ruler of the underworld is referred to as "Pluto" in the English commentary, but as "Dis" or with other epithets in the Latin text. The abduction myth was a popular subject for Greek and Roman art, and recurs throughout Western art and literature, where the name "Pluto" becomes common (see Pluto in Western art and literature below). Narrative details from Ovid and Claudian influence these later versions in which the abductor is named as Pluto, especially the role of Venus and Cupid in manipulating Pluto with love and desire.
See also Gocan, p.13-14 The union between "Horia" and various new arrivals from the western Siberian camps became a second Volunteer Corps, grouping as many as 5,000 volunteers.Cazacu, p.114, 116-117; Șerban (2003), p.161 Through the alliance it formed with the anti-Bolshevik Czechoslovak Legions, it was a Romanian national contribution to the international coalition, but reluctantly so.Cazacu, passim; Șerban (1997), p.109, 111; Șerban (2003), passim Once relocated to Irkutsk and Omsk in late 1918, the volunteers expressed their lack of interest in fighting against the Bolsheviks: after rebelling against Colonel Kadlec, their Czech technical adviser, the Corps was placed under Maurice Janin of the French Mission.Cazacu, p.
299; Vintilă (2010), p. 534 However, these were effectively centralized into the National Union of Christian Students, which answered directly to Brăileanu, and the Student Front property was handed over to the Guard. Creating "review boards" presided over by Herseni, Chirnoagă and Făcăoaru,Boia, p. 172; Bruja (2009), passim; Săndulescu, pp.
I (R. Bentley and Son, 1895), passim and brief mention is made of the sad family circumstances Tilley was experiencing at this time, which made him happy to return to London. Despite this, Tilley was involved in the organisation of The Great Exhibition held in Hyde Park, London in 1851.
C. M. Bowra, Greek Lyric Poetry: From Alcman to Simonides pp. 108, 191, 264; Patricia A. Rosenmeyer, The Poetics of Imitation: Anacreon and the Anacreontic Tradition (Cambridge University Press, 1992), passim. In Latin literature, to be "in the roses and violets" meant experiencing carefree pleasure.Henriksén, A Commentary on Martial, p.
82 and passim and local hierarchs, Puigdollers arranged massive administrative assistance for the Church, including concessions, tax exemptions,Clara 1988, pp. 497-529 registration of various organizationse.g. in Asociación de Hombres de Acción Católica, ABC 22.06.41, available here or financial assistance to families of the religious killed by the Republicans.
Paglia, Camille (1991). Sexual Personae, NY: Vintage, Chapter 1 and passim. Christian Groes-Green has argued that misogyny must be seen in relation to its opposite which he terms philogyny. Criticizing R. W. Connell's theory of hegemonic masculinities, he shows how philogynous masculinities play out among youth in Maputo, Mozambique.
After Russia left World War I following the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, the Allies sent troops there to prevent a German or Bolshevik takeover of weapons, munitions and other supplies previously shipped as aid to the pre- revolutionary government.George F. Kennan, Russia Leaves the War, p. 472, et passim. 1956, repr.
A late-Qing woodblock print representing the Yangzhou massacre of May 1645. Dorgon's brother Dodo ordered this massacre to scare other southern Chinese cities into submission. By the late nineteenth century the massacre was used by anti-Qing revolutionaries to arouse anti-Manchu sentiment among the Han Chinese population., passim.
10; passim; 'Haslemere Festival' The Times Friday, July 12, 1996 Issue 65630 p.32 Dolmetsch developed and improved the production of recorders at Haslemere. workshops. He became an accomplished player and gave his first recital at Wigmore Hall in 1939..'Recitals of the week. Mr Carl Dolmetsch' The Times Friday, Feb.
The flamen recited a prayer that Ovid quotes at length in the Fasti, his six-book calendar poem on Roman holidays which provides the most extended, though problematic, description of the day.Ovid, Fasti 4.905–942; Boyle and Woodard, Ovid: Fasti, pp. 254–255 et passim on the nature of this work.
After Russia left World War I following the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, the Allies sent troops there to prevent a German or Bolshevik takeover of weapons, munitions and other supplies previously shipped as aid to the pre-revolutionary government.George F. Kennan, Russia Leaves the War, p. 472, et passim. 1956, repr.
In the high desert country of Eastern Oregon, the ranchers considered the streams and pastures along those trails as highly valuable for sustaining the cattle on the drives.Brimlow (1951), Harney County, pp. 81-130 passim. But, the cattle consumed water and were pastured in lands that were reserved for the Paiute.
One of Ælfhere's brothers may have been married to a niece of Saint Dunstan.For Ælfhere's kin, which included at least two other brothers, see Williams, passim, especially p. 144, table 1. Ælfhere was promoted by King Eadwig, probably as a counter to the influence of Æthelstan Half-King and his kinsmen.
Iftimi, pp. 141–142 Romanian-language documents issued by this Prince, as well as by his competitor Mihai Racoviță, have Slavonic introductions, which include Ιω.Iorga, passim Constantine Mavrocordatos used both Io Costandin NicolaeOpaschi, p. 247 in an all-Romanian text and Noi Costandin Nicolae in a part-Slavonic one.Iorga, p.
J. Forster, The Debates on the Grand Remonstrance, November and December, 1641 (John Murray, London 1860), pp. 300-01 and passim (Google).Search term: Culpeper. The Earl of Clarendon, with whom he was often on ill terms, speaks generally in his praise, and repels the charge of corruption levelled against him.
In 1956 Gallie proposed a set of seven conditions for the existence of an essentially contested concept.See Gallie (1956a). Gallie was very specific about the limits of his enterprise: it dealt exclusively with abstract, qualitative notions, such as art, religion, science, democracy, and social justiceGallie (1956a), passim. Kekes (1977, p.
He went to Nantgarw in 1821 at the invitation of William Weston Young, and died in 1823. He is buried in Eglwysilan Churchyard, S.E. of Pontypridd in South Wales.W. Turner, The Ceramics of Swansea and Nantgarw: A History of the Factories (Bemrose and Sons, Ltd., London 1897), passim (Internet Archive).
5, 143, et passim. "Poetic play (ludus, ludere, iocum, etc.)," Michèle Lowrie observes, "denotes two related things: stylistic elegance of the Alexandrian variety and erotic poetry."Michèle Lowrie, Horace's Narrative Odes (Oxford University Press, 1997), p. 41. Ludi, always plural, were the games held in conjunction with Roman religious festivals.
However, "Kim" is used as romanized name in both North and South Korea.Yonhap (2004), 484–536 and 793–800, passim. The family name "Lee" is romanized as 리 (ri) in North Korea and as 이 (i) in South Korea. In the former case, the initial sound is a liquid consonant.
The term was coined by lexicographer Bryan A. Garner in his 2008 edition of Garner's Modern American Usage and has since been adopted by some other style guides.Ben Yagoda, How to Not Write Bad: The Most Common Writing Problems and the Best Ways to Avoid Them, , 2013, p. 82 and passim.
His rationale was that the legislators' oversight had rendered the electoral process entirely corrupt, always favoring the rich.Radu (2000–2001), p.133 Românul took up this campaign, proposing to merge the electoral colleges into one, thus doing away with the census suffrage.Gorun, p.64; Radu (2000–2001), passim; (2005), p.
55– and passim; Shippeitaro comared p. 298. English translations of this medieval version is found in S. W. Jones's Ages Ago: Thirty-Seven Tales from the Konjaku Monogatari Collection (1959), and Michelle Osterfeld Li's study Ambiguous Bodies. A similar tale is also included in another medieval anthology, the Uji Shūi Monogatari.
The Khwarazmshahs had viziers as their chief executives, on the traditional pattern, and only as the dynasty approached its end did ʿAlāʾ-al- Din Moḥammad in ca. 615/1218 divide up the office amongst six commissioners (wakildārs; see Kafesoğlu, pp. 5-8, 17; Horst, pp. 10-12, 25, and passim).
In his work on the cosmological systems of antiquity, the Dutch Renaissance humanist Gerardus Vossius deals extensively with Caelus and his duality as both a god and a place that the other gods inhabit.Gerardus Vossius, Idolatriae 3.59 online et passim, in Gerardi Joan. Vossii Operum, vol. 5, De idololatria gentili.
Muller, Richard, Post-Reformation Reformed Dogmatics: The Rise and Development of Reformed Orthodoxy, ca. 1520 to ca. 1725, Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic, 2003, volume 3, passim. This influence was so pervasive that by 1643 it provoked the Dutch Reformed theologian Jacobus Revius to publish his book-length response: Suarez repurgatus.
But, apart from reasons of health, he was anxious to get to England to clear himself from responsibility for the failure at Hispaniola, and to represent to the Protector the needs of the colony at Jamaica. cites Thurloe, vol. iii. passim; Life of Penn, ii. 28–132; Carte, Original Letters, ii.
He was awarded the Iguana Music Fund Fellowship award from Cambridge's Club Passim and used the proceeds to build a home studio. Erelli attended Bates College in Lewiston, Maine and in 1997 enrolled at the University of Massachusetts Amherst where he obtained a master's degree in evolutionary biology in 1999.
A long way from Passim. Boston Globe, June 24, 2007. Later that year Erelli invited fans to finance his next studio album - Delivered - referring to the project as a barn raising. The project succeeded and the 11-song album produced by Josh Ritter's bassist, Zack Hickman, was released in 2008.
He was 'unsurpassed as a snapper-up of unconsidered madrigalian trifles', and his personal collections were made up, after his death in 1873, into nearly 600 lots for sale.Alec Hyatt King, Some British Collectors of Music, c. 1600–1960 (Cambridge University Press 1963), pp. 37–59 passim, at p. 59.
183; Duncan, "Leuchars, Patrick"; Penman, David II, passim. He also engaged on occasional diplomatic activity. On 13 December 1356, he and a number of other bishops were granted safe conducts to travel to London, in order to participate on a deal over the king's proposed ransom.Penman, David II, pp. 186-7.
Oram, Lordship of Galloway, p. 59 et passim. The world of peace which David had enjoyed in England ended after the death of Henry I, just as it did for most other English magnates. When Henry I first became king of England, he did so in circumstances that were very irregular.
See also Harre, passim or any of the other far- right parties. The explicitly fascist National Christian Party (PNC), founded as a merger of the LANC and Goga's National Agrarians, was especially adept at canvassing the peasant vote in Bessarabia, veering it toward antisemitism.Diana Dumitru, Vecini în vremuri de restriște.
Clark, p. 251. See also Duțu & Dobre, passim Maniu was still "reluctant to collaborate" with various resistance groups, "since many manifested anti-Semitic and ultra-nationalist sentiments."Petrescu & Petrescu, p. 576 From April 1946, PNȚ men networked in Suceava County between the Sumanele Negre partisans and an American envoy, Ira Hamilton.
Numerous examples are discussed by Nicholas Penny and Francis Haskell, Taste and the Antique: the Lure of Classical Sculpture 1500-1900 1981, passim; the Belvedere Torso retained its original state in large part because of Michelangelo's admiration for it (Penny and Haskell cat. no 80. Belvedere Torso, pp 311-14).
Millar, p.44 Victoria began a policy of commissioning artists to record Balmoral, its surroundings, and its staff. Over the years, numerous painters were employed at Balmoral, including Edwin and Charles Landseer, Carl Haag, William Wyld, and William Henry Fisk.Millar, passim The royal couple took great interest in their staff.
The Bowery is the oldest thoroughfare on Manhattan Island, preceding European intervention as a Lenape footpath, which spanned roughly the entire length of the island, from north to south.Sanderson, Eric W. Mannahatta: A Natural History of New york City, 2009, p. 107, illus. "Lenape sites and trails", and Ch. 4 "The Lenape", passim.
Porphyry may also have been present at this meeting.Schott, "Porphyry on Christians", 278; Beatrice, 1-47; Digeser, Christian Empire, passim. Upon returning, the messenger told the court that "the just on earth"Eusebius, Vita Constantini 2.50. Davies (80 n.75) believes that this should be re-written as "the profane on earth".
See also Kubba and Young (1998), passim. A visual examination of Chopin's preserved heart (the jar was not opened), conducted in 2014 and first published in the American Journal of Medicine in 2017, suggested that the likely cause of his death was a rare case of pericarditis caused by complications of chronic tuberculosis.
In fact, indications are that black Americans also practiced family planning to a comparable degree in the post-slavery period, and several factors seem to have influenced a desire for smaller families among various demographic groups in the 19th century.Katz, "The History of Birth Control in the United States," p. 86 et passim.
The West Kootenay region of British Columbia, where the community of Crawford Bay is situated, is part of the traditional territories of the Sinixt and Ktunaxa peoples.Paula Pryce, Keeping the Lakes' way: reburial and the re-creation of a moral world among an invisible people University of Toronto Press, 1999. Page 7. . passim.
Horsfall, Virgil, Aeneid 2, p. 91. Fata deum is a theme of the Aeneid, Virgil's national epic of Rome.Elisabeth Henry, The Vigour of Prophecy: A Study of Virgil's Aeneid (Southern Illinois University Press, 1989) passim. The Sibylline Books (Fata Sibyllina or Libri Fatales), composed in Greek hexameters, are an example of written fata.
Linderski, "The Augural Law", pp. 2252–2256. In legal and rhetorical usage, precatio was a plea or request.Steven M. Cerutti, Cicero's Accretive Style: Rhetorical Strategies in the Exordia of the Judicial Speeches (University Press of America, 1996), passim; Jill Harries, Law and Empire in Late Antiquity (Cambridge University Press, 1996), p. 36.
The importance of a good diet to health was recognized by medical writers such as Galen (2nd century AD), whose treatises included one On Barley Soup. Views on nutrition were influenced by schools of thought such as humoral theory.Mark Grant, Galen on Food and Diet (Routledge, 2000), pp. 7, 11 et passim.
Commission as Lt-Col of 1st Administrative Bde dated 13 September 1873, London Gazette, 12 September 1873. The unit's first Honorary Colonel was Prince Alfred, Duke of Edinburgh.Monthly Army List, passim. In 1873 the 1st London AVC became part of the 1st Administrative Brigade of Middlesex Artillery Volunteers under the command of Walmisley.
Icelandic, "fór fram með tilþrifum og atorku", "Reiddust goðin?" Vísir, 7 August 1973.ÞS. "Blótuðu Þór í úrhellisrigningu." Vísir, 7 August 1973.Pétur Pétursson (1985:passim).McNallen, Stephen A. (2004). "Three Decades of the Ásatrú Revival in America". Tyr: Myth-Culture-Tradition Volume II. Ultra Publishing. pp. 203–219. .Kaplan, Jeffrey. 1996.
Pope Paul II, for whom it was originally intended, died in 1471; Onofrio himself died without having returned to good standing in the papal court.Bacha, "Deux écrits", p. 386; Sylvain Balau, "Sources de l'histoire du pay de Liége au Moyen Age," Memoires couronnés 61 (1902–1903), pp. 647–648 online et passim.
Vincenzo Di Benedetto: Cos e Cnido, in: Hippocratica - Actes du Colloque hippocratique de Paris 4-9 septembre 1978, ed. M. D. Grmek, Paris 1980, 97-111, see also Antoine Thivel: Cnide et Cos ? : essai sur les doctrines médicales dans la collection hippocratique, Paris 1981 (passim), ; cf. the review by Otta Wenskus (on JSTOR).
2-3 and passim. He also notes "[t]he view proceeding from a belief in the uniformity of human nature [Trompf's emphasis]. It holds that because human nature does not change, the same sort of events can recur at any time."G.W. Trompf, The Idea of Historical Recurrence in Western Thought, p.
Friedman (2012) ch. 24 and passim. Documentary filmmaker Avi Dabach, great-grandson of Chacham Ezra Dabach (one of the last caretakers of the Codex when it was still in Syria), announced in December 2015 an upcoming film tracing the history of the Codex and possibly determining the fate of the missing pages.
Garfield's father had broken contact with him when he divorced his Jewish wife; and Garfield scholar Roni Natov sees this difficult relationship as a major influence on his work, giving particular significance to the fathers and father figures in the novels.Natov, passim. This view is partly supported by Garfield's own commentary.Natov, 2.
It offered a standard three-band AM radio, at a time when radios were not standard on most American cars, even the most expensive ones.Flory, J. "Kelly", Jr. American Cars 1946-1959 (Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Coy, 2008), passim. The car weighed , was capable of getting , of reaching , and of accelerating in 37 seconds.
Indicated, for instance, by Tertullian, Apologeticus 23.15-16. See Peter Cramer, Baptism and Change in the Early Middle Ages, c. 200–c. 1150 (Cambridge University Press, 2003), passim, especially the process as described by Hippolytus of Rome, pp. 11ff online; Jeffrey Burton Russell, Satan: The Early Christian Tradition (Cornell University Press, 1987), p.
Folkie Paul's new path takes him to Oxford. Press & Sun-Bulletin (Binghamton, New York), May 11, 2006. Since approximately 1995 (no one seems to know for certain), Paul has annually played Club Passim over New Year's, performing two shows on December 30 and two shows on New Year's Eve.Webb. Jela. Ellis Paul.
LeWarne, pp. 150 passim. Colonization Commission Secretary Willard, who initially led the Washington colonization effort, departed in 1899 to join a Theosophist colony in Point Loma, California. The Brotherhood was later governed by a twelve-man board of trustees who were elected by mail vote each December for four year staggered terms.
W. Clark (ed.), Liber Memorandorum Ecclesie de Bernewelle (Cambridge University Press, 1907), pp. 47-53 and passim (Internet archive).), who remarried, to assert her right in dower,Calendar of Patent Rolls, Edward I: A.D. 1301-1307 (HMSO, London 1898), p. 236 (Internet Archive). C.P.R. mis-transcribed "John" for "Nicholas": see D. Richardson, ed.
Brookes, pp. 115 and 267; and Cardus (1929) passim Langford married Leslie Doig in 1913. There was one daughter of the marriage, Brenda, born in 1918, later, as Brenda Milner, professor of neuropsychology at the Montreal Neurological Institute. Langford died after a serious illness at the family home in Withington, aged 65.
Early Christian writers had identified the classical underworld with Hell, and its denizens as demons or devils.Friedrich Solmsen, "The Powers of Darkness in Prudentius' Contra Symmachum: A Study of His Poetic Imagination," Vigiliae Christianae 19.4 (1965), pp. 238, 240–248 et passim. In the Renaissance, the bident became a conventional attribute of Pluto.
Radford, The Lost Girls, p. 22 et passim. Throughout the Middle Ages and Renaissance, and certainly by the time of Natale Conti's influential Mythologiae (1567), the traditions pertaining to the various rulers of the classical underworld coalesced into a single mythology that made few if any distinctions among Hades, Pluto, Dis, and Orcus.
Crampton, pp. 115–116; Santoro, p. 233 A Crown Councillor, he then threw his reluctant support behind the National Renaissance Front, created by Carol II as the driving force of a pro-fascist but anti-Guard one-party state (see 1938 Constitution of Romania).Țurlea, passim; Veiga, pp. 245–248, 250, 262–265.
The frequency of remarriage among the elite was high. Speedy remarriage was not unusual, and perhaps even customary, for aristocratic Romans after the death of a spouse.Susan Treggiari, Roman Marriage: Iusti Coniuges from the Time of Cicero to the Time of Ulpian (Oxford University Press, 1991), pp. 258–259, 500–502 et passim.
In 1893-94 he was Bishop Berkeley Fellow in Ancient Philosophy at Owens College in Manchester and in 1895 he was appointed lecturer in Greek and Latin Literature at Bryn Mawr College, Pennsylvania, United States.Graduate Courses: Bryn Mawr College: 1891-1899, 1895 section, p. 8, et passim, archive.org. Retrieved 2 August 2017.
He is quoted in the tosafot on Berakot, and his name is frequently written.Tos. to Soṭah. 22a; Shiṭṭah Meḳubbeẓet on B. Ḳ. 3a et passim His tosafot are called also Shiṭṭah of Évreux.Teshubot Mahram, No. 608 Moses wrote his tosafot on the margin of a copy of Isaac Alfasi, whose authority he invoked.Tos.
In the general election of November 1946, which was rigged through fraud and voter intimidation,Boia, pp. 246–247; Cioroianu, pp. 64–66; Terteci, passim the Bloc claimed a decisive victory. However, the PNP only had a minor role to play in the campaign, with a reported 7% of the BPD candidates.
We want to make music that touches them and moves them in > that way, the place where tears come from, for joy and for sorrow. The Weepies' first album Happiness was released at Club Passim on November 29, 2003, and though they were unsigned by a label it sold over 10,000 copies.
As an added benefit, from Henry's viewpoint, she might also provide some protection against further Scottish incursions like those that had plagued the northern English provinces with regularity under Malcolm III.Green, "David I and Henry I",’, passim; Stringer, Earl David of Huntingdon, pp. 1-5; MacDonald, "David I, c. 1085-1153", p. 335.
Donahue (2007), passim. Ronald Light, a 33-year-old mathematics teacher,Still Unsolved p. 35 is considered the prime suspect in Wright's murder. Light did not come forward in response to an extensive media appeal to trace a man matching his description seen on the green bicycle,On Trial for Murder p.
Gibson, Ian (1997), passim His life and work were an important influence on other Surrealists, pop art and contemporary artists such as Jeff Koons and Damien Hirst. There are two major museums devoted to Salvador Dalí's work: the Dalí Theatre-Museum in Figueres, Spain, and the Salvador Dalí Museum in St. Petersburg, Florida.
A variety of sources show that Uí Fidgenti was the most prominent of the non-(classical)-Eóganacht overkingdoms of medieval Munster, once the formerly powerful Corcu Loígde and distant Osraige are excluded as non-participating.Byrne, passim; Charles-Edwards, passim By circa 950, the territory of the Ui Fidgheinte were divided primarily between the two most powerful septs, the Ui Cairbre and the Ui Coilean. The Ui Cairbre Aobhdha (of which O’Donovan were chief), lay along the Maigue basin in Coshmagh and Kenry (Caenraighe) and covered the deanery of Adare, and at one point extended past Kilmallock to Ardpartrick and Doneraile. The tribes of Ui Chonail Gabhra extended to a western district, along the Deel and Slieve Luachra, now the baronies of Upper and Lower Connello.
Chicago: A. C. McClurg & Co., passim. Eventually, two explorers united the tribes in overthrowing the Mahars' reign and establish a human "Empire of Pellucidar" instead.Burroughs, Edgar Rice (1923). Pellucidar. Chicago: A. C. McClurg & Co., passim. While the Mahars are the dominant species in the Pellucidar novels, these creatures are usually confined to their handful of cities. Before their downfall, the Mahars used Sagoths (a race of gorilla-men who speak the same language as Tarzan's Mangani) in enforcing their rule over any tribes who disobeyed their orders. Though Burroughs' novels suggest that the Mahars' domain is limited to one relatively small region of Pellucidar, John Eric Holmes' authorized sequel Mahars of Pellucidar indicates there are other areas ruled by Mahars.
Radu Paisie's election to the throne was made possible by a collapse of public order and the fading out of the ruling dynasty, the House of Basarab. Wallachia's elective custom had always allowed sons born outside wedlock to contest the throne, creating the background for massacres among pretenders; in the 1500s, this strife was doubled by civil wars between factions of the boyar nobility. These backed individual pretenders in exchange for domination of the country's affairs.Cîrstina, passim; Gheonea, pp. 49–50; Rezachevici, passim The conflicts were tolerated by the Ottoman Empire, which exercised suzerainty over Wallachia and neighboring Moldavia (the Danubian Principalities), throughout the Medieval era. The fall of Hungary in 1526 left both countries entirely controlled by the Sublime Porte.
Such clocks were the most accurate available prior to the development of the quartz crystal and atomic clocks. Miles, Synchronome, pp. 16-17; 27-30; chapters 8 and 9 passim. He was also interested in timekeeping via radio signals and in 1913 Synchronome started to manufacture the Horophone, a device for capturing radio time signals.
Large-scale European emigration to the United States started in the 1840s in Britain, Ireland and Germany. That was followed by a rising wave after 1850 from most Northern European countries, and in turn by Central and Southern Europe. Research into the forces behind this European mass emigration has relied on sophisticated statistical methods.Åkerman, passim.
A tall modius is part of the complex headdress used for portraits of Egyptian queens, ornamented variously with symbols, vegetative motifs, and the uraeus.Bryan, "A Newly Discovered Statue of a Queen," p 36ff.; Paul Edmund Stanwick, Portraits of the Ptolemies: Greek Kings As Egyptian Pharaohs (University of Texas Press, 2002), p. 35 et passim.
14 & passim. Although warned against taking up his benefice he did so, and preached against the Roman errors. He was arrested on Bonner's orders, imprisoned in London, condemned as a heretic at St Mary Overie, and burnt at Coventry in February 1555.John Foxe's The Acts and Monuments Online, 1570 edition, Book 11, page 1703.
People & Places: Club Passim. Maverick Magazine, September 2009, Issue #86, p. 54-5. Conoscenti left Atlanta that year and toured the country almost continuously until 2004. During that time he released Boxes of Bones, My Brilliant Masterpiece, One for the Road, Mysterious Light, Paradox of Grace, Extremely Live at Eddie's Attic, and Turn Here.
See also Stanomir, p.130 An emanation of the 1923 Constitution, it comprised experts tasked with reviewing laws endorsed by Parliament, and whose exact role sparked a series of controversies.Mâță, passim Filitti was among those who described the Council as a necessary branch of the legislature, rather than as an organ of the executive.Mâță, p.
Hardeman SW, Wake RW, Soloway MS. Two new techniques for evaluating prostate cancer. The role of prostate-specific antigen and transrectal ultrasound. Postgrad Med, 86(2):197–198, 201, 204 passim, 1989.Hardeman SW, Causey JQ, Hickey DP, Soloway MS. Transrectal ultrasound for staging prior to radical prostatectomy. Urology, 34(4):175–180, 1989.
Lyman, p.19 On 1 September 1941, after Persia (modern Iran) was invaded, Iraq Command was renamed "Persia and Iraq Force" (PAI Force).MacMunn, passim PAI Force was still commanded by Quinan and he still reported to India Command. Iraqforce was variously part of India Command, Middle East Command and then Persia and Iraq Command.
Cassius also, with no small sense of self-worth, claimed descent from the Seleucid kings.Birley, Marcus Aurelius, 130, citing Prosopographia Imperii Romani2 A 1402f.; 1405; Astarita, passim; Syme, Bonner Historia-Augustia Colloquia 1984 (= Roman Papers IV (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1988), ?). Cassius and Martius Verus, still probably in their mid-thirties, took the consulships for 166.
Thus, Verhulst displayed great agency through her strategy, independence, and creativity. No works survive that can be securely attributed to Verhulst, although she is frequently identified as the person behind several works assigned to the Master of the Brunswick Monogram.Bergmans, passim. This is mentioned by most subsequent studies about Verhulst although always with conditions.
158-185 passim. In addition to life on the farm, Macpherson pursued outside interests, including activity in the local Community Club and telephone cooperative.Macpherson, The Macpherson Family Through Four Generations, pg. 185. He was instrumental in the establishment of the Linn-Benton Dairy Breeders and Corvallis Milk Producers organizations, and was elected president of each.
Cumbria Record Office (Carlisle), D/Lons/W2/1/90-91, passim. In 1720 he benefited from the legacy of his friend Charles Williams of Caerleon, and with the £70,000 left to him he bought Coldbrook Park near Abergavenny, which subsequently passed to John Hanbury's son Charles Hanbury Williams.A. A. Locke, The Hanbury Family (London 1916).
Carl Berger, The Sense of Power. Studies in the ideas of Canadian imperialism, 1867-1914, (University of Toronto Press, 1970), passim. Additionally, the concept of a North American Union between Canada, the United States, and Mexico has been discussed in policy and academic circles since the concluding of the North American Free Trade Agreement.
The design of the Zenith was perfected around 1906–1908 by Francois Baverey of Lyon, France. The carburettor had two jets, one for rich mixture, one for lean. The mixture was then combined in the right proportions for the engine's speed and load.Special-interest Autos, Volumes 5-8 (Bennington, Vt., Special-Interest Publications, 1999), passim.
In the twentieth century, the faulty blazon of a number of these arms was subsequently corrected, when historical colours became clear or charges turned out to be misinterpreted.Kl. Sierksma, De gemeentewapen van Nederland (Utrecht 1960), passim. Generally, the High Council pursues a policy of stylistic simplicity, as decreed by Interior Ministry guidelines from 1977.
42, passim. Cromwell Massey, who kept a secret diary during his captivity, wrote: "I lost with the foreskin of my yard all those benefits of a Christian and Englishman which were and ever shall be my greatest glory."Colley, Captives, p. 288. Adolescent captives were, in addition to being circumcised, made to wear female clothes.
The Lehi group regarded Bernadotte as a stooge of the British and their Arab allies and therefore as a serious threat to the emerging state of Israel.Heller, pp, 239–255. Most immediately, a truce was in force, and Lehi feared that the Israeli leadership would agree to Bernadotte's peace proposals, which they considered disastrous.Heller, passim.
However, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that Congress nonetheless had inherent power at that time to establish the Court.Penhallow v. Doane's Adm'rs, 3 U.S. 54 passim (1795) (holding throughout a seriatim opinion that Congress had inherent power to establish the Court of Appeals in Cases of Capture prior to ratification of the Articles of Confederation).
Final Report, p. 96; Laszlo, passim The military operation and the recovery of Bessarabia were received with enthusiasm by staff member Vintilă Horia, who wrote: "I am reminded of those horrific days when, last year, Asia spilled over the Dniester and the Jewish scum [...] were slapping the clean cheeks of the Romanian soldier."Laszlo, p.
Schaeffer, Casper and Johnson, William M. Memoirs and reminiscences: together with sketches of the early history of Sussex County, New Jersey. (Hackensack, N.J. : Privately printed, 1907), passim. For the next 50 years, the village of Stillwater was essentially German, centered on a union church shared by Lutheran and German Reformed (Calvinist) congregations.Chambers, Theodore Frelinghuysen.
209; Schenker, "Ulysses in His Tent," passim. Halleck proceeded to conduct operations against Beauregard's army in Corinth, Mississippi, called the Siege of Corinth because Halleck's army, twice the size of Beauregard's, moved so cautiously and stopped daily to erect elaborate field fortifications; Beauregard eventually abandoned Corinth without a fight.Woodworth, pp. 141–211; Fredriksen, p. 909.
See also Michael Polanyi: Scientist and Philosopher, pp. 258–259 et passim. In the summer of 1968 he and his colleague, Thomas A. Langford, completed editorial work on Intellect and Hope: Essays in the Thought of Michael Polanyi, published that year by Duke University Press for the Lilly Endowment's Research Program in Christianity and Politics.
226–227 online; Alison Futrell, Blood in the Arena: The Spectacle of Roman Power (University of Texas Press, 1997, 2001 reprint), p. 194 et passim. and Walter Burkert saw it as a form of scapegoat or pharmakos ritual.Walter Burkert, Structure and History in Greek Mythology and Ritual (University of California Press, 1979), p. 59ff. online.
Lesley, p. xvii Coward's most important relationship, which began in the mid-1940s and lasted until his death, was with the South African stage and film actor Graham Payn.Payn, passim Coward featured Payn in several of his London productions. Payn later co-edited with Sheridan Morley a collection of Coward's diaries, published in 1982.
While such tactics increase the combat effectiveness of the submarine and improve its chances of survival, someHolwitt, p.294, for instance. Holwitt, however, persistently refuses to acknowledge armed merchantmen are not protected, and most of the merchantmen sunk by both sides in World War II were armed. See Blair, Silent Victory passim; Parillo, pp.
9 and passim. Today, he is also recognized as a sympathetic early Native American ethnographer, having learned the languages and observed many of the customs of the Mahicans and Mohawks. His descriptions of their practices are cited in many modern works, such as the 2005 book 1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus.
Early American Marxism website, passim. Krafft was elected to the governing 15 member National Executive Committee (NEC) of the SPA in 1918, although he was unable to participate in its activities until early the next year due to his ongoing legal difficulties."Socialist Party of America (1897-1946): Party Officials," Early American Marxism website.
Lorna J. Clark. (Athens, GA, and London: University of Georgia Press, 1997), passim. Julia made a full recovery in 1834. Julia Barrett's many admirers included Fanny Burney's parson son Alexander d'Arblay, but she chose instead to marry a widower with children, James Thomas (died 1840) on 2 August 1836, to the disappointment of her family.
Vlasiu, passim. See also: Juvara, p.74, 76, 77; M. Vida (2007), p.59-60, 83 Neo-Brâncovenesc or pure Art Nouveau played an important part in remodeling the urban landscape, in Bucharest as well as in the Black Sea port of Constanța (where Petre Antonescu and Frenchman Daniel Renard designed the Constanța Casino).
In 2011, the IMF's managing director Dominique Strauss-Kahn stated that boosting employment and equity "must be placed at the heart" of the IMF's policy agenda. The World Bank indicated a switch towards greater emphases on job creation.Passim see especially pp. 11–12 2011 World Development Report fullPDF World Bank (2011)Passim see especially pp.
137; Gafița (2009), pp. 157, 160, 170; Olaru (1994), passim Onciul's brother in law, the Conservative Florea Lupu, came out in support of these attacks. Together with his refusal to accept the PNPR merger, this stance caused him to be expelled from Concordia—although he held on to his seat in the House.Cocuz, pp.
Wittgenstein's Ladder: Poetic Language and the Strangeness of the Ordinary. (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1996), passim, which points towards Wittgenstein's generous financial gifts to Rilke among several Austrian artists, although he preferred Rilke's earlier works and was distressed by his post-war writings. and Hans-Georg Gadamer.Gadamer analyzed many of Rilke's themes and symbols.
London Gazette, passim. As an Act of Parliament had been passed making him a felon if he did not return by a certain date,The statutes at large, from Magna Charta, to the thirtieth year of King George the Second, inclusive IV (ed. the late John Cay, Esq, London, 1758), 5 Geo. II, c.3.
The result of the frauds was to deprive the Charitable Corporation of the bulk of its assets. Bankruptcy proceedings against George Robinson and John Thomson continued for a long time, evidently due to litigation. They ended with a dividend being paid from Robinson's estate in 1748, and from Thomson's in 1747.London Gazette, passim.
Killakee House,Co. Dublin, between ca. 1865–1914. When Samuel White's widow, Anne, died in 1880, she bequeathed the estate to her late husband's nephew, John Thomas, 6th Baron Massy.Tracy, p. 46. The Massys were a Protestant Ascendancy family who had come to Ireland in 1641 and owned extensive lands in Counties Limerick, Leitrim and Tipperary.Tracy, passim.
Cuttlefish differed from her sister Cachalot (built by the Portsmouth Navy Yard) mainly in her innovative welded (replacing the previous riveted) construction. Wartime experience would later prove that welding was a sound technique.Blair, Clay, Jr. Silent Victory (Lippincott, 1975), passim. Both were medium-sized submarines built under the tonnage limits of the London Naval Treaty of 1930.
Ira Kipnis, The American Socialist Movement, 1897-1912. New York: Columbia University Press, 1952; pg. 180 and passim. In the summer of 1903, moderate socialists won majority control of Central Branch of Local Seattle of the Socialist Party — the largest of seven branches in the city — and brought Mills to Seattle on behalf of the local.
The right of observing the "greater auspices" was conferred on a Roman magistrate holding imperium, perhaps by a Lex curiata de imperio, although scholars are not agreed on the finer points of law.H.S. Versnel, Triumphus: An Inquiry into the Origin, Development and Meaning of the Roman Triumph (Brill, 1970), p. 324 online et passim. A censor had auspicia maxima.
Their companionship was mostly warm and affectionate but they had no children.Chesnut, Mary Chesnut's Civil War, passim. The couple resided at Chesnut Cottage in Columbia during the Civil War period. As Mary Chesnut described in depth in her diary, the Chesnuts had a wide circle of friends and acquaintances in the society of the South and the Confederacy.
Press, 2011), passim, but especially pp. 372-74; for Bernini and Caravaggio, see 285n.39, as well as Tomaso Montanari, La libertà di Bernini (Turin: Einaudi, 2016), pp. 154-84, 'L'eredità di Caravaggio,' who makes an even stronger case for the influence of Caravaggio on Bernini, one that had long been ignored or denied in Bernini scholarship.
The latter is perhaps of the greatest artistic significance, on account of its extensive cycle of paintings representing the Totentanz (Dance of the Dead), created by the Rococo artist Felix Hözl (died 1774), a resident of Straubing, in 1763. The cycle is of note as an 18th-century treatment of a predominantly medieval theme.Huber, Totentanz, passim.
The Royal Society. This also confirms the biographical information here, as does the epitome in the Concise Dictionary of National Biography, 1939 [1903]. For more information on his troubled private life, see The Letters of Sarah Harriet Burney, ed. Lorna J. Clark (Athens, GA/London: University of Georgia Press, 1997), passim; The Journals and Letters of Fanny Burney, esp.
Knyaz Alecu, meanwhile, briefly headed Moldavian government and preserved his seat in the Assembly—though his eligibility, including his citizenship, were openly questioned by Kogălniceanu.M. Kogălniceanu, passim The latter eventually engineered the cabinet's downfall.Iorga (1938), p. 372 Alecu then served on the first unified government of Romania as Minister of Finance, but resigned after only a few days.
A particularly interesting example was found in Barhobble, Wigtownshire in Scotland. (passim) Gospel books also contain examples of this form of the Christian cross. The most notable examples are probably the Book of Kells and the Lindisfarne Gospels. Mention must also be made of an intriguing example of this decoration that occurs on the Ardagh Chalice.
David Christian made the following observations about pastoralism.David Christian, A History of Russia, Central Asia and Mongolia, 1998, pp 81-98 and passim The agriculturist lives from domesticated plants and the pastoralist lives from domesticated animals. Since animals are higher on the food chain, pastoralism supports a thinner population than agriculture. Pastoralism predominates where low rainfall makes farming impractical.
See also James Bonwick, "St. Patrick and the Druids," in Irish Druids and Old Irish Religions (London 1894), pp. 37ff., full text online and Philip Freeman, St. Patrick of Ireland: A Biography (Simon and Schuster, 2005), passim, limited preview online. The 7th-century dating of the earliest surviving sources for these Irish stories coincides with the life of Begnet.
26–28 and passim. AVA's other directors were Edward Fokczyński, Antoni Palluth, and Leonard Danilewicz's elder brother, Ludomir Danilewicz. The company took its name from the combined radio callsigns of the Danilewicz brothers (TPAV) and Palluth (TPVA). When the company was being formed about 1929, the Danilewicz brothers were short-wave "hams" and students at the Warsaw Polytechnic.
Side view of Manuc's Inn The narrativeBased on Kir Ianulea (wikisource) and "Kyr Ianulea" (translated by Alina Cârâc), in the Romanian Cultural Institute's Plural Magazine, Nr. 6/2000. Also summarized in Chiciudean (passim), Cioculescu (p.204-207) and Rotiroti (p.23-51). opens with the rally of all devils, as ordered by "the Overlord of Hell" Dardarot.
When a revised version was presented in Paris in 1909 by the Ballets Russes of Sergei Diaghilev, it was given the more Romantic title of Les Sylphides.George Balanchine and Francis Mason, 101 Stories of the Great Ballets (New York: Doubleday, 1954), passim. It has remained a popular staple of the ballet repertory for the past century and more.
82 et passim. Marcus Crassus was acquitted of incestum with a Vestal who shared his family name.Crassus's nomen was Licinius; the Vestal's name was Licinia (see Roman naming conventions). His reputation for greed and sharp business dealings helped save him; he objected that he had spent time with Licinia to obtain some real estate she owned.
Map highlighting the region of Veneto in northern Italy. The Mala del Brenta (), also known as Mafia veneta ("Venetian mafia") or Mafia del Piovese, is an organized crime group based in the Veneto and Friuli-Venezia Giulia, north- eastern Italy. The criminal organization's structure is like a Cosa Nostra and Camorra model, but more violent.Dianese, M., 1995, passim.
Tienpoint negotiated covenants with Native American (Seneca, Cayugas, Iroquois, Oneidas, Onondagas, and Mohawks) in the Hudson Valley that were instrumental in establishing the Dutch fur trade, mostly in beaver pelts, in North America.Dolin, Eric Jay. Fur, Fortune, and Empire: The Epic History of the Fur Trade in America. (New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 2011), passim.
In the years following the Emperor's expedition to Ennarea, the warring potentates gradually fled south to the Kingdom of Kaffa. The remaining Sidamo population was absorbed by the Oromo, who as a practice made no distinction in ethnic ancestry for inclusion into their society.This process, called moggaasa, is discussed by Mohammed Hassen, The Oromo, pp. 21f, and passim.
Morris, John. Traveller from Tokyo, The Cresset Press, 1943, p.14 and passim He was repatriated by the Diplomatic corps after Japan's entry into the Second World War and joined the BBC, running their Far East service. Morris was head of the BBC Far Eastern Service 1943–1952, and controller for the BBC Third Programme 1952–1958.
The name is also preserved in the later word ghoul. Greek folk etymology links the word to the root gel-, "grin, laugh," in the sense of mocking or grimacing, like the expression often found on the face of the Gorgon, to which Barb linked the reproductive demons in origin., "Antaura," passim, and Burkert (1992), p. 82 ("evil grinning").
Although Du Bois attended a New England Congregational church as a child, he abandoned organized religion while at Fisk College.Lewis, p. 55. As an adult, Du Bois described himself as agnostic or a freethinker, but at least one biographer concluded that Du Bois was virtually an atheist.Rabaka, p. 127 (freethinker); Lewis, p. 550 (agnostic, atheist); Johnson, passim (agnostic).
For accuracy, within "the one like a Son of man" is not personally linked with suffering, still less with death. For this and subsequent observations and commentary, compare Gerald O'Collins, Christology: A Biblical, Historical, and Systematic Study of Jesus. Oxford: OUP (2009), pp. 59-67; J. D. G. Dunn, Christology in the Making, London: SCM Press (1989), passim.
By the 14th century Dante was describing his own imaginary journey through the astral spheres of Paradise.Miguel Asín Palacios La Escatología musulmana en la Divina Comedia [Muslim Eschatology in the Divine Comedy] (1919). Seyyed Hossein Nasr, An Introduction to Islamic Cosmological Doctrines, University of New York Press, passim. Idries Shah, The Sufis, Octagon Press, 1st Ed. 1964.
The Australian defence of Tobruk was anchored on three factors: the use of the pre-existing Italian fortifications around the port, aggressive patrolling and raiding of Axis positions and the firepower of the garrison's artillery. Fighting from fixed positions, the Australian infantry successfully contained and defeated repeated German armoured and infantry attacks on the fortress.Miller (1986), passim.
Philosophy, political thought, and mythology are three major examples of how classical culture survives and continues to have influence.Grafton, Most, and Settis, entry on "mythology," in The Classical Tradition, p. 614 et passim. The West is one of a number of world cultures regarded as having a classical tradition, including the Indian, Chinese, Judaic, and Islamic traditions.
Rollins and Witts, passim. A few principal sopranos served the company over a longer span of years, but not continuously; a few women served for longer but did not sing the principal soprano roles continuously. The Times repeatedly praised her singing and appearance,See, e.g., "Princes Theatre, Gilbert and Sullivan", The Times, 16 June 1942; p.
Plato, Symposium, 180a; the beauty of Achilles was a topic already broached at Iliad 2.673–674. But ancient Greek had no words to distinguish heterosexual and homosexual,Kenneth Dover, Greek Homosexuality (Harvard University Press, 1978, 1989), p. 1 et passim. and it was assumed that a man could both desire handsome young men and have sex with women.
Some even accused Dunmore of colluding with the Shawnees and arranging the war to deplete the Virginia militia and help safeguard the Loyalist cause, should there be a colonial rebellion. Dunmore, in his history of the Indian Wars, denied these accusations.Roosevelt, Theodore (1889). , Chapters VIII "Lord Dunmore's War" and XI "The Battle of the Great Kanawha", passim.
Roiz understands the State, which emerged from the so-called gothic era,Roiz, Sociedad vigilante y mundo judío en la concepción del Estado, pp. 311ff., passim. as the most successful western franchise in the history of Europe. The vigilant citizen is characterized by efforts to purge the hours of lethargy from life, to the point of virtually eliminating them.
German allies such as Vichy France began to require the Karaites to register as Jews, but eventually granted them non-Jewish status after getting orders by Berlin.Semi passim. When interrogated, Ashkenazi rabbis in Crimea told the Germans that Karaites were not Jews, in an effort to spare the Karaite community the fate of their Rabbanite neighbors.Blady 125–126.
Many Karaites risked their lives to hide Jews, and in some cases claimed that Jews were members of their community. The Nazis impressed many Karaites into labor battalions.Green passim. According to some sources, Nazi racial theory asserted that the Karaites of Crimea were actually Crimean Goths who'd adopted the Crimean Tatar language and their own distinct form of Judaism.
147–148; Wagenvoort, "The Origin of the Ludi Saeculares," p. 219 et passim; John F. Hall III, "The Saeculum Novum of Augustus and its Etruscan Antecedents," Aufstieg und Niedergang der römischen Welt II.16.3 (1986), p. 2574. Maris is depicted with a cauldron symbolizing rebirth, and the half-man, half-horse Mares three times underwent death and rebirth.
Breatnach, Companion, p. 244; McLeod, Early Irish Contract Law, passim The tract is a collection of material from varying dates, some no earlier than the 8th-century, some much earlier.McLeod, Early Irish Contract Law, p. 111 For instance, it contains a poem on contractual surplus adjustment that can be dated, based on style, to the early 7th-century.
Hector Berlioz, best known as a composer, was also a prolific writer, who supported himself, early in his career, by writing musical criticism, using a bold, vigorous style, at times imperious and sarcastic.Cairns, passim Criticism was an activity "at which he excelled but which he abhorred".Macdonald, Hugh. "Berlioz, (Louis-)Hector", Grove Music Online, Oxford University Press, 2001.
Matthews 154. It has also been conjectured that a related deity named or titled "Tzedek" (i.e. "righteousness") was worshipped in pre-Israelite Jerusalem as the names of two kings of the city, Melchizedek and Adonizedek contain the element tzedek.Peake's commentary on the Bible (1962), passim According to one such hypothesis "Tzedek" was an epithet of the god El ().
Notitia Dignitatum passim There is a tendency by some modern scholars to ascribe to ancient barbarians a degree of ethnic solidarity that did not exist, according to A.H.M. Jones. Germanic tribes were constantly fighting each other and even within such tribal confederations as the Franks or Alamanni there were bitter feuds between the constituent tribes and clans.
See also Butaru, p. 293 Iorga was upset by the imposition of uniforms on all public officials, calling it "tyrannical", and privately ridiculed the new constitutional regime's architects, but he eventually complied to the changes.Țurlea, passim In April, Iorga was also at the center of a scandal which resulted in Codreanu's arrest and eventual extrajudicial killing.
Cyril M. Kornbluth (July 2, 1923Rich, p. 16 et passim. – March 21, 1958) was an American science fiction author and a member of the Futurians. He used a variety of pen-names, including Cecil Corwin, S. D. Gottesman, Edward J. Bellin, Kenneth Falconer, Walter C. Davies, Simon Eisner, Jordan Park, Arthur Cooke, Paul Dennis Lavond, and Scott Mariner.
Anais Nin, Journal (1931-1934), Paris: Le Livre de Poche, 1966, pp. 138, 171–172, 237, 404, 505, passim. On her second visit to Rank, Nin reflects on her desire to be reborn as a woman and artist. Rank, she observes, helped her move back and forth between what she could verbalize in her journals and what remained unarticulated.
204; Hamilton's Description of the Sheriffdoms of Lanark and Renfrew (Maitland Club), pp. 18, 79; Pitcairn's Criminal Trials, 1833, I. ii. 70; Munimenta Alme Glasguensis (Maitland Club), passim; Grub's Ecclesiastical Hist. of Scotland, 1861, ii. 353, iii. 32, 42, 44, 88; Acts of Parliament of Scotland, iv. 688, v. 46, 120, 129, 479, 505, 528, vii.
Miriam Griffin, "Philosophy, Politics, and Politicians at Rome," in Philosophia togata: Essays on Philosophy and Roman Society (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1989), passim, including citations from Cicero. Cicero praised Publius Crassus for his character and speaking ability The Peripatetics and Academics, according to Cicero, provided the best oratorical training;Cicero, De oratore 3.57f.; Brutus 119ff.; Tusculan Disputations 2.9.
For secondary school, von Speyr attended a coeducational gymnasium, where she excelled, particularly in Latin and Greek.Von Speyr, My Early Years, pp. 96–104, 128–140 et passim. At her mother's insistence, she also spent a year at a girls' school in La Chaux-de-Fonds, since the gymnasium was thought to give her too much exposure to boys.
John Richardson, "The Administration of the Empire," in The Cambridge Ancient History (Cambridge University Press, 1994), vol. 9, pp. 564–565 online et passim, especially p. 580. Independent GaulLe Gaule indépendante is the subtitle of volume 2 (1908) of Camille Jullian's monumental Histoire de la Gaule, referring to Gaul outside Roman rule at the time of Caesar's conquest.
The history of St. Demetrios Greek Orthodox Church reflects the history of Seattle and of the United States in general, the history of Seattle's Greek community, and the tensions resulting from differing interpretations of Eastern Orthodox Christianity within the congregation and from differing views on the relative power of the Archdiocese and the individual congregation.Mootafes et al., passim.
"Le Conseil central...", passim; Politics and Political Parties..., pp. 291, 296–300; Eaton, p. 40; Gidó (2009), pp. 89, 91 The CCER did not represent "a third organization—added to or supplanting [the PER and UER]—nor a single body resulting from their fusion", and declared itself apolitical, committed to the defense Jews "within the framework of organic laws".
32, 47 et passim. In the Greco-Roman world, debt bondage was a distinct legal category into which a free person might fall, in theory temporarily, distinguished from the pervasive practice of slavery, which included enslavement as a result of defaulting on debt. Many forms of debt bondage existed in both ancient Greece and ancient Rome.G.E.M. de Ste.
He devotes a chapter to misconceptions about God that are due to mistaken "mental elaboration" as opposed to "heresies of speculation," and says that the God in which he believes has nothing to do with magic, providence, quietism, punishment, the threatening of children, or sexual ethics.H. G. Wells, God the Invisible King (New York: Macmillan, 1917), Ch. 2 passim.
110 & Ch. 5 passim. Sin is seen not as bad conduct but as the product of disharmonies of "the inner being" that "snatch us away from our devotion to God's service"H. G. Wells, God the Invisible King (New York: Macmillan, 1917), p. 150. and such weaknesses "cannot damn a man once he has found God."H.
Following one interpretation, the historical Jesus wanted to avoid the immediate confrontation with Rome, as Pilate would not have tolerated a popular leader who referred to himself as Messiah. There are also theological interpretations, of mixed historical and theological.David F. Watson, "Honor Among Christians: The Cultural Key to the Messianic Secret", Fortress Press, Minneapolis, 2010, pp. 1-10, passim.
Humphrey II of Toron (1117–1179) was lord of Toron and constable of the Kingdom of Jerusalem. He was son of Humphrey I of Toron.Runciman, Steven, A History of the Crusades, Volume Two: The Kingdom of Jerusalem and the Frankish East, 1100-1187, Cambridge University Press, London, 1952, pp. 280-281, 329-424, passim, Appendix III.
In the UK, they have had seventeen Top 20 singles and five Top 10 albums.Rogan, Johnny (2004). passim ("Chart Positions" data) Four Kinks albums have been certified gold by the RIAA and the band have sold over 50 million records worldwide. Among numerous honours, they received the Ivor Novello Award for "Outstanding Service to British Music".
416, op. 3, doc. 1177, 100-190 passim. In May 1864, the coastal tribes of Pskhu, Akhtsipsou, Aibgo and Jigit were defeated in battle and then killed en masse to the last man, woman and child, after which, on 21 May, Prince Mikhail Nikolayevich gathered the troops in a clearing in the area for a thanksgiving service.
Leuchars is usually characterised as a steadfast supporter of the king, and he can be found throughout his period as Chancellor attending to royal administration and close to the king.Duncan, "Leuchars, Patrick"; Penman, David II, passim. He witnessed dozens of royal charters, attended parliaments and councils, and sat on the exchequer until 1369.Dowden, Bishops,p.
The realism of the transparent material worn by the sleeping woman, the stunningly rich colours and the perfectly recreated marble surround are characteristic of Leighton's work, as is his use of natural light. He allows the sunset in the background to appear as molten gold.A. Weidinger, Magnificent Extravagance – Frederic, Lord Leighton's Flaming June 1894–95, Belvedere (2010), passim.
From Mankind to Marlowe (Cambridge: Harvard University Press), passim. The new drama combined the rhetorical complexity of the academic play with the bawdy energy of the moralities. However, it was more ambiguous and complex in its meanings, and less concerned with simple allegory. Inspired by this new style, Shakespeare continued these artistic strategies,Logan, Robert A. (2006).
The proceedings were directed from Warsaw by Drymmer and Charaszkiewicz, and on the ground by Ankerstein and later Zych. After the Zaolzie takeover, preparations began on 7 October 1938 for a covert operation codenamed Łom ("Crowbar")Paweł Samuś et al., Akcja "Łom", passim. in easternmost Czechoslovakia's Carpathian Rus, coordinated with Hungarian operations conducted from the south.
Hunting, 'The Survey of Hatton Garden' (1985), passim. Arlidge's survey of 1694 shows the completed estate in detail:'A Survey of Hatton Garden by Abraham Arlidge 1694' (full colour print), London Topographical Society Publication no. 128 (1983), with note by Penelope Hunting. he succeeded Sir John Cass as Master of the Worshipful Company of Carpenters in 1712.
10–13, passim As with other New Testament specialists who had a strong classical training, Caird was baffled by the skepticism with which gospel commentators and others who write on the Jesus of history have traditionally looked upon their historical sources. Consequently, his work has a refreshing lack of negative presuppositions.Chadwick 1987, p. xxBarr 1985, p.
Despite Burton's stricturesBurton's critique was this: an active and competent enemy would soon have forced the passage of Humaitá, whose strength had been much exaggerated. (Burton, 332 and passim, and compare 234). However this may have been somewhat unfair, or Eurocentric. The Allied officer corps had no prior experience of the type of warfare they were engaged in.
The popularity of these works was supported for over a century by year-round performances of them, in Britain and abroad, by the repertory company that Gilbert, Sullivan and their producer Richard D'Oyly Carte founded, the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company. These Savoy operas are still frequently performed in the English-speaking world and beyond.Bradley, Chapter 1 and passim.
In the chamber he never missed an opportunity to combat the Socialists, Republicans and Democrats.M. Blinkhorn, Mussolini and Fascist Italy, Routledge (1994), passim. See also L. Federzoni, Italia di ieri per la storia di domani, Verona (1967). He endorsed Italy joining World War I on the side of France and the United Kingdom against Austria-Hungary and Germany.
469-580 passim. was also standard. The Italia was powered by Hudson's "Twin H" L-head straight 6, with higher (8:1) compression and dual one-barrel (single choke) downdraft carburetors, producing and all were equipped with a 3-speed manual transmission with a column-mounted gear shift lever. The cars featured drum brakes front and rear.
Charles Tracy Barney (January 27, 1851 – November 14, 1907) was the president of the Knickerbocker Trust Company, the collapse of which shortly before Barney's death sparked the Panic of 1907.Robert F. Bruner and Sean D. Carr, The Panic of 1907. Lessons Learned from the Market's Perfect Storm, passim. Hoboken, New Jersey: John Wiley & Sons, 2007.
Chanson d'Aspremont (or simply Aspremont, or Agolant) is a 12th-century Old French chanson de geste (before 1190Hasenohr, 106.). The poem comprises 11, 376 verses (unusually long for a chanson de gesteHolmes, 83.), grouped into rhymed laisses. The verses are decasyllables mixed with alexandrines. In this tale, the African Saracen king Agolant and his son Aumon (Almons,, passim.
Deletant, p.80 A few days after this, a large-scale pogrom was carried out in Iași with Antonescu's agreement; thousands of Jews were killed in the bloody Iași pogrom.Final Report, pp.120–126, 200, 204, 208–209, 243–244, 285–286, 315, 321, 323, 327–329; Ancel (2005 a), passim; Deletant, pp.130–140, 316–317; Ioanid, p.
19, 53–58 et passim; Jean MacIntosh Turfa, Divining the Etruscan World: The Brontoscopic Calendar and Religious Practice (Cambridge University Press, 2012), p. 62. Decor Fragment of a triumphal arch: The Emperor's Guards, The Praetorian Guard, featured in a relief with an eagle grasping a thunderbolt through its claws; in reference to Roman equivalent form of Jupiter.
70a), and thinks he may be identical with the Joseph of Orleans often cited in the edited tosafot (Shabbat 12a et passim). If so, he must be identified, according to Henri Gross,Gallia Judaica, p. 34 with Joseph ben Isaac Bekhor Shor. Weiss, however, suggests that this Joseph might have been either Joseph Bonfils, Rabbeinu Tam's teacher, or Joseph b.
' Wing issued ephemerides for twenty years (1652–1671), which John Flamsteed considered to be the most accurate of their time. As a very young man Flamsteed maintained a correspondence with Wing (who died in 1668).E.G. Forbes, L. Murdin and F. Wilmoth, The Correspondence of John Flamsteed, The First Astronomer Royal (Institute of Physics/CRC Press, London 1995) Vol. 1, passim.
In the fall McIlhenny set the birds loose to migrate south for the winter. As he hoped, the birds returned to Avery Island in the spring, bringing with them even more snowy egrets. This pattern continued until, by 1911, the refuge served as the summer nesting ground for an estimated 100,000 egrets.Edward Avery McIlhenny, Bird City (Boston: Christopher Publishing House, 1935), passim.
Although by then a secondary figure, cut off from the major political centers,Heinen, p. 168 Brăileanu was deeply involved in its creation, in recruiting youth, and in organizing charity campaigns, his activities closely monitored by the Romanian Police.Bruja (2008), passim He was particularly enthusiastic about the Guard's work-camp network, deeming them the "formative school of the Legionary Romanian".
Lavinia Stan and Lucian Turcescu, Religion and Politics in Post-communist Romania (New York: Oxford University Press, 2007), 9-13. Cf. also Stephen V. Mosma and Christopher Soper, The Challenge of Pluralism: Church and State in Five Democracies, 2nd edition (Rowman and Littlefield, 2008), passim. Most of his research was supported by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada.
Like Cinderella, Psyche has two envious sisters who compete with her for the most desirable male. Cinderella's sisters mutilate their own feet to emulate her, while Psyche's are dashed to death on a rocky cliff.Amy K. Levin, The Suppressed Sister: A Relationship in Novels by Nineteenth- and Twentieth- Century British Women (Associated University Presses, 1992), pp. 23–24 et passim.
Richard A. Bauman, Women and Politics in Ancient Rome (Routledge, 1992, 1994), p. 50 et passim, citing a section from the historian Valerius Maximus that deals with women's abilities in the courtroom. Among occupations that required education, women could be scribes and secretaries, calligraphers,Beryl Rawson, Children and Childhood in Roman Italy (Oxford University Press, 2003), p. 80. and artists.
Marble bust of a flaminate, 3rd century AD The sources on the municipal and colonial flamines of Divus Iulius are more yielding:Cp. e.g. Duncan Fishwick, The Imperial Cult in the Latin West, Leiden/Boston 1980–2005, passim. here too the priests were distinguished Roman citizens. Imperial priests played an important role in local politics and religion, supporting the dynamics of the cult.
By playing off one suspect against another Mallon got several of them to reveal what they knew.Molony (2006), p. 146 et passim The case was successfully prosecuted by the Attorney General, Solicitor General, James Murphy, Q.C. (later Justice Murphy), and Peter O’Brien, before Justice William O’Brien."A Short Account of the Discovery and Conviction of the 'Invincibles'", by George Bolton, Esq.
Chester, a governor of Christ's Hospital, also took a sustained interest in the career of Edmund Campion, and sponsored him as a scholar to St John's College, Oxford.G. Kilroy, Edmund Campion: A Scholarly Life (Routledge, 2016), pp. 18-27, passim. Although not named an officer or assistant in King Philip and Queen Mary's 1555 Charter to the Muscovy Company,E.
Conflicts erupted in New England in King Philip's War in 1675, "the most destructive war" in seventeenth-century North America, in which more than 600 colonists and 3,000 Indians died.James D. Drake, King Philip's War: Civil War in New England, 1675–1676 (University of Massachusetts Press, 1999), p. 168 and passim Nearly at the same time was Bacon's Rebellion in Virginia.
David (1986), passim David had intended to publish a second such volume,David (2001), p. ix and eight years after the author's death, Norman, her literary executor, published a sequel, Is There a Nutmeg in the House? (2000). Like its predecessor, it was drawn from magazine articles, essays and other earlier writings, to which Norman added articles written by David in the 1980s.
Dewey established a pattern of making powerful enemies early in life, and many of his friends found him difficult as well.Wiegand, passim As one biographer put it, "Although he did not lack friends, they were becoming a little weary of coming to his defense, so endless a process had it become."Rider, Fremont (1944), Melvil Dewey. American Library Association, p. 105.
And is usually denoted by an infix operator: in mathematics and logic, it is denoted by ', ' or '; in electronics, '; and in programming languages, `&`, `&&`, or `and`. In Jan Łukasiewicz's prefix notation for logic, the operator is K, for Polish koniunkcja.Józef Maria Bocheński (1959), A Précis of Mathematical Logic, translated by Otto Bird from the French and German editions, Dordrecht, South Holland: D. Reidel, passim.
On the whole, Roman sources infer the expedition as expiatory; for background, see Valerius Maximus, 1.1.1., and Cicero, In Verres, 2.4.108 et passim, cited by Olivier de Cazanove, in Rüpke, Jörg (Editor), A Companion to Roman Religion, Wiley-Blackwell, 2007, p 56. For debate and challenge to Roman descriptions of the motives for this expedition, see Spaeth, 1990, pp. 182–195.
Władysław Kozaczuk, Enigma: How the German Machine Cipher Was Broken, and How It Was Read by the Allies in World War Two, 1984, pp. 26–28 and passim. AVA's other directors were Edward Fokczyński, Antoni Palluth, and Ludomir Danilewicz's younger brother, Leonard Danilewicz. The company took its name from the combined radio callsigns of the Danilewicz brothers (TPAV) and Palluth (TPVA).
79; Tașcă, passim , Pakharnikos,Iorga (1932), p. 219 & 1934, pp. 206–207 , Paharnik) was a historical Romanian rank, one of the non-hereditary positions ascribed to the boyar aristocracy in Moldavia and Wallachia (the Danubian Principalities). It was the local equivalent of a Cup-bearer or Cześnik, originally centered on pouring and obtaining wine for the court of Moldavian and Wallachian Princes.
199; Huskinson, Roman Children's Sarcophagi, passim. On coinage issued by Sulla the dictator, Cupid bears the palm branch, the most common attribute of Victory.J. Rufus Fears, "The Theology of Victory at Rome: Approaches and Problem," Aufstieg und Niedergang der römischen Welt II.17.2 (1981), p. 791, and in the same volume, "The Cult of Virtues and Roman Imperial Ideology," p. 881.
She lived mostly at Hardwicke, where she built the new mansion Hardwick Hall, which inspired the rhyme, "Hardwick Hall, more glass than wall", because of the number and size of its windows.Levey, Of Household Stuff, p.10-11; Levey, An Elizabethan Inheritance, p. 20-39 passim She was indeed one of the greatest builders of her time at Hardwick, Chatsworth House, and Oldcoates.
Edfelt's mature poetry might be described as traditionalistic in form but modernistic in imagery.Bengt Landgren, De fyra elementen, Studier i Johannes Edfelts diktning från Högmässa till Bråddjupt eko, Uppsala 1979, passim. He got his major breakthrough in 1934 with Högmassa (High Mass), which was reviewed in many Swedish dailies.Torgny Lilja, Själens palimpsest: Tradition och modernism i Johannes Edfelts lyrik (diss in progress).
Pol de Odet de Selve, passim According to Raphael Holinshed, Henry VIII made Wotton lord chancellor; the offer, improbable in any case, is more likely to have been made to Sir Edward's brother Nicholas.Reliquiæ Wottonianæ, ed. 1685 Henrv VIII nominated Wotton one of his executors and a privy councillor to his son Edward, though Wotton's official superior at Calais, Lord Cobham, was neither.
CW Upham Salem Witchcraft Volumes I and II passim. While at the Village, Lawson's wife and daughter died. (This subject would be revisited in 1692, see below.)CW Upham Salem Witchcraft Volumes I and II. By the spring of 1688, Lawson returned to Boston and he seems to have been something of an itinerant preacher over the next four years.Sewall DI, p.213.
The various ways in which the accusation has been made are discussed in Gurría Lacroix' essay ("Acusación de plagiario") in volume 7 of the IIH edition. As Woodrow Borah put it in his review:-At p. 565. On this point, see also Castañeda de la Paz, passim, esp. p. 189 (where she discusses Chimalpahin's use of work by Tezozomoc) and pp. 193f.
Sir Arthur Keith's theory of a species-wide amity-enmity complex suggests that human conscience evolved as a duality: people are driven to protect members of their in-group, and to hate and fight enemies who belong to an out-group. Thus an endless, useless cycle of ad hoc "isms" arises.Arthur Keith, A New Theory of Human Evolution, Watts, 1948, passim.
These interchanges led to a period of intensive borrowing in which the Greeks (especially) adapted cultural features from the East into their art.Burkert, 128 et passim. The period from roughly 750 to 580 BC also saw a comparable Orientalizing phase of Etruscan art, as a rising economy encouraged Etruscan families to acquire foreign luxury products incorporating Eastern-derived motifs.Fred S. Kleiner, ed.
She had one child, a daughter, Kecia, born in 1985. Reyes' brother, Bernie Whitebear (1937–2000), was a prominent activist, not only founder of SIHB, but co-founder of the United Indians of All Tribes Foundation, and the Daybreak Star Cultural Center; her older brother Lawney Reyes is a sculptor, designer, curator, and memoirist.Reyes 2002, passim, especially p. 181 et. seq.
Ambient house pioneers Paterson (The Orb) and Cauty (The Orb, The KLF), joined with Pratt and Beken in London’s Townhouse Studios in the summer of 2001, to begin work on a new project.Transit Kings' official biography, passim (link) Recording later continued in Cauty's Brighton studio. In 2003, the group released their first single, "Boom Bang Bombay", under the name Custerd.Custerd entry at discogs.
See Watt, Dictionary, passim, for details and individual examples. The ultimate reward for such services was a bishopric, which brought wealth, prestige, and a "job for life".A detailed survey, although regarding 12th- and 13th-century England, but still relevant, can be found in Bartlett, England under the Norman and Angevin Kings, pp. 377–412. Walter de Coventre's life is not well documented.
Registers of St. Dionis Backchurch: Hart. Soc. passim Osborne married, secondly (15 September 1588), Margaret Chapman of St. Olave's, Southwark, by whom he had no issue. She died in 1602 (having married, secondly, Robert Clark, a baron of the exchequer), and was buried beside her first husband in St. Dionis Backchurch. Osborne's daughter Alice married Sir John Peyton, 1st Baronet in 1580.
An Intermediate Greek-English Lexicon: ποικίλος. the Jewish Publication Society of America Version also employs the phrase "coat of many colors".Genesis 37, JPS. On the other hand, the Revised Standard Version translates ketonet passim as "a long robe with sleeves" while the New International Version notes the translation difficulties in a footnote, and translates it as "a richly ornamented robe".
Archeoweb, passim The Spanish attempt at relief that the Cardinal-Infante soon launched was unable to dislodge the besiegers. He therefore lifted his siege of the besiegers and moved with his army to the valley of the Meuse, where he took Roermond and Venlo from the Dutch, a considerable loss.Israel (1997), pp. 80-81 Map of the siege of Breda by Johannes Blaeu.
He was a disciple of Rava and a scholarly opponent of Rav Papa. According to the Iggeret Rav Sherira Gaon, he served as head of the academy of Pumbedita. He was a contemporary of Abaye, whose halakhot he transmitted, and of whom he was perhaps a pupil.Berachot 46b; Sotah 32b; et passim He also transmitted the halakhot of Rava and Rav Nachman.
Laws and edicts were posted in writing as well as read out.Susan P. Mattern, Rome and the Enemy: Imperial Strategy in the Principate (University of California Press, 1999), p. 197; Teresa Morgan, Literate Education in the Hellenistic and Roman Worlds (Cambridge University Press, 1998, 2000), pp. 1–2 et passim; Greg Woolf, "Literacy or Literacies in Rome?" in Ancient Literacies, p. 46ff.
He married Mary Johnstone and lived at 14 Mauldeth Road, on the Fallowfield/Withington border, and later moved to 1 Oak Drive, Fallowfield. He and his wife, Mary, moved south to 3 Oak Hill Park, Hampstead, shortly before his formal retirement.Tout Papers, Rylands Library, passim He was a devout AnglicanCharlton, H. B. (1951) Portrait of a University. Manchester: University Press; chap.
Jewish Encyclopedia. "The place where children were sacrificed to the god Moloch was originally in the 'valley of the son of Hinnom,' to the south of Jerusalem (, passim; ). For this reason the valley was deemed to be accursed, and 'Gehenna' therefore soon became a figurative equivalent for 'hell.'" In rabbinic literature, Gehenna is also a destination of the wicked.Kohler, Kaufmann; Ludwig Blau (1906).
Shadrach Fox was the ironmaster who preceded Abraham Darby at Coalbrookdale. Shadrach was probably the son of Captain Thomas Fox, who appears in the accounts of Philip Foley in 1669 as buying tough pig iron,R. G. Schafer (ed.), A selection from the Records of Philip Foley's Stour Valley Iron Works 1669–74 (Worcs. Hist. Soc., n.s. 9, 1978), 94–5 and passim.
The following year Gilbert Vinter conducted ten numbers from the show, also for EMI."The Arcadians", Castalbumdb.com; and "The Arcadians (highlights)", WorldCat, retrieved 3 June 2014 In 1999 a substantially complete score was recorded, with dialogue, by Ohio Light Opera, conducted by J. Lynn Thomson.McCall, passim In 2003, Theatre Bel-Etage, conducted by Mart Sander, recorded fifteen tracks from the score.
See also Maciu, p. 934 This embarrassment prompted Ypsilantis to form a small national contingent, comprising armed burghers and Pandurs who were trained by Western standards.Djuvara, pp. 283, 356; Vârtosu (1962), passim Especially visible in Oltenia, the Pandurs traced their origins to the late 17th century, and had also functioned as a militia in 1718–1739, when Oltenia was a Habsburg territory.
From June 1792 he was a member of the Dublin Society of United Irishmen, founded by James Napper Tandy and Archibald Hamilton Rowan.Proceedings of the Dublin Society of the United Irishmen ed. R.B. McDowell (Irish Manuscripts Commission, Dublin 1998), passim. Just before the outbreak of the 1798 Rebellion Harvey was arrested at his home on 26 May 1798 at 11.00 p.m.
The beliefs associated with "Blue Team" opinions arise largely from dissatisfaction with the general drift of American foreign policy toward accommodation with the PRC. The massacre in Tiananmen Square and China's later use of a missile test in an attempt to influence Taiwanese voters sharpened fears about China's intentions;Buszynski 128. The more virulent critics of China accused Clinton of appeasement.Timperlake passim.
Leforge joined the Montana militia in 1867 in the Bozeman, Montana and Livingston, Montana areas, acquiring both military experience and acquaintance with Native Americans tribes and ways (including raiding parties by Piegan Blackfeet, his father working near Fort Ellis, Montana. (These and all other narrative details herein derive from Leforge's own account).Leforge, Thomas. Memoirs of a White Crow Indian, passim.
However, though the Pictish language did not disappear suddenly, a process of Gaelicisation (which may have begun generations earlier) was clearly underway during the reigns of Caustantín and his successors. By a certain point, probably during the 11th century, all the inhabitants of northern Alba had become fully Gaelicised Scots, and Pictish identity was forgotten.; ; ; ; cf. , passim, representing the "traditional" view.
4–5, passim. Northumbria's southern frontier with Mercia ran across England, from the Humber in the east, following the River Ouse and the River Don, to the Mersey in the west. Some archaeological evidence, the Roman Rig dyke, near modern Sheffield, appears to show that it was a defended border, with large earthworks set back from the frontier.Higham, pp. 140–144.
561–608 and 807–810, passim. In Korean, the name that is usually romanized as "Park" actually has no 'r' sound. Its initial sound is an unaspirated voiced bilabial stop, like English 'b' at the beginning of words. The vowel is , similar to the 'a' in father and the 'a' in heart, so the name is also often transcribed "Pak, "Bak" and "Bahk.
Guy M. Robinson, "Appendix: An Appreciation of James Wreford Watson with a bibliography of his work," A Social Geography of Canada (Hamilton: Dundurn, 1991), 492 et passim, Google Books, Web, Apr. 21, 2011. He taught at the University of Edinburgh from 1954 to 1975. From 1975 to 1982 he was the director of the Centre for Canadian Studies, in Edinburgh.
Bust of Marcus Aurelius in the Liebieghaus, Frankfurt. Like many emperors, Marcus spent most of his time addressing matters of law such as petitions and hearing disputes,Fergus Millar, The Emperor in the Roman World, 31 BC – AD 337 (London: Duckworth, 1977), 6 and passim. See also: idem. 'Emperors at Work', Journal of Roman Studies 57:1/2 (1967): 9–19.
S. Knighton and D. Loades (eds), The Navy of Edward VI and Mary I (Ashgate Publishing, 2013), pp. 189–236, passim. and Clerk of the Green Cloth in the Queen's House.J. Nichols, 'XX: A Certifficate to be taken at the Funerall of an Esquire', A Treatise on Evidence of Succession to Real and Personal Property and Peerages (London 1844), p. 775.
225; Marcia L. Colish, The Stoic Tradition from Antiquity to the Early Middle Ages (Brill, 1980), p. 360 et passim. CiceroCicero, Partitiones oratoriae 37.130. distinguished between things that are written and those that are unwritten but upheld by the ius gentium or the mos maiorum, "ancestral custom".A. Arthur Schiller, Roman Law: Mechanisms of Development (Mouton, 1978), pp. 254–255.
Wood, 301-303 passim. While the Federal Farmer's style displays "moderation, reasonableness, and tentativeness," the letter known to be Lee's contained "exclamatory statements" and "charged phrases."Wood, 301. The Federal Farmer makes references primarily to the New England states and New York, while Lee focuses particularly on the ways in which the proposed Constitution would be harmful to the South.
According to Herodotus, Colchis was colonized by Egyptians (see details in Itinerary). In that case, the Colchian fleets that settle in and around Greece may be thought to prefigure the Greek colonization of Egypt.S. Stephens, Ptolemaic Epic, passim Apollonius conflates Greek and Egyptian mythology. Islands symbolized creation in the Egyptian scheme of things, being associated with the ground emerging from the Nile floods.
Sanielevici (1930), passim With an article in Adevărul Literar şi Artistic, he discussed the supposed links between the poem Mioriţa and the legendary Dacian prophet Zalmoxis (Mioriţa sau patimile lui Zalmoxis, that is "Mioriţa or the Passion of Zalmoxis").Octavian Buhociu, Die rumänische Volkskultur und ihre Mythologie. Schriften zur Geistesgeschichte des östlichen Europa, 8, Harrassowitz Verlag, Wiesbaden, p.325-326.
He also orchestrated the navy's change to adopting unrestricted submarine warfare in case of war with Japan;Holwitt, Joel I. "Execute Against Japan", Ph.D. dissertation, Ohio State University, 2005, pp.212–217 passim. Stark expressly ordered it at 17:52 Washington time on 7 December 1941,Holwitt, p.220. not quite four hours after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.
He also painted numerous English sitters during their visits to Rome on the Grand Tour, having sketched antiquities for John Evelyn as early as 1645.Edward Chaney, The Evolution of English Collecting (New Haven and London, 2003), passim. Francesca Gommi Maratta (c. 1690) In 1679 or 1680, a daughter, Faustina, was born to Maratta by his mistress, Francesca Gommi (or Gomma).
223 Ralea was also tasked with undermining the reputation of the anticommunist opposition and with popularizing communism among Romanian American exiles.Deaconescu, p. 28; Grigorescu & Ștefan, passim The anticommunist press responded by calling Ralea "a liaison man" of the Politburo, tasked with planting Stalinism in America.Walter Dushnyck, "Stalin's Pan-Slavism in the United States", in The Ukrainian Weekly, Nr. 30/1948, p.
But soon he returned to Rome to run for further political offices; but he failed in standing for the praetorship. His animosity towards Cicero continued and he appeared as a witness against Milo and Sestius, two of Cicero's friends. Cicero spoke on behalf of Sestius with a scathing speech against the character of Vatinius.Cicero, pro Sestio, passim; ad Quintem fratrem ii.4.
John Gilbert: The Last of the Silent Film Stars. Lexington: The University of Kentucky Press; passim; . In its review of the film in 1933, the trade publication Variety describes Gilbert as being "miscast in his final appearance for Metro" (actually his last as a contract star for MGM), adding that his "voice [is] okay but the part doesn't suit.""Shan" (1933).
Given the prevalence of circular runs, there were probably other losses among boats which simply disappeared.Blair, passim. During World War II, 314 submarines served in the United States Navy, of which nearly 260 were deployed to the Pacific.O'Kane, p. 333. On December 7, 1941, 111 boats were in commission and 203 submarines from the , , and es were commissioned during the war.
The London printer Richard Jugge is generally credited as the inventor of the footnote, first used in the Bishops' Bible of 1568.Chuck Zerby, The Devil's Details: A History of Footnotes, 2007, , p. 28 and passim Early printings of the Douay Bible used two closely spaced colons (actually squared four dot punctuation mark U+2E2C) to indicate a marginal note.
4, libertas Decembri; In two satires set during the Saturnalia, Horace has a slave offer sharp criticism to his master.Horace, Satires, Book 2, poems 3 and 7; Catherine Keane, Figuring Genre in Roman Satire (Oxford University Press, 2006), p. 90; Maria Plaza, The Function of Humour in Roman Verse Satire: Laughing and Lying (Oxford University Press, 2006), pp. 298–300 et passim.
Her father, Reuben "Buck" Buckman Claflin, Esquire, 1850 federal census, Licking, Ohio; Series M432, Roll 703, Page 437; father listed as Buckman, brothers incorrectly transcribed as Hubern (Hubert) and Malven (Melvin).Wight, Charles Henry, Genealogy of the Claflin Family, 1661–1898. New York: Press of William Green. 1903. passim (use index) was a con man, lawyer and snake oil salesman.
Loomis, pp. 219–268 passim. Wells Fargo 1870 adUntil 1876, both banking and express operations of Wells Fargo in San Francisco were carried on in the same building at the northeast corner of California and Montgomery Streets. In 1876 the locations were separated, with the banking department moving to a building at the northeast corner of California and Sansome Streets.
183-221; Hausleitner, p.77-78; Olson, passim; Stourzh, p.194 The initial demand was for the proceedings to be held at the Jewish House, but the Conference was ultimately hosted by a similar institution of the local Ukrainians and the local Music Society. The reason for this failure is disputed: some attribute it to opposition from the "Hebraist" adversaries,Lichtblau & John, p.
Because he hailed from an Occitan-speaking region ruled by the counts of Barcelona, he is often considered a Catalan. His name, in contemporary Latin, was Pontius or Poncius, transformed in Castilian to Ponce, the form used here, or Poncio, and also transformed into Ponç (Catalan) or Pons (Occitan).Reilly, King Alfonso VII, passim, uses the form Pons de Minerva.
The Brewster residence at Wrentham Hall, built c. 1550, torn down in 1810 Robert Brewster (1599–1663) was an English landowner of Parliamentarian sympathies who sat in the House of Commons at various times between 1645 and 1659.C.H. Firth and R.S. Rait, Acts and Ordinances of the Interregnum, 1642-1660, 3 volumes as 1 (HMSO London, 1911) passim (British History Online).
253, 254, passim. In Greek. The culture of the Vallahades did not differ much from that of the local Christian Orthodox Greek Macedonians, with whom they shared the same Greek Macedonian dialect, surnames, and even knowledge of common relatives. De Jong has shown how the frequent Vallahades self-reference to their identity as Turks was simply used as a synonym for Muslims.
Oram, Lordship of Galloway, p. 59 et passim. The world of peace which David had enjoyed in England ended after the death of Henry I, just as it did for most other English magnates. His hostility to Stephen can be interpreted as an effort to uphold the intended inheritance of Henry I, the succession of his daughter, the former empress-consort Matilda.
It is also applied in various other situations, especially when someone meets a sinner (as Jesus requires passim in the Diary). It invokes the Divine Mercy that is given to the humanity from the cross of Jesus. Blood and water from His Side pierced by a spear (John 19:34) symbolizes the grace of sacraments: help and forgiveness (cf. Diary 299).
Iațencu, passim Eusebie had embraced Romanian nationalism from the 1870s, against the conservatism of the boyar class; George radicalize himself even further, by introducing social demands into the nationalist program and seeking direct backing from the peasants.Cocuz, pp. 163, 199, 235; Drahta, pp. 594–597 George entered a local primary school in 1870, followed by the German high school four years later.
He worked with the Iuliu Maniu Foundation, the Assembly of Captive European Nations (ACEN), the National Committee for a Free Europe, and a virtual government-in- exile, the Romanian National Committee (RNC).Coșovanu, passim; Petraru, pp. 139–140 He also headed a section on the Study of Displaced Populations at the International Institute of Sociology, under Gini's presidency.Turda & Gillette, p.
Notions are the specialised slang used, now or formerly, by pupils, known as men, at Winchester College.Lawson, 1901. p. 84 and passim A notion is defined as "any word, custom, person or place peculiarly known to Wykehamists". The number of notions officially in use declines each year, with around 200 notions currently included in the official Notions book sent to New Men.
4 in the Introduction by Alan Bliss. Where Beowulf does deal with specific tribal struggles, as at Finnsburg, Tolkien argued firmly against reading in fantastic elements.Tolkien: Finn and Hengest, the discussion of Eotena, passim. In the essay, Tolkien also revealed how highly he regarded Beowulf: "Beowulf is among my most valued sources", and this influence may be seen throughout his Middle-earth legendarium.
It stressed fear as a source of disease, and love as a source of good. He promoted natural childbirthBevan-Brown, Sources (1960), p. 50 and passim, fathers being present at childbirthBevan-Brown, Sources (1960) p 48ff, breastfeedingBevan-Brown, Sources (1960) p 17 and passim on demand, and opposed infant circumcision ("this rather barbaric rite")Bevan-Brown, Sources (1960) p 15, corporal punishmentBevan-Brown, Sources (1960) p 48 and leaving babies alone to cry.Bevan-Brown, Sources (1960) p 13 He also referred to those influences in connection with both masturbationBevan-Brown, Sources (1960) p 61 and homosexualityBevan-Brown, Sources (1960) p 62 A review of The Sources of Love and Fear in the periodical Landfall said it would be of particular value to people confused about the issues, in view of the controversy aroused by the Cranmer House Clinic and the Christchurch Psychological Society.
Grandson of Rashi, and brother of RaSHBaM and Rabbeinu Tam; died before his father, leaving four children.Jacob Tam, "Sefer ha-Yashar," No. 616, p. 72b, Vienna, 1811 Although he died young, Isaac wrote tosafot, mentioned by Eliezer ben Joel HaLevi,Avi haEzri, § 417 to several tractates of the Talmud. Isaac himself is often quoted in the edited tosafot (Shabbat 138a; Ketuvot 29b et passim).
Marco is an Italian masculine given name of EtruscanPallotino, pp. 29, 30; Hendrik Wagenvoort, "The Origin of the Ludi Saeculares" in Studies in Roman Literature, Culture and Religion (Brill, 1956), p. 219 et passim; John F. Hall III, "The Saeculum Novum of Augustus and its Etruscan Antecedents", Aufstieg und Niedergang der römischen Welt II.16.3 (1986), p. 2574. and Latin origin, derived from Marcus.
Clark, pp. 236–237 Brăileanu's other decrees lifted academic freedom, allowing the Ministry to intervene in college policy, and prioritized the academic employment of people who, like himself, were known Guard members or had been jobless since the Soviet occupation.Bruja (2009), passim He disbanded the National Student Front, the sole student association established under the FRN, and lifted bans on other student associations.Bruja (2009), p.
Halfond 12-13. Many of the synods (sometimes also called "councils"—"synod" is sometimes applied to smaller gatheringsLumpe passim.), though not all, have what can be called "conciliar status," that is, they were convoked by a monarchical authority.Halfond viii, 21, 59. Especially in the Frankish church the great number of conciliar canons is evidence of the close relationship between the rulers and the church.
Hart-Davis passim Between the wars, he contributed The Times's reports on the Eton and Harrow matches, usually anonymously, but in 1929 on the occasion of the hundredth match his tour d'horizon of the series appeared under his name.The Times, 12 June 1929, p. 15 His reports were later described in The Times as the best prose of their time.The Times, 2 May 1962, p.
8, 102, et passim; Scherer, "Rechtsverhältnisse der Juden", p. 258; Bishop of the Jews; Hochmeister). The first Landesrabbiner of whom there is authentic record is Judah Löw ben Bezaleel, of whom his contemporary David Gans says that he was for 20 years (1553–73) the spiritual head ("ab bet din") of all the Jewish congregations in the province of Moravia ("Ẓemaḥ Dawid", year 5352).
210, and Passim. The theology of the faith missions, on the other hand, has had a compelling motivation for missions, asserting that no person can be saved from eternal damnation except through hearing and believing the Gospel of Jesus Christ. The expanding faith missions were not inclined toward ecumenical cooperation. They increasingly drew away from the SVM, draining off financial support as well as potential volunteers.
Adjunction is seldom mentioned in the literature. Exceptions are Burgess (2005) passim, and QIII in Tarski and Givant (1987: 223). :\forall x \forall y \exist w \forall z [ z \in w \leftrightarrow (z \in x \lor z=y)]. Adjunction refers to an elementary operation on two sets, and has no bearing on the use of that term elsewhere in mathematics, including in category theory.
Some mythological Bovidae in Chinese mythology are incapable of any pretence at scientific classification. Some of these are translated as "unicorns", in English. Some of the mythological types may represent extinct or exotic species, others seem completely mythological (Parker: passim). Some of the mythological types are chimeras, or composite type beasts, composed of parts from various animals, combined together to form something different than found in nature.
Many relocated to Galilee, so most remaining native speakers of Hebrew at that last stage would have been found in the north.Spolsky, B., "Jewish Multilingualism in the First century: An Essay in Historical Sociolinguistics", Joshua A. Fishman (ed.), Readings in The Sociology of Jewish Languages, Leiden: E. J. Brill, 1985, p. 40. and passim The Christian New Testament contains some Semitic place names and quotes.
It eventually built a small overseas empire of East Indian trade posts, North Atlantic possessions (such as Greenland and Iceland), and a small Atlantic trade route between possessions on the Guinea Coast (in modern Ghana) and what are now the United States Virgin Islands.Már Jónsson (2009) passim.,Pernille Ipsen and Gunlög Fur. "Introduction to Scandinavian Colonialism", Itinerario, Volume 33, Issue 02, July 2009, pp 7-16.
Correggio and passim. In 1614 the panel was in Rome, the property of Cardinal Sforza of Santa Fiora,Cf. The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church - Biographical dictionary, as well as Catholic Hierarchy data for this cardinal who had no doubt inherited it. It was subsequently owned by Scipione Borghese, and then by Cardinal Antonio Barberini; the latter gave it to Mazarin in c. 1650.
54–57 & nn..Underhill, Lois Beachy, The Woman Who Ran for President: The Many Lives of Victoria Woodhull (Bridgehampton, N.Y.: Bridge Works, 1st ed. 1995 ()), passim, esp. ch. 8. Nesta Helen Webster, a political conservative in the U.K. early in the 20th century, implied the genders might be equalLee, Martha F., Nesta Webster: The Voice of Conspiracy, in Journal of Women's History, vol. 17, no.
37; Lăcustă, passim; Rotaru, p.237 Ion Șpac, "Pantelimon Halippa – fondator și manager al ziarului și revistei Viața Basarabiei" , in Literatura și Arta, November 13, 2008, p.3 The short-lived periodical, financed by sympathizers from the Kingdom of Romania (including politician Eugeniu Carada), was pushing the envelope on the issue of Romanian emancipation and trans-border brotherhood, beyond what the 1905 regime intended to allow.Lăcustă, p.
Mark M. Boatner III, Encyclopedia of the American Revolution, p. 271. New York: David McKay Company, Inc., 1966 Through his mother, he was a grandson of Lily (née Whitney) Barney (sister of William Collins Whitney) and Charles T. Barney, the former president of the Knickerbocker Trust Company,Robert F. Bruner and Sean D. Carr, The Panic of 1907. Lessons Learned from the Market's Perfect Storm, passim.
124-152; cited in Sonya O. Rose, Limited Livelihoods: Gender and Class in Nineteenth Century England (London, 1992), passim. This cotton mill, taken over by Jeremiah Garnett and Timothy Horsfall in 1799, closed in 1930 and was demolished. The workers' cottages survived. Two diaries of historical interest survive, one written by the weaver John O'Neill, and one by a co owner of the factory, James Garnett.
Bank, by arguing that it did not have to pay a transfer tax when it converted from a state to a federally chartered bank. In 1970 it was using the name Firstbank;Shelby Scates, Firstbank: The Story of the Seattle First National Bank (Seattle: North Pacific Bank Note Co., 1970), passim. in 1974 the name Seafirst was adopted instead. Seafirst was acquired by BankAmerica Corp.
Berlin 1986, p. 479 et passim. After the Frankfurter Zeitung was banned by the German government in 1943, Boveri returned to Berlin, where her apartment was destroyed in an air strike. She then took up work as a report writer in the German embassy in Madrid before returning to Berlin in 1944 to work as a freelance writer with the National Socialist weekly Das Reich.
See, e.g., Shepherd, Marc. "A Buxton Travelogue" (1994), reprinted at The Gilbert and Sullivan Archive (1997), accessed 6 April 2009 In 1999 he co-operated with Roberta Morrell in the writing of a book, Merely Corroborative Detail, published in 1999, which combined his biography with detailed notes on the interpretation of his D'Oyly Carte roles.Morrell, passim Sandford died at Market Drayton, Shropshire at the age of 80.
A contrasting opinion came from the pianist and composer Ferruccio Busoni, who considered Mendelssohn "a master of undisputed greatness" and "an heir of Mozart".Andrew Porter, Liner notes to Walter Gieseking's recording of Mendelssohn's Songs without Words, Angel 35428. Busoni, like earlier virtuosi such as Anton RubinsteinSee Rubinstein's concert programmes in , passim and Charles-Valentin Alkan, regularly included Mendelssohn's piano works in his recitals.
Horace, Satires, Book 2, poems 3 and 7Catherine Keane, Figuring Genre in Roman Satire (Oxford University Press, 2006), p. 90Maria Plaza, The Function of Humour in Roman Verse Satire: Laughing and Lying (Oxford University Press, 2006), pp. 298–300 et passim. But everyone knew that the leveling of the social hierarchy was temporary and had limits; no social norms were ultimately threatened, because the holiday would end.
Its principal playwrights were Jonson himself, Thomas Middleton, and John Marston, though many others also contributed to its development, including Thomas Heywood, Thomas Dekker, John Day, and John Webster.Gibbon (1980, 2, et passim). Once the companies of boy players—the Children of Paul's and the Children of the Chapel—had resumed public performances from 1600 onwards, most of their plays were city comedies.Gibbon (1980, 1).
During the Imperial era, circus games were often added to festivals for which they were not traditionally celebrated in the Republic.Salzman, On Roman Time, p. 126 et passim. Circus games were held in various provinces throughout the empire, as indicated by archaeological remains of tracks and supporting structures, although many areas would have lacked costly permanent facilities and instead erected temporary stands around suitable grounds.
The Lesbian Organization of Toronto (L.O.O.T. or LOOT)Ross, Becki L. (1995) The House that Jill Built: Lesbian Nation in Formation, University of Toronto Press, passim for the abbreviation without periods was a multi-faceted lesbian organization founded in 1976 and disbanded in 1980.Ross (1995), p. 11 The group was Toronto's first openly lesbian feminist group, and its members elected to open Canada's first Lesbian Centre.
Although Dale and Herbert had administrative talent, both were frequently away from the Cathedral, and often directed the operations through letters or through the sub-dean.Calendar of the Manuscripts of the Dean and Chapter of Wells. 2 volumes, (London, U.K.: 1907-1914) 2:319-345, passim. Their perpetual absences contributed to the material decay of the cathedral, and a general decrease in revenue from church lands.
188–189; (2007), p.508 Iorga himself, convinced that the Sămănătorist tenets were still applicable, set up a series of journals which advertised themselves as reincarnations of the defunct publication; in addition to Neamul Românescs literary supplement, these were: Drum Drept (1913–1947, merged with Ramuri in 1914) and Cuget Clar (or Noul Sămănător, "The New Sower", 1936–1940).Ghemeş, passim. See also: Ornea (1995), pp.
Pharaoh (Internet Movie Database). Between 1897 and 1899 Prus serialized in the Warsaw Daily Courier (Kurier Codzienny) a monograph on The Most General Life Ideals (Najogólniejsze ideały życiowe), which systematized ethical ideas that he had developed over his career regarding happiness, utility and perfection in the lives of individuals and societies.Zygmunt Szweykowski, Twórczość Bolesława Prusa (The Art of Bolesław Prus), pp. 295–97 and passim.
122 & passim Ross (1936) - Virtue, Pleasure, Knowledge, Artistic activityRoss W.D. The Right and the Good (Oxford University Press, 1930) In particular, Zimmerman singles out the work of William Frankena who, in his book Ethics (1963), gave a comprehensive list of values and who, besides suggesting the use of headings, began to group similar values together.Frankena W.K. Ethics, 1963 (Prentice-Hall, Eaglewood Cliffs, 1973) pp.87-88; cf.
Trafford Publishing, p. 161 and passim. He would stay with them for eight years, until Murphy's death. He went on to lead the Bob Schulz's Frisco Jazz Band, and has put out 6 studio albums (the later four being under the band name of Bob Schultz and his Frisco Jazz Band), 1 live album, and 1 compilation (also as Bob Schulz and his Frisco Jazz Band).
Györffy, passim According to Kálnoky, by 2006 Hungarians who saw themselves as Cuman and Jazyg were displaying "identitarian sensitivities". She rated these grievances as more notable than those of Hungarian Slovaks, Croats or Romanians. A 2012 survey noted a "strong, partly ethnic-religious identity" in Jász-Nagykun-Szolnok, rather than in Kunság as a region; the authors surmised that the newer territorial unit had geographical coherence.
His main fairy tale collection was published as Povești de aur ("Golden Stories").Batzaria (1987), passim Also in 1930, he worked state-approved textbooks for the 2nd, 3rd and 4th grades, co-authored with P. Puchianu and D. Stoica and published by Scrisul Românesc of Craiova. "Cărți școlare", in Învățătorul, Special Issue, August 20, 1930, p. 37 In addition, Batzaria took to the applied study of philology.
112 In 1942, after the Guard's downfall, Familia published a posthumous homage to Nicolae Iorga, who had been assassinated by the Guard in 1940.Batzaria (1942), passim From November 1942, Universul hosted a new series of his political articles, on the subject of "Romanians Abroad". Reflecting the Antonescu regime's rekindled interest in the Aromanian issue, these offered advice on standardizing the official Aromanian dialect.Zbuchea (1999), pp.
Some scholars think he influenced Roman conceptions of the god Mars,Pallotino, pp. 29, 30; Hendrik Wagenvoort, "The Origin of the Ludi Saeculares," in Studies in Roman Literature, Culture and Religion (Brill, 1956), p. 219 et passim; John F. Hall III, "The Saeculum Novum of Augustus and its Etruscan Antecedents," Aufstieg und Niedergang der römischen Welt II.16.3 (1986), p. 2574. but this is not universally held.
" Calling it a "land of promise," the anonymous writer (probably a Mr. Lastinger who was the newspaper editor) wrote, "Bee culture is also carried on; the honey is as rich as that from California."Joseph Tillman, ed. Southern Georgia: A Pamphlet, Savannah Times Steam Printing Service, 1881, passim From the Macon Telegraph, March 24, 1886, in an article titled "At Alapaha. Her New Hotel.
Robert Turcan has seen the garland of loaves as a way to thank Mars for protecting the harvest.Turcan, The Gods of Ancient Rome, p. 79. Mars was linked to Vesta, the Regia, and the production of grain through several religious observances.Pascal, "October Horse," p. 283 et passim, and Herbert-Brown, "Fasti: the Poet, the Prince, and the Plebs," pp. 134–138, on Mars' relation to Vesta generally.
Amy Elizabeth "Betty" Thorpe (November 22, 1910 – December 1, 1963) was, according to William Stephenson of British Security Coordination, an American spy, codenamed "Cynthia", who worked for his agency during World War II.Stevenson (1976), pp. 341–50 and passim British Security Coordination was a cover organization that had been set up in New York City by the British Secret Intelligence Service (MI6) in May 1940.
Kuck, passim Radicalization was also embraced by the PAPF, who, at the height of the Stavisky Affair, proposed the death penalty by hanging for politicians found guilty of forgery or embezzlement.Marius, "La justice expéditive", in Chantecler. Littéraire, Satirique, Humoristique, Issue 99/1934, p. 2 The group formed a single caucus with the far-right Comités de Défense Paysanne, and expelled its own left-wing members in 1936.
Wisconsin Governor Jim Doyle proposed legislation for same-sex partnerships in Wisconsin on February 17, 2009.2009 Assembly Bill 75, passim. On June 13, the Assembly passed, by vote of 50–48, a state budget that incorporated domestic partnerships for same-sex couples.Assembly Bill 75, Journal of the Wisconsin Assembly, June 11, 2009, p. 263–264. The vote was taken after midnight on June 13.
Although built mainly for the transport of slate, the line is known to have carried passengers at various times between Caernarfon and Pen-y-groes. It is the last recorded use of horses by British Railways, and closed only with the closure of the branch line to which it connected after the Beeching Review in 1963.G.H. Williams, Swn y trên sy'n taranu, (Caernarfon, 2018), passim.
Alarik, Scott. "From Club 47 to Club Passim", in Deep Community: Adventures in the Modern Folk Underground (2003). Black Wolf (Cambridge, Mass.) Artists who have performed there include Joan Baez, Shawn Colvin, Bob Dylan, Tom Rush, Joni Mitchell, Suzanne Vega, Muddy Waters and Jimmy Buffett. At times the Club was a place for blues musicians like Paul Butterfield and Elvin Bishop to play as well.
Monthly Army List, passim. In 1873 the 1st London AVC became part of the 1st Administrative Brigade of Middlesex Artillery Volunteers under the command of Walmisley, now promoted to lieutenant-colonel.London Gazette, 12 September 1873. AVCs proved expensive to maintain, and the Secretary of State for War, Edward Cardwell refused to pay for the upkeep of horses, harness and field-guns from the annual capitation grant.
During the 1960s she performed these throughout the world under the auspices of the British Council. She continued to act until the late 1970s. Between 1929 and 1935, she appeared in seven films, most notably Escape Me Never, and in at least four tv dramas between 1939 and 1949, including Britain's first live broadcast television play, Rehearsal for a Drama (1939).Kissing the Joy passim.
Those who openly disagree with official teachings are condemned as "apostates" who are "mentally diseased".See also Raymond Franz, In Search of Christian Freedom, pg. 358. Former members Heather and Gary Botting compare the cultural paradigms of the denomination to George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-four,The Orwellian World of Jehovah's Witnesses, Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1984, passim. and Alan Rogerson describes the group's leadership as totalitarian.
"Milwaukee:A Tale of Three Cities" in, From Redlining to Reinvestment: Community Responses to Urban Disinvestment edited by Gregory D. Squires. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2011; p. 151 and passim Milwaukee had a population of 594,833 by 2010, while the population of the overall metropolitan area increased. Given its large immigrant population and historic neighborhoods, Milwaukee avoided the severe declines of some of its fellow "Rust Belt" cities.
Scholars have frequentlyGrabka, "Christian Viaticum," pp. 1–43; A. Rush, Death and Burial in Christian Antiquity (Washington, D.C. 1941), pp. 93–94; Frederick S. Paxton, Christianizing Death (Cornell University Press 1990), pp. 32–33; G.J.C. Snoek, Medieval Piety from Relics to the Eucharist (Leiden 1995), passim, but especially pp. 103 and 122–124; Paul Binski, Medieval Death: Ritual and Representation (Cornell University Press 1996), p.
Everyone knew, however, that the leveling of the social hierarchy was temporary and had limits; no social norms were ultimately threatened, because the holiday would end.Barton, The Sorrows of the Ancient Romans, passim. The toga, the characteristic garment of the male Roman citizen, was set aside in favor of the Greek synthesis, colourful "dinner clothes" otherwise considered in poor taste for daytime wear. (especially note 59).
Rumors that Philip had murdered him were taken up by the senatorial opposition of the later 3rd century, and survive in the Latin histories and epitomes of the period.York, passim. Philip was acclaimed emperor, and was secure in that title by late winter 244. Philip made his brother rector Orientis, an executive position with extraordinary powers, including command of the armies in the Eastern provinces.
In it Menasseh argued, and for the first time tried to give learned support in European thought and printing, to the theory that the native inhabitants of America at the time of the European discovery were actually descendants of the [lost] Ten Tribes of Israel.Méchoulan, Henry, and Nahon, Gérard (eds.), Menasseh Ben Israel. The Hope of Israel, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1987, , p. 101 and passim.
36, 372 et passim These populations mainly engaged in agriculture and cattle-raising especially worshiped the Sun, the deified river Strymon and later the "Thracian horseman". Dimitrios C. Samsaris, A history of Serres (in the Ancient and Roman times), Thessaloniki 1999, p. 27-46, 69–71, 83–96 (Website of Municipality of Serres) The ancient city of Serraepolis was founded in Cilicia by Siropaiones exiled from Serres.
70 et passim A vigorous correspondent, Halliburton wrote numerous letters to fans, friends, editors, sponsors, and literary acquaintances. To his parents alone, he wrote well over a thousand letters; a large selection of these, edited in part by his father Wesley, was published in 1940 by Bobbs-Merrill as Richard Halliburton: His Story of His Life's Adventure As Told to His Mother and Father.
Meares was educated at Melbourne Grammar School, where he boxed and played tennis, at Trinity College,see The Fleur-de-Lys (1931–1934), passim. and at the University of Melbourne, from which he graduated with a Bachelor of Agricultural Science degree in 1934,"University of Melbourne: Supplementary Examinations: February, 1934: Fourth Year Bachelor of Agricultural Science", The Argus, (Wednesday, 21 March 1934), p.14.
Ho, Allan B. & Feofanov, Dmitry (eds.): Shostakovich Reconsidered, p. 80 et passim. Although Volkov remains reluctant to respond to criticisms of himself and of Testimony, on February 15, 1999, he appeared with Vladimir Ashkenazy, Allan B. Ho, and Dmitry Feofanov at an open forum at the Mannes College of Music to answer questions about the memoirs.See Unfortunately, none of his principal critics attended this session.
69–70 During this process, the PȚ shed much of its radical platform. However, left-wing Peasantists supported their ideologue Stere, who had a controversial past, for a leadership position in the unified body. This proposal was strongly opposed by figures on the PNR's right-wing such as Vaida and Voicu Nițescu.Scurtu (1973), passim The unification was only made possible once Mihalache "sacrificed" Stere.
Tabak, Jessica. "Acts of Omission: Fiona Brideoake examines 19th-century censored Shakespeare" , 2 November 2009 By 1850 eleven editions had been printed. The spelling "Shakspeare", used by Bowdler and also by his nephew Thomas in his memoir of Thomas Bowdler the elder,Bowdler, pp. 31–32 and passim was changed in later editions (from 1847 on) to "Shakespeare", reflecting changes in the standard spelling of Shakespeare's name.
Furthermore, Stinnett makes numerous and contradictory claims of the number of messages originated by the Kido Butai, attributing to it messages from shore stations, Yamamoto's flagship (which was not accompanying the task force), deception measures, and traffic from before the task force even sailed.Young, pp.10-11; Stinnett, passim. Moreover, he finds "not a single one" originating from the Kido Butai after it sortied 26 November.
The Principalship was regarded as lucrative - a stipend of £600 - but with only honorific duties.Monthly Anthology page 185 However, it involved complex political maneuverings around the other Patronage appointments to Professors posts in the University.Emerson, passim Davidson was regarded as perfectly "safe".Emerson page 199 One success was getting his son, the non-descript Robert Davidson, appointed Regius Professor of Civil Law at the University.
L'Aiòli was a Provençal newspaper founded by Frédéric Mistral in 1891 to defend and promote Occitan languages and literature, as part of the Félibrige movement.Julian Wright, The Regionalist Movement in France 1890–1914: Jean Charles-Brun and French Political Thought, , p. 47–48 and passim The name comes from a famous Provençal dish, aïoli. It was published in Avignon and published three issues monthly.
Palm OS was originally developed under the direction of Jeff Hawkins at Palm Computing, Inc.Piloting Palm, Andrea Butter & David Pogue, Wiley 2002, p. 82. Palm was later acquired by U.S. Robotics Corp.,Piloting Palm, chapter 8, passim. which in turn was later bought by 3Com,Piloting Palm, pp. 179–189. which made the Palm subsidiary an independent publicly traded company on March 2, 2000.
They then each set up a mill of their own, Kendrew near Haughton-le-Skerne and Porthouse near Coatham Mundeville, both on the same river.A. J. Wardey, The linen trade: ancient and modern (1864; repr. 1967), 690–92 They also granted permits, enabling others to build similar mills, including in northeast Scotland, where early mills included those in Douglastown, Bervie and Dundee.Wardey, 692 and passim.
3 and passim while Ryszard Niklewicz served as a well-known physician.Stanisław Chodynicki, Paweł Radziejewski, Wspomnienie o dr. Ryszardzie Niklewiczu, [in:] Medyk Białostocki Czesław Meissner was a moderately successful theatrical actor.Czesław Meissner, [in:] FilmPolski service Andrzej Meissner fought in the Warsaw Uprising, survived and later served as engineer;Paweł Brojek, 10 lat temu zmarł Andrzej Meissner – działacz i publicysta endecki, [in:] Prawy service 26.06.
Bezviconi, Profiluri..., pp. 246, 249 In March 1914, Moruzi returned to antisemitic themes, contributing to the polemic on Jewish emancipation with the article Problema jidovească și poporul român ("The Jewish Question and the Romanian People"). Defining himself as a "humble autodidact", Moruzi argued that Romanian Jews were less qualified for citizenship than ethnic Romanians from outside the Kingdom. He called naturalization on such grounds "false, unnatural and alien".Moruzi (1914), passim That summer, Unirea published his column on the styling of Romanian nobility, in which Moruzi protested against boyars who took up "foreign titles".Rosetti, passim Living in near-total isolation after going deaf ("the cruelest of all infirmities", as he defined it),Moruzi (1914), p. 2 Moruzi was also succumbing to asthma. He died in poverty at Iași, in October 1914, but had a sumptuous funeral at Eternitatea, where Unireas A. C. Cuza delivered a eulogy.
3 She performed for several years from 1890 at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane.Silvestre, passim She played in the United States many more times, by invitation of producer Charles Frohman.Silvestre, p. 177 Her many Broadway roles included the title role in Phroso in 1898, Lady Algy in Lord and Lady Algy in 1899, Countess Zicka in Diplomacy in 1901 and Clara in The Girl in the Taxi in 1910.
See also: MacMullen, vii, and passim. Because of the persecution, however, a number of Christian communities were riven between those who had complied with imperial authorities (traditores) and those who had refused. In Africa, the Donatists, who protested the election of the alleged traditor Caecilian to the bishopric of Carthage, continued to resist the authority of the central Church until after 411.Barnes, Constantine and Eusebius, 56; Tilley, Martyr Stories, xi.
II, Exile Politics and Guerrilla Warfare (1962-1976), Cambridge/Mass. & London, MIT Press, 1978, passim In 1973 the government of the Soviet Union invited Neto to Moscow and told him Chipenda planned to assassinate him. The USSR resumed aid to the MPLA, Neto again firmly in control, in 1974. In September Chipenda joined the FNLA again, and returned to the MPLA only after the multiparty elections of 1992.
C. B. E. Reed: Memoir of Sir Charles Reed (London: Macmillan, 1883), passim. In the religious field he was active in the London Missionary Society, the British and Foreign Bible Society, the London Sunday School Union, and the Religious Tract Society. Returned to Parliament again in 1880 for St Ives in Cornwall, he voted against his party in the Bradlaugh debates, deploring Charles Bradlaugh's atheism.ODNB: Retrieved 13 December 2010.
30; Paul Zanker and Björn C. Ewald, Living with Myths: The Imagery of Roman Sarcophagi (Oxford University Press, 2012), p. 102 et passim; Newby, "In the Guise of Gods and Heroes," pp. 201–205. In Vergil's Aeneid, purple flowers are strewn with the pouring of Bacchic libations during the funeral rites the hero Aeneas conducts for his dead father.Vergil, Aeneid 5.77–81; Brenk, Clothed in Purple Light, p. 88.
Invincibles' leader James Carey, Michael Kavanagh and Joe Hanlon agreed to testify against the others. Joe Brady, Michael Fagan, Thomas Caffrey, Dan Curley and Tim Kelly were convicted of the murder,Molony (2006), p. 187 et passim and were hanged by William Marwood in Kilmainham Gaol in Dublin between 14 May and 9 June 1883. Others, convicted as accessories to the crime, were sentenced to serve long prison terms.
102 Historian J. L. Grassi argued that the author of the Vita had access to inside information, as a servant of the Queen.Grassi, "Vita Ædwardi Regis", p. 87 et passim There are two distinct sections to the work, book i and book ii, and the stages of composition of both were different. Book i is the core piece of historical narrative, perhaps the part commissioned by the queen.
In the era of the Reformation and Counter Reformation, there was frequently a backlash against unwholesome interest in the dark arts, typified by writers such as Thomas Erastus.Walker, D.P. (1958) Spiritual and Demonic Magic from Ficino to Campanella. London: Warburg Institute, passim. The Swiss Reformed pastor Ludwig Lavater supplied one of the most frequently reprinted books of the period with his Of Ghosts and Spirits Walking By Night.
495-502; V. Lusini, Il Duomo di Siena, II, Siena 1939, passim. For a recent discussion of Ansano di Andrea di Bartolo’s activity as a beater of gold, cf. W. Loseries, Bartolo di Fredi riabilitato, ‘La Diana’, II, 1996, pp. 463–464, who rightly (and in contrast to my previous opinion) recognizes an identity of Ansano di Andrea di Bartolo the painter and Ansano di Bartolo the gold-beater (i.e.
Southwold was the home of a number of Puritan emigrants to the Massachusetts Bay Colony in the 1630s, notably a party of 18 assembled under Rev. Young, which travelled in the Mary Ann in 1637.Roger Thompson, Mobility and Migration: East Anglian Founders of New England, 1629–1640 2009:188, et passim. Richard Ibrook, born in Southwold and a former bailiff of the town, emigrated to Hingham, Massachusetts, along with Rev.
His first record, Carved in Stone on the DB Records label was released that year, followed by Beneath Your Moon. In 1994, he met Ellis Paul at Eddie's, and the two have been close friends and collaborators since. Conoscenti frequently plays guitar at Paul's shows around the country, including accompanying Paul for many years at his traditional New Year's Eve shows at Club Passim in Cambridge, Massachusetts.Webb, Jela.
Natronai staunchly opposed Karaism. He endeavored to enforce the observance of every rabbinic provision emanating from or as explained by either of the two great Babylonian academies; and as the Karaites rejected the ritualistic forms of these schools, he made strenuous efforts to establish uniformity among the Rabbanites. Hence the origin of many a ritualistic formula is traced to him.Siddur R. Amram, passim; see also Zunz, Ritus, p.
Tugwell, 80 Cleveland's reputation as an opponent of corruption proved the Democrats' strongest asset.Summers, passim; Grossman, 31 Reform-minded Republicans called "Mugwumps", including men such as Carl Schurz and Henry Ward Beecher, denounced Blaine as corrupt and flocked to Cleveland.Nevins, 156–159; Graff, 55 At the same time the Democrats gained support from the Mugwumps, they lost some blue-collar workers to the Greenback-Labor party, led by Benjamin Butler.
The church of El Rocío (Santuario de la Virgen del Rocío) Interior of the church The Virgin of El Rocío The Romería de El Rocío is a procession/pilgrimage on the second day of Pentecost to the Hermitage of El Rocío in the countryside of Almonte, Province of Huelva, Andalucia, Spain, in honor of the Virgin of El Rocío.El Rocio Pilgrimage , visithuelva.com. Retrieved 15 April 2010.hermandadrociosevilla.com, passim.
The book devotes considerable attention to Wizard of Oz author L. Frank Baum, a display window designer and nationally-known expert on decoration. It discusses other window designers including Elbert Hubbard, Arthur Fraser, and Walter F. Allert, commercial artists such as Maxfield Parrish, Louis Tiffany, Joseph Urban, Boardman Robinson, and promoters of advertising such as Robert Ogden (pp. 39–70 and passim). Store interiors became increasingly ornate and carefully planned.
He was already a well-known religious and historical writer during the era of the Second Spanish Republic.[Núñez 2009] passim, esp. p. 9. In mid-1938, during the Spanish Civil War, the Nationalists established the headquarters of their Women's Section in the Salesian convent of Burgos. At that time, Pilar Primo de Rivera sought someone capable of leading the spiritual organization of the religious life of that organization.
PP Kampars, Sovetskaia grazhdanskaia obriadnost' (M.: Mysl', 1967) passim Special rites and ceremonies were devised in the 1960s to celebrate the granting of passports on the sixteenth birthday. Another rite was created for initiation into the ranks of workers and peasants. As early as the late 1950s, the state had also been making more ceremonious civil marriages, name-giving ceremonies for babies and funerals, in order to compete with the church.
Friedrich Solmsen, "The Powers of Darkness in Prudentius' Contra Symmachum: A Study of His Poetic Imagination," Vigiliae Christianae 19.4 (1965), pp. 238, 240–248 et passim. In the Renaissance, the bident became a conventional attribute of Pluto in art. Pluto, with Cerberus at his side, is shown holding the bident in the mythological ceiling mural painted by Raphael's workshop for the Villa Farnesina (the Loggia di Psiche, 1517–18).
Many of their works were published by Joseph Johnson, who was eventually jailed for his seditious activities. Wollstonecraft had been much influenced by the ideas she ingested from Price's sermons at Newington Green Unitarian Church and the whole ethos of Rational Dissent in the village of Newington Green.Gordon, p51 passim. These seeds germinated into A Vindication of the Rights of Men, her response to Burke's denunciation of her mentor.
Dr A. Nyland, The Kikkuli Method of Horse Training, Revised Edition, 2009, Maryannu Press, Sydney, p. 9. The Kikkuli Text addresses solely the conditioning, not education, of the horse.Nyland, passim. The Mitannians were acknowledged leaders in horse training and as a result of the horse training techniques learned from Kikkuli, Hittite charioteers forged an empire of the area which is now Turkey, Syria, Lebanon and Northern Iraq.Nyland, pp. 11–17.
In Shropshire, the gauge was usually narrow, to enable the wagons to be taken underground in drift mines. However, by far the greatest number of wagonways were near Newcastle upon Tyne, where a single wagon was hauled by a horse on a wagonway of about the modern standard gauge. These took coal from the pithead down to a staithe, where the coal was loaded into river boats called keels.Lewis, passim.
Brune's emblems partake of different traditions, including that of the ambiguous status of secular imagery in the Dutch Reformed Church and the generally moralizing stance of many bourgeois writers of the Dutch Golden Age. Different images have been interpreted differently by scholars, depending on among other factors the perceived relations between Brune and his audience, and between Brune and the broader pictorial tradition of the time.Bruyn 202ff.; Hecht passim.
The theme that civilizations flourish or fail according to their responses to the human and environmental challenges that they face, would be picked up two thousand years later by Toynbee.Arnold J. Toynbee, A Study of History, 12 volumes, Oxford University Press, 1934–61, passim. Dionysius of Halicarnassus (c. 60 BCEafter 7 BCE), while praising Rome at the expense of her predecessors—Assyria, Media, Persia, and Macedonia—anticipated Rome's eventual decay.
David Hackett Fischer has identified four waves in European history, each of some 150-200 years' duration. Each wave begins with prosperity, leading to inflation, inequality, rebellion and war, and resolving in a long period of equilibrium. For example, 18th-century inflation led to the Napoleonic wars and later the Victorian equilibrium.David Hackett Fischer, The Great Wave: Price Revolutions and the Rhythm of History, Oxford University Press, 1996, passim.
Other poets from the Thebaid had not only become celebrities—such as Musaeus Grammaticus, Colluthus, and Christodorus—but also were part of a poetic revolution of that time.Alan Cameron 1965 passim; MacCoull 1988, pp. 59–61; Cavero 2008, pp. 25–105. These poets, though Egyptians, wrote their verses in the Greek dialect of Homer, who had composed his Iliad and Odyssey more than a thousand years before them.
Focusing upon the merits of Christ as the sole basis for Justification, they warned fellow workers against what they considered a legalistic trend the church was tending to drift into. Seeing in this emphasis a threat to the law and other distinctive doctrines, key denominational leaders strenuously opposed the men and their message.L. E. Froom, Movement of Destiny, Washington, D.C.: Review & Herald Publishing. Association, 1971, 244-250 passim.
During his freshman year, he attempted to enlist in the military as a United States Navy cadet, but was rejected because of a burned right hand that he had suffered at age three. Because of wartime demands, Virginia Tech was operating on a twelve-month schedule, and Kraft finished his degree in only two years. He graduated in December 1944 with a Bachelor of Science degree in Aeronautical Engineering.Kraft, Flight, passim.
Bernie Whitebear (September 27, 1937 – July 16, 2000Reyes 2002, p. 78, 191.), birth name Bernard Reyes,Reyes 2002, p. 78. was an American Indian activist in Seattle, Washington, a co-founder of the Seattle Indian Health Board (SIHB), the United Indians of All Tribes Foundation, and the Daybreak Star Cultural Center, established on 20 acres of land acquired for urban Indians in the city.Reyes 2002, passim, especially p.
Camp Modin was founded by three couples who had studied under the influential Jewish educator Samson Benderly: Albert & Bertha Schoolman, Alexander & Julia Dushkin, and Isaac & Libbie Berkson. They opened a boys' camp on the site of an abandoned hotel on the shores of Lake George in Canaan, Maine in 1922, with 45 campers in the first class.Jonathan B. Krasner, The Benderly Boys and American Jewish Education (UPNE, 2012), , pp. 273ff & passim.
46, British Museum Press (in UK), 2nd edn, 1996 Many of the Little Masters' subjects were mythological or Old Testament stories, often treated erotically, or genre scenes of peasant life.Mayor, p. 315, and Russell, p. 11 and passim throughout The size and subject matter of the prints shows that they were designed for a market of collectors who would keep them in albums, of which a number have survived.
Sherman offered Grant an example from his own life, "Before the battle of Shiloh, I was cast down by a mere newspaper assertion of 'crazy', but that single battle gave me new life, and I'm now in high feather." He told Grant that, if he remained in the army, "some happy accident might restore you to favor and your true place".Smith, Grant, p. 212: Schenker, "Ulysses in His Tent," passim.
Szweykowski, Zygmunt, Twórczość Bolesława Prusa, passim. After having sold Pharaoh to the publishing firm of Gebethner and Wolff, Prus embarked, on 16 May 1895, on a four-month journey abroad. He visited Berlin, Dresden, Karlsbad, Nuremberg, Stuttgart and Rapperswil. At the latter Swiss town he stayed two months (July–August), nursing his agoraphobia and spending much time with his friends, the promising young writer Stefan Żeromski and his wife Oktawia.
Catala, op. cit., passim He favored Nazi Germany during the Second World War, and wrote anti-Semitic reports about Prime Minister Édouard Daladier and his successor Paul Reynaud. Philippe Petain later used de Lequerica as an intermediary to request an armistice from the Wehrmacht. During the last year of the war he was appointed Minister of Foreign Affairs, and severed diplomatic relations with Imperial Japan in retaliation for the Manila massacre.
The university became involved in the print trade around 1480, and grew into a major printer of Bibles, prayer books, and scholarly works.Carter, passim OUP took on the project that became the Oxford English Dictionary in the late 19th century, and expanded to meet the ever-rising costs of the work.Peter Sutcliffe, The Oxford University Press: an informal history (Oxford 1975; re- issued with corrections 2002) pp. 53, 96–97, 156.
Later states (in effect editions) of Burgkmair's two earliest chiaroscuro woodcuts, the equestrian portraits of Saint George and the Emperor Maximilian on horseback, and other Burgkmair prints, carry Negker's name and sometimes address, suggesting he owned the blocks, and was acting as publisher, though it is now thought that he may not have cut the earliest ones himself.Landau and Parshall, 200-202 & passim. See also Bartrum, No.s 132-137 & others.
18 et passim although this identification is not accepted by all historians.K. A. Nilakanta Sastri (ed., 1967), Age of the Nandas and Mauryas, p.147 This Himalayan alliance gave Chandragupta a composite and powerful army made up of Yavanas (Greeks), Kambojas, Shakas (Scythians), Kiratas (Himalayans), Parasikas (Persians) and Bahlikas (Bactrians) who took Pataliputra (also called Kusumapura, "The City of Flowers"):Chandragupta Maurya and His Times, Radhakumud Mookerji, Motilal Banarsidass Publ.
Maurer joined the Knights of Labor labor union on his 16th birthday in April 1880. He was also active in the Single Tax movement associated with Henry George.James Maurer, It Can Be Done. New York: Rand School Press, 1938; pg. 87 and passim. In the early 1890s, he joined the People's Party, a populist political organization which attempted in particular to advance the cause of the nation's farmers.
He labels those who oppose these measures as wanting to protect special interests and sacred cows and accuses them of wanting to maintain the status quo. In particular, Hanushek identifies teachers' unions among the entrenched or special interests that oppose the measures he recommends.See Eric Hanushek and Alfred Lindseth, Schoolhouses, Courthouses, and Statehouses: Solving the Funding-Achievement Puzzle in America's Public Schools (Princeton University Press, 2009), p. 270 and passim.
The family's Michigan Avenue home in Chicago was populated with servants, including gardeners and governesses, and he grew up in proximity of the scions of the city elite, including young relatives of Cyrus McCormick and Abraham Lincoln.Poole, The Bridge, pp. 10, 15-16, 26 and passim. Following high school graduation, Poole, an accomplished violinist, took a year off to study music, with a view to becoming a professional composer.
Both Dis and Pluto appear in the works of Shakespeare and Marlowe, but Pluto with greater frequency; Spenser prefers the name Pluto. Golding translates Ovid's Dis as Pluto,Arthur Golding, Ovid's Metamorphoses (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2001) passim, with a few instances of Dis; Radford, The Lost Girls, p. 25. a practice that prevails among English translators, despite John Milton's use of the Latin Dis in Paradise Lost.
Both, passim; Butaru, pp. 13, 64–87, 89, 95–96, 108, 112, 123, 158, 252–254, 316–317; Stanomir, Spiritul, pp. 8–9, 104–105, 108-110, 113, 114, 147–155, 198–206 Identified by researcher Ioana Both as a source for the "Eminescu myth", Iorga saw in him the poet of "healthy race" ideas and the "integral expression of the Romanian soul", rather than a melancholy artist.Both, pp.
Story, passim He did not succeed, mainly because he died before the restoration of the leader of the Orangist faction, William I of the Netherlands to power. Other "mutineers", like Theodorus Frederik van Capellen were rehabilitated by the new king, but this was not extended to Story because he could not ask for rehabilitation. Story died "of the impact of dropsy" in exile in Cleves on 8 January 1811.
He studied law under Donellus Hogerbeets, passim. and received his doctorate in law from Leiden University in 1584. Already in 1590 he was appointed pensionary of the city of Leiden and secretary of the Board of Regents of Leiden University. He resigned these posts when he was made a Justice in the Hoge Raad van Holland en Zeeland (the supreme court of the provinces of Holland and Zeeland) in 1596.
As he was unable to afford the raw materials necessary to attempt projects on the scale of Epstein's Indian and Assyrian influenced pieces, he concentrated initially on miniaturist sculpture genres such as Japanese netsuke before developing an interest in work from West Africa and the Pacific Islands.Arrowsmith, Rupert Richard (2010). Modernism and the Museum: Asian, African, and Pacific Art and the London Avant-Garde. Oxford University Press. passim.
Wells distinguished delegate democracy (which governs through a majority vote by delegates) from selective democracy (which governs by "persons elected by the common man because he believes them to be persons able to govern") and favoured the latter; "I believe that 'delegate democracy' is already provably a failure in the world."H.G. Wells, In the Fourth Year (London: Chatto & Windus, 1918), pp. 117–19, 129; cf. Ch. 10 passim.
The end of the campaigning season was marked in October, with the ritual of the October Horse, which also involved chariot races, on the Ides, and the Armilustrium on October 19.Fowler, Roman Festivals, p. 249 et passim. The paucity of evidence on the Equirria, as with other archaic festivals, may indicate that they were preserved for the sake of religious tradition, but not attended by masses of people.
In particular, Bernardus' conceptions of Natura and Genius would be echoed and transformed in the works of Alain de Lille, in the Roman de la Rose, in Chaucer's Parlement of Foules, and in Gower's Confessio Amantis.See, passim, George D. Economou, The Goddess Natura in Medieval Literature (Cambridge: Harvard UP, 1972), and Jane Chance Nitzsche, The Genius Figure in Antiquity and the Middle Ages (New York: Columbia UP, 1975).
And all the provincial TV stations have correspondents and reporters that are obliged to provide the programme with news reports and features from their respective areas. The programme consists of a daily news bulletin of approximately thirty minutes, beginning with the headlines and proceeding to detailed reports.See the Duowei external link below, passim. In special circumstances, the broadcast is extended beyond the 30 minutes allotted when deemed necessary.
Filipescu, pp. 67–69. See also Constantinescu, passim Cocea's mandate was immediately contested by his National Liberal adversaries. They sought to invalidate his candidature, citing a law which prevented those with a military discharge from running in elections. The National Liberal motion was however defeated when Cocea, who presented himself as a political victim, earned unexpected support from the Romanian National Party and the Democratic Nationalist Party.Constantinescu, July 1971, pp.
29, 41–42 et passim. Democratic politics, driven by the charismatic appeal of individuals (populares) to the Roman people (populus), potentially undermined the conservative principle of the mos.Hölkeskamp, Reconstructing the Roman Republic, p. 42. Because the higher magistracies and priesthoods were originally the prerogative of the patricians, the efforts of plebeians (the plebs) for access could be cast as a threat to tradition (see Conflict of the Orders).
In 2008 the first German female combat pilot, Ulrike Flender, joined JaBoG 32. In October 2011 the German Federal Ministry of Defence announced a reorganisation/reduction of the German Armed Forces.Quoted from , PDF-file "Die Stationierung der Bundeswehr in Deutschland", passim As a result of this reorganisation, the wing was disbanded on 31 March 2013, with personnel and planes joining the 1st Squadron of Aufklärungsgeschwader 51 (Reconnaissance Wing 51).
Gordon, p51 passim. A couple of years after she left Newington Green, these seeds germinated into A Vindication of the Rights of Men, a response to Burke's denunciation of the French Revolution and attack on Price. In 1792 she published the work for which she is best remembered, A Vindication of the Rights of Woman, in the spirit of rationalism extending Price's arguments about equality to women.Tomalin, p61.
4]; Șerban (AUASH 2004), passim It was a new edition of the Bucharest gazette founded by Voicu Nițescu, and, in this new form, was managed by a team of pro-union activists: the Transylvanians Sever Bocu, Ghiță Popp, Iosif Șchiopu and the Bukovinian Filaret Doboș.Șerban (AUASH 2004), p.177 România Mare was successful, despite the fact that only between 3,000 and 5,000 copies were published per issue.Șerban (AUASH 2004), p.
496–498 Overall, Fătu sided with the Factionalists, who came to be headed by Nicolae Ionescu, and with Ion C. Brătianu's "Red" radicals, against moderate liberals and "White" conservatives. In Moldavia in particular, the central issue dividing society was that of Jewish emancipation: Factionalists, motivated by economic antisemitism, opposed the integration of Romanian Jews, whereas conservatives supported it.Brătescu, passim; Michelson, pp. 226–228; Scurtu, pp. 53–56; Xenopol (1910), pp.
Budiansky, 2008, passim. To prevent ratification of new constitutions formed during Reconstruction, the opposition used various means to harass potential voters. Failed attacks led to a massacre during the 1868 elections, with the insurgents' murders of about 1,300 voters across various southern states ranging from South Carolina to Arkansas. The lynchers sometimes murdered their victims, but sometimes whipped or physically assaulted them to remind them of their former status as slaves.
Curtis, pp. 90–91. She was received by the nobility, and raised her wards to make marriages answering to the ideal of respectability of the time. In 1758, she moved from her Paris apartment to the more rural Saint-Germain-en-Laye, where she lived quietly and corresponded with friends, until failing health led her to return to the city in 1778.Curtis, pp. 10–11, 187, and passim.
Programme for Ivanhoe, 1891 Throughout the 1880s, Sir Arthur Sullivan chafed at the restrictions of the comic operas for which he was famous. His friends and associates, and even the queen, encouraged him to write a serious opera.Jacobs, pp. 188, 267 and passim His usual collaborator, W.S. Gilbert, declined to join him in writing a full- scale romantic opera, and recommended Sturgis as "the best serious librettist of the day".
The lawsuit left Gilbert and Sullivan somewhat embittered, and though they finally collaborated on two more works, these suffered from a less collegial working relationship than the two men had typically enjoyed while writing earlier operas.Wolfson, passim Gilbert and Sullivan's penultimate opera, Utopia, Limited (1893), was a very modest success compared with their earlier collaborations. It introduced Gilbert's last protégée, Nancy McIntosh, as the heroine, who received generally unfavourable press.Ainger, pp.
Murray&Roscoe;, passim In Afghanistan in 2009, the British Army was forced to commission a report into the sexuality of the local men after British soldiers reported the discomfort at witnessing adult males involved in sexual relations with boys. The report stated that though illegal, there was a tradition of such relationships in the country, known as bacha bazi or "boy play", and that it was especially strong around North Afghanistan.
George R. MacLay, The Social Organism: A Short History of the Idea that a Human Society May Be Regarded as a Gigantic Living Creature, North River Press, 1990, , passim. would recur centuries later in the works of the French philosopher and sociologist Auguste Comte (1798–1857), the English philosopher and polymath Herbert Spencer (1820–1903), and the French sociologist Émile Durkheim (1858–1917).George R. MacLay, The Social Organism: A Short History of the Idea that a Human Society May Be Regarded as a Gigantic Living Creature, North River Press, 1990, , passim. Niccolò Machiavelli Niccolò Machiavelli, about to analyze the vicissitudes of Florentine and Italian politics between 1434 and 1494, described recurrent oscillations between "order" and "disorder" within states: Machiavelli accounts for this oscillation by arguing that virtù (valor and political effectiveness) produces peace, peace brings idleness (ozio), idleness disorder, and disorder rovina (ruin). In turn, from rovina springs order, from order virtù, and from this, glory and good fortune.
The son of Aulus Plautius who was praetor urbanus in 51 BC, Plautius was appointed consul suffectus in 1 BC, replacing Cossus Cornelius Lentulus Gaetulicus. It has been speculated that he may have been the Aulus Plautius who was sent to Apulia by Augustus possibly around AD 9/10, = Dessau, Inscriptiones latinae selectae 961 = ; Camodeca, passim; Eck, passim; PIR² P 456, S. 183 with the task of interrogating and torturing slaves for some purpose,PIR² P 455 although it is more likely that this refers to his son Aulus Plautius who may have been involved with the suppression of a slave revolt in Apulia in AD 24. Aulus Plautius was married to Vitellia, the great- aunt of the future Roman emperor Vitellius. They had at least two sons and one daughter: Aulus Plautius (suffect consul in AD 29 and who initiated the conquest of Britannia); Quintus Plautius, (ordinary consul of AD 36), and Plautia, who was the wife of Publius Petronius.
They were managed by John Boosey, and later by William Boosey, together with Chappell. In 1861 the Musical World observed: 'classical chamber music of the highest order is brought week after week within the reach of the shilling paying masses as it has now been no less than fifty-two times at St James's Hall.... swelling the total of the Monday Popular Concerts to no less than sixty-three within two years of their foundation.... Such a result is unparalleled in the history of musical entertainments.'C. Pearce 1924, pp. 231-32. George Bernard Shaw gives an interesting narrative of the 'Pops' between 1888 and 1894.Shaw 1937, passim: G.B. Shaw, Musical Life in London 1890-1894 (Constable, London 1932), passim. Shaw admired the Joachim Quartet, led either by Joachim himself or often by Mme Wilma Norman Neruda (Lady Hallé) (and later still by Eugène Ysaÿe), with ('modest') L. Ries (2nd violin), ('solemn') Herr Strauss (viola) and the ('gentle') cellist Alfredo Piatti.
Rawlinson became a chancery lawyer.Hist. MSS. Comm. 11th Rep. pt. ii. passim In Easter term 1686 he became a serjeant- at-law, and in 1688 at the revolution he was appointed one of the three Commissioners for the Great Seal. A Series of the Lords Chancellors, Keepers of the Great Seal, Masters of the Rolls, Vice-Chancellors, Chief Justices and Judges ... of England, from the reign of ... Elizabeth until the present day, etc p.
15 & passim. The hat is also worn in Christian pictures by figures such as Saint Joseph and sometimes Jesus (see below). However, once "made obligatory, the hat, hitherto deliberately different from hats worn by Christians, was viewed by Jews in a negative light".Piponnier & Mane, 138 (quoted) A provincial synod held in Breslau in 1267 said that since Jews had stopped wearing the pointed hats they used to wear, this would be made compulsory.
304 Despite literary recognition, and probably because he was perceived as a foreigner, Steuerman was not invited to join the newly created Romanian Writers' Society (SSR). He ridiculed the SSR's xenophobia in a series of articles for Ordinea and Opinia.Durnea (2005), passim His comments enlisted negative reactions in Chendi's Cumpăna magazine, where it was implied that Rodion risked awakening latent antisemitism, but were defended by his more liberal colleagues at Noua Revistă Română.Durnea (2005), p.
In 2010, Tom Jones recorded "Did Trouble Me", from Werner's The Gospel Truth, for his album Praise and Blame. Her eighth album, Live at Club Passim is collection of original songs (gospel, jazz & folk) recorded with her band: Colleen Sexton, Trina Hamlin & bassist Greg Holt. For her ninth album, Classics, she performs pop music from the 1960s and 1970s accompanied by chamber instruments. Her tenth album, entitled Kicking the Beehive, was released in March 2011.
Latin hymns and litanies from the earliest Christian era name Mary as the "Mystical Rose" and by an array of rose epithets, or as a garden that bore Christ in the image of the rose.Winston-Allen, Stories of the Rose, pp. 88–89 et passim; J. Miller, Beads and Prayers, p. 166. Ambrose declared that the blood of Christ in the Eucharist, transubstantiated from wine, was to be perceived as a rose.
Wentworth Woodhouse (east front) from A Complete History of the County of York by Thomas Allen (1828–30). The west front Wentworth Woodhouse comprises two joined houses, forming west and east fronts. The original house, now the west front, with the garden range facing northwest towards the village, was built of brick with stone details. The east front of unsurpassed length is credibly said to have been builtCharlesworth 1986:120–137 passim.
The doctrinarios were further divided into fluid groups based on clientelism: narvaístas (around General Narváez), monistas (around Alejandro Mon), pidalistas (followers of Pedro Pidal), and polacosEsdaile, passim., especially p. 89, 387–393 (around Luis Sartorius, and so named because of Sartorius's Polish ancestry.)Esdaile, p. 99 Also leagued with the Moderates were the vilumistas, led by the Marquess of Viluma, who wished to go back to the enlightened absolutism of the Royal Statute of 1834.
RKO became the first major studio to produce for television with Talk Fast, Mister, a one-hour drama filmed at RKO-Pathé studios in New York and broadcast by the DuMont network's New York station, WABD, on December 18, 1944. In collaboration with Mexican businessman Emilio Azcárraga Vidaurreta, RKO established Estudios Churubusco in Mexico City in 1945.Fein (2000), passim; Lasky (1989), p. 228. Cary Grant and Ingrid Bergman in Notorious (1946).
The narrative Povestea lui Harap-Alb, Wikisource.Plot partly outlined in and , passim. starts with a stock formula: a king's three sons on a quest, and the hero who is youngest will succeed. An unnamed king has a brother, the Green Emperor () who is nearing death, and as has no male heirs, he has written to king to send any of his three princes, and whichever one completes the journey shall inherit the whole empire.
There has long been an admiration of Native Americans as fitting the archetype of the noble savage within European thought, stemming from a cultural sympathy grounded within the post-Enlightenment theory of primitivism.Anthony Pagden, The Fall of the Natural Man: the American Indian and the origins of comparative ethnology. Cambridge Iberian and Latin American Studies.(Cambridge University Press, 1982)See Paul Hazard, The European Mind (Cleveland, Ohio: Meridian Books 1937, 1969): 13-14, and passim.
Some scholars propose that myths from different cultures reveal the same, or similar, psychological forces at work in those cultures. Some Freudian thinkers have identified stories similar to the Greek story of Oedipus in many different cultures. They argue that these stories reflect the different expressions of the Oedipus complex in those cultures.Johnson and Price-Williams, passim Likewise, Jungians have identified images, themes, and patterns that appear in the myths of many different cultures.
115, citing Varro, De Lingua Latina 5.146–147, on the Forum Holitorium as a macellum. Throughout the city, meats, fish, cheeses, produce, olive oil, spices, and the ubiquitous condiment garum (fish sauce) were sold at macella, Roman indoor markets, and at marketplaces throughout the provinces.Claire Holleran, Shopping in Ancient Rome: The Retail Trade in the Late Republic and the Principate (Oxford University Press, 2012), pp. 207–208 et passim; Seo, "Food and Drink, Roman," p.
The editor is Vlad Galin-Corini, son-in-law of Diomid Strungaru. Commentators have described the book as a revelation, in particular for its detail on the various public figures whom the Transnistrian ethnologist had met before 1944.Constantin (2010), p.96, 103, 105, 138, 145–146; Datcu, passim According to Galin-Corini, these works were also rejected by editors in Moldova, because they make brazen statements about Bessarabians who collaborated with the Soviets.
The Lake Yojoa region of Honduras lies about from what was defined as a probable boundary of the Maya territories.Thompson 1975: 321 It is presumed that the people of Los Naranjos spoke Lenca, a language that is indigenous to Honduras and El Salvador. The Lenca language is nearly extinct in modern times and there is a movement to preserve and restore the language, as there are still people of Lenca origin.Campbell 1976, passim.
23-34, passim (Internet Archive). Among his various books John Chaunterell possessed an exquisite vellum manuscript Mass-book of Lincoln diocese production, which he left to St Giles in his will and which later remained in his family. This still survives in its original binding, a sumptuous memorial to the early Tudor heyday of St Peter's.Illustration here. For the benefit of Rugby School, it was sold at Christie's in December 2018 for £87,500.
87 et passim. See for instance Seneca, Phaedra 247, Hercules Oetaeus 926. "One of the commonest literary motifs for mourning in ancient texts is women baring and beating their breasts," notes Alan Cameron, The Last Pagans of Rome (Oxford University Press, 2011), p. 725. The baring and beating of breasts ritually in grief was interpreted by Servius as producing milk to feed the dead.Servius, note to Aeneid 5.78; Corbeill, Nature Embodied, pp. 86–87.
Zanker, The Power of Images in the Age of Augustus, pp. 239–240, 249–250 et passim. One exception to public nudity was the baths, though attitudes toward nude bathing also changed over time. In the 2nd century BC, Cato preferred not to bathe in the presence of his son, and Plutarch implies that for Romans of these earlier times it was considered shameful for mature men to expose their bodies to younger males.
English Garden Design: History and Styles since 1650. . pp 74-112 passim and provides a tantalizing possibility that Wentworth or his guests may have been cognizant of it. At the very least, they could enjoy the view for what it was. It is the earliest known example of such a roof deck in New England, though evidence of others from later periods exists, as at the circa 1797 Rider Tavern in Charlton, Massachusetts.
G.W. Trompf, in his book The Idea of Historical Recurrence in Western Thought, traces historically recurring patterns of political thought and behavior in the west since antiquity.G.W. Trompf, The Idea of Historical Recurrence in Western Thought, passim. If history has lessons to impart, they are to be found par excellence in such recurring patterns. Historic recurrences of the "striking-similarity" type can sometimes induce a sense of "convergence", "resonance" or déjà vu.
1–17 et passim. who was identified with the god Pan of ancient Greek religion and with the gods Faunus, Inuus, Silvanus, and Incubus of ancient Roman religion. Like these deities, heBoth ancient Greek and Latin categorize nouns within three grammatical genders: masculine, feminine, and neuter. Although grammatical gender is distinguished from biological gender, Latin places humans (homines), animals (animalia), and anthropomorphic beings perceived as having sexual characteristics in their gender-specific category.
In the Vulgate the book is called Liber Iesu filii Sirach ("Book of Joshua Son of Sirach"). The Greek Church Fathers also called it the "All-Virtuous Wisdom", while the Latin Church Fathers, beginning with Cyprian,Testimonia, ii. 1; iii. 1, 35, 51, 95, et passim termed it Ecclesiasticus because it was frequently read in churches, leading the early Latin Fathers to call it liber ecclesiasticus (Latin and Latinised Greek for "church book").
Initiation was reserved to women, and the cult was served by priestesses of high social caste. According to Cicero, men were forbidden to look on Ceres' cult image;Cicero, In Verres, 2.4.108 et passim, cited by Olivier de Cazanove, in Rüpke, Jörg (Editor), A Companion to Roman Religion, Wiley-Blackwell, 2007, p 56. this could imply the use of separate cult images, or the use of the same images in different, gender- segregated rites.
"Armenia" full text The Cilician Gates have been a major commercial and military artery for millennia.William Mitchell Ramsay, The historical geography of Asia Minor, 1890, passim full text In the early 20th century, a narrow-gauge railway was built through them, and today, the Tarsus-Ankara Highway (E90, O-21) passes through them. The southern end of the Cilician gates is about 44 km north of Tarsus and the northern end leads to Cappadocia.
Several of these paintings depict women who had adopted some elements of male dress. While in 1903 Brooks had shocked her husband by cutting her hair short and ordering a suit of men's clothes from a tailor, by the mid-1920s bobbed and cropped hairstyles were "in" for women and wearing tailored jackets--usually with a skirt--was a recognized fashion, discussed in magazines as the "severely masculine" look.Doan, 114–117 and passim.
Beard, The Roman Triumph, pp. 128–131. Some were released, either becoming part of Roman society or returning home to rule as a Roman client. Others might be kept in custody as they were before the triumph, that is, not in the Tullianum or any other dungeon, but under the close scrutiny of Roman officials and away from other prisoners they might incite: Beard, The Roman Triumph, pp. 134–137 et passim.
Alesia was an oppidum of the Celtic Mandubii in present-day Burgundy. A dedication to the gods alludes to the presence of a shrine at the curative spring, where sick pilgrims could bathe in a sacred pool. The sanctuary itself, located near the eastern gate of the town just outside the city wall,James Bromwich, The Roman Remains of Northern and Eastern France: A Guidebook (Routledge, 2003), pp. 49 and 133 online et passim.
He was a student of R. Judah haNasi, in whose name he transmitted several halakhic sayings.Yerushalmi Hagigah 3:2; Yerushalmi Kiddushin 3:14; et al. The best known of his senior fellow students was Hiyya the Great, who, as an assistant teacher in Rabbi's school, sometimes acted as Yannai's tutor.Yerushalmi Demai 7:1; Yevamot 93a But several discussions between Hiyya and YannaiYerushalmi Berachot 4:5, and Bavli passim show the real relationship.
176 Towards the end of the Roman Period, there was an industry here making fine stoneware from the local limestone.Gibson, 1983, passim. Products included vases and bowls turned on a lathe, and mugs carved by hand. Examples of stoneware that may have originated here have been found in many places in the Jerusalem region, mostly dating from the first and second centuries CE. Ceramics from the Byzantine era have been found here.
Krostenko, Cicero, Catullus, and the language of social performance pp. 197, 212 et passim. See also Lindsay Hall on Caesar's "linguistic nationalism," "Ratio and Romanitas in the Bellum Gallicum," in Julius Caesar as Artful Reporter, pp. 11–43. A hundred and fifty years later, Tacitus takes a more cynical view of humanitas as an illusion of civilization that is in fact submission to the dominant culture.W.J. Slater, "Handouts at Dinner," Phoenix 54 (2000), p. 120.
Aachen Altar: Centrepiece with the crucifixion of Christ The notname Master of the Aachen Altar is given to an anonymous late gothic painter active in Cologne between 1495 and 1520Marita to Berens-Jurk, Der Meister des Aachener Altars. Mainz 2002, passim. or 1480 and 1520,Herta Lepie, Georg Minkenberg, Die Schatzkammer des Aachener Domes, Brimberg, Aachen 1995, , p. 47. named for his master work, the Aachen Altar triptych owned by the Aachen Cathedral Treasury.
While the above narrative of the events of Wittenberg in early 1522 and the association of the Zwickau Prophets with them had become the standard textbook explanation of the case, Olaf Kuhr has proposed a new paradigm for understanding the occasion.Kuhr, The Wittenberg Disturbances, passim. Referencing primary sources such as correspondences, Kuhr concludes that Dreschel and Storch left Wittenberg before January 1 and Stübner by January 6.Kuhr, The Wittenberg Disturbances, 206–207.
The task of assigning a proper coat of arms and flag to each municipality was completed by the early 1990s. In the process care was taken to rectify errors from the past, execute drawings in a clear style and standardize the blazon. While municipal coats of arms have to be in keeping with local historic and heraldic heritage, considerably more creativity is allowed in the design of flags.Lieve Viaene-Awouters and Ernest Warlop (2002) passim.
J. A. V. Chapple and Arthur Pollard (1966), 203–226, passim. On the other hand, some reviewers complained that Gaskell painted Ruth as too passive a victim of Bellingham's advances, eluding the question of Ruth's own sexual feelings. Gaskell loaded the story down with so many extenuating circumstances that Ruth scarcely seemed a representative example of a "fallen woman."Alan Shelston, "Introduction," in Elizabeth Gaskell, Ruth (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1985), xii–xiv.
More specifically, the grammar of a language > is a well-defined system by definition not more powerful than a universal > Turing machine (and, in fact, surely a great deal weaker).The State of the > Art, p. 40 The crux of Hockett's rebuttal is that the set of grammatical sentences in a language is not infinite, but rather ill-defined.p. 52 et passim Hockett proposes that "no physical system is well-defined".p.
With the exception of his work in September 1864 as an official photographer on the British military expedition to Shimonoseki, Beato was eager to portray Japanese people, and did so uncondescendingly, even showing them as defiant in the face of the elevated status of westerners.Dobson, "'I been to keep up my position'", passim. Beato was very active while in Japan. In 1865 he produced a number of dated views of Nagasaki and its surroundings.
Kennedy was initiated into Phi Psi, a local social fraternity that had been the Rhode Island Alpha Chapter of national Phi Kappa Psi fraternity until 1978.Robert T. Littell, The Men We Became: My Friendship With John F. Kennedy, Jr. (St. Martin's Press 2004), passim. In January 1983, Kennedy's Massachusetts driver's license was suspended after he received more than three speeding summonses in a twelve-month period, and failed to appear at a hearing.
Konarzewski Łukasz: Ludwik Konarzewski senior, [in:] "Ziemia śląska", edited by Lech Szaraniec, v. 2, Katowice 1989, p. 49-50 passim After completing his course of studies with distinction in 1910, he spent the following two years on foreign travels and stays in four of the great centres of European art: Paris, Munich, Vienna and Rome. He undertook these journeys in the company of Jan Wałach, with whom he had become acquainted during his student days.
In June–July 1964, Lindbergh participated in Edwin Link's second Man in Sea experiment, conducted in the Berry Islands (a chain in the Bahamas). Lindbergh's fellow diver for this venture was Robert Sténuit, who had become the world's first aquanaut in 1962. Sténuit and Lindbergh stayed in Link's SPID habitat (Submersible, Portable, Inflatable Dwelling) for 49 hours underwater at a depth of 432 feet, breathing a helium-oxygen mixture.The Deepest Days (Sténuit), passim.
While attending Suffolk University in Boston during the 1960s, he was influenced by the Cambridge folk scene and played at the Nameless Coffeehouse, Club 47 (now Club Passim), and other folk clubs. In 1972, he went to Nashville and recorded his first album, Midwest Farm Disaster. In 1974, he became disillusioned with music and moved to a farm in West Virginia with his family. In 1982, he recorded his second album, Last Chance Rider.
The scene where Kin Hodder falls to his death was also shot at Ealing. Following rehearsals, the production moved to BBC Television Centre between 12 and 14 June. Industrial action by BBC electricians interrupted the production, and by the end of the recording session the final ten minutes of the play remained untaped, leading to a remount on 23 June to complete the outstanding scenes.Pixley, Flashback: The Year of the Sex Olympics, passim.
The Rev. Edward Hartopp Craddock, D.D. (29 November 1810 - 27 January 1886)National Library of New Zealand was an Oxford college head in the 19th- century."Collection of Letters from E.H. Cradock, Oxford and Grasmere, to William Angus Knight, 1877-1886" Craddock, E.H. passim Craddock was born in Shenstone, Staffordshire and educated at Balliol College, Oxford. He held the Living at Tedstone Delamere; and was Principal of BrasenoseBNC web-site from 1853 until his death.
Runestone Sö 318, containing the personal name Kylfingr Barði Guðmundsson identified the Kylfings as an East Scandinavian, possibly Swedish, tribe that infiltrated northern Norway during the late ninth century.Guðmundsson passim; Bugge 309. Guðmundsson connects the Kylfings with the Germanic Heruli who were active throughout northern Europe and in Italy during the fifth and sixth centuries. According to Guðmundsson, many of these Kylfings may ultimately have emigrated to Iceland during the ninth and tenth centuries.
Numerous American alligators, Louisiana black bears, and white- tailed deer also inhabit the island, in addition to coypu, North American river otters, muskrats, snakes, and other wild animals.Edward A. McIlhenny, "How I Made a Bird City," Country Life in America (1912) [reprint], passim. The gardens are planted with azaleas, Japanese camellias, hydrangeas, Louisiana irises, palms, papyrus sedges, bamboo, and wisteria. Four miles of gravel roads are lined with live oak trees and Spanish moss.
Here, part of the view into the distance is through three layers of glass, and the form to the left is part of a chest of drawers.Piersol, 14–15, on still lifes and a description of Window w/vase & forest: "Kipniss places huge, sinuous leaves on diagonal branches. Illuminated from behind, their botanical shapes stand in bold contrast to the dark rectangular elements of the interiors." Intaglios, for plates showing interiors with a vase, passim.
The Sheares brothers principally organised the movement in Cork, while continuing with their legal careers. A Mr. Conway, one of their keenest members in Cork, informed the administration of their activities.Notes on Conway; accessed Oct 2009 During 1793 the brothers also joined the Dublin Society of the United Irishmen, where another spy, Thomas Collins, passed on their names.McDowell, RB Proceedings of the Dublin Society of the United Irishmen Irish Manuscripts Commission, Dublin 1998; passim.
The Charles Mingus composition "Hora Decubitus" initially appeared on the album Mingus Mingus Mingus Mingus Mingus. "Upon A Veil of Midnight Blue" would be recorded by the posthumous Charles Mingus Orchestra, initially written for rhythm and blues singer Charles Brown. "Speak Darkly My Angel" was written for Anne Sofie von Otter and the Brodsky Quartet, while "Put Away Forbidden Playthings" was his contribution to a concert commemorating the death of Henry Purcell.Costello, liners, passim.
Romulus and Remus regained their grandfather's throne and set out to build a new city, consulting with the gods through augury, a characteristic religious institution of Rome that is portrayed as existing from earliest times. The brothers quarrel while building the city walls, and Romulus kills Remus, an act that is sometimes seen as sacrificial. Fratricide thus became an integral part of Rome's founding myth.T.P. Wiseman, Remus: A Roman Myth (Cambridge University Press, 1995), passim.
For many years, the two sides waged a propaganda battle across the border using propaganda signs and canisters of leaflets fired or dropped into each other's territory.Gordon (1988), p. passim. West German leaflets sought to undermine the willingness of East German guards to shoot at refugees attempting to cross the border, while East German leaflets promoted the GDR's view of West Germany as a militaristic regime intent on restoring Germany's 1937 borders.
Its received much acclaim, unmatched by Cocea's later works in the genre, which critics often found unpalatable for their erotic content.Camboulives, p. 184. See also Călinescu, p. 919; Pastia, passim Cocea's erotic series includes: Fecior de slugă ("The Son of the Servant"), published in 1933 by Cultura Națională; Pentr-un petec de negreață ("Over a Black Patch", also known as Andrei Vaia), 1934, Alcaly Publishers; and Nea Nae ("Uncle Nae"), 1935, Alcaly.
The Claflin family are a Scottish American family of 17th century New England origins. The descendants of Robert Maclachlan of Wenham, Massachusetts, a Scottish soldier and prisoner of war assumed to have belonged to the Clan Maclachlan,First recorded spelled Mackclothlan in Massachusetts, for which see Wight, p. 11 and passim. The Gaelic -ch- is historically difficult for native English speakers to phonologically process and then reproduce, concerning which see also Clan Maclachlan#Early history.
Hrimiuc, pp. 312–316, 321–322, 329–331; Mironescu (2008), passim The alter ego, "Harrow", is only present (and mentioned by name) in the rhyming Predoslovie ("Foreword"), but is implicit in all the stories.Hrimiuc, pp. 321–322; Mironescu (2008), p. 16 Also in Neobositulŭ Kostakelŭ, Teodoreanu's love for role-playing becomes a study in intertextuality and candid stupidity. Pantele is a reader of Miron Costin, but seemingly incapable of understanding his literary devices.
26 and Salomon Kinsbrunner, as well as Constantin Krakalia and Volodymyr Zalozetsky-Sas, who were Ukrainian.Mihai, passim A Jewish steel magnate, Max Auschnitt, financed PNȚ projects both in interwar Romania and in exile.Hazard, p. 56 The PNȚ's governments, with Aurel Vlad as Minister of Arts, were criticized by the Union of Romanian Jews for tolerating discrimination, in particular against Jews and Judaism; Vlad also informed minority leaders that decentralization had been postponed indefinitely.
Next to him, in the role of secondo amoroso was Angiola Zanuchi (or Zanucchi), a mezzosoprano of probably limited scope who specialised in travesti roles.Zanuchi's vocal characteristics are described by Reinhard Strohm in his The Operas of Antonio Vivaldi (Florence, Olschki, 2008, Volume II, p. 561, ). From the information Strohm provides it can be deduced that Vivaldi sometimes used to notate Zanuchi's parts in the alto clef, sometimes in the soprano clef (passim).
Schaeffer, Casper, M.D. and Johnson, William M. Memoirs and Reminiscences: Together with Sketches of the Early History of Sussex County, New Jersey. (Hackensack, New Jersey: Privately Printed, 1907). passim.Snell, op. cit., passim.Armstrong, William C. Pioneer Families of Northwestern New Jersey (Lambertville, New Jersey: Hunterdon House, 1979), passimStickney, Charles E. Old Sussex County families of the Minisink Region from articles in the Wantage Recorder (compiled by Virginia Alleman Brown) (Washington, N.J. : Genealogical Researchers, 1988), passim.
In 1554, probably in Germany, he made a Latin translation of the Syriac 'Basilius-Anaphora' for Julius von Pflug († 3 September 1564), the last Catholic bishop of Naumburg-Zeitz. These were printed together with Masius' translation of the treatise De Paradiso of Moses Bar-Kepha. In 1571 Masius published his Grammatica linguae syricae as well as the dictionary Syrorum Peculium. Hoc est, vocabula apud Syros scriptores passim vsurpata, at the Plantin press in Antwerp.
During the Hellenistic age, there was a medical school; however, the theory that this school was founded by Hippocrates (see below) during the Classical age is an unwarranted extrapolation.Vincenzo Di Benedetto: Cos e Cnido, in: Hippocratica - Actes du Colloque hippocratique de Paris 4-9 septembre 1978, ed. M. D. Grmek, Paris 1980, 97-111, see also Antoine Thivel: Cnide et Cos ? : essai sur les doctrines médicales dans la collection hippocratique, Paris 1981 (passim), ; cf.
Even Ovid himself, however, did not claim exclusive heterosexuality and he does include mythological treatments of homoeroticism in the Metamorphoses,As at Metamorphoses 10.155ff. but Thomas Habinek has pointed out that the significance of Ovid's rupture of human erotics into categorical preferences has been obscured in the history of sexuality by a later heterosexual bias in Western culture.Habinek, "The Invention of Sexuality in the World-City of Rome," p. 31 et passim.
The EFD is hostile to further European integration, and more nationalistic and anti-immigration than its main predecessor IND/DEM. The EFD was considered to belong on the right-wing to far-rightFar-right MEPs form group in European Parliament, euractiv.comRoy H. Ginsberg, Demystifying the European Union: The Enduring Logic of Regional Integration, p. 170, Rowman & Littlefield, 2010, Rob Ford, Matthew J. Goodwin, Voting for Extremists, passim, Taylor & Francis, of the political spectrum.
58 and passim it is last documented in Ireland in the early 17th century. In Scotland the rod was used into the 13th century for the inauguration of its last Gaelic kings,Alexander III of Scotland was the last, for whom and which see Bannerman 1989. and for the Norse-Gaelic Lords of the Isles into the 15th.Domhnall of Islay, Lord of the Isles is recorded being so inaugurated in the Book of Clanranald, ed.
Bercovici, 1998, 31–37, 59 Finally, around this time Yiddish was establishing itself as a literary language, and some Jews with secular interests were familiar with the dominant theatrical traditions of their respective countries; given this burgeoning literary intellectual culture, within a year or two of Goldfaden's founding the first professional Yiddish theatre troupe, there were multiple troupes, multiple playwrights, and more than a few serious Yiddish theatre critics and theoreticians.Bercovici, 1998, passim.
Flory, J. "Kelly", Jr. American Cars 1946-1959 (Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Coy, 2008), passim. A small number of Volgas with the Chaika engine, automatic transmission, and power steering were built for the KGB as the M23, 603 were built in 1962–1970.Thompson, pp.120-121 As the car's leading engineer Boris Dekhtyar recalled, the new version of the Volga had improved brake pads and reached a higher top speed of over 170 km/h; it was well received.
Like many other aspects of Roman religion and law, the lex curiata was attributedCicero, De re publica 2.13 et passim. to Numa Pompilius, Rome's second king. This origin seems to have been reconstructed after the fact to explain why the law was required, at a time when the original intent of the ceremony conferring imperium was no longer understood.H.S. Versnel, Triumphus: An Inquiry into the Origin, Development and Meaning of the Roman Triumph (Brill, 1970), p.
Together with Sima and Herseni, Brăileanu sought to establish full Guardist control over cultural institutes such as Accademia di Romania, but their moves were vetoed by Antonescu, who favored a more conservative approach.Turcuș & Turcuș, passim Brăileanu had a tense relationship with another one of Antonescu's proteges, Sextil Pușcariu, who led the Romanian Institute in Berlin and had been given discretionary powers. Daniela Olărescu, "Sextil Puşcariu – preşedintele Institutului român din Berlin: un subiect tabu?", in Revista Arhivelor, Vol.
7-12 historiography for decades to come did not pay much attention, referred the question in passim and at times suggested erroneous interpretations.e.g. as late as in 2008 two historians claimed, that Revertes let the success go to his head; he allegedly indulged in countless and chaotic detention orders, triggering a counter-action against him, Victor Alba, Stephen Schwartz, Spanish Marxism Versus Soviet Communism: A History of the P.O.U.M. in the Spanish Civil War, London 2008, , p.
With the MacCarthys obvious, the O'Mahonys and O'Driscolls were the others. See also Smith, Ancient and Present State because the White Rod or slat, mentioned in the case as received by O'Donovan from MacCarthy Reagh, was for a king or Rí of some grade in origin, in this case a subordinate lord princeps (prince) or petty king, in the Irish understanding, receiving his rod from his superior or overking.Dillon, pp. 4, 8; FitzPatrick, passim; Simms, p.
Volkmar Greiselmayer, "Anmerkungen zum Nordportal der Schottenkirche St. Jakob in Regensburg," in Paulus, Romanik, pp. 154–67. While this theory would have absolved art historians of the duty of interpreting the program as a unified whole, it has not met with wide acceptance. Indeed, a thorough examination of the structure seems to have demonstrated conclusively that the entire portal was assembled in the late 12th century, simultaneously with the construction of the second church.Gaisberg, Schottenportal, passim.
As a consequence, all helicopters of the type Sikorsky CH-53G were to be transferred to the German Air Force.Quoted from , PDF-file "Stationing of the Bundeswehr in Germany ", passim Consequently, Medium Transport Helicopter Regiment 25 was disbanded on 31 December 2012 and re- established as new Helicopter Wing 64 on 1 January 2013. With a final muster and the taking down of the regimental flag on 5 March 2013, Medium Transport Helicopter Regiment 25 officially ceased to exist.
Eliade, Myth and Reality, p. 100 One such myth from the Wemale people of Seram Island, Indonesia, tells of a miraculously-conceived girl named Hainuwele, whose murdered corpse sprouts into the people's staple food crops.Eliade, Myth and Reality, pp. 104–5 The Chinese myth of Pangu,Railsback, passim the Indian Vedic myth of Purusha,Rig Veda 10:90 and the Norse myth of Ymir all tell of a cosmic giant who is killed to create the world.
Federici, I, 12, 42, passim. According to the research of Raymund of Capua, who became a Dominican about 1350, the Militia was merged with the Dominican Order of Penance (Ordo de Poenitentia Sancti Dominici) to form the Third Order of Saint Dominic. The constitutions of the two orders, that of Gregory IX for the Militia in 1235Federici, I, 12-16. and that of Muñón de Zamora for the Order of Penance in 1285,Federici, I, 28-36.
Stead, Christian. The New Poetic: Yeats to Eliot, (Harmondsworth: Pelican Books, 1969), passim. In 1927, Eliot was asked by his employer, Geoffrey Faber, to write one poem each year for a series of illustrated pamphlets with holiday themes to be sent to the firm's clients and business acquaintances as Christmas greetings. This series, called the "Ariel Series", consisted of 38 pamphlets published between 1927 and 1931 featuring poems and brief prose from a selection of English writers and poets.
Starting in the early 1800s, they moved to what is today southwest Ontario, settling around the Grand River, especially in Berlin, Ontario (now known as Kitchener) and in the northern part of what later became Waterloo County, Ontario. This same geographic area also attracted new German migrants from Europe, roughly 50,000 between the 1830 and 1860.Lehmann (1986) passim Research indicates that there was no apparent conflict between the Germans from Europe and those who came from Pennsylvania.
F. L. Ganshof, "Benefice and Vassalage in the Age of Charlemagne" Cambridge Historical Journal 6.2 (1939:147-75). The term is also applied to similar arrangements in other feudal societies. In contrast, fealty (fidelitas) was sworn, unconditional loyalty to a monarch.Ganshof 151 note 23 and passim; the essential point was made again, and the documents on which the historian's view of vassalage are based were reviewed, with translation and commentary, by Elizabeth Magnou-Nortier, Foi et Fidélité.
Studies in memory of Kathleen Hughes (Cambridge University Press, 1982), passim, especially pp. 29, 35 and 41. The Latin equivalent of glas, Stancliffe argues, is iacinthus or hyacinthus; this is a somewhat unorthodox view. Hyacinthus is a problematic color word, in ancient Greek meaning either "blue-black, purplish black" or "orange, saffron"; see M. Eleanor Irwin, "Odysseus' 'Hyacinthine Hair' in Odyssey 6.231," Phoenix 44.3 (1990) 205-218 (where it is argued that in context the word means "curled").
Known as the Baku 26, all the commissars were executed with the sole exception of Mikoyan; the circumstances of his survival are shrouded in mystery. In February 1919 Mikoyan returned to Baku and resumed his activities there, helping to establish the Baku Bureau of the Caucasus Regional Committee (Kraikom).Mikoyan's activities in Baku are treated in passim in Ronald Grigor Suny, The Baku Commune, 1917-1918: Class and Nationality in the Russian Revolution. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1972.
According to this theory, the antagonists in the Labours of Heracles are, like Marsyas, representatives of the older religion; see Ruck and Staples 1994 passim. Marsyas was a devoté of the ancient Mother Goddess Rhea/Cybele, and his episodes are situated by the mythographers in Celaenae (or Kelainai), in Phrygia, at the main source of the Meander (the river Menderes in Turkey).The river is linked to the figure of Marsyas by Herodotus (Histories, 7.26) and Xenophon (Anabasis, 1.2.8).
NREM sleep is characterized by decreased global and regional cerebral blood flow. It constitutes ~80% of all sleep in adult humans.Parmeggiani (2011), Systemic Homeostasis and Poikilostasis in Sleep, passim. Initially, it was expected that the brainstem, which was implicated in arousal would be inactive, but this was later on found to have been due to low resolution of PET studies and it was shown that there is some slow wave activity in the brainstem as well.
Renaissance artists had clothed their saints in classical draperies. Adopting to a certain extent the attitude of the Middle Ages, certain 17th century painters, such as Georges de La Tour, Zurbarán, and Caravaggio dressed them in the contemporary fashion. The natural mediators between God and the faithful are thus seen in a kind of mystical familiarity.J. Gállego and J. Gudiol, Zurbarán, Alpine Fine Arts Collection (1987) passim Saint Apollonia was the patroness of dentists, hence the attribute she carries.
Biagi:(2006:passim.)) All three of these inscriptions give the dedicatee the title of διασημότατον (i.e. diasemotaton – nominative form diasemotatos), which is the Greek equivalent of the Latin honorific Vir Perfectissimus. Thus, when the monuments with which they were associated were set up, he was a member of the Second Class of the Roman equestrian order. The viri perfectissimi were invariably men of very high official and social status with close connections to the Imperial Court.
Tolkien uses his constructed languages for the names for Moria in The Hobbit and especially in The Lord of the Rings. The name "Moria", the one most used for it in these worksTolkien, J.R.R., The Lord of the Rings, passim, means "the Black Chasm" or "the Black Pit", from Sindarin mor, "dark, black" and iâ, "void, abyss".J. R. R. Tolkien (1981), The Letters of J. R. R. Tolkien, George Allen & Unwin, letter no. 297 (August 1967) pp.
To strengthen his voice, he spoke on the seashore over the roar of the waves. Between his coming of age in 366 BC and the trials that took place in 364 BC, Demosthenes and his guardians negotiated acrimoniously but were unable to reach an agreement, for neither side was willing to make concessions.D. M. MacDowell, Demosthenes the Orator, ch. 3 (passim); At the same time, Demosthenes prepared himself for the trials and improved his oratory skill.
Torino: Artema, p.147, et passim and by this time he had also incorporated Symbolism (or, perhaps more accurately, "l'iperdecorativismo eclettico"), as seen in his sculptures of the Angelo della Resurrezione (Angel of Resurrection) on the Carlo di G.B. Casella family tomb (1877), the later relief for the tomb of Elisa Falcone (1893), and other works at Staglieno. Giacomo Carpaneto, Cav. Mauriziano (1811-1878) was a respected merchant, part of a family originally from Sampierdarena (S.
Braid always maintained that he had gone to Lafontaine's demonstration as an open-minded sceptic, eager to examine the evidence and, then, form a considered opinion of Lafontaine's work. He was neither a closed- minded cynic intent on destroying Lafontaine, nor a deluded and naïvely credulous believer seeking authorisation of his already formed belief (Neurypnology (1843), p. 2.For an extended account of the interactions between Braid and Lafontaine, see Yeates (2013), pp. 103–308 passim.
The remaining nomadic Turkic tribes became vassals of the Kalmyk khan. After the Russian annexation of Crimea in 1783, Slavic and other settlers occupied the Nogai pastoral land, since the Nogais did not have permanent residence. In the 1770s and 1780s Catherine the Great resettled approximately 120,000 Nogais from Bessarabia and areas northeast of the Sea of Azov to the Kuban and the Caucasus.B. B. Kochekaev, Nogaisko-Russkie Otnosheniia v XV-XVIII vv (Alma-Ata: Nauk, 1988), passim.
Anita McConnell, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 and Peter Mere Latham (1789–1875), a physician.W. B. Spaulding, Peter Mere Latham (1789–1875): a great medical educator, Canadian Medical Association Journal, 1971 June 19; 104(12): 1109–passim. Latham senior's grandson George William Latham (1827–1886), was an English landowner, barrister and a Liberal politician. When his wife died two years later, in November 1888, the estate was sold to Thomas Barlow, Esq.
History of St. George's Church in the city of New York, 1752-1811-1911p. 187 et passim. and the Friends Meeting House and Seminary (to the southwest) (1861, Charles Bunting) attracted more residents to the area around the park. The earliest existing houses in the district, in the Greek Revival style, date to 1842–43, when the city's residential development was first moving north of 14th Street, but the major growth in the area occurred in the 1850s.
Numerous historical inaccuracies—not least of which was the reference to the Globe before that playhouse had been built—exposed the forger's ignorance. The handwriting of the Queen and Southampton did not at all resemble authentic examples. Words appearing in the forgeries (upset, for example) were not used in Shakespeare's time, or were used in a different sense than that of the papers.Malone, An Inquiry into the Authenticity of Certain Miscellaneous Papers and Legal Instruments, passim.
British stamps. The text in traditional Irish orthography reads Rialtas Sealadach na hÉireann 1922 and translates as Provisional Government of Ireland 1922 The government is generally referred to simply as "the Provisional Government".Gabriel Doherty and Dermot Keogh (eds), Michael Collins and the Making of the Irish State, passim; Marie Coleman, The Irish Revolution, 1916–1923, pp. 107–113; Michael Hopkinson, "From treaty to civil war, 1921-2", in A New History of Ireland, Volume VII, pp.
Like his plays of the 1980s, The Hothouse concerns authoritarianism and the abuses of power politics, but it is also a comedy, like his earlier comedies of menace. Pinter played the major role of Roote in a 1995 revival at the Minerva Theatre, Chichester.Merritt, "Pinter Playing Pinter" (passim); and Grimes 16, 36–38, 61–71. Pinter's brief dramatic sketch Precisely (1983) is a duologue between two bureaucrats exploring the absurd power politics of mutual nuclear annihilation and deterrence.
VII: 1651–1659 (By Order, 1813), passim. In February 1658/9 he and Sir Henry Vane spoke warningly to suggestions that the Protector should occupy the role of a King: > 'If we find kings destructive to the nation, we may lay them aside. It is a > formidable thing, to speak of a King' and with regard to the reinstatement of Lords: > 'Men are born to be subjects and not to be slaves. Either let us be slaves > or freemen.
His stories also often contain elements of fantasy or whimsy. A fair number originally appeared in New Year's issues of newspapers.Tokarzówna, Krystyna; Stanisław Fita, Bolesław Prus, 1847–1912: Kalendarz życia i twórczości, passim. Prus long eschewed writing historical fiction, arguing that it must inevitably distort history. He criticized contemporary historical novelists for their lapses in historical accuracy, including Henryk Sienkiewicz's failure, in the military scenes in his Trilogy portraying 17th-century Polish history, to describe the logistics of warfare.
Hummus topped with whole chickpeas and olive oil Although multiple different theories and claims of origins exist in various parts of the Middle East, evidence is insufficient to determine the precise location or time of the invention of hummus. Its basic ingredients—chickpeas, sesame, lemon, and garlic—have been combined and eaten in the Levant over centuries.Tannahill p. 25, 61Brothwell & Brothwell passim Though regional populations widely ate chickpeas, and often cooked them in stews and other hot dishes,e.g.
As the title indicates, the dictionary was arranged in alphabetical order, and from the many quotations by Rashi in his commentary on the Talmud (Ḥul. 20b; Pes. 50a et passim) it seems that it dealt chiefly with the difficult words and passages of the Talmud; but (by Rashi) he is quoted also for the interpretation of the word boṭnim, in . Machir adopted for the most part the interpretations of his brother, who was Nathan ben Jehiel's teacher.
The Massys were a Protestant Ascendancy family who had come to Ireland in 1641 and owned extensive lands in Counties Limerick, Leitrim and Tipperary.Tracy, passim. He used the house to entertain visitors while shooting game at Cruagh and Glendoo and to host parties where long lines of guest’s carriages could be seen stretched along the road leading to the house. Lord Massy employed a small army of staff, ranging from coachmen, stablemen, house servants, gardeners, cooks, and gamekeepers.
32 and passim for an extended discussion of this issue, available in pdf form on the Alger Hiss Story website. See also Anthony Summers, The Arrogance of Power: The Secret World of Richard Nixon (New York, London: Penguin-Putnam Inc, 2000), p. 490; and Gay Talese, Thy Neighbor's Wife, (New York: Harper Perennial Book, 2009) p. 102. When Hiss and Chambers both appeared before a HUAC subcommittee on August 17, 1948, they had the following exchange: :HISS.
128 online; and Ronald Syme (discussed passim in this article). See also C.-J. Guyonvarc'h, “La langue gauloise dans le De bello gallico,” Revue du CRBC 6: La Bretagne linguistique (1990), discussed at L'Arbre Celtique, "Les personnages Celtes," Troucillus/Procillus. assume that the two names refer to a single man; although Troucillus is a problematic reading of the text, it is a well-established Celtic name,D. Ellis Evans, Gaulish Personal Names (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1967), p.
Būstān al-jāmiʿ li-jamīʿ tawārīkh al-zamān, in English General Garden of all the Histories of the Ages,Steven Runciman, A History of the Crusades, Volume II: The Kingdom of Jerusalem and the Frankish East, 1100–1187 (Cambridge University Press, 1951), pp. 480–481 and passim. is an anonymous Arabic chronicle from Ayyubid Syria.Claude Cahen, "Une chronique syrienne du VIe/VIIe siècle: Le Bustān al-Jāmiʿ", Bulletin d'études orientales 7/8 (1937/1938), 113–158.
The Donlins who ran the club during the 1970s pronounced the name PASSim. Bob Donlin said this pronunciation as he welcomed people to the shows with the always-out-of-adjustment mic stand microphone, but those who were unaware often said PassEEM. It adopted the present name in 1994; a combination of the earlier two names. At its inception, it was mainly a jazz and blues club, but soon branched out to include ethnic folk, then singer-songwriter folk.
Momotarō now enjoys popular association with Okayama City or its prefecture, but this association was only created in the modern era., and passim. The publication of a book by Nanba Kinnosuke entitled Momotarō no Shijitsu (1930) for example helped the notion of Momotarō's origins in Okayama to gain wider familiarity. Still, even as late as the antebellum period before World War II (1941–1945), Okayama was considered only the third contender behind two other regions known as Momotarō's homeland.
Blokker, passim; Santoro, pp. 115–116; Spiridon, pp. 94–95, 104 Iorga's writings insisted on the importance of Byzantine Greek and Levantine influences in the two countries after the fall of Constantinople: his notion of "Byzantium after Byzantium" postulated that the cultural forms produced by the Byzantine Empire had been preserved by the Principalities under Ottoman suzerainty (roughly, between the 16th and 18th centuries).Blokker, pp. 166–170; Boia (2000), pp. 100, 181, 267; Djuvara, p.
He was the host at a celebrated party in Paris on 18 May 1922, when Marcel Proust met James Joyce (without the slightest rapport); other guests included Sergei Diaghilev, Igor Stravinsky and Pablo Picasso. The occasion was the first night of Stravinsky's Renard.Davenport-Hines, passim Schiff tried unsuccessfully to get Picasso to paint a portrait of Proust.Richardson, p. 207 In the early 1920s Schiff was in touch with major modernist figures, and a patron of Wyndham Lewis's The Tyro.
Earlier, in 1918, Schiff had helped finance Osbert Sitwell's periodical Art and Letters. Later the Schiffs knew Edwin Muir and Wilma. Schiff kept up a long correspondence with Aldous Huxley, which has been published.Clémentine, passim Using his customary pen name, Stephen Hudson, Schiff translated the twelfth volume of Proust, "Time Regained",See Hudson's translation of Time Regained at Project Gutenberg Australia completing the Scott-Moncrieff version; Sodome et Gomorrhe II was dedicated to him and Violet.
Rawson, "Crassorum funera," passim; see also article Battle of Carrhae, discussion under Political background in Rome. Cicero implies as much when he enumerates Publius's many fine qualities (see above) and then mourns and criticizes his young friend's destructive desire for gloria: Publius presumably helped with preparations for the war. Both Pompeius and Crassus levied troops throughout Italy. Publius may have organized these efforts in the north, as he is said to have departed for Parthia from Gaul (probably Cisalpina).
Latrocinium (from Latin latro, "bandit", ultimately from Greek latron, "pay" or "hire") was a war not preceded by a formal declaration of war as understood in Roman law; thus guerrilla warfare conducted against Rome was a form of latrocinium. It is typically translated into English as "banditry" or "brigandage", but in antiquity encompassed a wider range of subversive or anti-authoritarian actions, especially slave rebellions organized under charismatic leaders.Grunewald, Bandits in the Roman Empire, pp. 10ff., 58, et passim.
Miles, Obedience, passim. The Spiritual Exercises of Saint Ignatius of Loyola imbue much of her thought. Von Speyr's more immediately mystical writings were not released until 1985 and vary in theme and style. The work Book of All Saints gives inner portraits of many saints and historical figures in terms of their prayer lives; one Dominican scholar has expressed doubts about her critical description of Saint Thomas Aquinas in the first of her two entries on him.
Fearing the prophecy, Laius abandons his son, Oedipus', who is raised in the city of Thebes. Oedipus later crosses paths with Laius and gets into a fight and, not knowing that Laius is his father, kills him.Sophocles, passim Adams, thus, states that the "break-room conversation" Dwight and Clark share starts to make Dwight paranoid and fear that Clark is after his job. Many reviewers noted that the episode made references to previous episodes of the series.
Thorstein married Thurid, the daughter of Eyvind the Easterner. Thorstein and Thurid had a son, Olaf Feilan, and a number of daughters, including Groa, Thorgerd, Olof, Osk, Thorhild, and Vigdis.Eirik the Red's Saga § 1 (Jones 127); Laxdaela Saga § 4 (Magnusson 52); Njal's Saga § 1 (Cook 3); Grettir's Saga § 26 (Thorsson 62); Landnámabók passim. A woman named Unn, wife of Thorolf Mostur-beard, claimed to be the daughter of Thorstein, but this claim was viewed by other Icelanders with scepticism.
These views also appear in his novel The Soul of a Bishop. He pleads for a "modern religion" or "renascent religion" that has "no revelation and no founder."H. G. Wells, God the Invisible King (New York: Macmillan, 1917), p. 173. Wells rejects any belief related to God as Nature or the Creator, confining himself to the "finite" God "of the human heart."H. G. Wells, God the Invisible King (New York: Macmillan, 1917), p. ix & Ch. 1 passim.
The Mystics of al-Andalus, Yusuf Casewit, New York: Cambridge University Press, 2017, Pg 294. His writings had a great influence on Ibn ArabiClaude Addas, in Salma Khadra Jayyusi and Manuela Marín, eds., Handbuch der Orientalistik, Part 1, Volume 12, Der Nahe und Mittlere Osten. The legacy of Muslim Spain, BRILL, 1992, page 921 and 922 and passim (see index) who was quite sceptical of Ibn Barrajan's methods of prognostication of the Jerusalem conquest calling them 'Ilm al-Huruf.
See also the 1936 debate on its resemblance to the British Museum skull, in Digby (1936) and Morant (1936), passim. Mitchell- Hedges claimed that she found the skull buried under a collapsed altar inside a temple in Lubaantun, in British Honduras, now Belize.See Garvin (1973, caption to photo 25); also Nickell (2007, p. 67). As far as can be ascertained, F.A. Mitchell-Hedges himself made no mention of the alleged discovery in any of his writings on Lubaantun.
The church and the chapel are treated as separate places to visit and as such have different opening times and it is quite difficult to see the rest of the church from the chapel. The patron of the pictorial decoration was Felice Brancacci, descendant of Pietro, who had served as the Florentine ambassador to Cairo until 1423.K. Shulman, Anatomy of a Restoration: The Brancacci Chapel (1991), p. 6. Cf. also A. Ladis, Masaccio: la Cappella Brancacci (1994), passim.
Peter Mere Latham, painting by Henry William Pickersgill c.1850 Peter Mere Latham was a physician and "a great medical educator".W. B. Spaulding, Peter Mere Latham (1789-1875): a great medical educator, Canadian Medical Association Journal, 1971 June 19; 104(12): 1109–passim. The son of John Latham (1761–1843).Peter R. Fleming, "Latham Peter Mere (1789–1875)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 He was born on 1 July 1789 in London.
136 The Lipton company promoted this mixture on the television show Arthur Godfrey's Talent Scouts in 1955, and early on, it was known as "Lipton California Dip", but soon simply as "California Dip".Potato Chip Institute International, Potato Chipper, 14-15:passim "As you know, this dip is ordinarily called the Lipton California Dip." A Lipton advertising campaign promoted it on television and in supermarkets. The recipe was added to the Lipton instant onion soup package in 1958.
It is currently occupied by Professor Jennifer Strawbridge. Caird's academic legacy is also seen in that during the course of his career he taught numerous people who went on to garner serious scholarly attention. These include Marcus Borg, Colin Gunton, Lincoln Hurst, David P. Moessner, John Muddiman, Allison Trites, Francis Watson, and N. T. Wright.see the various contributions to Hurst and Wright 1987, passim According to British Old Testament scholar James Barr, Caird was sometimes "practically adored" by students.
The Standing Committee of the General Synod decided that he was without blame in the incident.For details of the Crockford Affair see obituaries, passim, and Michael De-la-Moy, The Church of England: A Portrait (London: Simon & Schuster, 1993), pp. 240-1, as well as the article on Gareth Bennett. Shortly before his retirement in 1990 he was appointed Knight Bachelor by the Queen in the Queen's Birthday Honours, and he received the accolade on 6 November 1990.
The Shanay-Timpishka, also known as La Bomba, is a tributary of the Amazon River, called the "only boiling river in the world".Andrés Ruzo, The Boiling River: Adventure and Discovery in the Amazon, passim It is 6.4 km long. It is known for the very high temperature of its waters--from 45°C to nearly 100°C. The name means 'boiled by the heat of the sun', though the source of the heat is actually geothermal.
De Groen 1998, p.120 and Herbert continued with his career, publishing two further novels and an autobiography. In 1964, Herbert returned to the abandoned draft.De Groen 1998, p.208 He drew extensively on his own life experiences and those of interesting people he had met around Australia, especially in the Northern Territory.De Groen 1998, p. 209 and passim Herbert's interest was in portraying the stories of disadvantaged and displaced people, with an especial interest in Aboriginal Australians.
In composing the sacred books, God chose men and while employed by Him Footnote: Cf. Pius XII, Encycl. Divino afflante Spiritu, 30 September 1943; AAS 35 (1943), p.314; EB 556. they made use of their powers and abilities, so that with Him acting in them and through them,Footnote: In and by man: cf. Heb. 1:1; 4:7 (in); 2 Sam 23:2; Mt 1:22 and passim (by); Vatican Council I, schema de doctr. cath.
Continuing south along the Tigris he sacked Khosrow's great palace at Dastagird and was only prevented from attacking Ctesiphon by the destruction of the bridges on the Nahrawan Canal. Discredited by this series of disasters, Khosrow was overthrown and killed in a coup led by his son Kavad II, who at once sued for peace, agreeing to withdraw from all occupied territories. In 629 Heraclius restored the True Cross to Jerusalem in a majestic ceremony., passim.
People spoke of Ned Harrigan as the American Molière.Cullen, passim Although the Theatre Comique was eventually shut down for financial reasons, Harrigan announced in 1881 that they would build a fresh and elegant "New Theatre Comique" several blocks further north on Broadway. The building they renovated was originally the home of the Church of the Messiah but had hosted many other theatres throughout the years.Kahn Jr., E. J. The Merry Partners: The Act and Stage of Harrigan and Hart.
On 1 Feb 2013 he returned to Club Passim (formerly Club 47) in Cambridge, Mass. His first album in 45 years, Curbside Cotillion, was released in 2012, his first recording as Jack Landrón. He is featured in the documentary For the Love of the Music: the Club 47 Folk Revival (2013). On 19 Dec 2014 Landrón spoke at the Cambridge Forum in Harvard Square, Massachusetts, about his experiences during Freedom Summer's voter registration drive in Mississippi in 1964.
A wali (wali , '; plural , '), the Arabic word which has been variously translated "master", "authority", "custodian", "protector" and "friend",Hans Wehr, p. 1289 is most commonly used by Muslims to indicate an Islamic saint, otherwise referred to by the more literal "friend of God".John Renard, Friends of God: Islamic Images of Piety, Commitment, and Servanthood (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2008); Idem., Tales of God Friends: Islamic Hagiography in Translation (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2009), et passim.
Kingbird Highway: The Biggest Year in the Life of an Extreme Birder. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, pp. 6, passim. Three years later, in 1973, he set the record for the most North American bird species seen in one year (671) while participating in a Big Year, a year-long birding competition.Kaufman, Kenn. Kingbird Highway: The Biggest Year in the Life of an Extreme Birder. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, Appendix, pp. 317-8. However, this record included regions like Baja California that are no longer ornithologically considered part of North America and has since been surpassed.Kaufman, Kenn. Kingbird Highway: The Biggest Year in the Life of an Extreme Birder. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. His cross-country birding journey, covering some eighty thousand miles, was eventually recorded in a memoir, Kingbird Highway.Kaufman, Kenn. Kingbird Highway: The Biggest Year in the Life of an Extreme Birder. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, passim. Subsequently, he focused his work on creating and expanding upon birding field guides. In 1992, he was given the Ludlow Griscom Award by the American Birding Association.
Cali-Tex, 2002, passim. After the release of a second single, "Football", the group went on tour, opening for Sam & Dave, The Supremes, Clarence Carter, and Kool & the Gang in the American South and Midwest. After moving to New York to fill an opening slot for fellow Maxwell artists Faith, Hope & Charity, the group split with its label over monetary disputes and returned to Texas. Further recording ensued at local studios, but the group soon splintered, recording its last singles in 1973.
As the Strophades, they were identified as the dwelling-place of the Harpies. Virgil states that the Harpy drove the Trojans from the Strophades (Aeneid iii, 209 passim.). The islands are mentioned in The Divine Comedy (see List of cultural references in The Divine Comedy) and in passing in Chapter 10 of Rabelais' Fifth Book of Pantagruel. According to legend, the islands' name, meaning "Islands of Turning," refers to Zetes and Calaïs, sons of Boreas, who voyaged with the Argonauts.
Except for the four individuals to Charcot's left, the participants are arranged in two concentric arcs: the inner circle displaying "sixteen of his current and former physician associates [arranged] in reverse order of seniority", and the outer, depicting "the older generation of [physician associates] … along with philosophers, writers, and friends of Charcot". Both Signoret (1983, p. 689) and Harris (2005, p. 471) have identified each of the individuals depicted in Brouillet's tableau; and Signoret (passim) provides substantial biographical details of each.
Victoria Glendinning, Trollope (Hutchinson, London, 1992) passim In 1854 a Commission of Enquiry into the establishment of the Post Office was set up which brought about a number of changes in the London establishment. The Postmaster General of the day, Lord Canning, sent Tilley to Edinburgh and Dublin to revise the establishments there. Tilley is credited with having ensured that the clerks, sorters and postmen received better pay. Tilley had been a great supporter of the Savings Bank Act (1861).
Stead, Christian. The New Poetic: Yeats to Eliot, (Harmondsworth: Pelican Books, 1969), passim. In 1927, Eliot was asked by his employer, Geoffrey Faber, one of the partners in Faber & Gwyer, to write one poem each year for a series of illustrated pamphlets with holiday themes to be sent to the firm's clients and business acquaintances as Christmas greetings. This series, called the "Ariel Series", would release 38 pamphlets from a selection of English writers and poets from 1927 through 1931.
For example, the instruction ("passim, not passi") or ("numquam, not numqua") tells the reader that the Classical Latin word is written with an at the end, which indicated nasalization. That common spelling error suggests that nasal vowels were being denasalized in Vulgar Latin. Many of the mistakes later became standard spelling: Spanish nunca, from (numqua). In some cases, the document recommends forms that are not the usual classical ones: ("amfora, not ampora") recommends an , whereas amphora is normally spelled with .
Haredi groups and people actively and publicly opposing Zionism are Satmar, Toldos Aharon,Sefer Shomer Emunim by R' Aharon Roth, Sefer Asifas Michtovim, by R' Avrohom Yitzchok Kohn foundational books of the Toldos Avrohom movement, passim. Neturei Karta. Lithuanian Haredim, sometimes called mitnagdim, take a different approach to their beliefs from their Hassidic counterparts. Lithuanian religious Jews oppose the state not because of the three oaths midrash but because they feel that Zionism epitomizes secularity and Jewish desire to be void of Torah.
This is one of the painter's last works, and one of the most bitter. The contrast of light and shade gave him pleasure. He studied the composition of the Renaissance painters in Italy, and perhaps also the work of Flemish artists, but in spite of all that, he clung to the profoundly Spanish tradition of realism, even after having spent nearly all his life in Italy.M. Scholz-Hansel, Jusepe De Ribera (Masters of Spanish Art), Konemann UK Ltd (2001), passim.
Ingoldesby further angered the colony's Quaker leaders after he retaliated against them for their opposition to raising troops from New Jersey to support a planned invasion of French colonies in Canada. Weeks, Daniel J. Not for filthy Lucre's sake: Richard Saltar and the antiproprietary movement in East New Jersey, 1665–1707. (Bethlehem, Pennsylvania: Lehigh University Press, 2001), passim. His commission as governor was revoked in October 1709, but the news of his removal did not reach him until April 1710.
Herwart often lent Kepler books that might otherwise have been unavailable to him, and used his influence to help Kepler retain academic appointments despite his Protestantism,The Galileo Project, "Kepler, Johannes." as Herwart himself was "an ardent Catholic and a friend of the Jesuits."Max Caspar, Kepler, translated and edited by C. Doris Hellman (New York: Dover, 1993), pp. 80, 83, et passim. His extant correspondence with Kepler covers a period from 1597 to 1611 and includes more than 90 letters.
The following are the offences punishable by a free kick in the 2019 Laws of the Game. A free kick may be awarded only for an offence committed while the ball is in play, or at a restart of play.Laws of the Game 2019/20, passim; see esp. p. 103 If an offence is committed in any other circumstance, the offending player may be punished with disciplinary action, but play restarts in the same manner it would have restarted without the offence.
Vlasiu, p.51-52 According to art historian Ioana Vlasiu, Tzigara and painter- researcher Abgar Baltazar were in part responsible for fusing local folk art and international primitivism with Art Nouveau, thus paving the way for the Neo-Brâncovenesc school of decorators and architects.Vlasiu, passim The interest in decorative works was a special focus of his visits to England and France—the South Kensington Museum impressed him greatly, as did the workshops of Eugène Grasset and Horace Lecoq de Boisbaudran.
Early in the 1970s Zoss performed at Passim (Club 47) in Cambridge. While he was onstage, Bonnie Raitt's manager, Dick Waterman, was in the club trying to get a booking for Raitt. While Waterman and the club owner were discussing the booking, he heard Zoss sing "Too Long at the Fair." After the show Waterman introduced himself and asked for a tape of the song to play for Raitt, who was about to record her second album for Warner Bros.
Mathew Hole, D.D. was an Oxford college head in the 18th-century."Practical discourses on the liturgy of the Church of England" Hole, M J.A. Giles, J.A. passim: London; William Pickering; 1837 Hole was educated at Exeter College, Oxford and was appointed a Fellow in 1663.Alumni Oxonienses (1500-1715): Hieron-Horridge He was Rector from 1715 until his death on 19 July 1730.Exeter College', A History of the County of Oxford: Volume 3: The University of Oxford (1954), pp.
In both ancient and later art, Cupid is often shown riding a dolphin. On ancient Roman sarcophagi, the image may represent the soul's journey, originally associated with Dionysian religion.Janet Huskinson, Roman Children's Sarcophagi: Their Decoration and Its Social Significance (Oxford University Press, 1996), passim; Joan P. Alcock, "Pisces in Britannia: The Eating and Portrayal of Fish in Roman Britain," in Fish: Food from the Waters. Proceedings of the Oxford Symposium on Food and Cookery 1997 (Prospect Books, 1998), p. 25.
In most cases, religious services for Andros were in keeping with the Church of England not that of the Puritans.See Sewall DI in 1688, passim especially p. 217-9, for much argument with Andros over his use of the South Meetinghouse for Anglican services as well as other details of the fight with the Mathers. A strange reference to Lawson's preaching sermons for Andros arose later during the witchcraft trials in the deposition of a twelve-year-old accuser in August of 1692.
Good Old Gaiety: An Historiette & Remembrance, pp. 39–41 (1903) London: Gaity Theatre Co His last full-length play, The Fairy's Dilemma (1904), drew heavily on (and satirised) pantomimic conventions. But Harlequin Cock Robin was Gilbert's only solo essay in the genre of traditional pantomime.Stedman, passim In the West End, during the mid-19th century, pantomimes traditionally opened at the major theatres on 26 December, known in England as Boxing Day, intended to play for only a few weeks into the new year.
109, 148 Trade with France, and from there southern Europe and the Mediterranean, can be assumed,Valante 2008, p. 134 but that with elsewhere in the Anglo-Celtic Isles and the wider Norse world may have been more limited by Limerick's location. Poul Holm has recently argued that Norse Dublin, Limerick, and Waterford, can all three be classed as genuine city-states as such an entity is defined by Mogens Herman Hansen and the Copenhagen Polis Centre.Holm, passim, and p.
The island country in turn enjoys a whose peculiar rhythms, the putative fact for example that Japan alone has , color Japanese thinking and behaviour. Thus, human nature in Japan is, peculiarly, an extension of nature itself.(1) Watsuji Tetsurō, Fūdo, Iwanami Shoten 1935 passim; (2)Dale, Myth of Japanese Uniqueness, ibid. pp.43f. # The Japanese language has a unique grammatical structure and native lexical corpus whose idiosyncratic syntax and connotations condition the Japanese to think in peculiar patterns unparalleled in other human languages.
111 De Brimeu was one of Charles the Bold's leading councillors and a knight in the prestigious Order of the Golden Fleece.Werner Paravicini, Guy de Brimeu, Der Burgundische Staat und seine adlige Führungsschicht unter Karl dem Kühnen, Bonn, 1975, passim There is evidence Guy de Brimeu lived in the Castle of Westerlo for a longer period of time between 1475 and his death in 1477. The fief also seems to have been an important source of income for Brimeu.Paravicini 1975, p.
The Bagrationi dynasty presided over a period of economic prosperity and cultural revival in the area. The taxes collected at Artanuji were a major factor in the rise of the Bagrationi power. Deserted in an Arab invasion, Klarjeti was repopulated and developed into a major centre of Christian culture aided by a large-scale monastic movement initiated by the Georgian monk Gregory of Khandzta (759 – 861).Rapp, Stephen H. (2003), Studies in Medieval Georgian Historiography: Early Texts And Eurasian Contexts, passim.
At the height of his political and financial career (1849–1851) he built a new residence for his young family, the McDearmon-Tibbs "Clover Hill" house overlooking the Court House village (Appomattox Court House National Historical Park ruins).Appomattox County Land Tax Records 1845-1857. Microfilm, Library of Virginia. Also during these heady days McDearmon had striven mightily to promote the Southside Railroad (Virginia) as a boon to the new county (and himself).William Marvel, A Place Called Appomattox (Chapel Hill: 2000) passim.
Draper, The Roots of American Communism, pp. 165-169 and passim. Batt was named National Secretary of the Organizing Committee for the new Communist Party of America (CPA) and the editor of The Communist, the weekly publication of that committee. At the founding convention of the CPA, held in Chicago, Batt was sensationally arrested on the floor of the gathering by Illinois authorities serving an arrest warrant for Batt's having allegedly having violated the state's sedition laws as editor of The Communist.
Local people tried to rescue him but they quickly judged that the troops were too strong for them, and Sir John was arrested and taken to the Fleet prison.Everitt (1966), pp.71, 111. House of Lords Journal for Monday 15 August 1642 Sandys' troops then moved to Knole where, according to the earl of Dorset's steward, they caused damage to the value of £186, and 'The Armes they have wholie taken awaie there being five wagenloads of them (sic passim).
Leonard et al., passim From 1915 to 1916 he taught physics at the University of Minnesota.American Telephone and Telegraph Company, The Bell System Technical Journal, p. 686, 1922 Having moved to Maplewood, New Jersey, he joined AT&T; in 1916, where he worked on transmission techniques. In 1926, still with the company, he moved to New York and in 1934, he transferred to Bell Telephone Laboratories (Bell Labs), the research organisation created jointly by AT&T; and Western Electric a few years earlier.
Though Strasberg's own approach demonstrates a clear debt to psychoanalysis, he make it clear in his books that he thinks that the philosophical foundations of Stanislavski's work lie in Pavlovian reflex and were unaffected by psychoanalysis. Strasberg, for example, dismissed the "Method of Physical Action" as a step backwards.Carnicke (1998, passim). Carnicke writes: "Just as it is 'true' for Stanislavsky [sic] that action is central to theatre, so is it 'true' that emotion is central to his System [sic]"; (1998, 151).
260–1, 451 and passim. Charles I of England generally recognised that Catholics could not conscientiously take the Oath of Supremacy, and frequently exerted his prerogative to help them to avoid it. On the other hand, his theory of the divine right of kings induced him to favour the Oath of Allegiance, and he was irritated with the Catholics who refused it or argued against it. Pope Urban VIII is said to have condemned the oath again in 1626,Reusch, 327.
People & Places: Club Passim. Maverick Magazine, September 2009, Issue #86, p. 54-5. Lorković's earliest recording, Clear and Cold (1990) was digitally re- mastered and re-released in 2013. In her review of the album for The Oklahoman, Brandy McDonnell said: "Although the Croatian-born singer/songwriter/multi-instrumentalist also is known for his skill on the accordion, Clear and Cold showcases his classical training and fleet-fingered prowess on piano..."McDonnell, Brandy. Album review: Radoslav Lorkovic “Clear and Cold”.
Various mythological geography is associated with the Eight Pillars, including the eight mountain pillars themselves along with surrounding or intervening terrain, such as the Moving Sands. The eight mountain pillars include Kunlun, Jade Mountain, Mount Buzhou, and five more (Yang Lihui 2005: passim). Kunlun functions as a sort of ladder which could be used to travel between earth and Heaven. Accordingly, any person who succeeded in climbing up to the top of Kunlun would magically become an immortal spirit (Yang 2005: 160-162).
In early medieval art, the Father may be represented by a hand appearing from a cloud in a blessing gesture, for example in scenes of the Baptism of Christ. Later, in the West, the "Throne of Mercy" (or "Throne of Grace") became a common depiction. In this style, the Father (sometimes seated on a throne) is shown supporting either a crucifixG Schiller, Iconography of Christian Art, Vol. II, 1972, (English trans from German), Lund Humphries, London, figs I;5–16 & passim, and , pp.
122–124 and figs 409–414 or, later, a slumped crucified Son, similar to the Pietà (this type is distinguished in German as the Not Gottes)G Schiller, Iconography of Christian Art, Vol. II, 1972, (English trans from German), Lund Humphries, London, figs I;5–16 & passim, and , pp. 219–224 and figs 768–804 in his outstretched arms, while the Dove hovers above or in between them. This subject continued to be popular until the 18th century at least.
Diana Kennedy, The Essential Cuisines of Mexico, 2009, , passim Allspice is also indispensable in Middle Eastern cuisine, particularly in the Levant, where it is used to flavour a variety of stews and meat dishes, as well as tomato sauce.Diane Kochilas, My Greek Table, 2018, , p. 22 In Arab cuisine, for example, many main dishes use allspice as the only spice. In northern European and North American cooking, it is an ingredient in commercial sausage preparations and curry powders, and in pickling.
As the mythology of the Red River and related mythical geography developed, it was influenced by ideas from the cosmology of India related to Mount Sumeru as an axis mundi, together with related cosmological features, such as rivers (Christie 1968:74). India was the goal of the Buddhist priest Xuanzang and his companions in the Journey to the West, in which India became part of a fictional geography, as well as all the land between it and Tang China (Yu 1977, passim).
This garden was sited in the hollow between the Quirinal and the Pincio, in the southern reaches of the ancient Gardens of Sallust,Phyllis Pray Bober, "The Coryciana and the Nymph Corycia" Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 40 (1977:223-39) p. 224 note 12, and passim. a rich field of buried sculpture, some of which he displayed in his villa. There the grotto that he arranged round a Roman marble sleeping naiad,Perhaps originally intended for a Sleeping Ariadne.
Michael Lecker, The "constitution of Medina": Muḥammad's first legal document, Studies in late antiquity and early Islam SLAEI vol.23, Darwin Press, 2004, passim This contract, known as the Leaf (ṣaḥīfa) upheld the peaceful coexistence between Muslims, Jews and Christians, defining them all, under given conditions, as constituting the Ummah, or "community" of that city, and granting the latter freedom of religious thought and practice.Pratt, p. 121, citing John Esposito, What Everyone Needs to Know About Islam, Oxford University Press, New York p.
NBCSL was founded in 1977 after a group of about eighteen African American state legislators, attending the annual meeting of the National Conference of State Legislatures and perceiving that the NCSL was still "racially exclusive" at that time, decided to call for a national conference in Nashville, Tennessee.Tyson King-Meadows, Thomas F. Schaller, Devolution and Black State Legislators: Challenges and Choices in the Twenty- First Century (State University of New York Press, 2007), , pp. 194–95, 202 & passim. Excerpts available at Google Books.
The Italians usually used only tone blocks, for a very different effect, much closer to the chiaroscuro drawings the term was originally used for, or to watercolor paintings.Landau and Parshall, The Renaissance Print, pp. 179-202; 273-81 & passim; Yale, 1996, The Swedish printmaker Torsten Billman (1909-1989) developed during the 1930s and 1940s a variant chiaroscuro technique with several gray tones from ordinary printing ink. The art historian Gunnar Jungmarker (1902-1983) at Stockholm's Nationalmuseum called this technique "grisaille woodcut".
Søren Kierkegaard, one of Poteat's primary intellectual sources, identifies this expanded awareness as "double-reflection." See his Concluding Unscientific Postscript to Philosophical Fragments, edited and translated by Howard V. Hong and Edna H. Hong (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1992), pp. 72ff et passim. For a helpful explanation of Kierkegaard's conception, see Katherine M. Ramsland, Engaging the Immediate: Applying Kierkegaard's Theory of Indirect Communication to the Practice of Psychotherapy (Cranbury, NJ: Associated University Presses, 1989), ch. 4: "Kierkegaard's Indirect Communication," pp.
"Orpheus also invented the mysteries of Dionysus, and having been torn in pieces by the Maenads he is buried in Pieria." and prescribed the mystery rites preserved in Orphic texts. Pindar and Apollonius of RhodesApollonius, Argonautica, passim. place Orpheus as the harpist and companion of Jason and the Argonauts. Orpheus had a brother named Linus, who went to Thebes and became a Theban.Apollodorus, Library and Epitome, 2.4.9, This Linus was a brother of Orpheus; he came to Thebes and became a Theban.
Whether the name Kylfing denotes a particular tribal, socio-political, or economic grouping is also a matter of much debate.E.g., Guðmundsson passim; Hastings 640. They are mentioned in Old Norse runestone inscriptions, sagas (most notably in Egil's Saga), and poetry (such as Thorbjorn Hornklofi's poem Haraldskvæði), as well as Byzantine records and Rus' law-codes. According to the sagas, the Kylfings opposed the consolidation of Norway under Harald Fairhair and participated in the pivotal late ninth century Battle of Hafrsfjord.
First Geograph Conference On Wednesday 17 February 2010, Geograph British Isles organised its first conference for contributors to the project. About 80 contributors attended to discuss the project in both plenary and break-out sessions.Geograph website forum passim (Registration required) (accessed 26 February 2010) The event was hosted by Geograph's sponsor, Ordnance Survey. Ordnance Survey press release (accessed 26 February 2010) It took place at the Ordnance Survey head office at Romsey near Southampton and was reported by geography-related media.
Sebastian, passim Before their friendship came apart, however, Sebastian claimed that he took notes on their conversations (which he later published) during which Eliade was supposed to have expressed antisemitic views. According to Sebastian, Eliade said in 1939: > The Poles' resistance in Warsaw is a Jewish resistance. Only yids are > capable of the blackmail of putting women and children in the front line, to > take advantage of the Germans' sense of scruple. The Germans have no > interest in the destruction of Romania.
From his teenage years, Dahl was initially bisexual, but from then onward, "his preference and partiality...remained with men."Linick, 528–8 He had his first homosexual experiences at the age of 16 with the painter Eduard Bargheer.Linick, 528 He kept his sexual orientation secret in his professional life, even as he cataloged in his diaries a wide variety of infatuations, affairs, trysts, and relationships.Linick, 525–607, passim After coming to America, Dahl married Etta Gornick Linick, whom he had met in Zurich.
Richard Dellamora, Masculine Desire: The Sexual Politics of Victorian Aestheticism (University of North Carolina Press, 1990), pp. 23–25, with further discussion of Hallam and his relations with other literary figures et passim. The efforts among aesthetes and intellectuals to legitimate various forms of homosexual behaviors and attitudes by virtue of a Hellenic model were not without opposition. The 1877 essay "The Greek Spirit in Modern Literature" by Richard St. John TyrwhittPublished in The Contemporary Review 29 (1877), pp. 552–566.
The quest for the sword of light is an added layer,: "the frame-story is complicated by a quest for the Sword of Light". attached to the core tale of the quest for "the one story", which forms a frame story to the Irish versions of the medieval werewolf tale, according to George Lyman Kittredge's 1903 study. "The one story" is actually shorthand, and Kittredge generally uses "the cause of the one story about women", as occurs in O'Foharta's version., and passim.
G. Wells, In the Fourth Year (London: Chatto & Windus, 1918), pp. 29–30. (2) "to define and limit the military and naval and aerial equipment of every country in the world";H.G. Wells, In the Fourth Year (London: Chatto & Windus, 1918), p. 33. to create "an authority that may legitimately call existing empires to give an account of their stewardship," and thus to "supersede Empire";H.G. Wells, In the Fourth Year (London: Chatto & Windus, 1918), po, 39 & 40, and Ch. 5, passim.
Berufsorganisation - Westkorresponenten - "Der Schwarze Kanal", passim, especially p. 52. During the ensuing years Wetzel was regarded with renewed suspicion by the East German leadership, and he held a succession of relatively low-profile journalistic positions. In June 1957 he became an editor with "Freie Welt", an illustrated magazine, but in February 1958 he was dismissed without notice on account of his "ideological failings" by the "Culture and Progress" publishing house. In 1959 he found an editorship with the magazine "Urania".
John Bert Lott, The Neighborhoods of Augustan Rome (Cambridge University Press, 2004), pp. 14 online, 34–38 et passim. "The associated games, which as neither state-sponsored ludi nor private benefactions had an ambiguous status, were aimed solely at the urban plebs, arose out of the mood of holiday abandon, and evidently offered — or could be manipulated to provide — a release for subversive sentiment": Richard C. Beacham, Spectacle Entertainments of Early Imperial Rome (Yale University Press, 1999), pp. 55–56 online.
Lilti, passim. It was, however, Goodman's The Republic of Letters that ignited a real debate surrounding the role of women within the salons and – so Goodman contends – the Enlightenment as a whole.Goodman, The Republic of Letters, pp. 1-11. According to Goodman: ‘The salonnières were not social climbers but intelligent, self-educated, and educating women who adopted and implemented the values of the Enlightenment Republic of Letters and used them to reshape the salon to their own social intellectual, and educational needs’.Ibid.
This was a naval code used by merchant ships (commonly known as the "maru code"),Blair, Silent Victory, passim broken in May 1940. 28 May 1941, when the whale factory ship Nisshin Maru No. 2 (1937) visited San Francisco, U.S. Customs Service Agent George Muller and Commander R. P. McCullough of the U.S. Navy's 12th Naval District (responsible for the area) boarded her and seized her codebooks, without informing Office of Naval Intelligence (ONI). Copies were made, clumsily, and the originals returned.Farago, Ladislas.
In October 2011 the German Federal Ministry of Defence announced a reorganisation/reduction of the German Armed Forces. As a consequence, all helicopters of the type CH-53G were to be transferred to the Air Force.Quoted from , PDF-file "Die Stationierung der Bundeswehr in Deutschland", passim German Army Aviation Corps Medium Transport Helicopter Regiment 25 flying CH-53G, based at Laupheim Air Base, was disbanded on 31 December 2012 and re-established as new Helicopter Wing 64 on 1 January 2013.
It is likely, however, that Chararic and Theodemir must have reigned after Ariamir, since Ariamir must have been the first Suevic monarch to lift the ban on Catholic synods and it is inconceivable that a Catholic monarch could have continued the ban for "a long time".Thompson, 87. On the other hand, some scholars see the conversion of the Suevi as progressive and stepwise and regard Ariamir's lifting of the ban on synods as the second step following Chararic's public conversion.Ferreiro, passim.
Taylor, "I Made Up My Mind", passim. Cape sold the US rights to the recently formed publishing house of Pascal Covici and Donald Friede. Friede had heard gossip about The Well at a party at Theodore Dreiser's house and immediately decided to acquire it. He had previously sold a copy of Dreiser's An American Tragedy to a Boston police officer to create a censorship test case, which he had lost; he was awaiting an appeal, which he would also lose.
The spoken word was thus the single most potent religious action, and knowledge of the correct verbal formulas the key to efficacy.Halm, in Rüpke (ed), 235–236 et passim. The Roman belief in the power of the word may be reflected also in the importance of persuasive speech, formally oratory, in political life and the law courts. Accurate naming was vital for tapping into the desired powers of the deity invoked, hence the proliferation of cult epithets among Roman deities.
A total of 36 students were enrolled in the 1959–60 school year, the school's last year of operation.Quackenbush. Geraldine Steensma was the school's first full- time teacher, for five years, and Willemina Van Halsema, the sister of the church's pastor and a community worker at the church, also taught part-time the first two years. Other teachers at the school were Eleanor Sietsema, M. Louise Crawford, Faye Campbell (aide), James Stabile (music), Katherine Hunt, Donald Vittner, and Constance Pryce.Quackenbush, passim.
The two remaining ships commenced firing in all directions, and Tang submerged to begin evasive action. She shadowed the enemy until morning and then closed the tanker for a submerged attack from extremely close range, just , barely enough to allow her torpedoes to arm., passim; Roscoe, Submarine Operations; Holmes, Undersea Victory. Additional lookouts had been posted on the target's deck and, when the spread of torpedoes from Tang struck her, they were hurled into the air with other debris from the ship.
Barend, p.88-89; Sandqvist, p.58. See also Vlasiu, passim The style called Neo-Brâncovenesc (or "Neo-Romanian"), which assimilated the Art Nouveau guidelines, was announced by Anghel Saligny and later taken up by Ion Mincu. Virgil Mihaiu, "Arhitectură Art Nouveau din România în premieră la Lisabona", in România Literară, Nr. 33/2009 The merger of decorative styles in handicrafts received enthusiastic support from ethnographer Alexandru Tzigara- Samurcaș, and was adapted into the mural paintings of Abgar Baltazar and Ștefan Popescu.
The early Germans of New Jersey: Their History, Churches, and Genealogies. (Dover, New Jersey, Dover Printing Company, 1895), passim. Often villages established and settled by German emigrants remained culturally German well into the Nineteenth Century, with German Lutheran and Reformed churches (often as "Union" churches) established shortly after the first settlements (as was the case in Knowlton and in Stillwater). However, by the early Nineteenth Century, many descendants of these German settlers removed to newly opened lands in the West (i.e.
In around 1535 Edmund married Elizabeth, youngest daughter of Thomas Hynde, prominent MercerHynde was Warden of the Mercers in 1513/4 and 1523/4, see Lyell and Watney, Acts of Court of the Mercers' Company, passim. and Merchant Adventurer of London, and his wife Margaret (daughter of the Mercer William Browne, Lord Mayor of London 1507–08A.B. Beavan, The Aldermen of the City of London Temp. Henry III to 1912 (Corporation of the City of London, 1913), II, p. 20.
Intisar Soghayroun Elzein, Islamic Archaeology in the Sudan (Archaeopress, 2004), passim. The title makk was used for the ruler of the Funj Sultanate and for all his vassal rulers in the region of Sennar. It was used by the ruler of Taqali, whose tributaries were also known as mukūk al-ʿāda (sing. makk al-ʿāda), "customary kings".Janet J. Ewald, Soldiers, Traders, and Slaves: State Formation and Economic Transformation in the Greater Nile Vallye, 1700–1885 (University of Wisconsin Press, 1990), p. 235.
Sara Adler (née Levitskaya, Britannica gives Levitsky; 26 May 1858 – 28 April 1953) was a Russian-born Jewish actress in Yiddish theater who made her career mainly in the United States. She was the third wife of Jacob Adler and the mother of prominent actors Luther and Stella Adler, and lesser-known actors Jay, Julia Adler, Frances, and Florence.Adler, Jacob, A Life on the Stage: A Memoir, translated and with commentary by Lulla Rosenfeld, Knopf, New York, 1999, . 266, passim.
131–132 et passim. The disciples of Hippocrates explained the maintenance of vital heat to be the function of the breath within the organism. Around 300 BC, Praxagoras discovered the distinction between the arteries and the veins, although close studies of vascular anatomy had been ongoing since at least Diogenes of Apollonia. In the corpse arteries are empty; hence, in the light of these preconceptions they were declared to be vessels for conveying pneuma to the different parts of the body.
The state of Transnistria was created by local economic elites with special relations to the Soviet and later Russian political centre.Jan Zofka: Postsowjetischer Separatismus: Die pro-russländischen Bewegungen im moldauischen Dnjestr-Tal und auf der Krim 1989–1995, Göttingen: Wallstein Verlag, 2015, passim. During the reign of Igor Smirnov (1991–2011) maintaining special relations with Russia was a priority of Transnistria.Marcin Kosienkowski: Continuity and Change in Transnistria’s Foreign Policy after the 2011 Presidential Elections, Lublin: The Catholic University of Lublin Publishing House, 2012, p. 23.
Gordon, pp. 51 passim. She later published A Vindication of the Rights of Men (1790), a response to Burke's denunciation of the French Revolution and attack on Price; and A Vindication of the Rights of Woman (1792), extending Price's arguments about equality to women: Tomalin argues that just as the Dissenters were "excluded as a class from education and civil rights by a lazy-minded majority", so too were women, and the "character defects of both groups" could be attributed to this discrimination.Tomalin, p. 61.
Although birth control was sometimes advocated as a way for the poor to manage their resources better by limiting the size of their family, it could also be promoted for controlling social groups seen as inferior.On race, class, modernity, and urbanization as factors in perceptions of birth control, see Katz, "The History of Birth Control in the United States," passim; Tone, Devices and Desires, p. 145ff. More broadly on the subject of eugenics, feminism, and race, see Gordon, The Moral Property of Women, p. 80ff.
Recorded in Brooklyn, New York, it features a multitude of guest artists, including vocalists Aoife O'Donovan, Ruth Ungar Merenda, and Cassandra Jenkins. Guest instrumentalists include bassist Paul Kowert (Punch Brothers), woodwind player Alec Spiegelman (Cuddle Magic), cellist Rushad Eggleston (Crooked Still), bassist Tony Maimone, keyboard players Frank LoCrasto and Erik Deutsch, guitarist Jefferson Hamer, and fiddler Stephanie Coleman. For March 2015, Andreassen has announced a full band tour of New England, including Joe's Pub in New York City, and Club Passim in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
His three other executors, who reserved their powers, were John Legh of Adlington, John Kirton, and William Buck. Buck was Master of the Fraternity of Taylors and Linen Armourers of St. John the Baptist (forerunner of the Merchant Taylors) in 1488–89C.M. Clode, Memorials of the Guild of Merchant Taylors (Harrison and Sons, London 1875), pp. 69–70; M.P. Davies, The Merchant Taylors' Company of London: Court Minutes 1486–1493 (Richard III and Yorkist History Trust/Paul Watkins, 2000), pp. 110, 200, 255, & passim.
Although James Chesnut Jr. was the only son, his father had given him little of his extensive property. Because his father lived to the age of 90 and gave his son but a small allowance, the son James had to live mainly on his law practice. The Chesnut fortune declined in the course of the war and thus, after his father died in 1866, Chesnut inherited little more than the extensive debts that encumbered the Mulberry and Sandy Hill plantations.Muhlenfeld, Mary Boykin Chesnut, passim.
Gat, p. 186–187. The issue remains unresolved: Iraqi activists still regularly charge that Israel used violence to engineer the exodus, while Israeli officials of the time vehemently deny it.Morris and Black; Gat; passim Historian Moshe Gat reports that "the belief that the bombs had been thrown by Zionist agents was shared by those Iraqi Jews who had just reached Israel".Gat, p. 177 Sociologist Phillip Mendes backs Gat's claims, and further attributes the allegations to have been influenced and distorted by feelings of discrimination.
For most of the colonial period, in the event of the resignation, prolonged absence or death of the royal governor, the province would be administered by an "acting governor" who was the president of the Provincial Council (also called the "Governor's Council")—the upper house of the colonial legislature. The council presidency was an honorary ceremonial post given to the council's oldest member.Pulvis, Thomas L. Proprietors, Patronage and Paper Money: Legislative Politics in New Jersey 1703–76. (New Brunswick, New Jersey: Rutgers University Press, 1986), passim.
31 ff an Italian opera not featuring at least one renowned castrato in a lead part would be doomed to fail. Because of the popularity of Italian opera throughout 18th-century Europe (except France), singers such as Ferri, Farinelli, Senesino and Pacchierotti became the first operatic superstars, earning enormous fees and hysterical public adulation.Heriot chs. 1–3 passim The strictly hierarchical organisation of opera seria favoured their high voices as symbols of heroic virtue, though they were frequently mocked for their strange appearance and bad acting.
The new strategy which relied on ad hoc mobile expeditionary forces brought about a great expansion of the command-opportunities for officers of equestrian as opposed to senatorial rank. These were for the most part professional soldiers who had achieved their equestrian status by rising through the ranks of the legionary centurionate.For a discussion of the significance of the equestrian officials with military backgrounds kn the Third Century see B. Dobson , Op. Cit and also B. Malcus, passim. Aper is also identifiedAgain, see Malcus, op.
I Part I: Life, &c.;, and Letters (John Russell Smith, London 1865), passim. Cheke's student, who read Isocrates, at first disputing but afterwards coming round fully to the innovations, which also won the approval of John Redman. The broadening and reinvigorating of classical antique literacy and scholarship, preserved through the mediaeval philosophical schools, opened also the biblical and patristic uses of ancient Greek language to fresh interpretations through the exercise of private thought and study, and to new perspectives of Athens, Rome and Byzantium.
Sullivan's works comprise 24 operas, 11 full orchestral works, ten choral works and oratorios, two ballets, one song cycle, incidental music to several plays, more than 70 hymns and anthems, over 80 songs and parlour ballads, and a body of part songs, carols, and piano and chamber pieces.Young, passim The operatic output spanned his whole career, as did that of his songs and religious music. The solo piano and chamber pieces are mostly from his early years, and are generally in a Mendelssohnian style.Jacobs, p.
He was born in Govan, Scotland to Richard Alexander Oswald, merchant of Moore Park, GlasgowSmith, John Guthrie & Mitchell, John Oswald "The Old Country Houses of the Old Glasgow Gentry" (James MacLehose & Sons, Glasgow, 1878) pp. passim and Elizabeth Anderson,Birth Register at Scotlands People on-line database (subscription required) accessed 26 November 2011 the eldest of five children. He represented the family of Haldane of that Ilk through Agnes Haldane (his paternal great grandmother) who was the mother of Mrs. Alexander Oswald (Margaret Dundas) of Shield Hall.
Lourie, "The Confraternity [and] the Ribat", passim. She goes on to quote the objection of O'Callaghan why "[i]f the ribāṭ with its complement of warrior-ascetics existed in Spain for centuries ... the first Spanish military order [the Order of Calatrava] was not founded before 1158?" According to Jesuit historian Robert Ignatius Burns, borrowing from a position of strength, which the Christians of Iberia attained only by the mid- eleventh century, is preferred to borrowing from weakness.Lourie, "The Confraternity [and] the Ribat", 175 n. 59.
The period immediately following his father's death was so painful that Lee Hays could not bring himself to talk much about it, even to Doris Willens, the writer he selected to be his biographer.Doris Willens, Lonesome Traveler: the Life of Lee Hays (Lincoln, Nebraska: University of Nebraska Press, 1988), p. 157 and passim. His brothers, both recently married, sent him to Emory Junior College in Georgia from which he graduated in 1930 at sixteen (but already over six feet tall and looking much older than his years).
Orontes was given these Satrapies of Armenis in 401 BC for supporting the Persian king Artaxerxes II in the Battle of Cunaxa against Cyrus the Younger. After the Battle of Cunaxa, Orontes harassed the Ten Thousand as they attempted to return home and made their way through Armenia.Xen. Anab. 2.4-5 passim It is likely he ruled from Armavir as the previous Satrap of Armenia, Hydarnes, had ruled from there. He married Rhodogoune, the daughter of king Artaxerxes II by one of his concubines.
173–176 and passim. In general, the density of cities expedites commerce and facilitates knowledge spillovers, helping people and firms exchange information and generate new ideas.Kent E. Calder & Mariko de Freytas, "Global Political Cities as Actors in Twenty-First Century International Affairs; "SAIS Review of International Affairs" 29(1), Winter-Spring 2009; . "Beneath state-to-state dealings, a flurry of activity occurs, with interpersonal networks forming policy communities involving embassies, think tanks, academic institutions, lobbying firms, politicians, congressional staff, research centers, NGOs, and intelligence agencies.
321, Giuliana Antica, I), and Della Descrittione di Malta Isola nel Mare Siciliano con le sue Antichità, ed altre Notitie of Giovanni Francesco Abela, printed by Paolo Bonecota, Malta, in 1647 (passim). The first known date regarding Caxaro is April 1, 1438, when he set for the examination to be given the warrant of public notary of Malta and Gozo by the competent authorities in Palermo, Sicily.Wettinger and Fsadni, 1983: 21, n. 67. In those times, Malta and its dependencies formed part of the Kingdom of Aragon.
In recent years, his project has been called Agnostic Gospel. His wife Katie has been his partner in some of his musical endeavors. In 2019, Champagne got together with drummer Billy Conway and harmonica player Jim Fitting -- the two other members of Treat Her Right -- and recorded an album. A live date for the trio billed as "Billy, Jimmy, & Dave" was announced for January 19, 2020 at Club Passim in Cambridge -- their first appearance together on stage since all were in Treat Her Right.
Reader, Rocky Road, p.85 et. seq. KGON, Portland's leading radio station at the time, gave it no play at all.Reader, Rocky Road, p.85 passim, especially p.112-114. On August 31, 1982 they recorded a 30-minute concert performance for Don Blank of KOIN-TV; in fact, the concert took multiple takes over the course of four hours.Reader, Rocky Road, p.119-120. The sessions later with Erlanger later that year seem not to have produced any finished tracks.Reader, Rocky Road, p.120-121.
Around the time of Lawson's increasing unhappiness, Francis Hutchinson published a broad attack on witch-phobia that included a lengthy treatment of Salem.Francis Hutchinson An Historical Essay, published in 1718 but begun at least a decade before, Chapter V, passim. Hutchinson cites the work of Robert Calef and blames the influence of the Mathers in the decade leading up to events at Salem, as well as the English clergyman Richard Baxter. Lawson was not considered important or influential enough to earn a mention in Hutchinson's work.
Senior Lieutenant Wilhelm Krützfeld, head of the local police precinct, and Bellgardt's superior, later covered up for him. Berlin's police commissioner Graf Helldorf only verbally reprimanded Krützfeld for shielding his subordinate and, partly in consequence, Krützfeld has often mistakenly been identifiedKnobloch, passim and United States Holocaust Memorial Museum as the rescuer of the New Synagogue.Regina Scheer explains that Heinz Knobloch popularised the story that Wilhelm Krützfeld rescued the New Synagogue. Knobloch learned about the rescue from the report of an eyewitness, the late Hans Hirschberg.
97, no. 4 (July / August 2018), p. 54. People ignore warnings about the dangers of nuclear power plantsSheldon Novick, The Careless Atom, Boston, Houghton Mifflin Company, 1969, passim until anticipated nuclear power-plant accidents occur; and people ignore warnings about the dangers of nuclear weaponsThomas Powers, "The Nuclear Worrier" (review of Daniel Ellsberg, The Doomsday Machine: Confessions of a Nuclear War Planner, New York, Bloomsbury, 2017, , 420 pp.), The New York Review of Books, vol. LXV, no. 1 (18 January 2018), pp. 13–15.
Previté Orton, pp 339–340, who also remarks on Berengar's "unrevengeful character." Dissatisfied with the emperor, who had ceased his policy of grants and family alliances in favour of paying Magyar mercenaries, several Italian nobles — led by Adalbert and many of the bishops — invited Rudolph II of Upper Burgundy to take the Italian throne in 921.Rosenwein, pp 262, 274, and passim. Moreover, his own grandson, Berengar of Ivrea (who would rule as Berengar II of Italy from 950), rose up against him, incited by Rudolph.
In 1840, Elizabeth Sholl (a widow), followed her oldest son William to Western Australia, along with three of her other children, including RJ Sholl – who abandoned his own medical studies. The family arrived in WA on the ship Shepherd on 19 November 1840 and settled in the South West soon afterwards.The Inquirer, 15 November 1843, 17 February 1844 & 17 March 1847 passim; Birman 1976, pp121–2; Erickson 1987–88, p2809. RJ Sholl appears to have worked initially as a teacher or private tutor in the Busselton area.
The various parties went into the new war with mostly the same cameras and procedures they had used when exiting the last one. Stereoscopic imaging using overlapping exposures was refined and standardized for mapping.Babington Smith, 78; Stanley, 268 et passim Color photography from the air was introduced in 1935 in the United States, but did not find widespread application.Goddard, 240 Experiments with flash bomb photography at night were carried out pre-war, but did not lead to an operational capability until later in the war.
Reginald Gray, 2007. (New Statesman, 12 January 2009) From 16 to 31 July 2001, a Harold Pinter Festival celebrating his work, curated by Michael Colgan, artistic director of the Gate Theatre, Dublin, was held as part of the annual Lincoln Center Festival at Lincoln Center in New York City. Pinter participated both as an actor, as Nicolas in One for the Road, and as a director of a double bill pairing his last play, Celebration, with his first play, The Room.Merritt, "Talking about Pinter" (passim).
Mswati III, Sobhuza II's son and eventual successor Known by the honorific "Bull of Swazi" by virtue of his numerous progeny, NY Times obituary mentions among other honorifics in passim King Sobhuza continued the tribal practice of maintaining many consorts. According to the Swaziland National Trust Commission, King Sobhuza II married 70 wives, who gave him 210 children between 1920 and 1970. About 180 children survived infancy, and 97 sons and daughters were reported living as of 2000. At his death he had more than 1,000 grandchildren.
Wilson-Bareau and Hughes disagree, see Wilson-Bareau p. 59 and passim in chapter 4. A further four editions were published, the last in 1937, so that in total over 1,000 impressions of each print have been printed, though not all of the same quality. As with his other series, later impressions show wear to the aquatint. The 1863 edition had 500 impressions, and editions followed in 1892 (100) before which the plates were probably steel-faced to prevent further wear, 1903 (100), 1906 (275), and 1937.
Charles Maurice Bevan-Brown (29 July 1886 – 27 February 1967) was a New Zealand psychiatrist and psychotherapist who practised in Christchurch from the 1940s to the 1960s. He established a clinic for medical psychology and founded the New Zealand Association of Psychotherapists..Obituary, Dr. C. M. Bevan-Brown, The Press, Christchurch, February 28, 1967 He was influential in the formation and ethos of Parents' Centres New Zealand.Dobbie, Mary, The trouble with women: the story of Parents Centre New Zealand, (Cole Catley, 1990) (pbk.), passim.
The Manticore is the second novel in Robertson Davies' Deptford Trilogy. Published in 1972 by Macmillan of Canada, it deals with the aftermath of the mysterious death of Percy Boyd "Boy" Staunton retold during a series of conversations between Staunton's son and a Jungian psychoanalyst., passim The title refers to elements of the subconscious which unfold through the story and are eventually manifested as a fantastic mythical creature: a manticore. The Manticore won the Governor-General's Literary Award in the English- language fiction category in 1972.
James Oswald was born on 2 May 1779, the fifth child and second son of Alexander Oswald of Shieldhall, Glasgow, and Margaret Dundas,Old Parish Registers Births in Scotlands People on-line database [www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk] (purchase required) accessed 27 November 2011 and was the grand-nephew of slave-trader Richard Oswald.Smith, John Guthrie & Mitchell, John Oswald "The Old Country Houses of the Old Glasgow Gentry" (James MacLehose & Sons, Glasgow, 1878) pp. passim He was the paternal first cousin of Richard Alexander OswaldWill Richard Alexander Oswald d.
As a child, D'Auban appeared with his sister, Marie, as Madame D'Auban's "celebrated infant dancers", from 1850 onwards,The Era, 26 May 1850, p. 13 and continued to appear as part of the D'Auban family song and dance act throughout his childhood.The Era passim, for example, 23 January 1853; 14 September 1856; 14 March 1858; and 29 May 1859 As adults, he and his sister appeared together in a comic dance double act at the Crystal Palace in 1863.The Observer, 27 December 1863, p.
Gunther Franz, Der deutsche Bauernkrieg, (Darmstadt, 1979), passim. Also that year, sculptor Tilman Riemenschneider was imprisoned in the fortress and tortured along with the other members of Würzburg's city council - as punishment for allying themselves with the peasants. Bishop Julius Echter von Mespelbrunn took office in 1573 and again reconstructed the fortress and increased the size of the fortifications further after a fire in 1572 had damaged much of the medieval castle. Under his reign, the transformation of the fortress into a Renaissance residence was completed.
He regularly performed at the Club 47 coffeehouse (now called Club Passim) in Cambridge, the Unicorn in Boston, and The Main Point in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania. In the 1970s he lived in Deering, New Hampshire. Rush is credited by Rolling Stone magazine with ushering in the era of the singer- songwriter. In addition to performing his own compositions, he sang songs by Joni Mitchell, Jackson Browne, James Taylor, Murray McLauchlan, David Wiffen and William Hawkins, helping them to gain recognition early in their careers.
While it is acknowledged that symbolism refers to something very different from a mere 'code', an artificial or arbitrary meaning, and that "it holds an essential and spontaneous echoing power",Gilbert Durand, Les structures anthropologiques de l'imaginaire. Introduction à l'archétypologie générale, PUF, 1963 (Introduction et conclusion, passim), p. 21 (in french). for René Guénon, this 'echoing power' goes immensely farther than the psychological realm: symbolism is "the metaphysical language at its highest",Introduction to the study of the Hindu Doctrines, part II, chapter VII: Symbolism and anthropomorphism.
In his later years, Walton formed friendships with younger composers including Hans Werner Henze and Malcolm Arnold, but although he admired their work, he did not influence their compositional styles. Throughout his life, Walton held no posts at music conservatoires; he had no pupils, gave no lectures and wrote no essays.Kennedy, passim After his death, the Walton Trust, inspired by Susana Walton, has run arts education projects, promoted British music and held annual summer masterclasses on Ischia for gifted young musicians.The Times, 15 September 1984, p.
He viewed that the university had been one-sided in the forms of study it offered—chiefly theology, philosophy, the classics and history—and that the opportunity should be offered to learn of the natural world and obtain the "knowledge of the great material design of which the Supreme Master-Worker has made us a constituent part". This idea, of Nature as the Second Book of God, was common in the 19th century.Yanni, Carla. Nature's Museums: Victorian Science and the Architecture of Display, Chapter two, passim.
The existing structure is believed to be the fourth or fifth built on the site. In 1724, Nicholas Leke, 4th Earl of Scarsdale commissioned the building of a design by architect Francis Smith, to develop a Georgian mansion with gardens, using parts of the existing structure. On a scale and quality with Chatsworth House, internally it featured both oak ornamental panels and stucco plasterwork by Italian craftsmen Francesco Vassalli and the brothers Giuseppe and Adalberto Artari;Geoffrey Beard, Decorative Plasterwork in Great Britain, 1975:56f. et passim.
Rosalind’s acting career began in 1920 (What's in a Name), soon followed by the role of Ophelia to John Barrymore's Hamlet on Broadway in 1922 – the most famous production of Hamlet yet. After many other stage appearances, some with the Provincetown Players, she and her partner, the photographer Francis Bruguière, moved to London in 1927. At this point, she took the opportunity to drop nine years off her age, which is why many sources erroneously give her birth year as 1901.Kissing the Joy passim.
For some of the above reasons, it was G. W. S. Barrow's contention that the Gaelic-speaking Céli Dé were gradually replaced by the clerks and personal dependents of the early thirteenth-century bishops, most of whom came from France or England.Barrow, "Clergy of St Andrews", p. 200, et passim. By 1250, these French or English-speaking Céli Dé had moved to the church of St Mary, and had been granted the status and rights of a secular college, that is, a collegiate church.
Hellemo, pp. 3–6, and Cartlidge and Elliott, 61 (Eusebius quotation) and passim. Clement approved the use of symbolic pictograms. The earliest surviving Christian art comes from the late 2nd to early 4th centuries on the walls of tombs belonging, most likely, to wealthyThe Second Church: Popular Christianity A.D. 200–400 by Ramsay MacMullen, The Society of Biblical Literature, 2009 Christians in the catacombs of Rome, although from literary evidence there may well have been panel icons which, like almost all classical painting, have disappeared.
Kerr's major confidante and secret adviser regarding the dismissal was a member of the High Court and friend of Kerr, Sir Anthony Mason whose role was not revealed until 2012 when Whitlam's biographer Jenny Hocking detailed Kerr's archival record of their extensive consultations.Jenny Hocking Gough Whitlam: His Time. Melbourne University Publishing 2012. Chapter 10 'The Third Man' passim Kerr described Mason as playing 'a most significant part in my thinking' and wrote of confiding in Mason 'to fortify myself for the action I was to take'.
While in Paris, he attended the Sorbonne and Paris Institute of Political Studies (best known as Sciences Po), eventually receiving its certificate. His official duties left him time to work as an editor of a quarterly magazine published by the World Assembly of Youth and as a commissioning editor representing a small publishing company, Noonday Press.Aldrich, Nelson W. (ed.) George, Being George: George Plimpton's Life as Told, Admired, Deplored, and Envied by 200 Friends, Relatives, Lovers, Acquaintances, Rivals, Random House Publishing (2008) pp. 120–123 and passim.
Examples are Roverandom, Eriol in The Book of Lost Tales,Tolkien, J. R. R.: The Book of Lost Tales, Part One; Allen & Unwin, 1983; passim Tuor in Quenta Silmarillion,Tolkien, J. R. R.: The Silmarillion; Allen & Unwin, 1977; p. 245 Ar-Pharazôn in Akallabêth,Tolkien, J. R. R.: The Silmarillion; p. 278 Ælfwine in The Lost Road,Tolkien, J. R. R.: The Lost Road and Other Writings; Unwin Hyman, 1987; p.44 St Brendan in Imram,Tolkien, J. R. R.: Sauron Defeated; Harper Collins, 1992; pp.
The 'Savoy Version' of 1921 made further minor cuts throughout the score, but restored the finale (except for Bouncer's reprise). Box's verse in No.7, "The Buttercup", was also omitted, and further dialogue cuts were made. The keys of some of the numbers are lower in the Savoy Version, so that Bouncer is best sung by a bass-baritone.Boosey & Co.'s Savoy Edition of Cox and Box, Boosey & Hawkes (1924), passim The key changes, however, may have been first made by Sullivan for the 1894 revival.
He even bought an estate at Stockbridge, Massachusetts, where Sam hoped he and Mary would occasionally stay together, but their relationship continued to grow cold., passim. p. 33 for wedding date, p. 82–85 for Stockbridge and Sam's visits Because she was Catholic, a divorce was out of the question for Mary; the possibility might not even have been discussed.. Mary increasingly withdrew from the world: By 1921 she was described by the St. Paul Pioneer Press as "virtually an invalid", although she lived until 1947.
Alan Fox, 1966, Industrial Sociology And Industrial Relations (Research Paper 3, Royal Commission on Trade Unions and Employers' Associations), London, HMSO, passim. For the other perspective, he used an existing term from political science: "pluralist", a perspective which suggests that multiple parties are involved in decision-making. However, Fox himself was strongly influenced by a third major theoretical position: the "radical" perspective, especially Marxism.Topham With Allan Flanders and Hugh Clegg, Fox became prominent in a group of scholars known collectively as the "Oxford school of industrial relations".
After graduating with a B.A. degree in English literature in 1952, Kipniss stayed at the university and earned a Master of Fine Arts degree in 1954. By then he regarded himself primarily as a painter although he continued to write poetry. In 1951 Kipniss was awarded a one-man show at the Creative Gallery, on 57th Street in Manhattan, as the result of a painting competition and showed semi-abstractions "suggesting romantic images of ethereal landscapes and half-grasped moments."Chronology, in Intaglios, passim, 168.
The Shubert brothers took out an option to produce the work, but nothing materialised. In 1927, shortly before his death, Stuart wrote a series of fourteen short pieces for the Empire News, consisting of recollections and reminiscences.Lamb, p. 258 They were collected and republished in 2003 under the title My Bohemian Life.Stuart, passim Stuart and his wife, Kitty, had five children who survived to adulthood, Mary "May" (1886–1956), Thomas "Leslie" (1888–1970), Marie "Dollie" (1891–1949), Stephen "Chap" (b. 1894) and Constance "Lola" (b. 1896).
Knoll and Schaer (eds.), Gesta Principum Polonorum, p. xxv In Gottfried Lengnich's printed edition, Lengnich named the author as "Martin Gallus" based on a misreading of Jan Długosz, where Gallus was conflated with Martin of Opava. Martin Gallus became the standard name in German scholarship for some time to come, though this identification is now rejected by most historians. Historian Maximilian Gumplowicz identified the author as Baldwin Gallus,Glumpowicz, Bischof Balduin, passim allegedly Bishop of Kruszwica, though likewise this theory has failed to gain general acceptance.
244, 246, 247 He also participated in the PCF-organized Congress of Writers, but, unlike Éluard and Aragon, again avoided adapting his style to socialist realism. He returned to Romania on an official visit in late 1946-early 1947,Cernat, p.113; Livezeanu, passim János Farkas, "Tristan Tzara în Ungaria. Octombrie 1956" , in Apostrof, Vol. XVII, Nr. 12 (199) as part of a tour of the emerging Eastern Bloc during which he also stopped in Czechoslovakia, Hungary, and the Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia.
The Times Atlas of the World (1967), Boston: Houghton Mifflin, Plate 3, et passim. The Lambert azimuthal projection is used as a map projection in cartography. For example, the National Atlas of the US uses a Lambert azimuthal equal-area projection to display information in the online Map Maker application, and the European Environment Agency recommends its usage for European mapping for statistical analysis and display. It is also used in scientific disciplines such as geology for plotting the orientations of lines in three-dimensional space.
T.P. Wiseman, Clio's Cosmetics (Leicester University Press, 1979), pp. 67–69, 85, et passim. During the transition to the Christian Empire, Quintus Aurelius Symmachus argued that Rome's continued prosperity and stability depended on preserving the mos maiorum, and the early Christian poet Prudentius dismissed the blind adherence to tradition as "the superstition of old grandpas" (superstitio veterum avorum) and inferior to the new revealed truth of Christianity.Clifford Ando, "The Palladium and the Pentateuch: Towards a Sacred Topography of the Later Roman Empire," Phoenix 55 (2001), p. 388.
Patrice reportedly married a Rothschild and lived a life of luxury, and continued to be active in political life. Like his friend Bertrand de Jouvenel, he spoke out against the French economic mainstream, advocating right-libertarianism; this agenda was promoted by his own magazine, Liaisons Sociales, as well as by Commentaire journal and Saint- Simon Foundation, both of which he financed.Drancourt, passim His parallel advocacy for the United States of Europe brought him into conflict with Charles de Gaulle, but also ensured support from Joseph Rovan.Drancourt, pp.
Călinescu, p.700-702, 710 The focus on decorative and artificial subjects was also preserved by Millian, in works which often depict scenes of seduction,Călinescu, p.835 and by Sperantia, who found his niche on the margin of Parnassianism.Cubleșan, passim In contrast to Minulescu's cheerfulness and in agreement with the Moldavian wing of the Symbolist movement, Iacobescu wrote sad poems reflecting his losing battle with tuberculosis, and gained a following among young Romanian intellectuals.Călinescu, p.709-710; Cernat, p.65; Vianu, Vol. III, p.
Protector Augg NN is the first known reference to a newly formed unit of the comitatus of Gallienus, the Protectores Augusti Nostri (i.e. 'Bodyguards of Our August Lord') which was made up of senior officers attached to the Imperial retinue.Christol(1970:passim. As the senior Praetorian tribunus, Volusianus would almost certainly have qualified for membership; #PRAEFECTVS VIGILVM PERFECTISSIMVS VIR – Volusianus is now Prefect of the Watch (probably 259 AD). Perfectissimus Vir was an honorific denoting membership of the second rank of the equestrian order.
The same writer states that the city Trachis was 5 stadia from the river Melas, and that the river Asopus issued from a gorge in the mountains, to the south of Trachis. According to Thucydides, Trachis was 40 stadia from Thermopylae and 20 from the sea. Trachis (as Trachin) is mentioned in the Catalogue of Ships in the Iliad by Homer as one of the cities subject to Achilles, and is celebrated in the legends of Heracles as the scene ofthis hero's death.Sophocles, Trach. passim.
Neil Smith, a director of that Festival, commented, "Reed had an unrivalled ability to imbue his performances with both madcap humour and deep pathos, a quality which, combined with the acrobatic agility of a trained dancer, brought him worldwide acclaim.""Jack Reed: Comic singer dies", Yorkshire Evening Post, 15 February 2010 Reed had many hobbies, including oil painting, crafts and cooking, and he loved the ballet. He published his autobiography, Nothing Whatever to Grumble At: His Story, as told to Cynthia Morey, in 2006Reed (2006), passim.
Crucifixion was a punishment generally reserved for slaves in the Late Republic;Smith, Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities, entry on "Crux," Bill Thayer's LacusCurtius edition; Elizabeth Rawson, "Sallust on the Eighties?", Classical Quarterly 37 (1987), pp. 175–176; K.M. Coleman, "Fatal Charades: Roman Executions Staged as Mythological Enactments," Journal of Roman Studies 80 (1990), p. 53 et passim; for full discussion, see M. Hengel, Crucifixion in the Ancient World (London 1977), especially "Crucifixion and Roman Citizens" and "The 'Slaves' Punishment," chapters 6 and 8.
The title page of The Guide for the Perplexed Maimonides' Mishneh Torah is considered by Jews even today as one of the chief authoritative codifications of Jewish law and ethics. It is exceptional for its logical construction, concise and clear expression and extraordinary learning, so that it became a standard against which other later codifications were often measured.Isidore Twersky, Introduction to the Code of Maimonides (Mishneh Torah), Yale Judaica Series, vol. XII (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1980). passim, and especially Chapter VII, "Epilogue," pp. 515–538.
The County of Pallars or PallásThe rare alternative spelling is a Castilian variant employed by, for example, Gerónimo Zurita in his Anales de la corona de Aragón. (, ; ) was a de facto independent petty state, nominally within the Carolingian Empire and then West Francia during the ninth and tenth centuries, perhaps one of the Catalan counties,Whether it is referred to as a part of Catalonia or not depends on the author. Lewis, passim, treats it as independent of Catalonia proper. originally part of the Marca Hispanica in the ninth century.
Armand Trousseau (14 October 1801 - 23 June 1867) was a French internist. His contributions to medicine include Trousseau sign of malignancy, Trousseau sign of latent tetany, Trousseau–Lallemand bodies (an archaic synonym for Bence Jones proteins"Lallemand bodies" at whonamedit.com). He is sometimes credited with the quip "use new drugs quickly, while they still work",Arthur K. Shapiro, Elaine Shapiro, The Powerful Placebo: From Ancient Priest to Modern Physician, passim cites Trousseau, 1833 though Michel-Philippe Bouvart had said the same over 40 years earlier.Gaston de Lévis, Souvenirs et portraits, 1780-1789, 1813, p.
Mathew's sister Jane had married into the Gavell family who, like the Downes and Suttons, were heirs to lands around Cobham formerly belonging to Chertsey Abbey through pre-Reformation familial connections.T.E.C. Walker, 'Cobham: Manorial History', Surrey Archaeological Collections LVIII (1961), pp. 47-78, at p. 55 and passim. John Machell the grandfather died in 1647, his eldest son John (of Wendover) being his heir,John (of Wendover) matriculated from Trinity College, Oxford in 1619 and entered the Inner Temple; and his descendants followed in the University of Oxford.
In Constantinople he obtained the patronage of the powerful praetorian prefect Aurelianus. Synesius composed and addressed to Emperor Arcadius a speech entitled De regno, full of topical advice as to the studies of a wise ruler,Konstantinos D.S. Paidas, He thematike ton byzantinon "katoptron hegemonos" tes proimes kai meses byzantines periodoy(398–1085). Symbole sten politike theoria ton Byzantinon, Athens 2005, passim. but also containing a bold statement that the emperor's first priority must be a war on corruption and a war on the interpenetration of barbarians into the Roman army.
Therefore, encircled Germany faced the possibility of war on both Eastern and Western fronts. To meet this threat, Chief of Staff Alfred von Schlieffen and his successor, Helmuth von Moltke the Younger, drew up and continually refined the Schlieffen Plan to meet this eventuality.Zuber (1911), passim The Plan committed Germany to an early offensive against France while Russia was still mobilising and also required the invasion of neutral Belgium. In Bismarck's German constitution the kaiser commanded the army and also appointed the chancellor and his cabinet, who had no control of the military.
Although it is sometimes supposed that Ibn Taymiyyah rejected the very idea of saints, which had become a cardinal Sunni belief in the medieval period,Jonathan A.C. Brown, "Faithful Dissenters: Sunni Skepticism about the Miracles of Saints", Journal of Sufi Studies 1 (2012), p. 123Christopher Taylor, In the Vicinity of the Righteous (Leiden: Brill, 1999), pp. 5-6John Renard, Friends of God: Islamic Images of Piety, Commitment, and Servanthood (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2008); Idem., Tales of God Friends: Islamic Hagiography in Translation (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2009, et passim).
The latter were generally supporters of constitutional monarchy (although some, including Maria Christina herself, were more inclined toward enlightened absolutism); they were liberals of one stripe or another, ranging from liberal conservatives and those whose liberalism was strictly economic to social liberals.Esdaile, passim. In the 1830s, these two groups faced off in the First Carlist War, which the Cristinos won. The terms of surrender—notably the Convention of VergaraConvenio de Vergara, Spanish-language text on WikiSource—left an opportunity for relatively moderate Carlists to continue to play a role in the country's politics,Esdaile, p.
Instead of the Transmitter, many Disney and Goldwyn films released by the studio originally appeared with colorful versions of the RKO closing ident as part of the main title sequence. For decades, re-releases of these films had Disney/Buena Vista and MGM/Goldwyn ident replacing the RKO insignia, but the originals have been made available in some of the Blu-ray and DVD editions.Culhane (1999), passim. With the creation of Disney's streaming service Disney+, all films available on the site that were originally released with the RKO thunderbolt ident have had the logo restored.
Because Hogg's novel appears to test concepts of internal validity, historical truth or a single rational world-view, contemporary critics sometimes regard it as an early anticipation of ideas associated with postmodernism. The Confession (which comprises the middle section of the novel) is an autobiographical account of the life of Robert Wringhim and, passim, his statement on the crimes with which his name was associated. The document is revealed to be in part a printed document intended for publicationJames Hogg, The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner. Ed., John Wain.
The Abrahamic religions recognize the biblical account of Cain and Abel as the first fratricidal murder to be committed. In the mythology of ancient Rome, the city is founded as the result of a fratricide, with the twins Romulus and Remus quarreling over who has the favour of the gods and over each other's plans to build Rome, with Romulus becoming Rome's first king and namesake after killing his brother.The political significance of the founding fratricide is discussed at length by T.P. Wiseman, Remus: A Roman Myth (Cambridge University Press, 1995) passim.
Azriel (commentary on the Sefer Yetzirah, p. 27b) and, after him, Menahem Recanati (Ṭa'ame ha-Miẓwot, passim) considered the sefirot to be totally different from the Divine Being. The "Ma'areket" group took the sefirot to be identical in their totality with the En Sof, each sefirah representing merely a certain view of the Infinite ("Ma'areket", p. 8b). The Zohar clearly implies that they are the names of the deity, and gives for each of them a corresponding name of God and of the hosts of angels mentioned in the Bible.
Eliade, Myth and Reality, p. 93 although this term is also used more broadly, to refer to any god who doesn't interact regularly with humans. In many myths, the Supreme Being withdraws into the heavens after the creation of the world.Eliade, Myth and Reality, p. 93–98 Baluba mythology features such a story, in which the supreme god withdraws from the earth, leaving man to search for him.Leslau, passim Similarly, the mythology of the Hereros tells of a sky god who has abandoned mankind to lesser divinities.Eliade, Myth and Reality, p.
With Club Passim in Cambridge, Karim Nagi began the work of connecting the Arab-American diaspora to each other as well as to their traditional culture. As a self-employed professional artist, he encourages Arabs to preserve and participate in the presentation of their traditions. In 2009 he was invited as a panelist at the Diwan conference at the Arab American National Museum in Dearborn, Michigan. His presentation, titled Lauren of Arabia addressed the prevalence of non-Arabs in Arab dance culture and encouraged members of the Arab diaspora to represent themselves in the arts.
Rollins and Witts, passimJoseph, passim The Savoy operas, from the beginning, were produced extensively in North America and Australasia, and soon afterwards in Germany, Russia, and elsewhere in Europe and around the world.Jellinek, Hedy and George. "The One World of Gilbert and Sullivan", Saturday Review, 26 October 1968, pp. 69–72 and 94 1921 cartoon of Gilbert and Sullivan audiences In 1922, Sir Henry Wood explained the enduring success of the collaboration as follows: G. K. Chesterton similarly praised the combination of the two artists, anticipating the operas' success into the "remote future".
Gregory M. Pflugfelder, Cartographies of Desire, passim In the Chinese literary tradition, works such as Bian er Zhai and Jin Ping Mei survived many purges. Today, the Japanese anime subgenre yaoi centers on gay youths. Japan is unusual in that the culture's male homoerotic art has typically been the work of female artists addressing a female audience, mirroring the case of lesbian eroticism in western art. In the 1990s, a number of American television comedies began to feature themes on same-sex relationships and characters who expressed same-sex attractions.
Philip G. Cerny, The Politics of Grandeur: Ideological Aspects of de Gaulle's Foreign Policy (1980).W.W. Kulski, De Gaulle and the World: The Foreign Policy of the Fifth French Republic (1966) passim online free to borrow French policy blocking British entry into the European Economic Community (EEC) was primarily motivated by political rather than economic considerations. In 1967, as in 1961–63, de Gaulle was determined to preserve France's dominance within the EEC, which was the foundation of the nation's international stature. His policy was to preserve the Community of Six while barring Britain.
Indeed, the late Professor W.B. Gallie pointed to the impossibility of finding a firm solution to such a question, by including democracy in a list of 'essentially contested concepts'.Gallie (1956a), passim. Kekes (1977, p.71) To date, the disagreement over definitions has seen some actors focus on supporting technical systems of democratic governance (elections, government structures and the like), while others take the bottom- up approach of promoting citizen participation and building strong civil and political society to prepare the ground on which systems of government can then be planted.
By early 1864, Qing control in most areas had been reestablished.Richard J. Smith, Mercenaries and Mandarins: The Ever-Victorious Army in Nineteenth Century China (Millwood, NY: KTO Press, 1978), passim. In May 1862, the Xiang Army began directly besieging Nanjing and managed to hold firm despite numerous attempts by the numerically superior Taiping Army to dislodge them. Hong Xiuquan declared that God would defend Nanjing, but in June 1864, with Qing forces approaching, he died of food poisoning as a consequence of eating wild vegetables when the city ran low on food supplies.
Kalderimi crossing the Aradena gorge on Crete In the former Ottoman countries, a kaldırım (Turkish) or kalderimi (Greek καλντερίμι or καλντιρίμι; plural kalderimia) is a cobblestone-paved road built for hoofed traffic. Kalderimia are sometimes described as cobbled or paved mule tracks or trails.Loraine Wilson, The High Mountains of Crete (Cicerone Mountain Guide), , 2010, passim.Brian Anderson, Eileen Anderson, Sunflower Guide Lesvos, 2007, passim Kalderimia are typically 2 m wide, though there are reports of widths from 1 to 4.5 m, "so that two fully laden mules could pass each other without much difficulty".
After the outbreak of World War I, and during the two years of Romanian neutrality, Versuri și Proză affiliated with the pro-Entente and Francophile movement, finally obtaining its acceptance by the cultural mainstream. Just after the war's end, in 1919, Rașcu received a full teaching position at Unirea High School in Focșani. While there, he founded and led a student literary society, named in honor of Grigore Alexandrescu, and put out its yearbook, noted for its reviews of 19th-century Romantic poetry"Cronica măruntă" (1921), passim; Călinescu, pp. 982, 991, 1017; Huzum, p.
The Mapping of New Jersey: The Men and Their Art. (New Brunswick, New Jersey: Rutgers University Press, 1973), passim. West Jersey was largely a Quaker venture focused on the settlement of the lower Delaware River area, and was associated with William Penn and prominent figures in the colonization of the Pennsylvania. After Carteret's death, his heirs sold his interest in East Jersey to twelve investors, eleven of whom were members of the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers), who asked the Quaker apologist Robert Barclay to serve as governor.
16 Its first Chairman was Maxy, but only for a short period. According to various reports, it was originally named "Jewish National Committee", and was led in 1945–1946 by Lică (Abramovici) Chiriță. Andi Mihalache, "Devictimizarea evreului: cauzalități imaginare și modele explicative în discursul antisemit de după al doilea război mondial (1945–1950)", in Caietele Echinox, Issue 13, 2007Wexler & Popov, passim From the beginning, it was a satellite organisation of the PCR: its first-ever meetings were attended by PCR envoy Vasile Luca, supported by two Jewish party colleagues—Maxy and industrialist Emil Calmanovici.Crăciun, p.
The Hermitage of El Rocío ( or Ermita de El Rocío) is a hermitage at El Rocío in the countryside of Almonte, Province of Huelva, Andalusia, Spain. The hermitage is home to the Virgin of El Rocío (), a small, much-venerated carved wood statue, and is the destination of an annual procession/pilgrimage on the second day of the Pentecost, known as the Romería de El Rocío, connected to the veneration of the Virgin of El Rocío;El Rocio Pilgrimage , visithuelva.com. Retrieved 2010-04-15.hermandadrociosevilla.com , passim. Retrieved 2010-04-14.
Browning 1992, p. 38. They also committed atrocities against both the Catholic and the Jewish populations as part of those "resettlement actions".Rossino, Alexander B., Hitler Strikes Poland, University of Kansas Press: Lawrence, Kansas, 2003, pp 69–72, en passim. After hostilities had ceased, the battalions−such as Reserve Police Battalion 101−took up the role of security forces, patrolling the perimeters of the Jewish ghettos in German-occupied Poland (the internal ghetto security issues were managed by the SS, SD, and the Criminal Police, in conjunction with the Jewish ghetto administration).
He was also interested in the collection of Transylvanian Romanian artifacts, added to the Bucharest Museum collection. Initially, he was in Lugosch (Lugoj), informing locals about Romanian folk art. One other such event took place in Hermannstadt (Sibiu), where he was invited by ASTRA to speak about the 50 years of development in Romanian art.Luceafărul (1914), passim This conference contained Tzigara' artistic credo: he believed that art was an objective reflection of social and cultural development, identifying the Westernization process, the proclamation of the 1881 Kingdom and later events with a profound transformation of Romania.
Michael Lovano, The Age of Cinna (Franz Steiner, 2002), passim, limited preview online. Censorinus is one of the two named friends of Publius Crassus who died with him at the Battle of Carrhae. Plutarch calls him "a man of senatorial dignity and a powerful speaker." During the battle, Censorinus is among those who ride with young Crassus on a last desperate cavalry foray; after sustaining heavy casualties, the Romans and their Gallic auxiliaries retreat to a sand dune, where hope is soon lost under the constant barrage of Parthian arrows.
By independence IFAN had offices in Saint-Louis, Abidjan, Bamako, Cotonou, Niamey, Ouagadougou, associated centers in Douala and Lomé, and permanent scientific research stations in Atar, Diafarabé, and Mont-Nimba. The 1940s and 50s saw more such projects undertaken, such as the 1943 Office of Colonial Scientific Research (Now the ORSTOM Soil Research Centre in Dakar-Hann) and the University of Dakar in 1957. Each of these institutions, begun as colonial instruments, evolved with the coming of independence into African tools to meet African needs.See J. Galliard, Passim.
Although Bill Dunne's brothers, Vincent, Miles, and Grant, were active in the American Trotskyist movement, participating in the Minneapolis Teamsters Strike of 1934, Bill Dunne was never part of that dissident communist movement.For more on the other three Dunne brothers, see Constance Ashton Myers, The Prophet's Army: Trotskyists in America, 1928-1941. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1977; passim. In 1934 he went so far as to author a polemic pamphlet for the Communist Party against his brothers and their comrades entitled Permanent Counter-Revolution: The Role of the Trotzkyites in the Minneapolis Strikes.
A period of unrest and anarchy followed, dated by Zuckerman to ca. 875–900. The absence of coin hoards from the 880s and 890s suggests that the Volga trade route ceased functioning, precipitating "the first silver crisis in Europe".Noonan, "Silver Crisis" 41–50; Noonan, "Fluctuations in Islamic Trade" passim After this economic depression and period of political upheaval, the region experienced a resurgence beginning in around 900. Zuckerman associates this recovery with the arrival of Rurik and his men, who turned their attention from the Volga to the Dnieper, for reasons as yet uncertain.
Snyder and, much more fully, Schiller cover these passim, see their indexes. Schiller's translator always translates the German term to "devotional images" etc. The term was first devised for a group of mainly sculptural subjects, including the Pietà and Pensive Christ, that were thought to have emerged in convents in south-western Germany in the 14th century, although their history is now believed to be more complicated.Hamburger, 3 In churches such images were often given a side-chapel, and sometimes are given special places in the rituals of Holy Week.
His first professional band, the Malchicks, scored some local success and gained attention by quickly throwing together permits for a public tribute performance the day after John Lennon was shot, but broke up over musical differences and over lead guitarist Lenny Rancher, Billy's younger brother, being too heavy a drinker at the time even by the standards of a hard-drinking crowd.Reader, Rocky Road, p.26-48. While in the Malchicks, Rancher met Karen Sage, who would remain his girlfriend for the rest of his life.Reader, Rocky Road, passim. p.
Conway was drummer on Early Riser, the ninth album by John Statz, recorded in 2019 and released in 2020. In 2019, Conway, Fitting, and Champagne got together and recorded an album. A live date was announced for January 19, 2020 at Club Passim in Cambridge -- which was to be their first appearance together on stage since all were members of Treat Her Right. Unfortunately, it was announced that week that Conway would not be able to perform at the event because of health issues and that Jerome Deupree and Larry Dersch would fill in.
1-9, and passim. the Versailles Treaty of April 1919 awarded German rights in Shandong Province to Japan. The representatives of the Chinese government put forth the following requests: # abolition of all privileges of foreign powers in China, such as extraterritoriality # cancelling of the "Twenty-One Demands" with the Japanese # return to China of the territory and rights of Shandong, which Japan had taken from Germany during World War I. The Western Allies dominated the meeting at Versailles, and paid little heed to Chinese demands. Britain and France were primarily interested in punishing Germany.
"Scripting: A Way of Talking" in The English Journal, Vol. 63, No. 6 (September 1974), 32-40, passim. Despite its deceptive simplicity in rhyme and meter, "Trees" is notable for its use of personification and anthropomorphic imagery: the tree of the poem, which Kilmer depicts as female, is depicted as pressing its mouth to the Earth's breast, looking at God, and raising its "leafy arms" to pray. The tree of the poem also has human physical attributes—it has a "hungry mouth", arms, hair (in which robins nest), and a bosom.
O'Donovan, Hy Fiachrach, Appendix, p. 449 The reasons for the Sliocht Íomhair's involvement and support of him are also not preserved, and so noting their ancestor Ímar's central importance in the beliefs of the greater family, a variety of explanations have been suggested. The one with the strongest support, entertained by John O'Donovan and his followers, is that what Collins found himself reporting was simply the garbled memory of a war between Clann Cathail and the Sliocht Íomhair, who importantly were regarded as a "collateral branch" themselves of the former.O'Donovan, passim.
Cf. AA.VV., Guglielmo Pizzirani 1886-1971, Bologna, Associazione Bologna per le Arti, 2010, passim. In 1965, Pizzirani received the Gold Medal and the Certificate of Merit for Culture and the Arts, from the Italian Ministry of Public Education"Medaglia d'oro ai benemeriti della cultura e dell'arte a Guglielmo Pizzirani" and several prizes from the Province of Bologna. Pizzirani died in 1971, but even after his death, many of his paintings were exhibited at various posthumous personales and are currently on show at important galleries and museums.Cf. Exhibition at Palazzo d'Accursio, Comune di Bologna.
Van Hoëvell, deemed a "radical" for his opinions,Veer, passim. stands alongside Dirk van Hogendorp as one of the most important and best-known Dutch anti- colonialists of the nineteenth century before Multatuli—he is regarded as one of Multatuli's predecessors. He was a passionate man, who felt it his duty to inform the Dutch citizenry of the arrogance of the Dutch colonial rulers, the widespread corruption among the native ruling classes, and the imposition of backbreaking labor on the local peasantry. Moreover, according to van Hoëvell, the colonial system harmed relationships between peoples.
Publius Rutilius Lupus was a Roman rhetorician who flourished during the reign of Tiberius. He was the author of a treatise on the figures of speech (de Figuris sententiarum et elocutionis), abridged from a similar work by the rhetorician Gorgias of Athens, who was the tutor of Cicero the Younger. (This rhetorician is not, of course, the well-known sophist Gorgias of Leontini, who lived in the time of Socrates.) In its present form the treatise is incomplete, as is clearly shown by the express testimony of Quintilian (Inst. ix.2.101–105 passim).
However, Maccus and Gofraid are usually assumed to be sons of the Aralt mac Sitric (died 940) mentioned above, the last known king of Limerick before Ivar, thus easily explaining Maccus' interest in the kingdom. Hence dynastic ties and rivalry could have existed.Etchingham, passim Uniquely Maccus brings the "lawmen" of the Isles with him and instead of being slain Ivar is captured, presumably for some offence in the opinion of Colmán Etchingham,Etchingham, p. 172 and perhaps related to his earlier expedition to Britain as argued by Hudson for another context.
An eastern concept that bears a kinship to western concepts of historic recurrence is the Chinese concept of the Mandate of Heaven, by which an unjust ruler will lose the support of Heaven and be overthrown.Elizabeth Perry, Challenging the Mandate of Heaven: Social Protest and State Power in China, Sharpe, 2002, , passim. G.W. Trompf describes various historic paradigms of historic recurrence, including paradigms that view types of large-scale historic phenomena variously as "cyclical"; "fluctuant"; "reciprocal"; "re-enacted"; or "revived".G.W. Trompf, The Idea of Historical Recurrence in Western Thought, pp.
His book also described the forced changes of life for the Sin Aikst/Lakes as conditions forced them away from traditional patterns and how they worked to preserve elements of their traditions. He explored the ambiguous effect of institutions such as the Chemawa Indian School circa 1940, which simultaneously acculturated natives to the majority American culture while inspiring a sense of "Indianness," rather than affiliation with only individual tribes.Reyes 2002, passim. His second book, Bernie Whitebear: An Urban Indian's Quest for Justice (2006), is a biography of his brother Bernie Whitebear (1937–2000).
Wright, 49–93 passim. In 2011, a 19th-century baseball club, composed of players from Long Island, was organized and adopted the name "Eckford of Brooklyn" or "Eckford Base Ball Club of Brooklyn". The club plays its home games at the Old Bethpage Village Restoration (OBVR) in Old Bethpage, New York, and won the in-house OBVR championship annually from 2012 through 2016 and the Mid-Atlantic Vintage Base Ball League (MAVBBL) Championship in 2016. The 21st-century Eckfords have quickly become one of the premier 19th-century base ball clubs in the United States.
Crăciun, p. 101 Historians debate as to whether or not Heraclid joined Günther on his travel to the Kingdom of England, but it is certain that he visited the Habsburg Netherlands. In 1553, at Brussels, Emperor Charles V recognized him as a military expert and took him into his own retinue. In the campaigns of 1554–1555, Heraclid saw action with the Reichsarmatur in the County of Flanders and at Thérouanne.Denize (1996), p. 53; Le Sergeant de Monnecove, passim He also made a decisive appearance in the battle of Renty.
BEIC) Giovanni Battista Pasquali was a leading printer in 18th-century Venice, supported by the British consul Joseph Smith (1682–1770), a patron and collector.Frances Vivian, Il Console Smith, mercante e collezionista, passim Pasquali was a scholar himself, who published his own essays as well as finely printed, unpretentious editions for a scholarly readership.Anne Palms Chalmers, "Venetian Book Design in the Eighteenth Century" The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin, 29.5 (January 1971:226-235) p. 227. He signed the Latin preface to his printed catalogue of Smith's distinguished library, Bibliotheca Smithiana, seu Catalogus librorum d.
Downing was undoubtedly a man of great political, diplomatic, and financial ability, but his character has often been maligned by his enemies because of his willingness to make the most of changing political circumstances, and to brutally betray former comrades in order to win favour from his current masters. Jordan, Don; Walsh, Michael (2013). The King's Revenge: Charles II and the Greatest Manhunt in British History. Little, Brown, passim Today his reputation is undergoing a revision among scholars of the period as his contributions as a financial reformer and diplomat are again recognised.
Many Mesoamerican flood myths have been documented in written form or passed down through in oral tradition. Some clearly have Christian influences, but others are believed by scholars to represent native flood myths of pre- Columbian origin.Horcasitas 1988, passim One myth documented among the Tlapanec and Huaxtecs has a man and his dog as the sole survivors of the deluge, but the man finds out that the dog takes the shape of a woman during the day when he is away. The man and the dogwoman then repopulate the earth.
Semitic visitor to Egypt, described as "Abisha the Hyksos" leading a group of Aamu ( "West Asians"), in the painting of a group of foreigners in the Tomb of Khnumhotep II, c. 1900 BC. Howard Vos has suggested that the "coat of many colors" said to have been worn by Joseph could be similar to the colorful foreign garments seen in the painting. In the Hebrew Bible, the coat of many colors ( ketonet passim) is the name for the garment that Joseph owned, which was given to him by his father Jacob.
In March 1930 she added almost to the world altitude record, flying to a height of . Her articulate performance in an NBC broadcast interview after that flight won her a position as a broadcaster covering the world of aviation, including live broadcasts from air shows and interviews with other prominent aviators. passim. In May 1930, still before her 19th birthday, she became the youngest pilot ever granted a Transport License by the U.S. Department of Commerce. In October 1930 a poll of licensed pilots selected her as the "Best Woman Pilot in America".

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