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21 Sentences With "seditions"

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

211 and 2012 riots and seditions erupted in Paris and later all France, resulting in the February Revolution. The National Guard refused to repress the rebellion, resulting in Louis Philippe abdicating and fleeing to England. On 24 February 1848, the monarchy was abolished and the Second Republic was proclaimed.La France au xixe siècle, p.
Indzhe Voyvoda () (c. 1755, Sliven - 1821, Sculeni) was a renowned Bulgarian leader (voivod) of an armed band of outlaws (hajduks) in Ottoman-held Bulgaria. He mainly operated in the mountainous regions of Strandzha, Sakar and the eastern Balkan Mountains. During the feudal seditions in the Ottoman Empire, Stoyan (his nickname Indzhe comes from Ottoman Turkish ince, "slim") became the leader of a large gang of robbers.
Perkin Warbeck In 1491 a second pretender to the English Crown, Perkin Warbeck, appeared in Ireland: he claimed to be Richard of Shrewsbury, younger son of King Edward IV of England. He received far less support than Simnel, (Kildare, prudently, refused to back him) but a small rising took place in which Plunket was implicated. He was removed from office and fined for "diverse seditions and transgressions" but not imprisoned.Ball 1920 p.
Malachy's son Montagu Wilmot Salter Old Burying Ground (Halifax, Nova Scotia) Salter was tried and convicted for uttering seditions words in February 1777. In November 1777, he was also charged with the serious misdemeanour of treasonable correspondence. Because of poor health, his trial was postponed and hung over him for the last three years of his life. Barry Cahill, "The Treason of the Merchants: Dissent and Repression in Halifax in the Era of the American Revolution", Acadiensis, Vol.
He then produces Francis Bacon's text "Of Seditions and Troubles". In this essay Bacon gives a complete description on the physics of sedition, sedition and the precautions to be taken against it, and of government of the 'people'. This became a worry for Bacon and other political theorists; the first signs of sedition were circulation of libels, pamphlets and discourse against the state and those who govern. Second, Bacon notices the reversal of values or evaluations which puts the existence at risk.
Elizabeth trusted in God, honest advice, and the love of her subjects for the success of her rule.Starkey Elizabeth: Woman, 6–7. In a prayer, she offered thanks to God that: > [At a time] when wars and seditions with grievous persecutions have vexed > almost all kings and countries round about me, my reign hath been peacable, > and my realm a receptacle to thy afflicted Church. The love of my people > hath appeared firm, and the devices of my enemies frustrate.
After the first disastrous failure in Assam, the Mughals henceforth continued to follow a defensive and conciliatory policy in regards to the Assam state. Because of their heavy engagement in Kamrup, the Mughals henceforward were very cautious not to offend their mighty neighbour. But the Ahoms being encouraged at their recent brilliant success continued to pursue hostile policy against the Mughals and proceeded to take advantage of the prevailing political confusion in Kamrup. The Assam disaster encouraged seditions and rebellions in Mughal occupied Kamrup.
By Our apostolic > power, We condemn the book: ... It corrupts the people by a wicked abuse of > the word of God, to dissolve the bonds of all public order and to weaken all > authority. It arouses, fosters, and strengthens seditions, riots, and > rebellions in the empires. We condemn the book because it contains false, > calumnious, and rash propositions which lead to anarchy; which are contrary > to the word of God; which are impious, scandalous, and erroneous; and which > the Church already condemned... The encyclical ends with plea for the author to recognize his errors.
Julia Soaemias Bassiana (180 – March 11, 222) was a Syrian noblewoman and the mother of Roman emperor Elagabalus, who ruled over the Roman Empire from 218 to 222. She was also de facto regent during her son's reign with her mother, Julia Maesa, and ruled Rome through and with the young emperor. However, the rule of mother and son by the seditions of the her influential mother Julia Maesa ended. She was born and raised in Emesa, Syria and through her mother was related to the Royal family of Emesa, and through marriage, to the Severan dynasty of Ancient Rome.
Hostettler (2010) p. 43 In 1783 Shipley, Jones's father-in-law, recommended it to a group of Welsh constitutional reformers and had it reprinted in Welsh with his own preface suggesting it was "just, rational and constitutional".Hostettler (2010) p. 44 As a result, Thomas FitzMaurice, the brother of the Earl of Shelburne, indicted Shipley for seditious libel, specifically for "publishing a false, scandalous and malicious libel ... to raise seditions and tumults within the kingdom, and to excite His Majesty's subjects to attempt, by armed rebellion and violence, to subvert the state and constitution of the nation".Faught (1946) p. 319 The law dealing with seditious libel was particularly strict.
Following the outbreak of the Syrian chaos in March 2011, Al-Bouti criticized anti- government protests and urged demonstrators not to follow "calls of unknown sources that want to exploit mosques to incite seditions and chaos in Syria." The opposition called him a hypocrite over his support for the uprising in Egypt, which he had written was Islamic, only to condemn protests as un- Islamic when they broke out in Syria itself. Al-Bouti did criticize President Assad in public, shortly after demonstrations had started, for a government decision to fire hundreds of female teachers for wearing the hijab. Following Al-Bouti's criticism, the decision was quickly revoked by President Assad.
And > are not great countries and populous kingdoms made desolate by domestic > seditions, through such causes? And are not earth and sea continually filled > with novel and terrible calamities by naval battles and military expeditions > for the same reason?"Philo, A Treatise Concerning the Ten Commandments > XXVIII The Book Exodus with the commentary of Abraham ibn Ezra, Naples 1488 Abraham ibn Ezra taught that a person can control his desires by training his heart to be content with what God has allotted to him. > "When he knows that God has forbidden his neighbor's wife to him, then she > is more elevated in his eyes than the princess in the eyes of the peasant.
This was true, but the senate argued that when it granted such exemptions it always specified that they were to continue only during its pleasure.Appian, Roman History, The foreign Wars, Book 6, The Spanish wars, 44 Classical sources also comment on other movements and seditions by other cities in the Celtiberian territories, and grave problems in Hispania Ulterior, where Punicus headed a Luso-Vettonic coalition against Rome.Enrique García Riaza "La expansión romana en Celtiberia" It is generally understood then, that the senate decision was so strict not only because it was fearful about the development of Segeda into a powerful city, but also because it was afraid of the development of a large scale rebellion in Hispania.
On 10 May 1559 Methuen and other prominent reformers were put on trial before the justiciary court at Stirling for usurping the ministerial office, for administering without the consent of their ordinaries the sacrament of the altar in a manner different from that of the Catholic Church, in the burghs of Dundee and Montrose, and for convening the subjects of the realm in those places, preaching to them erroneous doctrines, and exciting seditions and tumults. Being found guilty, he was 'denounced rebel and put to the horn as fugitive'.Pitcairn, Ancient Criminal Trials, i. 406 He was nominated by the lords of the congregation to the church of Jedburgh, Roxburghshire, 19 July 1560, in which year and the following he was a member of assembly.
1-3) Chicago, Illinois: Encyclopaedia Britannica. > (Original work published 1776) However, the Revolution did change course to set certain limits on the right of rebellion. In Federalist No. 28, Alexander Hamilton successfully made the case for a federal standing army, in opposition to Locke's principle that a republican government rules not by violence, but by law. Hamilton thought: > 'that seditions and insurrections are, unhappily, maladies as inseperable > from the body politic as tumours and eruptions from the natural body; that > the idea of governing all at all times by the simple force of law (which we > have been told is the only admissable principle of republican government) > has no place but in the reveries of those political doctors whose sagacity > disdains the admonitions of experimental instruction.
He recovered from more than 25 war injuries over the course of some 500 military battles, and none of Maceo's wounds diminished his willingness to lead his troops into combat. He had special recognition and admiration, as chief and war teacher, of the great Dominican strategist Máximo Gómez, who would become, in the years to come, the General-in-Chief of the Cuban Liberator Army. The use of the machete as a war weapon by Gómez as a substitute for the Spanish sword (also due to the scarcity of firearms and ammunition) was rapidly adopted by Maceo and his troops. Antonio Maceo rejected the military seditions of Lagunas de Varona and Santa Rita, which undermined the independence troops' unity and favoured a regionalism in Las Villas.
So, this man > retained his power a great while; he was also called king, and had nothing > to hinder him from doing what he pleased. > > Together with his brothers, he slew a great many of both of Roman and of > the king's forces, and managed matters with the like hatred to each of them. > They fell upon the king's soldiers because of the licentious conduct they > had been allowed under Herod's government; and they fell upon the Romans, > because of the injuries they had so lately received from them. But in > process of time they grew more cruel to all sorts of men, nor could anyone > escape from one or other of these seditions, since they slew some out of the > hopes of gain, and others from a mere custom of slaying men.
"The Spirit Level" by Richard Wilkinson and Kate Pickett;Bloomsbury Press 2009 During the Age of Reason, Francis Bacon wrote "Above all things good policy is to be used so that the treasures and monies in a state be not gathered into a few hands… Money is like fertilizer, not good except it be spread."Francis Bacon, Of Seditions and Troubles The rise of Communism as a political movement has partially been attributed to the distribution of wealth under capitalism in which a few lived in luxury while the masses lived in extreme poverty or deprivation. However, in the Critique of the Gotha Program, Marx and Engels criticized German Social Democrats for placing emphasis on issues of distribution instead of on production and ownership of productive property.Critique of the Gotha Program, Karl Marx.
An Executive Magistrate may be invested with the following powers by the Government and the District Magistrate: VI. An Executive Magistrate by the Government- (a) Power to issue search-warrant otherwise than in course of inquiry, section 98; (b) Power to require security for good behaviour in case of seditions, section 108; (c) Power to make orders prohibiting repetition of nuisance, section 143; (d) Power to make orders under section 144, 145 and 147; (e) Power to held inquests, section 174. VII. An Executive Magistrate by the District Magistrate - (a) Power to make orders prohibiting repetition of nuisance, section 143; (b) Power to hold inquests, section 174.] In addition to the powers mentioned above, any Executive Magistrate may be empowered by the Government as well as by the District Magistrate within respective jurisdiction to operate mobile court under the Mobile Court Act, 2009. This Act has a Schedule which contains a list of laws upon which mobile courts are administered .
Various seditions against the Umayyad Caliphate rose-up in the emirs and caliphates of Al-Garb Al-Andalus; the revolts of Ibn Marwan of Mérida/Badajoz or Umār ibn Hafsūn of Bobastro corresponds to a period of weak central government, when the Al Garb was a nominal extension of the Caliphate, an autonomous principality with its seat in Batalyaws (Badajoz). It was in the period of turmoil preceding the fall of the Caliphates (in 1031) that Sacavém was integrated into the Kingdom of Badajoz (except for a decade around 1020 when it was a part of al-Ušbuna, under ʿAbd al-ʿAziz ibn Sabūr and ʿAbd al- Malik ibn Sabūr (sons of Sabūr al-Saqlabi, a Slavic serf who sparked a revolt in against Caliph Al-Hakam II). This would last until the Aftasids conquered the region. In 1093, in a trade for aid against the Almoravids (from the Maghreb), the emir of Badajoz ceded to the imperator totius Hispaniæ Alfonso VI of León and Castile the castles of al-Ušbuna and aš-Šantaryin (Santarém), along with the territory of Sacavém.
Clement of Rome (c. 96) writes to the Corinthian congregation whose unity has been threatened because a "few rash and self- confident persons" have kindled shameful and detestable seditions towards the established leaders (presbyters) in the congregation (1 Clement 1). This jealous rivalry and envy has caused righteousness and peace to depart from the community (1 Clement 3). The writer laments: "Every one abandons the fear of God, and is become blind in His faith, neither walks in the ordinances of His appointment, nor acts a part becoming a Christian, but walks after his own wicked lusts, resuming the practice of an unrighteous and ungodly envy, by which death itself entered into the world." (1 Clement 3) Since history has demonstrated that many evils have flowed from envy and jealousy (1 Clement 4-6), the Corinthians are exhorted to repent (1 Clement 7-8), yield obedience to God's "glorious will," and to "forsake all fruitless labors and strife, and envy, which leads to death" (1 Clement 9:1).

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