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21 Sentences With "treasonably"

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

It seems almost treasonably impolite to mention his Thirties' popularity in Royal circles at one stage.
He was accused of various minor offences, but tried and executed on the charge of treasonably quartering the royal arms.
However, Kirchner's case was brought back before the Volksgerichtshof in 1944. This time, Roland Freisler, the Chief Justice at the Volksgerichtshof, sentenced her to death, and she was beheaded at Plötzensee Prison in Berlin. The judgment accused Kirchner of having "treasonably rooted herself in the evilest Marxist high-treason propaganda". It also accused her of "treasonably gathering cultural, economic, political, and military intelligence and communicating" the same.
When he was charged with treason in 1467 it was alleged against him that his flags and standard had been set up treasonably on Carlow Castle.
Like Hierocles, he unfavorably compared Jesus to Apollonius of Tyana.Porphyry frg. 60, 63; Frend, "Prelude", 12. Porphyry held that Christians blasphemed by worshiping a human being rather than the Supreme God, and behaved treasonably in forsaking the traditional Roman cult.
11 (Edinburgh, 1936), pp. 430-1. In February 1597 he suffered a temporary setback when he was convicted of "treasonably printing" an Act of the Scottish Parliament. However, the conviction was later set aside. When King James acceded to the English crown, following the death of Queen Elizabeth in March 1603, Waldegrave returned to England, leaving his Edinburgh printing business in his wife's care.
O'Cahan's arrangement with Docwra regarding his lands was agreed to by the government, but Chichester managed to persuade the government to repudiate the deal. O'Cahan, says Bigger, went "frantic": his behaviour allowed Chichester to claim that O'Cahan had spoken and acted treasonably. O'Cahan spent the rest of his life imprisoned in the Tower of London, dying there around 1626. During his imprisonment, the Plantation of Ulster continued westwards.
Returning to Scotland in 1679, he again got into trouble in 1681, when among the papers of Archibald Campbell, 9th Earl of Argyll a memorandum in his hand was found, reflecting on the government. He took refuge in The Hague. He was present at the meeting at Amsterdam in 1685, when the expedition of Argyll was resolved on. Stewart having prepared Argyll's declaration of war, he was accused of treasonably consulting and contriving Argyll's rebellion, He was found guilty in his absence.
After a minor siege with French cannon, it was evacuated on 22 March 1550. The following year John Haitlie in Fawns and William Haitlie in Redpath (near Earlston) were arrested for "treasonably supplying the English in the Castle of Lauder, thereby enabling them to hold out longer."Thomson, A., FSA(Scot)., Lauder and Lauderdale, Galashiels, 1902: 178-181 The Crown which had in any case abandoned the fort during its occupation, had given it to Robert Lauder of that Ilk (d.
Ptolemy (), king of Epirus c. 237 BC – 234 ВС, was the second son of Alexander II, king of Epirus, and Olympias, grandson of the great Pyrrhus and brother of Phthia of Macedon. He was named in honour of his late uncle Ptolemy. He succeeded to the throne on the death of his elder brother, Pyrrhus II of Epirus, but reigned only a very short time, having set out on a military expedition, during the course of which he fell sick and died or, according to Polyaenus, he was treasonably assassinated.
The church was substantially rebuilt between 1467 and 1497. Of the earlier structures, only the former Lady Chapel (now the Clopton Chantry Chapel) and the nave arcades survive. The principal benefactor who financed the reconstruction was wealthy local wool merchant John Clopton, who resided at neighbouring Kentwell Hall. John Clopton was a supporter of the Lancastrian cause during the Wars of the Roses and in 1462 was imprisoned in the Tower of London with John de Vere, 12th Earl of Oxford and a number of others, charged with corresponding treasonably with Margaret of Anjou.
In fact, it was a forgery, or at least a falsification. Howison was charged at the Court of Justiciary for “treasonably causing to be printed a false, adulterate and altered Act of Parliament instead of the true and genuine Act of 1592. He was sentenced to prison, but the General Assembly petitioned the King and he was released on 7 March 1596. Back in Cambuslang, Howison brought a charge of immorality against James Hamilton of Turnelaw (one of the group who had complained about him to the Court of Session in Edinburgh).
John Barlow had once called Surrey "the most foolish proud boy that is in England" and, although the arms of Surrey's ancestor Thomas Mowbray, 1st Duke of Norfolk show that he was entitled to bear Edward the Confessor's arms, doing so was an act of pride. The Heraldic Charge Against the Earl of Surrey, Peter R. Moore, English Historical Review, Volume CXVI, pages 557 to 583, (2001). In consequence, the King ordered Surrey's imprisonment and that of his father, sentencing them to death on 13 January 1547. Surrey was beheaded on 19 January 1547 on a charge of treasonably quartering the royal arms.
Rosa Hofmann's case stands out from those of her Salzburg comrades on account of the additional charges that were included in the extended second indictment document of October 1942. She was also charged with "treasonably advantaging the enemy" ("landesverräterischer Begünstigung des Feindes") as described in §91 of the penal code and with "degrading the fighting power of the German people" ("Zersetzung der Wehrkraft des deutschen Volkes") which was an offence under §5, para 1 of the special Wartime criminal decree that had come into force in August 1938. Some of the KJV resistance activists from Vienna and Linz were also prosecuted for these offences, probably in connection with the leafleting.
He then worked as an assistant at St. Luke's Church in Baltimore, from where he was transferred to Frederick County and then to Chestertown, Kent County. In 1862 he was elected rector of Mount Calvary Church in Baltimore. During the American Civil War, Curtis seemed to favor the Confederacy. He wrote that the Union victories were “steps and stages towards eventual ruin” and that they were “matters of humiliation and not of thanksgiving.” Episcopalian Bishop William Rollinson Whittingham reacted by ceasing to be a pew holder at Mount Calvary, saying that he did not wish to be “associated with a body so treasonably ungrateful for Divine Mercy shown in the deliverance of the State from armed rebels and thieves.”Letter of Bishop Whittingham to Rev.
Tytler states that during the crisis of 1481 the Border barons and those whose estates lay near the sea were commanded to put into a posture of defence their various castles, one of which was Edrington. In July 1482, Edrington Castle was taken and burnt by Richard (the future King Richard III), Duke of Gloucester's army but was soon afterwards rebuilt and fortified by order (and presumably paid for) of the Scottish Parliament. Pitcairn records on 7 April 1529, a "remission to Robert Lauder of The Bass and eleven others for treasonably intercommuning, resetting and assisting Archibald Douglas, 6th Earl of Angus (who had been forfeited), George Douglas, his brother, and Archibald, their uncle" whom Lauder had given refuge to in his castle of Edrington. The Douglases went into exile across the border.
The charge was that he had aided the earl and his brother George Douglas of Pittendreich; > "to invade our sovereign lord's person and the barons that were with him for > his defence in the burgh of Stirling in the month of July last bypast; and > for art and part of the treasonable revealing of the things which were done > within the burgh of Stirling, treasonably advertising and explaining to the > said earl and George what number of men our sovereign lord had and of their > strength and power, and to give them "artatioune" to invade his highness > that they might decide whether it were more gainful to fight with him or > desist therefrom"The Records of the Parliaments of Scotland to 1707, K.M. > Brown et al eds (St Andrews, 2007-2019), 1528/9/10.
60 (Hathi Trust). The great matter then in preparation was the indictment against John Harleston (Captain of Ruysbank Castle), Edward Grymeston (Comptroller of Calais), Sir Ralph Chamberlain (Lieutenant of Calais Castle), Nicholas Alexander (Captain of Newenham Bridge Castle) and Thomas Lord Wentworth (Deputy of Calais), that they had become adherents of the King of the French and had treasonably conspired to deprive Her Majesty of Calais and the other castles and to surrender them to the French during the preceding January. The indictment was found before Thomas Curtis (lord mayor), Sir John Baker (Chancellor of the Exchequer), Sir Clement Heigham and Sir Robert Broke on 2 July 1558.'Pouch XXXVIII: Trial and Acquittal of Thomas Lord Wentworthe', in Fourth Annual Report of the Deputy Keeper of the Public Records (By Command, London 1843), Appendix II: Calendar of the Contents of the Baga de Secretis, at pp.
Scales of Justice is a detective novel by Ngaio Marsh. it is the eighteenth novel to feature Roderick Alleyn, and was first published in 1955. With a classic 'Golden Age' crime novel's setting, in the idyllic, self-contained, rural English community of Swevenings, the suspects all members of a tight- knit social group revolving around the local baronet and his family (the Lacklanders), the plot concerns the brutal murder of Colonel Carterette, an enthusiastic fisherman, who is preparing for publication the deceased squire's memoirs, which include the admission that as a high-ranking diplomat before World War Two, the baronet had treasonably put class before country in what has been called the Herrenvolk heresy, and knowingly let a young member of the embassy staff take the blame. The young man in question, who idolised the Lacklander ambassador, had committed suicide and his eccentric father is now the murdered colonel's neighbour.
In July 1745 two traders, James Dunning [one of the traders that had been banned in 1734] and Peter Tostee appeared in Philadelphia claiming that they had been robbed on 18 April: > ... as they were returning up the Allegheny River in canoes, from a trading > trip, with a considerable quantity of furs and skins, Peter Chartier, late > an Indian Trader, with about 400 Shawnese Indians, armed with guns, pistols > and cutlasses, suddenly took them prisoners, having, as he said, a captain's > commission from the King of France; and plundered them of all their effects > to the value of sixteen hundred pounds. The Pennsylvania provincial council issued an indictment of "Peter Chartier of Lancaster County ... Labourer [who], being moved and seduced by the instigation of the Devil ... falsely, traitorously, unlawfully and treasonably did compass, imagine and intend open war, insurrection and rebellion against our said Lord the King." Chartier's landholdings in Pennsylvania, totaling some 600 acres, were seized and turned over to Thomas Lawrence, a business partner of Edward Shippen, III. Chartier led his Shawnee band to Lower Shawneetown on the Ohio River where they took refuge for a few weeks.
One of the early parishioners was Robert E. Lee, who “attended Mount Calvary Episcopal Church regularly”Emory M. Thomas, Robert E. Lee: A Biography (New York: W.W. Norton & Co., 1997) page 148. when working on Fort Carroll in 1849 and living at 908 Madison Avenue. Baltimore was a city sharply divided during the American Civil War. The pastor of Mount Calvary Alfred Allen Paul Curtis (who later converted to Catholicism and became the second bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Wilmington) wrote that the Union victories were “steps and stages towards eventual ruin” and that they were “matters of humiliation and not of thanksgiving.” Episcopalian Bishop Whittingham reacted by ceasing to be a pew holder at Mount Calvary, saying that he did not wish to be “associated with a body so treasonably ungrateful for Divine Mercy shown in the deliverance of the State from armed rebels and thieves.”Letter of Bishop Whittingham to Rev. Curtis, July 18, 1863, Whittingham Papers, Peabody Institute, Baltimore. In spite of the early support of its rector for the Confederacy, Mount Calvary would become known for its outreach to the African-American community.

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