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Lords and Vaumartin
Most of her novels have grown slowly in the back of her mind, often the result of non-fiction articles and essays she has written, though The Belt of Gold and The Lords of Vaumartin were written " cold " as the result of requests by her editor.

Lords and 1988
William Whitelaw was Margaret Thatcher's deputy from 1979 – 1988, a post he combined with that of Home Secretary in 1979 – 83 and Leader of the House of Lords after 1983.
The 1988 Act defines it as covering, " Where a work is made by or under the direction or control of the House of Commons or the House of Lords ..."
By early 1988 the Lords of the Wasteland had become Mother Love Bone.
Strathclyde first entered the House of Lords in 1986, becoming a junior whip in 1988, then Minister for Tourism in 1989.
Having been High Sheriff of Somerset from 1978 to 1979, he was made a life peer in 1988 as Baron Rees-Mogg of Hinton Blewett in the County of Avon, and sits in the House of Lords as a cross-bencher.
He was also a Conservative politician and served as Leader of the House of Lords from 1988 to 1990.
He was a deputy speaker in the House of Lords from 1982 to 1988.
Eventually, in 1988, the book was cleared for legitimate sale when the Law Lords acknowledged that overseas publication meant it contained no secrets.
John Julian Ganzoni, 2nd Baron Belstead PC ( 30 September 1932 – 3 December 2005 ) was a British Conservative politician and peer who served as Leader of the House of Lords under Margaret Thatcher from 1988 to 1990.
Firstly, the relief sought required the court to order positive action in the shape of the disapplication of the 1988 Act and the application of the 1894 Act ; were Factortame not to succeed before the ECJ, the House of Lords would have " conferred upon them rights directly contrary to Parliament's sovereign will ".
Secondly, the prospects of Factortame succeeding in a full trial of the case once the ECJ had given its ruling on the compatibility of the 1988 Act ; in this regard, the House of Lords took into account indications from the ECJ's first ruling that Factortame's arguments had ' considerable force '.
This meant that other claims against the Merchant Shipping Act 1988 would only be admissible if they had been lodged by 10 July 1996 ( i. e. six years from the House of Lords ' decision of 9 July 1990 granting Factortame interim relief ), if not such claims were statute-barred.
* Italian: " I Signori di Garth " (" Lords of Garth "), 1988
The Local Government Finance Bill 1988, which introduced the Community Charge (" Poll Tax "), was not certified as a Money Bill and was therefore considered by the Lords.
* Lords of the Rising Sun ( Japanese Samurai movies ; 1988, Amiga, Atari ST, DOS )
He led the SDP in the House of Lords from 1982 to 1988 but opposed its merger with the Liberals and rejoined Labour in 1995.
The Plymouth Marine Laboratory was founded in 1988, mainly due to the recommendations of a House of Lords Report.
In 1988, the Lords upheld the acquittal.
The first album House of Lords, was released in 1988 and experienced a modest amount of commercial success with the single " I Wanna Be Loved ".
* House Of Lords ( 1988 )
The Crown then appealed to the House of Lords, but the appeal was turned down in April 1988.
Prior to 1856 the jurisdiction for exchequer causes was that of the Court of Exchequer, which has been transferred to the Court of Session with one of the Lords Ordinary required to be Lord Ordinary in Exchequer Causes, this was restated by the Court of Session Act 1988.
One of the Lords Ordinary in the Outer House of the Court of Session was to be Lord Ordinary in Exchequer Causes, this was restated by the Court of Session Act 1988.
** Not of This Earth ( 1988 )-a remake with Traci Lords.

Lords and de
de: Myth: The Fallen Lords
Armed conflicts nevertheless continued, in particular with certain dissatisfied Marcher Lords, such as the earl of Gloucester, Roger Mortimer and Humphrey de Bohun, Earl of Hereford.
The Dark Powers most frequently serve as a plot device for Ravenloft, especially concerning the Dark Lords, the de facto visible rulers of the Ravenloft Demiplane.
John Selden in his esteemed work Titles of Honour writes, " The word Baro ( Latin for Baron ) hath been also so much communicated, that not only all Lords of Mannors have been from antient time, and are at this day called sometimes Barons ( as in the stile of their Court Barons, which is Curia Baronis, & c. And I have read hors de son Barony in a barr to an Avowry for hors de son fee ) But also the Judges of the Exchequer have it from antient time fixed on them.
In 1784, during the conflict between Nguyễn Ánh, the surviving heir of the Nguyễn Lords, and the Tây Sơn Dynasty, a French Roman Catholic prelate, Pigneaux de Behaine, sailed to France to seek military backing for Nguyễn Ánh.
The last trial of a peer in the House of Lords was in 1935, when Lord de Clifford was tried for motor manslaughter.
In this form the castle and town became an important stronghold of Marcher Lords, in the de Clare and le Despenser dynasties, also the Beauchamps Earls of Warwick, Richard of York through his marriage into the Neville family, and the Herbert family, Earls of Pembroke.
The history of the site then continues through the lordships of the de Neufmarchés, which was confirmed at the Battle of Brecon in 1093, and also the Gloucester / Hereford families until 1165, when the district of Brycheiniog passed into the hands of the de Braose dynasty of Marcher Lords.
In this way, Asolf ’ s son Richard de Tang ( c. 1130-c. 1195 ) was the first in a line of Lords of Tong who would inhabit Tong Hall and oversee the running of the manor until 1941.
When Éamon de Valera was nominated as President of the Executive Council in 1932, McNeill opted to travel to Leinster House, the parliament buildings, to appoint de Valera, rather than require that he go to the Viceregal Lodge, the Governor-General's residence and the former seat of British Lords Lieutenant, so as to avoid embarrassing de Valera, who was a republican.
The medieval Lords of the manor took de Stavelegh as their name, later becoming Stayley or Staley.
The first records of the de Stavelegh family as Lords of the Manor date from the early 13th century.
* The Jeu de Jean et Alice is a remake of a medieval play, more exactly a spoken, sung, and danced dialog between Jean and Alice, Lords of Wavre, and the city ’ s population.
The residents of Saint-Nicolas de Ver, possibly an unsuccessful town founded by the Lords de Mont, settled in Rolle.
In the Middle Ages, South Shropshire was part of the Welsh Marches, a lawless area ruled by tyrannical feudal lords, who as Marcher Lords had de facto independence from the King of England.
* Edward Southwell Russell, 26th Baron de Clifford, the last peer ever tried in the House of Lords.
At this stage, the House of Commons was de facto subservient to Lords, " managed from above " by the Lords ' handlers, following their lead and echoing their quarrels.
The barony of ' de Ros of Hamlake, Truibut and Belvoir ' ( sometimes spelled Ros, Roos or de Roos ) was created by Simon de Montfort with a writ of summons to the House of Lords for Robert de Ros ( 1223 – 1285 ) in 1264.

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