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Amerbach and was
Johann Amerbach ( b. c. 1440 in Amorbach, Germany ; d. 25 December 1513 in Basel, Switzerland ) was a celebrated printer in Basel in the 15th century.
Its origins lie with the Amerbach family in the 16th century whose Wunderkammer was bought by Basel 1661 and brought to the public 1671.

Amerbach and university
After completing his university career at Basel, where he made the acquaintance of the famous printer Johann Amerbach ( circa 1440 — 1513 ), Froben established a printing house in that city about 1491, and this soon attained a European reputation for accuracy and taste.

Amerbach and Basel
Holbein also painted the occasional portrait in Basel, among them the double portrait of Jakob and Dorothea Meyer, and, in 1519, that of the young academic Boniface Amerbach.
His studies in this language had been continued at Basel under Andronicus Contoblacas, and here he formed the acquaintance of the bookseller, Johann Amerbach, for whom he prepared a Latin lexicon ( Vocabularius Breviloquus, 1st ed, 1475 – 76 ), which ran through many editions.
The museum also preserves old cabinets of curiosities which have been bequeathed, as Amerbach cabinet and Faesch cabinet, which works great collectors Basel sixteenth and seventeenth century.

Amerbach and .
According to art historian Paul Ganz, the portrait of Amerbach marks an advance in his style, notably in the use of unbroken colours.
* Carlos Gilly ( 2001 ), Die Manuskripte in der Bibliothek des Johannes Oporinus: Verzeichnis der Manuskripte und Druckvorlagen aus dem Nachlass Oporins anhand des von Theodor Zwinger und Basilius Amerbach erstellten Inventariums.
* Barbara C. Halporn ( editor ), The Correspondence of Johann Amerbach, University of Michigan Press, November 2000, hardcover, 400 pages, ISBN 0-472-11137-X

Cabinet and originally
At that time Ormsby-Gore, speaking for the government in Commons, said, " The draft as originally put up by Lord Balfour was not the final draft approved by the War Cabinet.
Leo Amery, who is well known for his later career as a senior Conservative politician and Cabinet minister, was originally elected as a Liberal Unionist at a Birmingham South by-election in 1911.
This interpretation was originally put across in the work of nineteenth century constitutionalists such as Walter Bagehot, who described the Cabinet as the ' efficient secret ' of the British political system in his book The English Constitution.
This work was a commission from Dionysius Lardner's Cabinet Cyclopaedia, and was originally intended to be condensed into two or three duodecimo volumes.
Vaughan council originally rejected the proposal of a youth councillor but after the Vaughan Youth Cabinet amended their proposal, Council accepted the recommendation.
The system was originally promulgated as Japanese Cabinet Order No. 3 as of September 21, 1937.
Cabinet files were known originally as Diamond files.
The United States Department of War, also called the War Department ( and occasionally War Office in the early years ), was the United States Cabinet department originally responsible for the operation and maintenance of the United States Army.
Bernal, and had originally been recommended to Lord Mountbatten, Chief of Combined Operations, by the Cabinet minister Leopold Amery.
: It was originally the practice for the Chiefs of Staff to attend all military discussions of the Chamberlain War Cabinet.
Although originally run under the Cabinet Office, it was moved between Departments in 1995 to operate under the Department of Trade and Industry.
Both departments are descended from the Chief Secretary for Ireland's Office, originally based in Dublin Castle, which was the administrative office of the dominant politician of Cabinet rank in the British government in Ireland in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
The newly created Cabinet position of Secretary of State for Constitutional Affairs ( originally created to wholly replace the Lord Chancellor's executive function ) continued, although the holder of that Cabinet post — renamed Secretary of State for Justice in 2007 — currently also holds the office of Lord Chancellor.
The term Kabinett, also known as Cabinet, originally implied a wine of superior quality, set aside for later sale.
It was originally dubbed the " Cabinet Commons " when it was constructed.
Carlos Miguel Gutierrez ( originally Gutiérrez ) ( born November 4, 1953 ) is an American former CEO and former U. S. Cabinet Member who is currently a Vice Chairman of Citigroup's Institutional Clients Group.
The Company was originally founded by Edward Shortt, a former Liberal Cabinet Minister, in 1935 as Nightwatch Services: its guards rode bicycles and wore old police uniforms.
On the Representatives side, the extensions necessitated the demolition of the Prime Minister's suite of offices ( originally intended for the Speaker ) and the original Cabinet Room.
It was originally intended as a replacement in the Milestone line-up for Shadow Cabinet, which was not selling well.
As a Minister, McKim originally held the portfolios of Sustainable Transport and Alternative Energy, Corrections and Consumer Protection, Climate Change, Human Services, and Community Development: though he delegated responsibility for the portfolios of Human Services and Community Development to fellow Greens MP and then Cabinet Secretary Cassy O ' Connor.

Cabinet and private
All ministers, whether senior and in the Cabinet, or junior ministers, must support the policy of the government publicly regardless of any private reservations.
In later years, he recorded his appointment from private to lance-corporal in his Who's Who entry, on other occasions describing it as a greater promotion than entering the Cabinet.
A closet, through French from Latin clausum, " closed " began life in the 17th century as a small private room, often behind a bedroom, to which a man or woman could retire, for privacy, reading, or enjoyment of personal works of art: for this usage, see Cabinet ( room ).
Butterfield said he was reluctant to answer, but finally stated there was a new system in the White House that automatically recorded everything in the Oval Office, the Cabinet Room and others, as well as Nixon's private office in the Old Executive Office Building.
Set principally in the private office of a British Cabinet minister in the ( fictional ) Department for Administrative Affairs in Whitehall ( the sequel was set in the Prime Minister's offices at 10 Downing Street ), the series follows the ministerial career of The Rt Hon Jim Hacker MP, played by Paul Eddington.
Charles I began a formal " Cabinet Council " from his accession in 1625, as his Privy Council, or " private council ", was evidently not private enough, and the first recorded use of " cabinet " by itself for such a body comes from 1644, and is again hostile and associates the term with dubious foreign practises.
It is funded primarily ( 90 %) through a television fee, allocated by the Cabinet of Finland, which is between € 208. 15 and € 215. 4 per year, as well as through private television broadcasting license fees.
* Cabinet ( room ), a private room serving as a retreat, furnished with books and works of art, usually adjacent to a bedchamber.
* Cabinet of curiosities, early form of private museum
* In Australia's One Nation Party case, it has been revealed that Federal Cabinet Minister Tony Abbott controlled " slush funds " which were used to lay the groundwork for party leader Pauline Hanson's prosecution, and to guarantee a private lawsuit against the party.
Cairncross worked initially in the Cabinet Office as a private secretary to Lord Hankey, the Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster.
Even though he had been moved to Secretary of State for Defence, Reid was the main opponent of her proposals, and a leading figure in the decision of the Cabinet to grant an exemption for private clubs and pubs that did not serve food.
After leaving the Grant Cabinet in 1877 and briefly serving under President Hayes, Fish returned to private life, practicing law and managing his real estate in New York City.
Members of the Seimas may serve as Prime Minister or Cabinet member, but they may not hold any other position in either central or local government or in private enterprises or organizations.
The strictly private Cabinet meetings occur once a week to discuss vital issues and formulate policy.
Although it started over a private matter, it affected the political careers of several men and resulted in the informal " Kitchen Cabinet ".
From the time he was dropped from the Cabinet, Kategaya returned to practice as a private lawyer with J. B. Byamugisha Advocates, a law firm based in Kampala.
The Cabinet Office of the British government until 2010 had an Office of the Third Sector that defined the " third sector " as " the place between State and ( the ) private sector.
Hatch was a lawyer in private practice and became the chairman of the State DFL Party in 1980, before Governor Rudy Perpich appointed Hatch to his Cabinet as Commissioner of the state Department of Commerce, a position he served in from 1981-1989.
Smith ), Lord Chancellor in the Coalition Cabinet of Lloyd George, described by Alan Clark ( The Tories 1999 ) as having a ' vigorous private life '.
However, the right-winged Cabinet of Carl Bildt wanted to introduce private enterprise in the construction of the line.
CTV News reported that Prime Minister Harper forced Guergis to resign from Cabinet and suspended her from caucus, after private investigator Derek Snowdy, who was investigating Gillani on an unrelated matter, claimed that Gillani had made some verbal accusations about Guergis and Jaffer.
Although the palace has nearly 3 000 square metres of floor space, and private apartments for the President and their family, much of the palace is occupied by offices and accommodation for the Office of the President, including the Secretary General, Presidential Cabinet, military Aides-de-Camp, and the household staff.

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