Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Pope Zachary" ¶ 2
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

correspondence and considerable
Sir John Evelyn Shuckburgh of the new Middle East department of the Foreign Office discovered that the correspondence prior to the declaration was not available in the Colonial Office, ' although Foreign Office papers were understood to have been lengthy and to have covered a considerable period '.
The correspondence of single consonants had been more or less clearly recognized by several of his predecessors including Friedrich von Schlegel, Rasmus Christian Rask and Johan Ihre, the last having established a considerable number of literarum permutationes, such as b for f, with the examples bœra = ferre, befwer = fiber.
Though he is known to classical scholars as the last possessor of complete versions of Callimachus ' Hecale and Aitia, he was a versatile writer, and composed homilies, speeches and poems, which, with his correspondence, throw considerable light upon the miserable condition of Attica and Athens at the time.
Albert never visited the Holy Land, but he appears to have had a considerable amount of discourse with returned crusaders, and to have had access to valuable correspondence.
Thomas sent his wife, Frances Lucretia Kellogg Thomas, the following telegram, the only communication surviving of the Thomases ' correspondence: " We have whipped the enemy, taken many prisoners and considerable artillery.
There was considerable correspondence between the Commission and Ivan Holyman, the Chairman of ANA, with a view to recruiting Holyman as General Manager of TAA at the princely salary of £ 10, 000 pa, and, when that offer was declined, of buying the near-monopoly airline outright.
Their considerable correspondence shows evidence of his lasting love for her despite his infidelities and personal emotional turmoil.
* The Grenville Papers ( London, 1852 ), a considerable portion of which consists of Earl Temple's correspondence ;
This occurred only after very considerable opposition from the King and a detailed correspondence between them, also involving the incumbent governor-general ( George's brother the Duke of Gloucester ) and the British Foreign Office, the details of which did not come to light till over 50 years later.
Besides some historical works he left a correspondence of considerable political interest.
" As to the third version, the report described it as one of several " duplicate citations " that were issued in 1985 after " considerable correspondence indicating efforts over the years to chase down various citations ," and stated that the ones under Lehman's name were likely signed by machine.
After considerable correspondence the details of the new constitution were settled, and a bill, approved by Her Majesty's Government, finally passed the local legislature in 1889.
There was also considerable correspondence with its listeners.
The diplomatic correspondence between Russia and the United States involving Jews is of considerable bulk.
These houses were inspected by the Committee on 27 September, and have since been the subject of considerable correspondence and several meetings.
In correspondence home, he observed that he was seasick, and that the gales caused considerable broken crockery aboard ship.
The source of his education is not known, but that he was well educated is apparent from his correspondence, and from his considerable command of English law.
Afterwards we eat breakfast together, and my day then begins with sorting through the correspondence, which arrives in considerable quantity.
The earliest such synchronisms appear in the 15th century BC, during the Amarna Period, when we have a considerable quantity of diplomatic correspondence between the Egyptian Kings Amenhotep III and Akhenaten, and various Near Eastern monarchs.
There is a detailed account of Hauterive, with considerable extracts from his correspondence with Talleyrand, in the Biographie universelle by A. F. Artand le Montor, who published a separate life in 1831.

correspondence and extent
But any further development of Otho's policy was checked once Otho had read through Galba's private correspondence and realized the extent of the revolution in Germany, where several legions had declared for Vitellius, the commander of the legions on the lower Rhine River, and were already advancing upon Italy.
Division and controversy centred on this motion and its application continued to the extent that, ten years later, in 2007, Giles Goddard of Inclusive Church suggested in published correspondence with Andrew Goddard across the liberal-evangelical divide: " It's possible to construct a perfectly coherent argument that the last 10 years have been preoccupied with undoing the damage Lambeth 1. 10 caused to the Communion.
His voluminous correspondence yields to few collections of the kind in variety and interest, except to that of Madame de Sévigné, who is indeed represented in it to a great extent, and whose letters first appeared in it.
The existing written evidence ( including ongoing correspondence between the women concerning the development of the multi-volume series, Lane's extensive personal diaries detailing the time she spent working on the manuscripts, and Wilder's own initial draft manuscripts ) tends to reveal an ongoing mutual collaboration that involved Lane more extensively in the earlier books, and to a much lesser extent by the time the series ended, as Wilder's confidence in her own writing ability increased, and Lane was no longer living at Rocky Ridge Farm.
James exhibits a knack for popular expression that Peirce seldom sought, and here his analysis of correspondence by way of a simple thought experiment cuts right to the quick of the first major question to ask about it, namely: To what extent is the notion of correspondence involved in truth covered by the ideas of analogues, copies, or iconic images of the thing represented?
Among their other responsibilities were the matters of foreign affairs ( correspondence with other countries ) and to a smaller extent, the internal affairs, as they had also judiciary powers, presiding over the ‘ assessors ’ courts ’ ( Polish: Asesoria ), that were the highest appeal courts for people subjected to crown laws ( i. e. not subjected to ecclesiastic or magnates courts, but when a chancellor was an ecclesiastic person, he could judge the priests of the king's court ).
The passage of the education law of 1824 was to a great extent his work, and his correspondence with Lord Bathurst on this subject proved him a man of great diplomatic force.

correspondence and great
The great amiability and childlike simplicity of his character are well brought out in his Journal et correspondence ( Paris, 1872 ).
He also derived great satisfaction from his friendships and correspondence with Erasmus and other scholars.
In the preface, Abba Mari explains his object in collecting the correspondence ; and in the treatise which follows he shows that the study of philosophy, useful in itself as a help toward the acquisition of the knowledge of God, requires great caution, lest we be misled by the Aristotelian philosophy or its false interpretation, as regards the principles of creation ex nihilo and divine individual providence.
Writing in 409, Jerome remarked, " A great many years ago when I was helping Damasus, bishop of Rome with his ecclesiastical correspondence, and writing his answers to the questions referred to him by the councils of the east and west ..." If " east and west " do not betray the passage as an interpolation, Jerome spent three years ( 382 – 385 ) in Rome in close intercourse with Pope Damasus and the leading Christians.
While real-world sound changes often admit exceptions ( for a variety of known reasons, and sometimes without one ), the expectation of their regularity or " exceptionlessness " is of great heuristic value, since it allows historical linguists to define the notion of regular correspondence ( see: comparative method ).
Others claim they were prepared with great cooperation from Carroll, and that the correspondence of letters can tell his opinion of each.
) During disagreements about defensive forces on the Potomac River, McClellan wrote to his wife on August 10 in a manner that would characterize some of his more private correspondence: " Genl Scott is the great obstacle — he will not comprehend the danger & is either a traitor, or an incompetent.
With great fervour and strict consistency, Wolf Vostell collected photographs, artistic texts, private correspondence with colleagues such as Nam June Paik, Joseph Beuys, Dick Higgins and many others, as well as press cuttings, invitations to exhibitions and events or books and catalogues which document wolf Vostell's work and that of his contemporaries.
His Complete Letters of Oscar Wilde, compiled over the same period as Hart-Davis's correspondence with George Lyttelton, was described in a review of the latter as " a mammoth undertaking whose difficulties and challenges are documented in great detail in the letters, giving a satisfying portrayal of what dedication in literary scholarship looks like from the inside ".
The main characteristics of the style were: suggestion rather than statement, sensuality, great use of symbols, and synaesthetic effects — that is, correspondence between words, colours and music.
Discussions of historical evidence from the East and the West with Kunio Yanagita, as shown in their abundant correspondence, had a great influence to the birth and the development of Japanese folklore studies.
Under his superintendence was begun the great series of publications, besides that of the correspondence of Frederick the Great, which he helped to edit.
His tender affection for his relatives abundantly appears from his correspondence, along with his profound attachment to the great ideas of the Revolution and his noble love of country.
The principle that cardinal number was to be characterized in terms of one-to-one correspondence had previously been used to great effect by Georg Cantor, whose writings Frege knew.
His prolific correspondence was of great benefit when the Revolution broke out in 1917, as he had contacts throughout Ukraine.
Grigore II Ghica's diplomatic skills proved even more remarkable during the Russo-Austrian-Turkish War, when the Prince of Moldavia, at the request of the Porte, acted as the intermediary and mediator between the Ottomans and Russians through correspondence and exchange of envoys with the Russian Field Marshal Burkhard Christoph von Münnich, with John Bell, the secretary of the British embassy in St. Petersburg, with the French ambassador to Constantinople, Louis Sauveur Villeneuve, as well as with the great Ottoman dignitaries.
Kelly was of great help to the Hungryalist group of poets of India during the trial of Malay Roy Choudhury, with whom he had correspondence, now archived at Kolkata.
Haldimand created and preserved a great deal of written correspondence, especially during his time in North America.
While thus occupied he had an extensive correspondence with Halley, a very great part of which is extant.
His correspondence shows that he left prepared for failure, that he did not believe that the garrison could hold out against the French force, and that he was already resolved to come back from Minorca if he found that the task presented any great difficulty.
The correspondence reveals the Pastons in a great variety of relations to their neighbours, friendly or hostile ; and abounds with illustrations of the course of public events, as well as of the manners and morals of the time.
He was also a noted politician in his home region, and a tireless letter-writer ( 10, 000 of his letters survive, and he was in constant correspondence with Malherbe, Hugo Grotius, the brothers Dupuy, Alphonse-Louis du Plessis de Richelieu, and with his great friend Rubens.

0.859 seconds.