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key and figure
As a key figure in the Utah War, he led U. S. troops who established a non-Mormon government in the formerly Mormon territory.
He was a key figure in the Danish policies of territorial expansion in the Baltic Sea, Europeanization in close relationship with the Holy See, and reform in the relation between the Church and the public.
Asquith died in 1928 and the enigmatic figure of Lloyd George returned to the leadership and began a drive to produce coherent policies on many key issues of the day.
This led the key figure in organizing the resistance, Paul Kruger, into conflict with the British.
of the figure are moved by the animator on key frames.
Some also see him as a champion of anti-Communism, being a key figure during the formative years of the World Anti-Communist League.
A key figure behind the census was Herbert Hope Risley, best known for the now discounted attribution of all differences in caste to varying proportions of seven racial types.
Mahmud Tarzi, a highly educated, well-traveled poet, journalist, and diplomat, was a key figure that brought Western dress and etiquette to Afghanistan.
Antonio José de Sucre, the brilliant young lieutenant of Bolívar who arrived in Guayaquil in May 1821, was to become the key figure in the ensuing military struggle against the royalist forces.
Epicurus is a key figure in the development of science and the scientific method because of his insistence that nothing should be believed, except that which was tested through direct observation and logical deduction.
He was a key figure in the Axial Age, the period from 800 BC to 200 BC, during which similarly revolutionary thinking appeared in China, India, Iran, the Near East, and Ancient Greece.
Also called " Forry ," " The Ackermonster ," " 4e " and " 4SJ ," Ackerman was central to the formation, organization, and spread of science fiction fandom, and a key figure in the wider cultural perception of science fiction as a literary, art and film genre.
The Reform Package debate has seen the return of key political figure and former Chief Secretary Anson Chan, raising speculations of a possible run up for the 2007 Chief Executive election, though she dismissed having a personal interest in standing for the next election.
John MacLean emerged as a key political figure in what became known as Red Clydeside, and in January 1919, the British Government, fearful of a revolutionary uprising, deployed tanks and soldiers in central Glasgow.
* 1858 – Eliezer Ben-Yehuda, key figure in the revival of Hebrew as a spoken language ( d. 1922 )
Ribbentrop is also a key figure in the historical novel Famous Last Words by Timothy Findley ( Penguin Books 1982, ISBN 0-14-006268-8 ) and Harry Turtledove's alternate history series Worldwar where his Soviet counterpart Molotov frequently expresses contempt for his lack of intelligence.
Van Buren was a key organizer of the Democratic Party, a dominant figure in the Second Party System, and the first president not of British or Irish descent — his family was Dutch.
As Andrew Jackson's Secretary of State and then Vice President, Van Buren was a key figure in building the organizational structure for Jacksonian democracy, particularly in New York State.
Hamid Karzai, a prominent figure from the Popalzai clan, became the president of Afghanistan and Zahir Shah's relatives and supporters were provided with key posts in the transitional government.
Although Gerald Gardner, a key figure in Wicca, was arguably homophobic this historical aversion is not now commonly held.
The key figure of Hungarian national opera in the 19th century was Ferenc Erkel, whose works mostly dealt with historical themes.
His mother Maria was a key figure in Pietro's spiritual development: she imagined a different future for her deeply-beloved son than becoming just a farmer or a shepherd.
For thousands of years, the polar bear has been a key figure in the material, spiritual, and cultural life of Arctic indigenous peoples, and polar bears remain important in their cultures.
* Stuyvesant was a key figure in the Belgian comic strip Suske en Wiske in episode 269, " De Stugge Stuyvesant ".

key and 17th
In the 17th century, the importance of Lesser Poland diminished, when Warsaw and centrally located province of Mazovia emerged as key parts of the nation.
However, the 17th century was not simply an era of stagnation and decline, but also a key period in which the Ottoman state and its structures began to adapt to new pressures and new realities, internal and external.
Since the 17th century, the Rosary began to appear as an element in key pieces of Roman Catholic Marian art, often in art that depicts the Virgin Mary.
The Highlanes Gallery houses Drogheda's important municipal art collection which dates from the 17th century as well as visiting exhibitions in a venue which meets key international museum and gallery standards.
One reason for the continued popularity of bloodletting ( and purging ) was that, while anatomical knowledge, surgical and diagnostic skills increased tremendously in Europe from the 17th century, the key to curing disease remained elusive, and the underlying belief was that it was better to give any treatment than nothing at all.
While it remains in the realm of speculation where 17th Century Pequot settlements were located in North Stonington, it is possible that the area in which the Village of North Stonington is currently located might earlier have been a key settlement for them, given the proximity to moving water and generally flat terrain conducive to agriculture.
During the 17th century and 18th century a key industry in the town was brewing.
During the second half of the 17th century, German composers started pairing preludes ( or sometimes toccatas ) with fugues in the same key ; Johann Pachelbel ( c. 1653 – 1706 ) was one of the first to do so, although Johann Sebastian Bach's ( 1685 – 1750 ) " prelude and fugue " pieces are much more numerous and well-known today.
Later Toungoo kings instituted several key administrative and economic reforms that gave rise to a smaller, peaceful and prosperous kingdom in the 17th and early 18th centuries.
In Eck's wake, many Jesuits were appointed to key positions in the school, and the university, over most of the 17th century, gradually came fully under the control of the Jesuit order.
During the 17th and 18th centuries, harpsichord builders gradually increased the size and bass range of their instruments, to the point where every bass note could be properly played with its own key.
A key element of local architecture, as noted by Jean-Claude Marsan, is that the Habitant house-style of the 17th century proved so reliable, affordable and aesthetically pleasing it was repeated well into the 20th century with few major structural modifications.
After the liquidation of the Bulge, the Siegfried Line was pierced, Lützkampen falling 7 February, Grosskampenberg on the 17th, and the key point, Roscheid, 20 February.
In Japan, the Netherlands continued to play a key role in transmitting Western know-how to the Japanese from the 17th century to the mid-19th century, as the Japanese had opened their doors only to Dutch merchants before US Navy Captain, Commodore Perry ’ s visit in 1852.
In seventeenth-century France, the notion of decorum ( les bienséances ) was a key component of French classicism in both theater and the novel ( see French literature of the 17th century ), as well as the visual arts-see hierarchy of genres.
In the early 17th century, Galileo made extensive use of experimentation to validate physical theories, which is the key idea in the modern scientific method.
Johan de Witt, heer van Zuid-en Noord-Linschoten, Snelrewaard, Hekendorp and IJsselveere ( 24 September 1625 – 20 August 1672 ) was a key figure in Dutch politics in the mid 17th century, when its flourishing sea trade in a period of globalization made the United Provinces a leading European power during the Dutch Golden Age.
Extract and symbol key from 17th century alchemy text.
A key surface transportation route since the 17th century, the Isthmus of Chignecto was crossed by French and later British military roads to the Tantramar Marshes and along the strategic ridges.
However, the club's form faltered badly as key loanees Shefki Kuqi and Frank Fielding returned to their parent clubs and the club picked up just 1 win from its next 11 league fixtures to slip to 17th in the table come February 2011, and suffered a shock 2-1 FA Cup defeat to Crawley Town, a result described as one of the " biggest shocks " in FA Cup history.
He wrote on the 17th of April 1756, with undisguised contempt, that " the complete manuscript will be at the Dresden court, kept under lock and key as something very rare …".
The fiesta and abbey act as key instruments for the preservation, propagation and dissemination of the pious legend of Saint Caecilius, by which the city of Granada in the 17th century sought to redefine its historic identity, replacing its Moorish past with fabricated ( or re-discovered ) accounts of Christian origins.
These include the long par 3 17th, whose place in golf history was assured when Jack Nicklaus ( 1972 ) and Tom Watson ( 1982 ) made key shots there to win U. S. Opens.

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