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Page "Battle of Barnet" ¶ 10
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recompense and received
Timothy Palmer, who invented and later patented the arch type of construction for wooden bridges, was the genius who planned and supervised the building of the Essex, or `` Deer Island '' bridge although the actual work was carried out under the direction of William Coombs, who received $300 as recompense.
Disappointed in the level of recompense and respect he received from William, in 1085 Edgar secured the king's permission to emigrate with a retinue of two hundred knights, to seek his fortune in the expanding Norman colony in southern Italy and Sicily.
By the Treaty of Noyon, signed on the 13 August 1516 between Francis I of France and emperor Charles V, France abandoned its claims to the Kingdom of Naples and received the Duchy of Milan in recompense.
In 1911, his enemies urged for his dismissal from the Department of Agriculture on the technical charge that an expert in his department had received recompense exceeding the legal rate.
On September 22, 1508, de Torres's widow Catalina Sánchez, living then in Moguer ( Andalusia ), received a grant from the Spanish treasury in recompense for the services of her deceased husband.
Some scholars have suggested that the name means " the man with the double recompense " or rather " the man who received recompense twice over ", that is to say that it is a title for Job, as his family was returned to him according to the Qur ' an and the Book of Job.
The success of the record caused divisions within the group, with Brenston believing he was now the star and should front the group, and Turner and Raymond Hill bitter that they had received little recognition or recompense for writing and recording a hit record.
Heinrich III, Margrave of Meissen, received the castle from the Bishop from Naumburg in 1238 as recompense for services to the church and installed there a number of families belonging to the nobility of service ( retainers to a lord whose status was far above that of the peasantry but who nonetheless did not belong to the ranks of the high nobility ).

recompense and ;
In the Qur ' an, it is stated that ( 2: 62 ): " Surely, those who believe, those who are Muslims, Jewish, the Christians, and the Sabians ; anyone who ( 1 ) believes in GOD, and ( 2 ) believes in the Last Day, and ( 3 ) leads a righteous life, will receive their recompense from their Lord.
The original colonists signed the " Covenant of Planetfall ", agreeing that this outcome was just recompense for the labors of the crew during the voyage ; that they signed at gunpoint as they were awakened from hibernation is kept secret from later generations, and also that those who refused, died.
A man who bought a slave abroad might find that he had previously been stolen or captured from Babylonia ; he would then have to restore him to his former owner without recompense.
Accordingly, many monasteries proposed for dissolution put forward a case for continuation, offering to pay substantial fines in recompense ; and many of these cases were accepted, so that only 243 houses were actually dissolved at this time.
Unlike his mother-in-law who had supported the Parliamentary cause, Winston had had the misfortune of fighting on the losing side of the war for which he, like so many other Cavaliers, was forced to pay recompense ; in his case £ 446 18s.
As to the question concerning the frequent sufferings of the pious and the prosperity of the wicked — truly a burning one in Akiba's time — this is answered by the explanation that the pious are punished in this life for their few sins, in order that in the next they may receive only reward ; while the wicked obtain in this world all the recompense for the little good they have done, and in the next world will receive only punishment for their misdeeds ( Gen. R.
Pope Eugene IV, Cantate Domino ( 1441 ): " The most Holy Roman Church firmly believes, professes and preaches that none of those existing outside the Catholic Church, not only pagans, but also Jews and heretics and schismatics, can have a share in life eternal ; but that they will go into the " eternal fire which was prepared for the devil and his angels " ( Matthew 25: 41 ), unless before death they are joined with Her ; and that so important is the unity of this ecclesiastical body that only those remaining within this unity can profit by the sacraments of the Church unto salvation, and they alone can receive an eternal recompense for their fasts, their almsgivings, their other works of Christian piety and the duties of a Christian soldier.
As the Oxford Companion to the Bible states: " Since life was viewed as sacred ( Genesis 9. 6 ), no amount of blood money could be given as recompense for the loss of the life of an innocent person ; it had to be ' life for life '" ( Exodus 21. 23 ; Deuteronomy 19. 21 )".
Though initial attempts to acquire the pendant serve only to alienate the Earl's fiancée, Jill Wyvern, and the sale of the house, which would have yielded deposit enough to recompense the Captain, are thwarted by the tactlessness of Sir Roderick ; Jeeves comes up with a successful plan, which exploits Mrs Spottsworth's fascination in the supernatural.
A quick survey of non-Israelite legal codes from the time produces the following patterns: punishment for mere economic crimes can be capital ; punishment for murder can be a mere fine or economic recompense ; a man's family can be punished for crimes he did ; a high ranking ruler can pardon one subject from crimes he committed against another subject ; executions were often highly symbolic, disrespectful, and unusual.
In September 1808 John Bonnyman, a stonemason, had to have a finger amputated following an accident with the beam crane on the Rock ; as recompense for this mishap he was later appointed one of the first lighthouse keepers.
According to this biblical passage, the name Issachar refers to Leah hiring Jacob's sexual favours at the cost of some Mandrakes ; this suggests the etymology is ish-sachar, literally meaning man of hire, though some Jewish sources take it instead to mean reward or recompense, in reference to Issachar being the result of Jacob being hired.
In the opinion of the people he was now regarded as the embodiment of all legal virtue ; his health was toasted at the dinners of the Whigs amid rounds of applause, and, in recompense for the loss of his seat in parliament, he was returned by Lord Clive for his pocket-borough of Bishop's Castle, in Shropshire, in January 1770.
Their salary from the Crown was a token ; their recompense was in prestige, primarily because of the fuero militar (" military privilege "), that exempted them from certain taxes and obligatory community work assignments ( compare the feudal corvée ), and more significantly, exempted them from criminal or civil prosecution.
He threw in his lot as bodyguard to the future Duke of Milan, Francesco II Sforza, who had been reinstated in Milan by Emperor Charles V. The Medeghino gained a reputation for unscrupulous violence in the Sforza pay ; in partial recompense, he was made Marquis of Marignano on 28 March 1528 ( by Imperial patent and confirmed by Francesco Sforza II, Duke of Milan ), and also Marquis of Musso and Lecco.
Dismissed by his employer, with a scanty balance of salary, he had some difficulty in obtaining the means of transport to Antigua ; and there, finding himself reduced to entire dependence, he was content, without any pecuniary recompense, to become assistant to his relative, who had come to the town of St John's.
Vermuyden was to receive one third of the drained land, most of which had previously been common, as recompense for his investment, and to finance the draining he sold shares in this land to other investors, including some fellow Dutchmen ; some French and Walloon Protestant refugees also settled in the area as landowners or tenants.
For he had addressed the letter in question to the satrap of the Indus, although he was not subject to his dominion ; and in it he reminded him of the good service he had done him, but declared that he would not ask any recompense for the same, " for ", he said, " it is not my habit to ask for a return of favors.
Henceforth " Robert senior " appears as " formerly in Kilmarnock " and under this designation he and Helen Somerville, his spouse, had a grant of the lands of Dundonald in Walters-kyle in exchange for lands in Cunyngham on 20 May 1536 ; under the same description they had a further grant, dated 13 August 1536, of the lands of Chapelton, etc., in the lordship of Stewartoun, in recompense for their renunciation of all their claims and rights to the lands and barony of Kilmarnock.

recompense and however
The first recompense came, however, not from those princes, but from Christina, the ex-queen of Sweden, who, from her circlc of savants and courtiers at Rome, spontaneously and generously announced to Filicaja her wish to bear the expense of educating his two sons, enhancing her kindness by the delicate request that it should remain a secret.
He found however, some recompense for all his disillusionment and discouragement in learning, and, Wilhelm von Humboldt excepted ,' he was the most learned of all the Prussian ministers.

recompense and lands
Through his prayers the queen of the Franks was safely delivered of a male child, and in recompense Leonard was given royal lands at Noblac, from Limoges.
As recompense for his Volte-Face, Hamilton was created Sheriff of Lanark, in July 1455, and certain of the Earl of Douglas ' forfeited lands were made over to him.

recompense and were
Families were forced to travel in the severe winter of 1939 – 40, leaving behind almost all of their possessions without recompense.
Among those who ( at trial ) retracted their earlier statements given during prolonged beatings by the security service were Józef Chrzanowski, Marian Żyluk, Czesław Laudański, Wincenty Gościcki, Roman and Jan Zawadzki, Aleksander and Franciszek Łojewski, Eugeniusz Śliwecki, Stanisław Sielawa and several other local men pronounced innocent and released by the courts without recompense.
When they inquired about the SS General Sherman incident, the Koreans were initially reluctant to discuss the topic, ostensibly to avoid having to pay any recompense.
For the young men, that were most able and fit for labor and service, did repine that they should spend their time and strength to work for other men's wives and children without any recompense.
In recompense, Wilson was replaced by Lieutenant-General Philip Neame and the British 2nd Armoured and Australian 9th Infantry Divisions were deployed to Cyrenaica, but both formations were inexperienced, ill-equipped, and in the case of the 2nd Armoured, under strength.
Montague wrote that these bequests were " as a token of the sincere love, affection and esteem, I have long had for her person, and as a small recompense for the pleasure and happiness I have had in her conversation.
Probably the honors which it brought with it were sufficient recompense.
If the tribunal decided in favor of the penitent, they would issue a formal statement confirming that appropriate recompense had already been made, that the penitent's sins were forgiven, and that the matter was closed.
In recompense, Philip and Alexander rebuilt Orchomenos, when the theatre and the fortification walls, visible today, were constructed.
Several of the landlords of Greenhill making great profits from their rents, and who required recompense for the loss of their properties, were local dignitaries, including Lewis Llewelyn Dillwyn, MP.
Other accounts were in the form of questionnaires answered before colonial magistrates to protest and register a claim for recompense.
In recompense, athletic contests were held every year in the city to honour the dead, who were given proper burial.
Spain began its campaign by seizing the Chincha Islands, which were rich in guano, and demanding indemnity as recompense for the murder of two Spanish citizens in Lambayeque.

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