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Page "Amathus" ¶ 22
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At and coastal
At first Honorius based his capital in Mediolanum, but when the Visigoths under King Alaric I entered Italy in 401 he moved his capital to the coastal city of Ravenna, which was protected by a ring of marshes and strong fortifications.
At the beginning of the Industrial Revolution, inland transport was by navigable rivers and roads, with coastal vessels employed to move heavy goods by sea.
At the coastal city Mombasa, the air changes from cool to hot, almost every day ( see chart below ).
According to the book " Mexico One Plate At A Time ," even though the dish ceviche has been a part of traditional Mexican coastal cuisine for centuries, ceviche is not a dish native to Mexico.
At the end of this period a new landscape emerges: the northern Canaanite cities still existed, more or less intact, and became the Phoenicians ; the highlands behind the coastal plains, previously largely uninhabited, were rapidly filling with villages, largely Canaanite in their basic culture but without the Bronze Age city-state structure ; and along the southern coastal plain there are clear signs that a non-Canaanite people had taken over the former Canaanite cities while adopting almost all aspects of Canaanite culture.
At the same time, the remaining Jews of the city fled, and the Jewish cemetery fell into disrepair, threatened by coastal erosion.
At first, the trade included gold, ivory, and pepper, but the establishment of American colonies in the sixteenth century spurred a demand for slaves, who soon became the major export from the West African coastal regions ( see African slave trade ).
At the end of the last Ice Age, the Bristol Channel was dry land but subsequently the sea level rose, resulting in major coastal changes.
At midnight General Dietrich Kraiss, commander of the 352nd division, reporting the total loss of men and equipment in the coastal positions, advised that he had sufficient forces to contain the Americans on D + 1 but that he would need reinforcements thereafter, only to be told that there were no more reserves available.
At this location, the higher elevations of the coastal range facing the Andes become a multiplicity of islands, forming an intricate labyrinth of channels and fjords that have been an enduring challenge to maritime navigators.
According to the book " Mexico One Plate At A Time " ceviche is not native to Mexico, despite the fact that the dish has been a part of traditional Mexican coastal cuisine for centuries.
According to the book " Mexico One Plate At A Time ," even though the dish has been a part of traditional Mexican coastal cuisine for centuries, ceviche is not a dish native to Mexico.
At times when New Zealand feared invasion, various coastal fortifications were constructed to defend Cook Strait.
At the same time, Frankish and Saxon forces were raiding the coastal areas of northern Gaul.
One of Acalan's coastal settlements was called Tixchel ' At the place of Ixchel '.
At times the Delta Breeze is strong enough to bring coastal fog inland to the Sacramento Valley.
At times the delta breeze is strong enough to bring coastal fog inland to the Sacramento Valley.
At the northern end of Ormond-By-The-Sea is the North Peninsula State Park, comprising approximately of undeveloped coastal dunes and marsh lands, which were acquired in the mid-1980s through the Conservation & Recreation Lands Program, later known as the " Preservation 2000 " and " Florida Forever " programs.
At the time of European exploration, this coastal area along the Port Tobacco River was the territory of the Potopaco, an Algonquian-speaking tribe.
At the same time, coastal ships became larger and were unable to use the river.
At midnight of the 8th York's corps began withdrawing to the coastal city of Furnes ( now Veurne in Belgium ), where the next day he rejoined the rest of Walmoden's troops.
At the end of Eastbourne beyond Burdan's gate there is a long pedestrian-only coastal road ( unsealed ) which extends out to the Wellington Harbour entrance heads.
At various times, there have been massive coordinated raids in the interior, and throughout coastal Borneo, directed by the Raj during Brooke's reign in Sarawak.

At and side
At the first shot Russ had hurled his mount to the left toward the side of the winding draw.
At a nod from Songau, four lithe and muscular girls darted to Frayne's side and seized him by the arms.
At one side of the stage a dancer jumps excitedly ; ;
At the entrance side of the shelter, each roof beam is rested on the inside 4 inches of the block wall.
In the list of popes given in the Holy See's annual directory, Annuario Pontificio, the following note is attached to the name of Pope Leo VIII ( 963 – 965 ): At this point, as again in the mid-eleventh century, we come across elections in which problems of harmonising historical criteria and those of theology and canon law make it impossible to decide clearly which side possessed the legitimacy whose factual existence guarantees the unbroken lawful succession of the successors of Saint Peter.
At the time, precautions were not taken against this unintended side reaction, which caused also the Seveso disaster in Italy in 1976.
At this point, the Austro-Hungarian Empire stepped in, threatening to join the war on Serbia's side if the Bulgarian troops did not retreat.
At the start of a match, the shuttlecock is cast and the side towards which the shuttlecock is pointing serves first.
At least one further side bet is usually provided.
At the start of a game, play is more or less random, the only strategy is to avoid adding the third side to any box.
At that point, the other side bowls its remaining balls.
At the navel, throat and crown, there is a twofold knot caused by each side channel twisting once around the central channel.
At the heart wheel there is a sixfold knot, where each side channel twists around three times.
At rough vacuum, this asymmetric heating effect generates a net gas movement across each vane, from the concave side to the convex side, as shown by the researchers ' Direct Simulation Monte Carlo ( DSMC ) modeling.
At first Essendon was regarded as a junior club, and even after the formation of the VFA in 1877 the side was sometimes allowed ' odds ' of, for example, twenty-five players as against twenty, when confronted by the leading teams of the time.
At this time, on the more commercial side of production, the phenomenon of Totò, a Neapolitan actor who is acclaimed as the major Italian comic, exploded.
At Cofete on the western side of Jandía a remote and imposing house-Villa Winter-looks out to sea across wide and generally empty beaches.
At the same time, Isidore's works also gave the views of sphericity, for example, in chapter 28 of De Natura Rerum, Isidore claims that the sun orbits the earth and illuminates the other side when it is night on this side.
At the end of the year, concerned by Francisco Franco's Falangist uprising, ( supported by Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy ), Orwell decided to go to Spain to take part in the Spanish Civil War on the Republican side.
At the start of the Grand Gallery on the right-hand side there is a hole cut in the wall ( and now blocked by chicken wire ).
At the base it is wide, but after the blocks of stone in the walls are corbelled inwards by on each side.
At the upper end of the Gallery on the right-hand side there is a hole near the roof which opens into a short tunnel by which access can be gained to the lowest of the Relieving Chambers.

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