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At this juncture, the queen mother's popularity, secured by such populist early acts as mentioned above, had abated considerably and she was known in the street as " the Spanish woman.
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At and juncture
At the juncture of the WBS element and organization unit, control accounts and work packages are established and performance is planned, measured, recorded, and controlled.
At this favourable juncture appeared the Phädon oder über die Unsterblichkeit der Seele ( Phädon or On the Immortality of Souls ; 1767 ).
At that juncture, the mercenary soldier becomes an unlawful combatant but still must be " treated with humanity and, in case of trial, shall not be deprived of the rights of fair and regular trial ", being still covered by GC IV Art 5.
At this critical juncture, the Greek cause was rescued by the decision of three Great Powers, Great Britain, France and Russia, to intervene jointly in the conflict.
At this critical juncture, the exhausted Mahmud II died and was succeeded by his teenage son, Abdulmecid I.
At this juncture the Columbia River is nearly a mile wide ; vehicular traffic flows across the Columbia via the Interstate Bridge on I-5 and the Glenn Jackson Bridge on I-205.
At this juncture, if the votes are more than 1 / 2 aye, it will be sent to the President of Singapore, currently Tony Tan.
At this crucial juncture, Murat's chief of staff, General Augustin Daniel Belliard rode straight to the Emperor's Headquarters and, according to General Ségur who wrote an account of the campaign, told him that the Russian line had been breached, that the road to Mozhaysk, behind the Russian line, was visible through the gaping hole the French attack had pierced, that an enormous crowd of runaways and vehicles were hastily retreating, and that a final push would be enough to decide the fate of the Russian army and of the war.
At this crucial juncture, Friant committed his entire division and, despite the failure of a first attack, soon managed to gain a firm foothold on the escarpment, pushing towards the tower at Markgrafneusiedl, a sign that the battle in this sector was turning in favour of the French.
At this juncture in his career he was still billed as " John Halliley " and he made his stage debut in September 1934 at the Palladium Theatre in Edinburgh in the J.
At this juncture Waterboer offered to place the territory under the administration of Queen Victoria.
At this juncture he was instructed by the new Burmese King, Singun Min or Chingkucha ( 1776 – 1782 ) to evacuate Thai territory.
At that juncture, Morrison decided to try an acoustic sound, and he and Kielbania began performing shows in coffee houses in the Boston area as an acoustic duo with Morrison playing guitar and Kielbania on upright bass.
At this juncture, the Roman empire was convulsed by its first major civil war since the Battle of Actium exactly a century earlier.
At the appropriate juncture Humphries would force his way past the " blind " man, yelling " Get out of my way, you disgusting blind person ", kicking him viciously in the shins and then jumping off the tram and making his escape in a waiting car.
At and queen
At the old nest, the queen will in the early fall cease to lay the fertilized eggs that will produce females.
At first, only Elizabeth made a virtue of her virginity: in 1559, she told the Commons, " And, in the end, this shall be for me sufficient, that a marble stone shall declare that a queen, having reigned such a time, lived and died a virgin ".
At her coronation in January 1559, many of the bishops – Catholic, appointed by Mary, who had expelled many of the Protestant clergymen when she became queen in 1553 – refused to perform the service in English.
At that time, he also made an alliance with Duke Władysław of Opole, who promised to help Henry IV with the condition that his daughter ( perhaps called Constance ), who had recently married Henry IV, was crowned with him as Polish queen if he would obtain the royal investiture.
At various times, the ability of pawns to be queened was restricted while the original queen was still on the board, so as not to cause scandal by providing the king with more than one queen.
At the Abbey, Elizabeth was treated with all the respect due to a queen dowager, lived a regal life, and received a pension of £ 400 and small gifts from the King.
At first Guise stayed unwillingly at Linlithgow Palace, then in July 1543 she moved with the infant queen to Stirling Castle.
At the same time the queen began visiting the citizens of the nearby towns and, unannounced, would drop in on social institutions and schools.
At the age of seventeen he defended Ulster single-handedly against the armies of queen Medb of Connacht in the epic Táin Bó Cúailnge (" Cattle Raid of Cooley ").
At the tournament held for the coronation of Francis's new wife Eleanor in 1531, while the Dauphin Francis saluted the new queen as expected, Henry addressed his salute to Diane.
At the request of Jeanne of Navarre, the queen, he began work on the Histoire de Saint Louis, which he completed in 1309.
At the end of competition the runners-up were announced and the winner crowned by the outgoing queen.
At the end of competition the runners-up were announced and the winner crowned by the outgoing queen.
At the end the Glorious Revolution in 1688, the new king and queen, William and Mary agreed to abolish nearly all remaining monopolies and signed the English Bill of Rights 1689 and eliminated the hearth tax marking a new level co-operation and power sharing between the Parliament and the English monarchs.
At the time of her birth, Berengaria was the only child of the king and queen, as those born earlier had not survived.
At the time, the queen had been considering Stanley for honours and titles, including his appointment as viceroy of Ireland ; but he was almost certainly in complete sympathy with the Jesuits, which order his brother had joined and whose members sang his praises.
At the request of the Jesuits and to relieve the pressures on Catholics in England, Pope Gregory XIII issued a clarification or suspension in 1580, explaining that Catholics should obey the queen outwardly in all civil matters, until such time as a suitable opportunity presented itself for her overthrow.
At the accession of George III both Dyson and Akenside changed their political opinions, and Akenside's conversion to Tory principles was rewarded by the appointment of physician to the queen.
At the end, Fischer's pieces coordinate to force checkmate, while Byrne's queen sits, useless, on the other side of the board.
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