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Concubinage and was
Concubinage was " tolerated to the degree that it did not threaten the religious and legal integrity of the family ".

Concubinage and relationship
Concubinage is an interpersonal relationship in which a person engages in an ongoing relationship ( usually matrimonially oriented ) with another person to whom they are not or cannot be married ; the inability to marry is usually due to a difference in social status or economic condition.
Concubinage differed from marriage chiefly in the status of children born from the relationship.

Concubinage and often
Concubinage and reproduction served as incentives for importing female slaves ( often Caucasian ), though many were also imported mainly for performing household tasks.

was and institution
Thus, the Church was born and because of its intrinsic character was soon identified as a conservative institution, determined to resist the forces of change, to identify itself with the political rulers, and to maintain a kind of splendid isolation from the masses.
This resulted in an improved appearance, but was followed by an increase in printing cost that necessitated the institution of major economies to keep within the total of allocated funds.
In 1913 an abortive provision was made for the stay of federal injunction proceedings upon institution of state court test cases.
Nobel was elected a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in 1884, the same institution that would later select laureates for two of the Nobel prizes, and he received an honorary doctorate from Uppsala University in 1893.
Furthermore, the primary testimony to the commission that connected baseball to Doubleday was that of Abner Graves, whose credibility is questionable ; a few years later, he shot his wife to death and was committed to an institution for the criminally insane for the rest of his life.
Historians differ on which of them was responsible for which institution, and which of them most represented a truly democratic movement.
* Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh was named after Carnegie, who founded the institution as the Carnegie Technical Schools. Carnegie Vanguard High School
The institution was the first, and thus far only, English university in Moncton.
On August 21, 2009 it was announced that the institution had changed its name to Crandall University in honour of Rev.
Immediately after, he received several marks of distinction: he was made President of the Accademia di San Luca, the main artistic institution in Rome, and by the hand of the Pope himself his name was inscribed in " the Golden Volume of the Capitol ", and he received the title of Marquis of Ischia, with an annual pension of 3000 crowns.
The museum was the first institution of its kind in Greece, but the collection was transferred to Athens in 1834.
i ) the institution of curial abbreviators was very ancient, succeeding after the persecutions to the notaries who recorded the acts of the martyrs.
Public education was organized on the French model and Istanbul University was reorganized as a modern institution in 1861.
Also in 1995 it was given the status of a government institution of secondary special military education for young men.
The University of Ouagadougou, founded in 1974, was the country's first institution of higher education.
In 1919, after delays caused by the destruction of World War I and a lengthy debate over who should head the institution and the socio-economic meanings of a reconciliation of the fine arts and the applied arts ( an issue which remained a defining one throughout the school's existence ), Gropius was made the director of a new institution integrating the two called the Bauhaus.
The institution, also called BankItalia, was established in 1893 from the combining of three major banks in Italy after the Banca Romana scandal.
The origins of the building society as an institution lie in late-18th century Birmingham – a town which was undergoing rapid economic and physical expansion driven by a multiplicity of small metalworking firms, whose many highly skilled and prosperous owners readily invested in property.
The Eucharistic prayer was split in two so that Eucharistic bread and wine were shared immediately after the words of institution ( This is my Body .. This is my blood ... in remembrance of me.

was and practiced
The `` fruitful course '' of metropolitanization that you recommend is currently practiced by the town of East Greenwich and had its inception long before we learned what it was called.
Lawrence listened with the practiced, deceptive calm of the lawyer, but his face was in the shadow.
Since writing was practiced in the Aegean before the end of the century, we may hope that the details of tradition will now be occasionally useful.
Born in Sainte-Foy-lès-Lyon, Rhône, Carrel was raised in a devout Catholic family and was educated by Jesuits, though he no longer practiced his religion when he entered the university.
In part this was a consequence of the increasingly specialised forms of warfare practiced in the later period.
Lavoisier received a law degree and was admitted to the bar, but never practiced as a lawyer.
Commerce was practiced to some extent in very early times, as is proved by the distribution of Melian obsidian over all the Aegean area.
As was common during the years of Islamic expansion from Arabia, religious tolerance was practiced.
This also evolved as a method of increasing rate of fire, more in order to force the enemy to take cover than to try to accurately hit them, and was generally practiced by NKVD officers issued a pair of revolvers.
Removal of teeth, mainly incisors, is or was practiced by some cultures for ritual purposes ( for instance in the Iberomaurusian culture of Neolithic North Africa ).
The appellation " Father of Monasticism " might be considered misleading, as Christian monasticism was already being practiced in the deserts of Egypt.
It was postulated that BSI precautions should be practiced in environment where treaters were exposed to bodily fluids, such as:
After the war Liddell Hart imposed his own perceptions, after the event, claiming that the mobile tank warfare practiced by the Wehrmacht was a result of his influence.
Agriculture was practiced in sub-Saharan Africa since the third millennium BC.
In the past, it was practiced by humans in Europe, South America, among Iroquoian peoples in North America, Maori in New Zealand, the Solomon Islands, parts of West Africa and Central Africa, some of the islands of Polynesia, New Guinea, Sumatra, and Fiji.
Cannibalism was practiced as recently as 2000 years ago in Great Britain.
While there is universal agreement that some Mesoamerican people practiced human sacrifice, there is a lack of scholarly consensus as to whether cannibalism in pre-Columbian America was widespread.
In parts of Melanesia, cannibalism was still practiced in the early 20th century, for a variety of reasons — including retaliation, to insult an enemy people, or to absorb the dead person's qualities.
The dense population of Marquesas Islands, Polynesia, was concentrated in the narrow valleys, and consisted of warring tribes, who sometimes practiced cannibalism on their enemies.
In West Africa, the Leopard Society was a secret society active into the mid-1900s and one that practiced cannibalism.
However he, and many refugees, also report that cannibalism was practiced non-ritually when there was no food to be found.
It has been reported by defectors and refugees that, at the height of the North Korean famine in 1996, cannibalism was sometimes practiced in North Korea.

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