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Some Related Sentences

Emigration and continued
Emigration continued into the next century ; over half a million Irish went to Britain in World War II to work in industry and serve in the British armed forces.
Emigration continued, particularly to Britain.

Emigration and grew
A total of several hundred thousand people were involved in this Great Economic Emigration which grew steadily more intense until the outbreak of the First World War in 1914.

Emigration and population
Emigration also fell to 1 % in 1995, and there was a small population increase in 1996.
See Emigration from Africa for a general treatment of recent population movements.
Emigration helped the Régime in two ways: the country got rid of surplus population, and the emigrants supplied the country with much needed monetary remittances.
Emigration was often initiated by duress as was the case with the Great Irish Famine in the late 1840s, following which the population declined by over half in the following century ( from approx.
Emigration of males does not seem to occur until the population density of the colony reaches a critical level.
Emigration keeps the population small.
Emigration estimates can still be inferred from current population projections by the CBS: Between the years 1990 to 2005 emigration assumptions from Israel by the CBS averaged 14, 000 people per year.

Emigration and famine
Emigration was not uncommon in Ireland in the years preceding the famine.

Emigration and including
Nearly all Bingham ’ s over 500 recorded paintings ( 460 are portraits ) are unsigned, including famous ones such as Fur Traders Descending the Missouri, The Emigration of Daniel Boone, and The County Election.
Emigration from the free states, including New England, Iowa, Ohio, and other Midwestern states, flowed into the territory beginning in 1854.
They include the Point of the Mountain to the south via the Jordan Narrows, a gap in the Traverse Mountains, narrow entrances between the Great Salt Lake and Oquirrh Mountains to the northwest and the Great Salt Lake and the Wasatch Mountains to the north, and several canyons to the east including Parley's Canyon and Emigration Canyon.

Emigration and Great
This element, known as the Great Emigration, soon dominated the Polish political and intellectual life.
The city was the site of a military prison for Polish activists-those released, who left Europe, formed the Gromada Grudziądz in Portsmouth, England, in 1835, as part of the Great Emigration movement.
* Great Emigration
* Great Emigration
Category: Activists of the Great Emigration
The Great Economic Emigration, especially the emigration to Brazil, the " Brazilian Fever " as it was called at the time, was described in contemporary literary works by the Polish poetess, Maria Konopnicka, the Ukrainian writer, Ivan Franko, and many others.
Category: Activists of the Great Emigration
Known as the " Great Emigration ", it established the viability of the Oregon Trail for later homesteaders.
Category: Activists of the Great Emigration
Category: Activists of the Great Emigration
Category: Activists of the Great Emigration
Two of its members, Konstanty Adam and Adam Jerzy Czartoryski, were leaders of the liberal aristocratic faction of the Polish Great Emigration, which came into being after the collapse of the November Uprising of 1830 – 1831 in Poland.
* Great Emigration ( Wielka Emigracja )
Category: Great Emigration
The Great Emigration () was an emigration of political elites from Poland from 1831 – 1870.
Notable Poles of the Great Emigration living in exile:
* Great Emigration
Category: Activists of the Great Emigration
Nonetheless, the Polish army was eventually compelled to lay down arms on October 5, 1831, and crossed the Russian – Prussian partitional border under the command of General Maciej Rybiński in the Great Emigration.
Some indication of how the Academy ’ s influence extended beyond the boundaries of the Partitions came in 1893, when the collection of the Polish Library in Paris, the largest collection of Polish materials amassed by the Great Emigration, was transferred to the ownership of the Academy, and a station was founded in Paris, though this latter step had been preceded by the establishment of the Rome Expedition ( annual trips to Roman archives ).
The PPS was founded in Paris in 1892 ( see the Great Emigration ).

Emigration and 1840s
Emigration totaled 480, 000 in the 1840s, 1, 200, 000 in the 1850s, and 780, 000 in the 1860s.
Emigration totaled 480, 000 in the 1840s, 1, 200, 000 in the 1850s, and 780, 000 in the 1860s.

Emigration and .
Emigration to an uncivilized country leaves British nationality unaffected: indeed the right claimed by all states to follow with their authority their subjects so emigrating is one of the usual and recognized means of colonial expansion.
" In Emigration and Settlement Patterns of German Communities in North America, p. 31 – 54.
" In Emigration and Settlement Patterns of German Communities in North America, p. 371 – 380.
Emigration had not only been starting at the beginning of the 19th century, but with this theory it would mean that once conditions were better emigration would have slowed down.
Emigration to Israel and the influence of other Jewish denominations have led to Ethiopian Jews adopting more normative Jewish practices.
: Irish and German-American indigent immigrants, temporarily interned at Wards Island by the Commissioners of Emigration, begin rioting following an altercation between two residents resulting in thirty men seriously wounded and around sixty arrested .< ref > Riot On Ward's Island.
In 1815 he published Observations on Emigration to France, With an Account of Health, Economy, and the Education of Children, a cautionary work propounding his view that English invalids should avoid French spas and go instead to Malta.
Emigration from Uruguay rose drastically, as large numbers of Uruguayans looked for political asylum throughout the world.
Emigration to other parts of the world from China accelerated in the 1860s with the enactment of the Treaty of Peking, which opened the border for free movement.
Emigration was extremely high, particularly to St. Thomas and to the Dominican Republic.
Emigration from the region's depressed areas to northern Italy and the rest of Europe was very intense in the years between 1956 and 1971.
Schriften während der Emigration.
Among them, City Creek, Emigration, Millcreek, and Parley's border the eastern city limits.
Emigration, principally to the U. S. and Canada, remains substantial.
* Baird, Charles W. " History of the Huguenot Emigration to America.

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