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Some Related Sentences

Francophobia and between
Iorga's changing sentiment flowed between the extremes of Francophilia and Francophobia.

Francophobia and countries
Francophobia has existed in various forms and in different countries for centuries.

Francophobia and French
A peak in Nicolae Iorga's own nationalist campaigning occurred that year: profiting from a wave of Francophobia among young urbanites, Iorga boycotted the National Theater, punishing its staff for staging a play entirely in French, and disturbing public order.
Francophobia or Gallophobia ( agentive forms Francophobe and Gallophobe, respectively ) are terms that refer to a dislike or hatred toward France, the People of France, the Government of France, or the Francophonie ( set of political entities that use French as an official language or whose French-speaking population is numerically or proportionally large ).
Francophobia is used here as it is the historically understood term for the most pronounced and longest running hostility toward things French — that of the United Kingdom from the 17th to 19th centuries, though it continues very much to the present day amongst the general populace.
On a whole, although French neo-colonialism is denounced under the term of Françafrique ( including by sectors of the French population itself ), this does not necessarily lead to " Francophobia.
These are also considered examples of Francophobia, as well as the thought that in continental Europe French armies were spreading sexually-transmitted diseases.

Francophobia and .
Anti-French sentiment in the United States is the manifestation of Francophobia by Americans.
As with any xenophobia, Francophobia in the U. S. can be distinguished from rational criticism of France.
The Federalist Party advocated going to war, but Adams ignored Francophobia and avoided going to war with France until 1798 in the Quasi-War.

Ireland and rose
He rose to the rank of lieutenant-general in the British Army, was noted for his services during the Napoleonic Wars, and served as Commander-in-Chief, Ireland.
The Fenian Brotherhood trace their origins back to 1798 and the United Irishmen, who had been an open political organization only to be suppressed and became a secret revolutionary organization, rose in rebellion, seeking an end to British rule in Ireland and the establishment of an Irish Republic.
Its branches spread all over Ireland, until the sea rose and overwhelmed it.
Nonetheless, since the 18th century, shamrock has been used as a symbol of Ireland in a similar way to how a rose is used for England, thistle for Scotland and leek for Wales.
Below the crown are the national flowers of Australia, Wales, England, Scotland and Irelandthe wattle, the leek, the rose, the thistle, and the shamrock.
varies depending on where the Lieutenant's County is situated: a rose is worn in England, shamrocks in Northern Ireland, a thistle in Scotland and Prince-of-Wales feathers in Wales.
The obverse of the coin throughout her reign shows the left-facing effigy of the queen, with the legend. The general design of the reverse was similar to that of the previous reign, with four crowned cruciform shields bearing the arms of England, Scotland, Ireland, and France, separated by sceptres and with a central rose, and the legend.
The design of the reverse was similar to that of the previous reign, with four crowned cruciform shields bearing the arms of England and Scotland joined, Ireland, and France, separated by sceptres and with a central rose, and the legend.
Until the Union, the cruciform shields on the reverse showed the arms of England, Scotland, France, and Ireland in order, separated by sceptres and with a central rose, and the legend (" Of Great Britain, France, and Ireland Queen ").
Until the Union, the cruciform shields on the reverse showed the arms of England, Scotland, France, and Ireland in order, separated by sceptres and with a central rose, and the legend.
He also added ornate Baroque-style central ceiling mouldings and corner mouldings of the four national flowers of the United Kingdom: rose ( England ), thistle ( Scotland ), daffodil ( Wales ) and shamrock ( Northern Ireland ).
As royal badges James used: the Tudor rose, the thistle ( for Scotland ; first used by James III of Scotland ), the Tudor rose dimidiated with the thistle ensigned with the royal crown, a harp ( for Ireland ) and a fleur de lys ( for France ).
Heraldic badges of England ( tudor rose ), Scotland ( thistle ), and Ireland ( shamrock ).
In 1798 the United Irishmen, which had initially been an open political organisation, but which was later suppressed by the British establishment in Ireland and so became a secret revolutionary organisation, rose in rebellion, seeking an end to British rule in Ireland and the establishment of an Irish Republic.
As the Jurassic period began, Pangaea began to break up, sea levels rose and Britain and Ireland drifted on the Eurasian Plate to between 30 ° and 40 ° north.
The cap on the amount of tuition fees that Welsh universities could charge rose to £ 3000 in the academic year of 2007-08 bringing Wales in line with England and Northern Ireland although the Welsh Assembly up until 2010-11 gave all Welsh students studying in Wales a grant of £ 1890 towards their fees.
The rose represented England, the thistle referred to Scotland, the clover corresponded to Ireland, and the beaver, as the emblem of French Canadians, was replaced by the fleur de lys in 1938.
The crowned and slipped Tudor rose is used as the plant badge of England, as Scotland uses the thistle, Ireland uses the shamrock, and Wales uses the leek.
The Chain is in gold, decorated with motifs of Tudor rose, Thistle, Shamrock and Lotus Flower ( symbolizing England, Scotland, Ireland and India respectively ), and a crowned, red enamelled cypher of King Edward VII " ERI " ( Edwardus Rex Imperator ), surrounded by a gold wreath for men, upon which the badge is suspended.
For the period from 1642 to 1659, Mohun was an officer in military units loyal to the House of Stuart ; he served in England, Ireland, and the Low Countries, and rose to the rank of major.
" The sons of Hugo Lacy came to Ireland in spite of the King of England, and their coming produced assaults of war and dispersion among the Galls of Ireland, until these rose up against them and they were driven to seek the protection of Aed O Neill king of Ailech.

Ireland and aftermath
It could have been brought to England and France through the mass emigration from Ireland, in particular in the aftermath of the Flight of the Wild Geese.
He earned a high international profile when, in the aftermath of the killing of fourteen unarmed civilians in Derry by British Paratroopers ( known as " Bloody Sunday "), he travelled to the UN in New York to demand UN involvement in peace-keeping on the streets of Northern Ireland.
When, in the aftermath of the crisis over Henry VIII's marriage to Catherine of Aragon, the Irish Church was ordered to formally break its link with the Roman Catholic Church to become the Church of Ireland, the Anglican or Church of Ireland Bishop of Meath continued to live in Ardbraccan in an estate attached to the main church.
In the aftermath of this episode, the southern government under Seán Lemass, himself an IRA veteran of the War of Independence and Civil War, tried to forge closer ties with the authorities in Northern Ireland in order to promote peaceful cooperation on the island.
The aftermath of the elections the Sinn Féin elected members refused to attend Westminster having instead formed their own parliament Dáil Éireann the Irish for " Assembly of Ireland " which is now known as the First Dáil.
Coming in the aftermath of the divisive Wars of the Roses, Poynings ' intention was to make Ireland once again obedient to the English monarchy.
His resignation over the technicalities of how and when to bring in the local government reforms which the British Labour Government was pushing for was probably the final nail in the political coffin of Terence O ' Neill, who resigned in the aftermath of his failure to achieve a good enough result in the Northern Ireland general election, 1969.
In its aftermath, and especially after the Conscription Crisis of 1918 in which the British Cabinet had planned to impose conscription in Ireland, the National Volunteers were eclipsed by the Irish Volunteers, whose membership shot up to over 100, 000 by the end of 1918.
The Earth Alliance was founded in 2085 by the countries of Australia, the United Kingdom, Canada, Ireland, the Netherlands, Japan, New Zealand, South Africa, and the United States in the aftermath of World War III to replace the ineffectual United Nations.
In the aftermath of the 1975 Truce, the Ó Brádaigh / Ó Conaill leadership came under severe criticism from a younger generation of activists from Northern Ireland, headed by Gerry Adams, who became a vice-president of Sinn Féin in 1978.
Both families had been exiled from Ireland in the aftermath of Tyrone's Rebellion.
The Treaty of Ripon was an agreement signed by Charles I, King of England, Scotland, and Ireland, and the Scottish Covenanters on 26 October 1640, in the aftermath of the Second Bishops ' War.
In the aftermath of the destruction of the World Trade Center, Ireland declared an unprecedented full national day of mourning for the victims.
He was Chief Secretary for Ireland from 1907 to 1916, resigning in the immediate aftermath of the Easter Rising.
Meanwhile, the Cromwellian conquest of Ireland ( 1649 – 53 ) had defeated the Roman Catholic cause in Ireland and, in the aftermath, the public practice of Roman Catholicism was banned and Roman Catholic clergy were executed.
After a brief sojourn in Virginia, Ludlow returned to Europe, where he was appointed by a commission distributing seized and forfeited property in the aftermath of Oliver Cromwell's conquest of Ireland.
Since 1642, most of Ireland had been under the control of the Irish Catholic Confederation, who had taken much of the country in the aftermath of the 1641 Irish rebellion.
The nonjuring schism was a split in the Anglican Churches of England, Scotland and Ireland in the aftermath of the Glorious Revolution of 1688, over whether William of Orange and his wife Mary could legally be recognised as King and Queen of England, Scotland and Ireland.
Richard Dowd is descended from Thomas Dowd, one of a family of brothers who left Ireland to escape the aftermath of the Great Famine.
In the aftermath of the Irish Rebellion of 1798, Windham supported the union of Ireland with Great Britain, believing that Catholic emancipation would follow.
He claimed to demonstrate from photographs of the aftermath of each of the bombings, compared to the photographs taken in Northern Ireland where a 1, 000 pound IRA bomb did not leave a crater or strip concrete from buildings, that a " micronuke " from Mossad's Dimona research and development facility in the Negev desert had been used.
The aftermath of Russian defeat in 1856 ( the Treaty of Paris ) brought forth a period of common tutelage of the Ottomans and a Congress of Great Powers ( the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, the Second French Empire, the Kingdom of Piedmont-Sardinia, the Austrian Empire, Prussia, and, albeit never again fully, Russia ).

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