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willed and Manor
Following the death of his father, the first Lord of Livingston Manor, in 1728, most of the manor was inherited by the eldest son Philip Livingston, but 13, 000 acres ( 53 km² ) in the southwest corner, later named Clermont, was willed to Robert Livingston ( 1688 – 1775 ), a younger son.
The estate was established by Robert Livingston following the death of his father, the first Lord of Livingston Manor, in 1728 ; while most of the manor was inherited by the eldest son Philip Livingston, in the southwest corner, later named Clermont, was willed to Robert.

willed and von
Some Catholic theologians such as Karl Rahner, Gisbert Greshake, and Cardinal Hans Urs von Balthasar have at length discussed the possibility that any man may be led by a final grace to freely willed repentance if necessary at least at some point in the process of dying.
Gunther von Hagens ' BODY WORLDS exhibitions are the original, precedent-setting public anatomical exhibitions of real human bodies, and the only anatomical exhibits that use donated bodies, willed by donors to the Institute for Plastination for the express purpose of serving the BODY WORLDS mission to educate the public about health and anatomy.

willed and Rothschild
On their deaths, the Rothschild brothers willed the property to a son and it remains in family hands to this day.

willed and unmarried
His historic downtown family home was willed to the City of Hamilton after the death of the last of his five unmarried siblings in 1968.
Noting that “ the realism of her works allows no one like Jane Austen to appear in them ,” Miller argued that Austen ’ s omniscient, disembodied, and widely celebrated ( successful ) narrator emerges to compensate, if only partially, for the unmarried ( and thus “ failed ”) author ’ s oppression by “ the conjugal imperative ”: “ Behind the glory of style ’ s willed evacuation of substance lies the ignominy of a subject ’ s hopelessly insufficient social realization, just as behind style ’ s ahistorical impersonality lies the historical impasse of someone whose social representation doubles for social humiliation .” “ For all along ,” Miller wrote later in Jane Austen, “ shame has been style ’ s encrypted alter ego — its alternate form as ego — and style, the unremitting labor of managing and masking this encryption .”

willed and younger
However King Charles II of Spain, dying without issue, willed the throne to his grand-nephew the Duke of Anjou, younger grandson of his eldest sister Marie-Thérèse, daughter of King Philip IV of Spain who had married Louis XIV of France.
However, Francis V had decided to retain the Este name in the Habsburg family and willed his inheritance to the line of Archduke Charles Louis, younger brother of Emperor Francis Joseph, on condition that the heir use the name Austria-Este.

willed and sister
She and her sister willed the family mansion to the city of Little Rock for use by the Arkansas Arts Center.
Upon Francis I's death, his widow requested guardianship of her children ; however, the advisors of Emperor Leopold I insisted that he retain guardianship of both Francis and his sister, especially as Francis I had willed this before death.
He was a bachelor, and willed a portion of his estate and his mansion to William Tailer, the son of his sister Rebeccah.
The apparently unsent letter was found in the composer's estate after his death, after which it remained in the hands of Anton Schindler until his death, was subsequently willed to his sister, and was sold by her in 1880 to the Berlin State Library, where it remains today.

willed and their
In talking to the proprietor, Juan ( Stanley Adams ), Smith learns about the hardships that the nuns, led by the unyielding Mother Maria, overcame to emigrate from Eastern Europe – over the Berlin Wall – only to barely scratch out a meager living on the farm that was willed to their order.
Some who experience OBEs claim to have willed themselves out of their bodies, while others report having found themselves being pulled from their bodies, usually following a feeling of paralysis ).
These two churches had long shared the role of cathedral of Dublin, controversially at first, then under an agreement of 1300, Pacis Compositio, which gave Christchurch formal precedence, including the right to enthrone the Archbishop and to hold his cross, mitre and ring after death, but with deceased Archbishops of Dublin to be buried alternately in each of the two cathedrals, unless they personally willed otherwise, and the two cathedrals to act as one, and " shared equally in their freedoms ".
In regards to their weak willed infantry the guardsmen rellie on their unique sources of tanks and fire support.
The sisters willed their property to blind and orphaned children.
He is intelligent and streetwise enough to disperse situations that his role as minder often lands himself-and Arthur or those around him-in, although at the same time is seen not to be strong willed enough to break free of Arthur's often devious ways of keeping their working relationship in place.
Benjamin and Eudora Sawin willed land and funds into the Dover Historical Society along with their old household goods so that the building could be erected, and it was dedicated on May 14, 1907 by members and friends of the Dover Historical Society. In the early years it was used for meetings and to house Dover's historical memorabilia, but eventually members became disenchanted with the Society and the building was seldom opened.
Despite a drop in run production, the Cyclones pitching staff willed their way into the Playoffs, beating the Oneonta Tigers 2 games to 1 only to lose in the NYPL Championship to the Williamsport Crosscutters 2 games to none.
Each time the Inca high priest cast his spell over seven wax figures he could use them as he willed, as punishment for their sacrilege.
Corporative federalism, not to be confused with the ' cooperative federalism ' of the ( U. S .' s 1933-1936 ) New Deal, is a system of federalism not based on the common federalist idea of relative land area or nearest spheres of influence for governance, but on fiduciary jurisdiction to corporate personhood, where groups who are considered incorporated members of their own prerogative structure by willed agreement can delegate their individual effective legislature within the overall government.
Pope Clement VII willed his relative Alessandro de ' Medici to be the monarchical ruler of Florence, and went about requisitioning that dignity carefully ; he wanted to give the impression that the Florentines democratically chose Alessandro to be their monarch.
They willed their personal possessions and their swords to the chapter, which treasured those mementos until the chapter closed in the mid 1990s.
As they had no other children, they willed their fortune to the Norwegian Sea Rescue Society, which used it to purchase a rescue boat that was given Arne's name.
As they had no other children, they willed their fortune to the Norwegian Sea Rescue Society, which used it to purchase a rescue boat that was given Arne's name.
Lee's older brothers Lee Maeng-hee and Lee Sook-hee initiated legal action against him in February 2012, asking a South Korean court to award them shares of Samsung companies totaling hundreds of millions of dollars, which they claim their father willed to them.
It was named after its benefactor, Moses Aaron Dropsie ( 1821 – 1905 ), a wealthy half-Jewish religious convert who willed his entire fortune to " the promotion of and instruction in the Hebrew and cognate languages and their respective literatures.
She willed her furniture, stocks and bonds, personal savings, her house on Washington Avenue in Laurel and the farm " Lochlevlin " ( Loch Leven ) to their six children: Mary Barnes, John Henry Sothoron, Key, William Penn, Elizabeth S. Reese, and Barnes Compton.
Contrary to popular belief she was not the first Tafa ' ifā as the titles were willed to her by their previous possessor, Tonumaipe ' a Nāfanua.

willed and nephew
Louis's son the Grand Dauphin, as nephew to the late king, was closest heir, and Charles willed the kingdom to the Dauphin's second son, the Duke of Anjou.
The fifth baron willed Cefntilla to a nephew, and not to the heirs of the barony.
Childless, Julia Berwind willed the estate to a nephew, who did not want it and fruitlessly tried to pass The Elms to someone else in the family.
Before Sparewell died, he willed the box of stamps to his nephew, Mr. Hanleigh, with the instructions to return it to Jefferson.
He willed the kingdom to his nephew James to prevent it from falling to the Crown of Aragón.

willed and James
The building in which it resides willed to the Town of Boonton by James Holmes for use as a public library.
Sir James Monk willed the property known as ‘ Monklands ’ to his niece, Elizabeth Ann Monk.

willed and de
This conflicted with the Military Orders and administration of the Monastery of Castro de Avelãs, who believed that they had the right to settle all villages and use the land as they willed.
Isabel willed the majority of her encomienda to her eldest son, Juan de Andrade, but his inheritance of her encomienda was disputed by her widower, Juan Cano, and Diego Arias de Sotelo, son-in-law of Leonor ( Mariana ) Moctezuma, whom he claimed was Moctezuma's true heir.
She willed her inheritance to Charles François de Stainville on 8 January 1688.
On 6 January 1979, the Infanta's cousin, Manfredo de Borbón, 1st Duke of Hernani, died and willed his ducal title to be inherited by Margarita.

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