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Ketch's and execution
Ketch's notoriety stems from " his barbarity at the execution of Lord Russell, the Duke of Monmouth, and other political offenders.

Ketch's and was
He was freed from prison by the Firm, then abducted Ketch's mother and friends, seemingly murdering Dan Ketch by tearing his throat out while he is in human form.

Ketch's and .
Blackout then kills Ketch's acquaintances, newspaper vendor Theodore Larsen and Father Michael McDonald.
Blackout takes an opportunity minutes later to attack Dan Ketch's friend Stacy Dolan.
Blackout is later seen aiding Danny Ketch's attack and killing Caretaker before facing off against Ghost Rider.
He is first mentioned in the Proceedings of the Old Bailey for January 14, 1676, although no printed notice of the new hangman occurred until 2 December 1678, when a broadside appeared called The Plotters Ballad, being Jack Ketch's incomparable Receipt for the Cure of Traytorous Recusants and Wholesome Physick for a Popish Contagion.

execution and Lord
Following the execution of Charles I in 1649 and the establishment of the Commonwealth under Lord Protector Cromwell, it would not be reinstated until shortly after the restoration of the monarchy to England.
* 1661 – Oliver Cromwell, Lord Protector of the Commonwealth of England is ritually executed two years after his death, on the anniversary of the execution of the monarch he himself deposed.
The Long Parliament began with the execution of Lord Stafford, and effectively ended with the execution of Henry Vane the Younger.
The steadfastness and courage with which More held on to his religious convictions in the face of ruin and death and the dignity with which he conducted himself during his imprisonment, trial, and execution, contributed much to More's posthumous reputation, particularly among Catholics, although his zealous persecution of Protestants while Lord Chancellor makes him a poor example for modern notions of religious liberty.
Sale's translation was a part of commentary and, in one of those notes, refers to an allegedly common form of torture and execution by " throwing into a glowing pit of fire, whence he had the opprobrious appellation of the Lord of the Pit.
Eventually, when she was imprisoned for her alleged role in the murder of her husband, Lord Darnley, and King James VI enthroned in her stead, he openly called for her execution.
A new meeting was organised for 16 August, after the Home Secretary, Lord Sidmouth, had written to the magistrates instructing them that it was not the intention to elect an MP that was illegal, but the execution of that intention.
When Gloucester attacked this group at a council meeting in June 1483, Stanley was wounded and imprisoned but at least spared the fate of Lord Hastings – that of summary execution.
In a declaration made on the 16 June 1673 by Arthur Annesley, 1st Earl of Anglesey, the Lord Privy Seal, in reference to a dispute over the exercise of authority over the Officers of Arms the powers of the Earl Marshal were stated as " to have power to order, judge, and determine all matters touching arms, ensigns of nobility, honour, and chivalry ; to make laws, ordinances, and statutes for the good government of the Officers of Arms ; to nominate Officers to fill vacancies in the College of Arms ; to punish and correct Officers of Arms for misbehaviour in the execution of their places ".
Yet Somerset soon attracted political sympathizers and hoped to re-establish his power by removing Dudley from the scene, " contemplating ", as he later admitted, the Lord President's arrest and execution.
At the battle of Bosworth Field, Lord Stanley ( who is also Richmond's stepfather ) and his followers desert Richard's side, whereupon Richard calls for the execution of George Stanley, Lord Stanley's son.
This is evident in Cade's speech after ordering the execution of Lord Saye ; " The proudest peer in the realm shall not wear a head on his shoulders unless he pay me tribute.
Stowey Court may contain part of Lord Audley's original house which was left unfinished after his execution in 1497 until his descendants rebuilt the half-finished dwelling.
When Elizabeth I became Queen, Parliament passed an Act providing that a Lord Keeper of the Great Seal would be entitled to " like place, pre-eminence, jurisdiction, execution of laws, and all other customs, commodities, and advantages " as a Lord Chancellor.
In August 1970, Lord Goddard told Yallop that he thought Bentley was going to be reprieved, said he should have been, and attacked Maxwell-Fyfe for allowing the execution to go ahead.
The attack, under the command of Lord Elgin, was mounted in retaliation for the arrest on 18 September of British diplomatic envoy Harry Parkes and the torture and execution of a number of western hostages.
The immediate occasion was a passage in Lord Mahon's History of England that denounced the execution of André as the greatest blot upon Washington's record.
He seeks not only Lord de Winter, but the other four unknown conspirators who took part in his mother's clandestine " trial " and execution.
In 1680 he voted against the execution of Lord Stafford.
His status was definitely fixed ( in the case of lord keeper Sir Nicholas Bacon ) by the Lord Keeper Act 1562 ( 5 Eliz 1 c 18 ), which declared him entitled to like place, pre-eminence, jurisdiction, execution of laws, and all other customs, commodities, and advantages as the Lord Chancellor.
" In December 1548, Patrick, Lord Gray of Foulis, was summoned to account for his treasons against the Government of Scotland, and although the French commanders argued for his execution, he was eventually pardoned at Regent Arran's command.

execution and Russell
The fall and execution of the Marquess of Exeter left a power vacuum in the southwestern counties of England, which Russell would be called upon to fill.
At a press conference in Denver, Colorado on 3 November 1999, Russell Means accused Vernon Bellecourt of having ordered the execution of Anna Mae Aquash in 1975.
For example, in 1990, following the execution of Romanian dictator Nicolae Ceauşescu, Russell did a parody song on his show to the tune of " Chattanooga Choo-Choo.
The execution of the duke was considered to be worse than that of Lord Russell.
Luis is executed on August 6, but Endora Lenox, saddened by her half-sister's loss, turns back time inside the execution chamber so that Eve Russell can confess that her long-lost son with Julian, Vincent Clarkson, is the mysterious blackmailer who murdered Rae and Dylan, set fire to Dylan's apartment, and twice raped Fancy, his own half-sister.
In the end, Luis was saved from execution by the combination of Endora Lennox and Eve Russell, who outed Vincent as the true murderer.

execution and at
The only public demonstration in honor of John Brown was held at Pratt's Hall in Providence, on the day of his execution.
Missing one of the legs of the trade ( and subsequently having to trade it soon after at a lower price ) is called ' execution risk ' or more specifically ' leg risk '.
This design, wherein the CPU's execution resources can operate on only one instruction at a time, can only possibly reach scalar performance ( one instruction per clock ).
Instruction level parallelism ( ILP ) seeks to increase the rate at which instructions are executed within a CPU ( that is, to increase the utilization of on-die execution resources ), and thread level parallelism ( TLP ) purposes to increase the number of threads ( effectively individual programs ) that a CPU can execute simultaneously.
Pipelining allows more than one instruction to be executed at any given time by breaking down the execution pathway into discrete stages.
This separation can be compared to an assembly line, in which an instruction is made more complete at each stage until it exits the execution pipeline and is retired.
Both simple pipelining and superscalar design increase a CPU's ILP by allowing a single processor to complete execution of instructions at rates surpassing one instruction per cycle ( IPC ).
More generally, judges look at the difficulty and execution of jumps, stunts and tumbling, synchronization, creativity, the sharpness of the motions, showmanship, and overall routine execution.
A context switch is the computing process of storing and restoring the state ( context ) of a CPU so that execution can be resumed from the same point at a later time.
Calef places Mather at the scene of the execution of Mr. Burroughs ( and four others who were killed after Mather spoke ) and shows him playing a direct and influential role:
Robert Mugabe announced Zimbabwe's immediate withdrawal from the Commonwealth at the 2003 CHOGM, and Nigeria's execution of Ken Saro-Wiwa and eight others on the first day of the 1995 CHOGM led to that country's suspension.
The compact nature of such instruction sets results in smaller program sizes and fewer ( slow ) main memory accesses, which at the time ( early 1960s and onwards ) resulted in a tremendous savings on the cost of computer memory and disc storage, as well as faster execution.
There is an early example of the 12th century in Lincoln ; in France the metal work of the doors of Notre Dame at Paris is perhaps the most beautiful in execution, but examples are endless throughout France and England.
Before going further with serious experimentation, it can be convenient to check one ’ s programs at the PC using a suitable cross-assembler, such as the portable PDP-8 / DG Nova cross-assembler listed in the External links section, before attempting execution in the RDOS environment.
Their high risk / high payoff technology is aimed at solving the national level problems of protection from biological, chemical and information attack and to provide operational dominance for mobile distributed command and control, combined manned / unmanned warfare, and dynamic, adaptive military planning and execution.
Historian Isabelle Dervaux has described the reception this painting received when it was first exhibited at the official Paris Salon of 1874: " Visitors and critics found its subject baffling, its composition incoherent, and its execution sketchy.
* Simple Concurrent Object-Oriented Programming ( SCOOP ) facilitates creation of multiple, concurrently active execution vehicles at a level of abstraction above the specific details of these vehicles ( e. g. multiple threads without specific mutex management ).
This is not mandatory, but it increases the grade of execution of the element if each leg is separated by at least a 45 ° angle from the body axis.
They now gathered the various constitutional laws they had passed into a single constitution, showed remarkable strength in choosing not to use this as an occasion for major revisions, and submitted it to the recently restored Louis XVI, who accepted it, writing " I engage to maintain it at home, to defend it from all attacks from abroad, and to cause its execution by all the means it places at my disposal ".
The disclosure document must be delivered at least 20 days before the execution of the agreement or any payments are made.
Historians Keith Hopkins and Mary Beard tentatively estimate a total of 400 arenas throughout the Roman Empire at its greatest extent, with a combined total of 8, 000 deaths per annum from all causes, including execution, combat and accident.
While it is true that Aldini did do these attempts at human reanimation during the same time of Shelley's writings, and Forster execution was a sensational notice in the public venue, there is no specific reference that Shelley did actually adapt Aldini into her works despite obviously being aware of Aldini's experiments which were done in public at the Royal College of Physicians in 1803.

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