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Some Related Sentences

Flagellants and were
Other trials where the accused were condemned as Flagellants were recorded as late as the 1480s.

Flagellants and condemned
Clement VI officially condemned them in a bull of October 20, 1349 and instructed Church leaders to suppress the Flagellants.

Flagellants and by
* Civil unrest in northern Italy spawns the medieval musical form of Geisslerlieder, penitential songs sung by wandering bands of Flagellants .</ onlyinclude >
The practice was, of course, capable of abuse, and so arose in the thirteenth century the fanatical sect of the Flagellants, though in the same period we meet with the private use of the " discipline " by such saintly persons as King Louis IX of France and Elisabeth of Hungary.
* Exhibition of Female Flagellants ( 1830 ) attributed, probably falsely, to Theresa Berkley, published by George Cannon.
* Flagellation & the Flagellants: A History of the Rod ( 1868 ) by " Rev.
* The Beautiful Flagellants of New York ( 1907 ) by Lord Drialys ( The Society of British Bibliophiles Carrington: Paris ) – follows an intrepid traveller's adventures from Chicago to Boston to New York.
Reprinted by Olympia Press as The Beautiful Flagellants of Chicago, Boston and New York.
The ritual began with the reading of a letter, claimed to have been delivered by an angel and justifying the Flagellants ' activities.
This position was reinforced in 1372 by Gregory XI who associated the Flagellants with other heretical groups, notably the Beghards.
Sacred Flagellants and knights can be blessed by powerful priests, who are also masters of fire magic and preach very effectively against enemy faith.
Flagellants marched next to the mercenaries and state troops of all the Elector Counts, hedge wizards trained by the Elven High Mage Teclis advanced alongside ordinary citizens who hated Chaos.

Flagellants and Roman
In the 13th century, a group of Roman Catholics, known as the Flagellants, took this practice to its obvious ends.

Flagellants and Catholic
Initially the Catholic Church tolerated the Flagellants and individual monks and priests joined in the early movements.
Modern processions of hooded Flagellants are still a feature of various Mediterranean Catholic countries, mainly in Spain, Italy and some former colonies, usually every year during Lent.

Flagellants and century
Flagellants, from a fifteenth century woodcut

Flagellants and because
Flagellation and the Flagellants, Sir Eyre was removed from the service on 21 May 1816 because of the scandal he caused in the Christ's Hospital school for boys.

Flagellants and had
However, some towns began to notice that sometimes Flagellants brought plague to towns where it had not yet surfaced.

Flagellants and .
* 1261 – January – Pope bans the movement of Flagellants.
* October 20 – Pope Clement VI publishes a papal bull that condemns the Flagellants.
* January – Pope Alexander IV bans the Flagellants movement.
) Hundreds of thousands of engravings, photographs, and / or literary depictions of spanking and flagellation (" birching ") fantasies circulated during the Victorian era, including erotic novellas like The Whippingham Papers, The Birchen Bouquet, Exhibition of Female Flagellants or the pornographic comic opera Lady Bumtickler's Revels.
Flagellants.
Rulers like Catherine de ' Medici and France's King Henry III supported Flagellants but Henry IV banned them.
Her fame was such that the pornographic novel Exhibition of Female Flagellants was attributed to her, probably falsely.
The Empire also often fields state-trained Battle Wizards and religious fanatics known as Flagellants.
Delolme also wrote in English Parallel between the English Government and the former Government of Sweden ( 1772 ); A History of the Flagellants ( 1782 ), based upon a work of Boileau's ; An Essay on the Union of Scotland with England ( 1787 ), and one or two smaller works.

were and later
Three hours later, while we were bailing desperately, a dot of land came into view.
A year later they were removed to a Stalag in the harbor of Stettin.
We were given a job and we carried it out, and later, his case was taken up by the Disciplinary Committee.
A few weeks later the maps were being divided into squares and a position was described as being `` about lots 239, 247 and 272 with pickets forward as far as 196 ''.
Boniface was later to explain to the English that Robert of Burgundy and Guy De St.-Pol were easy enough to do business with ; ;
Behind him lay the Low Countries, where men were still completing the cathedrals that a later Florentine would describe as `` a malediction of little tabernacles, one on top of the other, with so many pyramids and spires and leaves that it is a wonder they stand up at all, for they look as though they were made of paper instead of stone or marble '' ; ;
A week later the sentence of the Council was carried out: Jake Camaret and the woman were marched naked through the streets past a mocking populace.
Again among those jubilantly reunited bunkmates, I was shy with Jessie and acted as I had during those early Saturday mornings when we all seemed to be playing for effect, to be detached and unconcerned with the girls who were properly our dates but about whom, later, in the privacy of our bunks, we would think in terms of the most elaborate romance.
Years later, franks-in-buns were accepted as the `` first to go '' at the New York Polo Grounds.
the later works were conceived to affirm a way of life for fellow citizens.
So impressive were those serious years of study at the university that Hans later wrote, `` to be perfectly free, the young man must revel in the great kingdom of thought and imagination ; ;
Mills secured Barco's photograph from the gentleman in charge, rushed to the Hollywood police station to report the theft, and less than five minutes later, detectives with his picture in hand were on the trail of Cal Barco.
The sections were mounted on cold slides smeared with Haupts' adhesive ( Johansen, 1940 ) in earlier experiments, and in later experiments with a different mixture of the same components reported by Schramm and Rottger ( 1959 ).
In later experiments, Af and Af were prepared by conjugating 8 mg of FITC per gram of globulin.
For purposes of sample selection only ( individual tests were given later ) we obtained group test scores of reading achievement and intelligence from school records of the entire third-grade population in each school system.
One cannot assume, of course, that all these accumulated meanings were inherent in the stereotype at the beginning of the therapy, or at any one time later on when the stereotype was uttered ; ;
Three years later similar restraints were imposed upon injunctions against collection of state taxes.
the important point, however, is that these magnificent achievements, unlike those of later decades, were only incidentally influenced by Oriental models.
On that cold, but bright, April day we were guests of your government in the reviewing stand of Red Square to witness the poeple's celebration for Yuri Gagarin and later on that day we attended the somewhat more exclusive reception for him in one of the impressive palaces of the Kremlin.
They were held together by pegs and withes and in later times drawn by a single ox in thills.
When the Negroes landed at Boston a month later they were, of course, no longer slaves.
On arriving in Tokyo later we were met by Masu who took us immediately to her university, the Japanese Women's University.
He went for more aspirin later in the day, and passed the surly landlord on the way -- he was still alive and scowling as usual, as if tenants were a burden in his life.
An hour later we were back in my unpadded pad, killing what had been left of the second pint.

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