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Protestation and from
The Wilhelmian era provided Speyer with numerous stately new buildings: In commemoration of the Protestation of 1529 the neogothic Gedächtniskirche, or Memorial Church ( height: 105 m ), begun in 1890, was consecrated in 1904, with financial support from Emperor William II and from Protestants all around the world.
Penry however was not found, and in September issued from Wolston or Haseley The Protestation of Martin Mar prelate, the last work of the series, though several of the anti-Martinist pamphlets appeared after this date.
The Protestation Oath, with its pledge to defend the true religion " against all Popery and popish innovation ", triggered demands from parishioners for the removal of the rails as popish innovations which the Protestation had bound them to reform.

Protestation and is
On 20 April, they drew up a letter of protest which was rejected by the Diet but then delivered to Emperor Charles V. This Protestation at Speyer sealed the schism of the Christian church and is considered the birth of Protestantism.
* Between 1883 and 1904, the Memorial Church is built in remembrance of the Protestation of 1529.
It is known that in common with many parts of the Chilterns there was much discontent with the levying of Ship Money and the oath required in support of The Protestation some of the causes of the dispute between Parliamentarians and King Charles I.

Protestation and collection
Its first recorded use was in 1894, in The Protestation, an ode by a British clergyman, Selwyn Image, that appeared in a collection entitled Poems and Carols:

Protestation and which
He was one of the chief movers of the Protestation of 3 May 1641, which he carried up to the Lords, urging them to give it their approval.
At the 1521 Diet of Worms Emperor Charles V had Martin Luther banned and the proliferation of his writings prohibited, which in 1529 provoked the Protestation at Speyer by several Lutheran estates.

Protestation and were
Political conditions were nonetheless very unfavorable to Philip, who might easily be charged with disturbing the peace of the empire, and at the Second Diet of Speyer, in the spring of 1529, he was publicly ignored by Emperor Charles V. Nevertheless, he took an active part in uniting the Protestant representatives, as well as in preparing the celebrated Protestation at Speyer.
The Protestation Returns of 1642 were intended to record a full list of all male inhabitants aged eighteen years and over in each parish, who took an oath to ' live and die for the true Protestant religion '.

Protestation and included
His offences included ignoring the Directory set by Parliament to enforce puritan reforms, refusing sacraments to those not kneeling, allowing Sunday games and reading a royalist Protestation in the middle of a sermon.

Protestation and .
On 3 May, Parliament decreed The Protestation, attacking the ' wicked counsels ' of Charles's government, whereby those who signed the petition undertook to defend ' the true reformed religion ', parliament, and the king's person, honour and estate.
At Broadwindsor, early in 1641, Thomas Fuller, his curate Henry Sanders, the churchwardens, and five others certified that their parish, represented by 242 adult males, had taken the Protestation ordered by the speaker of the Long Parliament.
On the outbreak of the First English Civil War, Baxter blamed both parties and recommended the Protestation ; but Worcestershire was a Royalist county, and he was exposed to annoyance and danger in Kidderminster.
In 1929 and still under French occupation the town celebrated the 400th anniversary of the Protestation.
* In 1529, at the Second Diet of Speyer, the Lutheran states of the empire protested against the anti-Reformation resolutions ( 19 April 1529 Protestation at Speyer, hence the term Protestantism.
William Holdsworth, the curate of Earl Shilton, openly reviled the Parliament and stood accused of reading a Royal Protestation in the middle of a sermon.
Nördlingen was one of the first Protestant cities and took part in the Protestation at Speyer in 1529.
* Gedächtniskirche der Protestation ( Memorial Church of the Protestation ) in Speyer.
Apparently his views changed as the revolutionary tendency of the Presbyterian party became more pronounced, for in 1649 he addressed to Lord Fairfax A Religious and Loyal Protestation ... against the proceedings of the parliament.
As a member of Parliament, Coke participated in the impeachment of Francis Bacon as lord chancellor and helped draft the Protestation of December 1621.

," and from
Motivation usually makes the difference between " good " and " bad ," but motivation also includes the aspect of ignorance ; so a well-intended action from an ignorant mind can easily be " bad " in that it creates unpleasant results for the " actor.
" Congo and Angola have agreed to suspend expulsions from both sides of the border ," said Lambert Mende, DR Congo information minister, in October 2009.
Allegiance is formed from " liege ," from Old French liege, " liege, free ", of Germanic origin.
The psychologist David H. Barlow of Boston University conducted a study that showed three common characteristics of people suffering from chronic anxiety, which he characterized as " a generalized biological vulnerability ," " a generalized psychological vulnerability ," and " a specific psychological vulnerability.
The vernacular name daisy, widely applied to members of this family, is derived from its Old English meaning, dægesege, from dæges eage meaning " day's eye ," and this was because the petals ( of Bellis perennis ) open at dawn and close at dusk.
When Tarrou points out that " victories will never be lasting ," Rieux admits that he is involved in a " never ending defeat ," but this does not stop him from engaging in the struggle.
In his first sermon, given during the first month of the plague, Paneloux describes the epidemic as the " flail of God ," through which God separates the wheat from the chaff, the good from the evil.
The traditional etymology is from the Latin aperire, " to open ," in allusion to its being the season when trees and flowers begin to " open ," which is supported by comparison with the modern Greek use of ἁνοιξις ( anoixis ) ( opening ) for spring.
According to Scott Simpson, the Gona Project's physical anthropologist, the fossil evidence from the Middle Awash indicates that both A. kadabba and A. ramidus lived in " a mosaic of woodland and grasslands with lakes, swamps and springs nearby ," but further research is needed to determine which habitat Ardipithecus at Gona preferred.
Hesiod connects it by with ( aphros ) " foam ," interpreting it as " risen from the foam ".
By the late 5th century BC, philosophers might separate Aphrodite into two separate goddesses, not individuated in cult: Aphrodite Ourania, born from the sea foam after Cronus castrated Uranus, and Aphrodite Pandemos, the common Aphrodite " of all the folk ," born from Zeus and Dione.
Twice in the year the superiors of the several coenobia met at the chief monastery, under the presidency of an archimandrite (" the chief of the fold ," from miandra, a sheepfold ), and at the last meeting gave in reports of their administration for the year.
Under the heading of " practices ," his class considers how readers read and marked up their books, forms of note-taking, and the interrelation between reading and writing from copying and translating to composing new texts.
Albert's personal qualities won for him the cognomen of the Bear, " not from his looks or qualities, for he was a tall handsome man, but from the cognisance on his shield, an able man, had a quick eye as well as a strong hand, and could pick what way was straightest among crooked things, was the shining figure and the great man of the North in his day, got much in the North and kept it, got Brandenburg for one there, a conspicuous country ever since ," says Carlyle, who called Albert " a restless, much-managing, wide-warring man.
Agesilaus II, or Agesilaos II () ( 444 BC – 360 BC ) was a king of Sparta, of the Eurypontid dynasty, ruling from approximately 400 BC to 360 BC, during most of which time he was, in Plutarch's words, " as good as thought commander and king of all Greece ," and was for the whole of it greatly identified with his country's deeds and fortunes.
To distinguish him from Ajax, son of Oileus ( Ajax the Lesser ), he is called " Telamonian Ajax ," " Greater Ajax ," or " Ajax the Great ".

," and Egyptian
The Egyptian conception of the universe centered on Ma ' at, a word that encompasses several concepts in English, including " truth ," " justice ," and " order.
Death threats against Mahfouz followed, including one from the " blind sheikh ," Egyptian theologian Omar Abdul-Rahman.
This holiday commemorates the day the Children of Israel reached the Red Sea and witnessed both the miraculous " Splitting of the Sea ," the drowning of all the Egyptian chariots, horses and soldiers that pursued them, and the Passage of the Red Sea.
The word " basalt " is ultimately derived from Late Latin basaltes, misspelling of L. basanites " very hard stone ," which was imported from Ancient Greek βασανίτης ( basanites ), from βάσανος ( basanos, " touchstone ") and originated in Egyptian bauhun " slate ".
Chafetz was arrested when he returned to Cairo in February 1984 for " smuggling an airplane into Egypt ," even though he had the written permission of the Egyptian Geological Survey and Mining Authority to bring the aircraft into the country.
Furthermore, he writes, " Rome shapes its Egyptian imperial struggle most visually around the contours of Cleopatra's sexualized and racialized black body — most explicitly her " tawny front ," her " gipsy's lust ," and her licentious climactic genealogy, " with Phoebus ' amorous pinches black ".
" The most likely interpretation of this passage is as two variants on the same syncretism of Greek Hermes and Egyptian Thoth ( or sometimes other gods ); the one viewed from the Greek-Arcadian perspective ( the fifth, who went from Greece to Egypt ), the other viewed from the Egyptian perspective ( the fourth, where Hermes turns out " actually " to have been a " son of the Nile ," i. e. a native god ).
Terryl Givens has suggested that the characters are early examples of Egyptian symbols being used " to transliterate Hebrew words and vice versa ," that Demotic is a " reformed Egyptian ," and that the mixing of a Semitic language with modified Egyptian characters is demonstrated in inscriptions of ancient Syria and Palestine.
The Egyptian Islamic Jihad () ( EIJ ), formerly called simply Islamic Jihad ( and Liberation Army for Holy Sites ) originally referred to as " al-Jihad ," and then " the Jihad Group ", or " the Jihad Organization ", is an Egyptian Islamist group active since the late 1970s.
Egyptian filmmaker Essam Deraz, " bin Laden's first biographer ," met bin Laden in the " Lion's Den " training camp in Afghanistan and complained that the Egyptians " formed a barrier " around bin Laden and " whenever he tried to speak confidentially to bin Laden, the Egyptians would surround the Saudi and drag him into another room ".
The Rosetta Stone, " basically a tax concession ," was statement of thanks to the Egyptian priesthood for help during the crisis.
Nephthys is the Greek form of an epithet ( transliterated as Nebet-het, and Nebt-het, from Egyptian hieroglyphs ). The origin of the goddess Nephthys is unclear but the literal translation of her name is usually given as " Lady of the House ," which has caused some to mistakenly identify her with the notion of a " housewife ," or as the primary lady who ruled a domestic household.
In this role, Nephthys was given the name " Nephthys-Kheresket ," and a wealth of temple texts from Edfu, Dendara, Philae, Kom Ombo, El Qa ' la, Esna, and others corroborate the late identification of Nephthys as the supreme goddess of Upper Egyptian Nome VII, where another shrine existed in honor of the Bennu.

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