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boundaries and delineated
These deterred the intrusion of others and delineated the boundaries between neighbouring areas.
His twenty-one-year reign was marked by efforts to modernize and establish control of the kingdom, whose boundaries were delineated by the two empires bordering it.
The Agnipurana also mentions a territory known as Anda-Kataha with one of its boundaries delineated by a peak, which scholars believe is Gunung Jerai.
Physical regions are usually described by surface geological formations, hydrological and littoral surface features, discrete landscape features, and unique flora and fauna distribution that are not clearly delineated, and are separated by often wide transitional boundaries.
The region is well delineated by topographical boundaries.
The boundaries of the areas which are completely forbidden, while having large portions in common, are delineated differently by various rabbinic authorities.
In 1101 Peter delineated the boundaries of the diocese of Roda – Barbastro and those that would belong to Lleida after its reconquest.
Accordingly, in this initial period of the Weimar Republic, in 1922 the Protestant Church in Germany formed the German Evangelical Church Confederation of 28 regional ( or provincial ) churches (), with their regional boundaries more or less delineated by those of the federal states.
Further in other areas such as East Jerusalem the UN in May 2009 noted that " only 13 percent of East Jerusalem land is currently zoned by the Israeli authorities for Palestinian construction, and much of that is already built up " While the settlers constitute 17 % of the residents of the West Bank ( 300, 000 out of a total population of 1. 8 million ), the built up areas in the settlements occupy just 1. 7 % of the West Bank ; and if they continue to build solely at the rate of their natural growth ( 9, 000 births per year ), they will consume over the next decade a total of just one-half of one per cent in an area already delineated as their " municipal boundaries ".
In this Alfvén-Klein cosmology ( sometimes called Klein-Alfvén cosmology ), the universe is made up of equal amounts of matter and antimatter with the boundaries between the regions of matter and antimatter being delineated by cosmic electromagnetic fields formed by double layers, thin regions comprising two parallel layers with opposite electrical charge.
* Connecticut claimed a strip of land across the northern part of the region delineated by the westward extension of its northern and southern state boundaries.
In 1938, the Institut National des Appellations d ' Origine created the Appellation d ' origine contrôlée ( AOC ) region for Chablis that mandated the grape variety ( Chardonnay ) and acceptable winemaking and viticultural practices within delineated boundaries.
The geographical jurisdiction of a State's Attorney may be delineated by the boundaries of a county, judicial circuit, or judicial district.
The highest areas in the parish are in the central portion, but this gently slopes down to the boundaries, where on the coast, the parish is delineated by steep cliffs.
The Balkans area is delineated as the political boundaries and airspace of Bosnia-Herzegovina, Croatia, Yugoslavia ( including Kosovo ), the Former Yugoslavian Republic of Macedonia, and Albania, based on the detailed description contained in the SFOR, KFOR, and TF Fox OPLANS.
The area of eligibility is delineated by the political boundaries of the International Security and Assistance Force.
All of Scotland has had community council areas delineated, the numbers and boundaries of which can be altered by the area council.
River Club borders the suburbs of Duxberry and Bryanston, and these boundaries are delineated by East Hertford in the east, Coleraine in the south, the Braamfontein Spruit in the north, and the William Nicol freeway in the east.
The term has gained widespread use throughout much of western Polynesia including Tokelau, Tuvalu, ' Uvea and Futuna, etc., with the expansion of use of the term being though to have occurred in the 18th century when Tongans, and to lesser extent Samoans, regularly interacted with white sailors, beachcombers, convicts, missionaries, and whalers who clearly delineated ethnoracial boundaries between themselves ( papalagi / papalangi ) and the Polynesians they encountered.

boundaries and charter
The Black Hills Area Council was granted a charter by the National Council, Boy Scouts of America in 1930, charged with the responsibility of organizing and supporting successful Cub Scout Packs, Boy Scout Troops, Varsity Scout Teams, Venturing Crews, Explorer Posts and Learning for Life Groups within its geographical boundaries.
In the early 19th century, the area that would later become Westwood was within the larger political boundaries of Harrington Township, which had been established by royal charter in 1775.
Maumee's original boundaries have expanded and the population has grown from the handful of promoters who applied for a municipal charter in 1838 to more than 15, 000 residents.
The original charter ( as reproduced in State Papers of Vermont, Volume Two: Charters Granted by the State of Vermont, VT Secretary of State, 1922, pp 206 – 7 ) merely mentions the boundaries of the tract of land.
The village charter does not allow commercial or industrial business within the village boundaries.
Interestingly, the boundaries of the final town charter granted by the State of Connecticut in 1899 to Laurel Beach are contained entirely within Milford.
The Company's possession of Bermuda was made official in 1612, when the third and final charter extended the boundaries of ' Virginia ' far enough out to sea to encompass Bermuda, which was also known, for a time, as Virgineola.
The town received its charter in 1554 when Queen Mary created the free borough of Buckingham with boundaries extending from Thornborowe Bridge ( now Thornborough ) to Dudley Bridge and from Chackmore Bridge to Padbury Mill Bridge.
A description in Anglo-Saxon of the boundaries of the estate was endorsed on the charter.
A charter of Cologne Archbishop Wichfried from the year 948 a. d. set the boundaries of the Provostry Oberpleis and moved into a district of Aegidienberg the today's Bad Honnefer, apart from Wülscheid.
The charter trustees are made up of local councillors in the district representing wards within the boundaries of the town / city.
In 1009 Æþelræd Unræd ( King Ethelred the Unready ) signed a charter at the Great Council which recognised the position and boundaries of Westune.
Many of these colonies were established by royal proclamation or charter that defined their boundaries as stretching " from sea to sea "; others did not have western boundaries established at all.
As of 2007, according to the Van Buren Place Community Restoration Association, 13 elementary schools, four middle schools, six non-charter high schools, and two charter high schools are located within the boundaries of West Adams.
In 1009 King Æthelred the Unready signed a charter at the Great Council which recognised the position and boundaries of Weston-on-Trent and several other manors including Crich.
King's Mill, the nearby crossing on the River Trent, is mentioned in a charter agreed by Æþelræd Unræd ( King Ethelred the Unready ) in 1009 regarding the boundaries of Weston-on-Trent.
After World War II, the principles of international law that upheld the territorial integrity of states were incorporated in the Charter of the United Nations, and subsequently reaffirmed in the Declaration on the Granting of Independence to Colonial Countries and Peoples, the Organization of African Unity charter respecting the integrity of inherited boundaries, and the 1975 CSCE Helsinki Final Act which contained a proscription that boundaries could only be altered by consent.
In the middle of the 19th century, the surrounding municipal districts were reorganized and Castro Verde was formalized within its current boundaries: it had received its town charter ( Foral ) in 1510 by King Manuel I of Portugal.
The charter created the burgage plots — long, narrow plots which can still be seen in the property boundaries on the west side of Castlegate and east side of Bridge Street.
In 1009 Æþelræd Unræd ( King Ethelred the Unready ) signed a charter at the Great Council which recognised the position and boundaries of Westune.

boundaries and would
A veteran diplomat with an extraordinary knowledge of Russian language, history and literature, Kennan recalls how, at the time of Hitler's attack on the Soviet Union in 1941, he penned a private note to a State Department official, expressing the hope that `` never would we associate ourselves with Russian purposes in the areas of eastern Europe beyond her own boundaries ''.
The mixing and pushing against the boundaries of established operatic genres would be a continuing hallmark of Salieri's own personal style, and in his choice of material for the plot ( as in his first opera ), he manifested a lifelong interest in subjects drawn from classic drama and literature.
However, the data he used originated back to epoch B1875. 0, which was when Benjamin A. Gould first made the proposal to designate boundaries for the celestial sphere, a suggestion upon which Delporte would base his work.
However, during the same period, a group of ambitious producers began working outside the boundaries of DOC regulations to make what they believed would be a higher quality style of Chianti.
Later, however, the Sultan changed his orders and had Fakhr-al-Din and his family killed on 13 April 1635 in Istanbul, bringing an end to an era in the history of Lebanon, which would not regain its current boundaries until it was proclaimed a mandate state and republic in 1920.
Otherwise, the description of the boundaries would be rather more logical, if schenisghe meant the city of Szczecin.
Under his tutelage, Sweden and the Protestant cause developed a number of excellent commanders, such as Lennart Torstensson, who would go on to defeat Sweden's enemies and expand the boundaries and the power of the empire long after Gustav Adolph's death in battle.
State boundaries would be established according to natural ethnic affinities, rather than by planners in distant imperial capitals, and overseen by his envisaged world alliance of states.
During his reign ( 1880 – 1901 ), the British and Russians officially established the boundaries of what would become modern Afghanistan.
Ibn Battuta talked his way into this expedition, which would be his first beyond the boundaries of the Islamic world.
The aftermath of the First World War left many issues to be settled, including the exact position of national boundaries and which country particular regions would join.
These boundaries would remain unchanged until 1916.
Nations may currently be pushing the boundaries of the international system, but the pursuit of any action to formally legalize non-medical and non-scientific drug use would require either treaty revision or a complete or partial withdrawal from the current regime.
During the 20th century elsewhere, both the licensing laws and enforcement were progressively relaxed, and there were differences between parishes ; in the 1960s, at closing time in Kensington at 10: 30 pm, drinkers would rush over the parish boundary to be in good time for " Last Orders " in Knightsbridge before 11 pm, a practice observed in many pubs adjoining licensing area boundaries.
All these other surfaces would have boundaries and the sphere is the only surface without boundary with constant positive Gaussian curvature.
Moreover, new states were recognized by the legal doctrine of uti possidetis juris, meaning that old administrative boundaries would become international boundaries upon independence even if they had little relevance to linguistic, ethnic, and cultural boundaries.
* Cosmopolitan liberalism calls for political power to shift to a world government which would make secession and change of boundaries a relatively easy administrative matter.
In exchange for this concession, Michigan would be granted the western three-quarters of the Upper Peninsula ( the easternmost portion had already been included in the state boundaries ).
Altham pointed out that for most of Grace's career, he played on pitches that " the modern schoolboy would consider unfit for a house match " and on grounds without boundaries where every hit including those " into the country " had to be run in full.
The original city boundaries did not cover the whole Improvement District ; they may have been intended as the areas where communities would be built for people to live.
), its coupling with the resonance of the cylindrical body of the drum, and the conditions at its boundaries ( a rigid termination to the drum's body ) would describe its movement over time and thus its generation of sound.
These doctors, led by Kouchner, concluded that a new aid organisation was needed that would ignore political / religious boundaries and prioritise the welfare of victims.
* Senator Thomas Hart Benton in December 1849 or January 1850: Texas's western and northern boundaries would be the 102nd meridian west and 34th parallel north.

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