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city and sprang
During the ensuing 15 years, many countercultural and New Left enterprises sprang up and developed large constituencies within the city.
At the beginning of Ottoman rule, several mosques sprang up in the city, and church lands were often seized and given to ex-soldiers, while many churches themselves were converted over time into mosques.
The city of Johannesburg sprang up as a shanty town nearly overnight as the uitlanders (" foreigners ," meaning non-Boer whites ) poured in and settled around the mines.
During this period much Gothic architecture sprang up around Naples, including the Naples Cathedral, which is the main church of the city.
New buildings, in typical fascist architecture, sprang up in the city.
A kind of parallel government in the form of " general assemblies " sprang up next to the city governments and the provincial States that repeatedly came into conflict with the established order.
The city was badly damaged as a result of the Civil War in Tajikistan ( 1992 – 1997 ) that sprang up in the nation shortly after its independence.
A number of theaters sprang up in the city, beginning in the late 19th century.
The " tent city " that sprang up was named after Lt. Emmet Crawford, who had been formerly stationed at Fort Robinson but was killed in Mexico in January 1886.
Following the silver strike, Captain Bullard laid out the streets of the Silver City, and a bustling tent city quickly sprang to life.
By 1871, numerous mining camps sprang up in the valley and resident John C. Cox filed a plan for a city on the east side of the valley.
Other examples of public giving were evident in the city, as public buildings housing free libraries, schools and foundations sprang up along the city's widening streets.
During the 1950s, bars sprang up across the city to accommodate the influx of new inhabitants, and soon became a symbol for Cameroonian identity in the face of colonialism.
The city has its origins in the Tokugawa period when a castle was built in the 16th century at the ford and a town sprang up around it.
During the next 10 years, an entire city sprang up on Macross Island as intense efforts were made to rebuild the spaceship.
A desperate effort of Spanish and Imperialist forces to relieve the city failed and on August 20, 1632, Frederick Henry sprang his mines, breaching the walls of the city.
The abandoned town of Bennett, British Columbia, historically usually referred to as Lake Bennett or Bennett Lake sprang up on its shores, numbering in the thousands and offering all the services of a major city.
Victorian Glasgow took the provision of open spaces extremely seriously, with the result that parks such as Queen's Park sprang up across the city.
After Detroit rebuilt in the early 19th century, a thriving community soon sprang up, and by the Civil War, over 45, 000 people were living in the city, primarily spread along Jefferson Avenue to the east and Fort Street to the west.
Beginning in the 1830s, the city itself began to grow beyond its original boundaries, and a mixture of homes and factories sprang up on the district's southern fringes.
On 6 August the town of Lawton sprang up and quickly grew to become the third largest city in Oklahoma.
Disston founded a sugar plantation, out of which sprang the city of St.
Lesser realms, which included the city of Ss ' thar ' tiss ' ssun ( located in what is now the Forest of Wyrms ) and the city of Ilimar ( which is now split between the Great Swamp of Rethild and the Gulthmere Forest ), sprang up outside of the two great empires of Mhairshaulk and Isstosseffifil.

city and up
On Fridays, the day when many Persians relax with poetry, talk, and a samovar, people do not, it is true, stream into Chehel Sotun -- a pavilion and garden built by Shah Abbas 2, in the seventeenth century -- but they do retire into hundreds of pavilions throughout the city and up the river valley, which are smaller, more humble copies of the former.
Not long ago an acquaintance, a slick-headed water rat of a lad up from the maw of the city, stood on the balcony puffing his first cigarette in weeks.
On spring and summer evenings people leave their shops and houses and walk up through the lanes of the city to the bridge.
Around that statue in the green park where children play and lovers walk in twos and there is a glowing view of the whole city, in that park are the rows of marble busts of Garibaldi's fallen men, the ones who one day rushed out of the Porta San Pancrazio and, under fire all the way, up the long, straight narrow lane to take, then lose the high ground of the Villa Doria Pamphili.
It really ought to be rebuilt, and he determined to go up and talk to the city banks about this.
For those who plan to travel to Europe by one route and return by another some agencies offer a service whereby you can pick up a car in one city on arrival and leave it in another city, or even another country, when you are ready to return home.
No matter if your children are at the movies, in school, visiting their grandmother, or on a field trip in some distant city, they will be upon you magically within seconds after you pick up the phone.
Here you can pick up a taxi or public transport to return to the center of the city.
He expressed the opinion the city could hire a CD director for about $3,500 a year and would only have to put up half that amount on a matching fund basis to defray the salary costs.
While the city council suggested that the Legislative Council might perform the review, Mr. Notte said that instead he will take up the matter with Atty. Gen. J. Joseph Nugent to get `` the benefit of his views ''.
The day following, when he was performing divine service in the basilica, the prefect of the city came to persuade him to give up at least the Portian basilica in the suburbs.
The city suffered extreme overcrowding and deplorable sanitary conditions up to 1875 when the medieval fortifications were finally abandoned as a limit to building operations and new, less miserable quarters were built in the eastern part of the city, where drainage of waste liquids was easiest.
In the 19th century and up to the 1930s, the city was important for the production of railway locomotives and carriages, iron, pins, needles, buttons, tobacco, woollen goods, and silk goods.
With their consent, he set up a rival emperor, the prefect of the city, a Greek named Priscus Attalus.
An International Council ( IC ) was set up to discuss and decide major issues regarding the WSF, while the local organizing committee in the host city is responsible for the practical preparations of the event.
Newer districts of the city lie to the south and east of the outcrop, as well as higher up the mountain, and in the valley on both sides of the Aar.
The city was linked up to the Swiss Central Railway in 1856.
The modern city not only encloses the entire harbor but takes up the better part of the Gulf of Ajaccio and in suburban form extends for some miles up the valley of the Gravona River.
When the Governor saw that he was confessing his Christianity publicly, not caring what might happen to him, he ordered him not to show up in the city.
In 1451 Berlin became the royal residence of the Brandenburg electors, and Berlin had to give up its status as a free Hanseatic city.
At present Berlin consists of 96 localities, which are commonly made up of several city neighborhoods — called Kiez in the Berlin dialect — representing small residential areas.

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