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edict and marked
* 1736 ( Genbun 1 ): The shogunate published an edict declaring that henceforth, the sole, authorized coinage in the empire would be those copper coins which were marked n the obverse with the character 文, pronounced bun in Japanese, the same character the era name Genbun.
The edict of Cyrus for the rebuilding of the Temple in Jerusalem marked a great epoch in the history of the Jewish people.
* 1736 ( Genbun 1 ): The shogunate published an edict declaring that henceforth, the sole, authorized coinage in the empire would be those copper coins which were marked on the obverse with the character 文 ( pronounced bun in Japanese or pronounced wen in Chinese — which is to say, the same character which is found in this era name of Genbun ).
Because of the political situation of the time, nothing happened until 1457, when Francesco Sforza's edict, underwritten by Cicco Simonetta, marked the start of design work.
The six quarters were officially abolished the edict issued by Violante Beatrice of Bavaria ( known as Notice of Violante of Bavaria ) in 1729, which marked the boundaries of New Division Contrade still valid.

edict and end
This edict was enacted by parlement two months later, at the end of the Ancien Régime.
The new emperor, Gallienus, issued an edict of toleration, bringing the persecution of Christians to an end and giving the Church legal status.
Whereas the play ( and the trilogy of which it is the last play ) was meant to end with somber mourning for the dead brothers, the spurious ending features a herald announcing the prohibition against burying Polyneices, and Antigone's declaration that she will defy that edict
He put an end to them in 1664 and published his " syncretistic " edict.
The abuses reappeared under Domitian ; the delators, with whom Vespasian had not interfered, although he had abolished trials for majestas, were again banished by Trajan, and threatened with capital punishment in an edict of Constantine ; but delating lasted till the end of the 4th century.
Before the treaty was even signed, the Ottoman government issued an edict, Hatt-ı Hümayun, which proclaimed the principle of the equality of Muslims and non-Muslims, and produced some specific reforms to this end.
At the end of 543 or the beginning of 544 the Emperor Justinian I issued an edict in which the three chapters were anathematized, in hope of encouraging the Oriental Orthodox to accept the decisions of the Council of Chalcedon and the Tome of Pope Leo I, thus bringing religious harmony to the Byzantine Empire.
Although he recognized that real unification could result only from an evolutionary process and not legislative edict, as the end of his term approached he discerned the need for changes in the National Security Act beyond those made in 1949.
At the end of November 1764, the king signed an edict dissolving the Society throughout his dominions, for they were still protected by some provincial parlements, as in Franche-Comté, Alsace, and Artois.
In this year he also issued his edict against the extravagant pomposity of the Church which contributed to the end of the era of Bavarian rococo.
The edict of 212 may have made enlistment in the army less attractive to most, hence the recruiting difficulties of the Roman army by the end of the 3rd century.
The edict did not end religious persecution and discrimination.
In the Dambidū lōmāfānu the king of Maldives ( Radun ) addresses his edict to all islands between Kelā ( in Tiladummati Atoll ), one of the northernmost islands of the group, and Addu ( Atoll ) in the southern end.

edict and religious
Again, Justinian moved toward compromise in the religious edict of 15 March 533, and congratulated himself that Pope John II admitted the orthodoxy of the imperial confession.
This edict proclaimed that all the religions were equal before the law, and that the Roman Empire had to return to its original religious eclecticism, according to which the Roman state did not impose any religion on its provinces.
On his return from his second visit he was the prime mover in the promulgation of the Bavarian religious edict of 1522, which practically established the senate of the University of Ingolstadt as a tribunal of the Inquisition, and led to years of persecution.
Although an accommodation between the two sides was sealed in 1598 by the Edict of Nantes, religious privileges of Huguenots eroded during the seventeenth century and were extinguished in 1685 by the revocation of the edict.
Here he lived with his mistress and his daughters — he had repudiated his wife — in disreputable peace until 1789, when he was condemned to a year's imprisonment for a lampoon on the Prussian religious edict of 1788.
* 1627 ( Kan ' ei 6 ): The: The Emperor was accused of having bestowed honorific purple garments to more than ten priests despite the shogun's edict which banned them for two years ( probably in order to break the bond between the Emperor and religious circles ).
In 1566, the edict of the Council of Trent was proclaimed denying Catholics any form of marriage not executed in a religious ceremony before a priest and two witnesses.
Yet relations with Go-Mizunoo deteriorated after the, during which the Emperor was accused of having bestowed honorific purple garments to more than ten priests despite an edict which banned them for two years ( probably in order to break the bond between the Emperor and religious circles ).
An edict of toleration is a declaration made by a government or ruler and states that members of a given religion will not be persecuted for engaging in their religious practices and traditions.
In the tolerance edict, she promised the toleration of all religious denominations in the Russian empire, except for the large number of Jews who had been the first partition of Poland in their subjects.
The municipality also ordered that music no longer be played in the Qalqiliya zoo, and mufti Akrameh Sabri issued a religious edict affirming the municipality decision.
The edict also guaranteed the rights and religious freedom of all inhabitants of the Ottoman Empire.
With the edict revoking religious toleration, Louis XIV combined legal persecution with the policy of terrorising recalcitrant Huguenots who refused to convert to Catholicism by billeting dragoons in their homes and instructing the soldiers to harass and intimidate the occupants to persuade them to either convert to the state religion or to emigrate.
The CODE NOIR OF LOUISIANA OF 1724 gave protection to slaves, by royal edict, including prohibitions against torture, mutilation, murder, corrupting female slaves, breaking up families and requirements for baptism, religious instructions, care for aged slaves and days of rest on Sundays and church holidays.
János Zsigmond Zápolya, adopting his court preacher's views, issued ( 1568 ) an edict of religious liberty at the Torda Diet, which allowed Dávid ( retaining his existing title ) to transfer his episcopate from the Calvinists to the Nontrinitarians, Kolozsvár being evacuated by all but his followers.
The remaining religious members of the order were successful in obtaining an edict in 1700 which again confirmed the purely religious nature of the order and regaining the use of the funds for religious and charitable purposes.
Other religious upheaval in the Ilkhanate during Ghazan's reign was instigated by Nawruz, who issued a formal edict in opposition to other religions in the Ilkhanate.
In 1712 Graf Ernst Casimir I issued an edict of tolerance permitting religious dissenters to settle in Büdingen.
This edict made the empire officially neutral with regard to religious worship ; it neither made the traditional religions illegal nor made Christianity the state religion, as occurred later with the Edict of Thessalonica.
After the initial conflicts between the state and the new emerging religion during which early Christians were periodically subject to intense persecution, Gallienus issued an edict of toleration for all religious creeds including Christianity, a re-affirmation of the policy of Alexander Severus.

edict and wars
Portuguese soldiers continued to raid the islands during 1435, and Eugene issued a further edict Sicut Dudum that prohibited wars being waged against the islands and affirming the ban on enslavement.

edict and France
China formally declared war on the United States, Britain, Germany, France and Japan, as an edict issued from the Dowager Empress Cixi.
Radama's successor, Queen Ranavalona I ( 1828 – 61 ), responded to increasing political and cultural encroachment on the part of Britain and France by issuing a royal edict prohibiting the practice of Christianity in Madagascar and pressuring most foreigners to leave the territory.
The scheme of the Paris police force was extended to the rest of France by a royal edict of October 1699, resulting in the creation of lieutenants general of police in all large French cities and towns.
* June 2 – A royal edict in France makes heresy punishable by death.
* The Pax Ecclesiae, an edict by the church in southern France attempting to outlaw acts of war against non-combatants and the clergy, is promulgated.
While it granted certain privileges to Huguenots, the edict reaffirmed Catholicism as the established religion of France.
Some Jews did leave France as a result of the leper scare, but Philip had successfully resisted signing any formal edict, which limited the impact to some degree.
This was a truth so acknowledged in France that the king ordered, by public edict, that the privilege of a tallière ( banker ) should be allowed only to the chief cadets ( sons of noblemen ).
In 1564 – 1566 he accompanied the young king on an extended tour through France ; and in 1566 he was instrumental in the promulgation of an important edict for the reform of abuses in the administration of justice.
Apparently shortly after the death of his father, he moved to the head of the valley at La Petite Liépvre, near Sainte-Marie-aux-Mines, France, remaining there until October 1712 when all the Anabaptists in the area were expelled by an edict of Louis XIV.
On the outbreak of the second war of religion in 1567, Pithou, who was a Calvinist, withdrew to Sedan, France and afterwards to Basel, returning to France on the publication of the edict of pacification.
The Edict of Fontainebleau ( October 1685 ) was an edict issued by Louis XIV of France, also known as the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes.
* 1562 – The Edict of Saint-Germain was an edict of limited toleration issued by Catherine de ' Medici ( the regent for the young Charles IX of France ) that ended insistent persecution of non-Catholics ( mostly Huguenots ).
After the return of Guadeloupe to France in 1763, the city of Pointe-à-Pitre was officially founded under governor Gabriel de Clieu in 1764 by a royal edict, and the swamps where downtown Pointe-à-Pitre stands today were drained in the following years, thus allowing the urban development of the city.
With the revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685, Louis XIV withdrew the privileges and toleration that Protestant Huguenots in France had been guaranteed under the edict for nearly 87 years, and ordered the destruction of Huguenot churches and the closure of Huguenot schools.
The edict provoked another revolt by the Protestant princes in 1552, this time led by Elector Maurice of Saxony and backed by King Henry II of France.
After King Henry III of Navarre became King Henry IV of France, he issued an edict in 1607 establishing the King of France and the Bishop of Urgell as co-princes of Andorra.
According to historian Henry Hallam, the first sénéchaux to receive judicial functions did so by an edict of Philip II of France in 1190, and " acted as the king's lieutenants in his domains ", or a sort of roving ambassadors or ministers for the throne.
The Parlement recognized the King of France and the edict of Nantes was accepted in 1600.
It should not be confused with the Edict of Fontainebleau ( October 1685 ), an edict issued by Louis XIV of France, best known as the " Revocation of the Edict of Nantes " of 1598 ( which had granted to the Huguenots the right to worship their religion without persecution from the state in a specified number of locations ).
In 1774, following the introduction of Rites of Adoption in several of its lodges, it issued an edict authorising them, the Duchess of Bourbon being elected first Grand Mistress of France.
On the promulgation in 1696 of an edict directing all who had armorial bearings to register them on payment of 20 livres, he was employed to collect the declarations returned in the various généralités, and established the Armorial général de France.

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