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Page "Fernando Álvarez de Toledo, 3rd Duke of Alba" ¶ 8
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exiles and from
Some, like Rambert, are exiles in double measure since they are not only cut off from those they want to be with but they do not have the luxury of being in their own homes.
After Stalin's death, Lithuanian exiles from the nearby settlements moved in
This was the start of a " golden decade " of peace and prosperity, during which time Athanasius assembled several documents relating to his exiles and returns from exile in the Apology Against the Arians.
In 1553 the accession of Mary I drove Ochino, and hundreds of other European exiles, from England.
Its subject is the Return to Zion following the close of the Babylonian captivity, and it is divided into two parts, the first telling the story of the first return of exiles in the first year of Cyrus the Great ( 538 BC ) and the completion and dedication of the new Temple in Jerusalem in the sixth year of Darius ( 515 BC ), the second telling of the subsequent mission of Ezra to Jerusalem and his struggle to purify the Jews from the sin of marriage with non-Jews.
42, 360 exiles, with men servants, women servants and " singing men and women ", return from Babylon to Jerusalem and Judah under the leadership of Zerubbabel and Jeshua the High Priest.
On August 31, Senator Kenneth Keating ( R-New York ), who probably received his information from Cuban exiles in Florida, warned on the Senate floor that the Soviet Union may be constructing a missile base in Cuba.
In the late mid-sixteenth century, among groups of English Protestant exiles fleeing from Queen Mary I, some of the earliest anti-monarchist publications emerged.
In October a group of exiles invaded Honduras from El Salvador but were unsuccessful in their efforts to topple the government.
Egyptian president Anwar Sadat — whose policies included opening Egypt to Western investment ( Infitah ), breaking with Soviet Union to make Egypt an ally of the United States, and making peace with Israel — released Islamists from prison and welcomed home exiles in tacit exchange for political support in his struggle against leftists.
In 1052, Macbeth was involved indirectly in the strife in the Kingdom of England between Godwin, Earl of Wessex and Edward the Confessor when he received a number of Norman exiles from England in his court, perhaps becoming the first king of Scots to introduce feudalism to Scotland.
In 1068, he granted asylum to a group of English exiles fleeing from William of Normandy, among them Agatha, widow of Edward the Confessor's nephew Edward the Exile, and her children: Edgar Ætheling and his sisters Margaret and Cristina.
The exiles were disappointed, however, if they had expected immediate assistance from the Scots.
Further, the elite Athenians who suffered ostracism were rich or noble men who had connections or xenoi in the wider Greek world and who, unlike genuine exiles, were able to access their income in Attica from abroad.
The Legionnaires were a motley collection of refugees and exiles who dated from Francia's day.
Puritanism in this sense was founded by some Marian exiles from the clergies shortly after the accession of Elizabeth I of England in 1558, as an activist movement within the Church of England.
While long-distance travel was unusual in Pictish times, it was far from unknown as stories of missionaries, travelling clerics and exiles show.
Arriving in San Francisco after having been released from questioning by immigration officials on Angel Island on 11 August 1918, Prokofiev was soon compared to other famous Russian exiles ( such as Sergei Rachmaninoff ), and he started out successfully with a solo concert in New York, leading to several further engagements.
According to the Jewish version of events, when the Judean exile ended in 538 BCE and the exiles began returning home from Babylon, they found their former homeland populated by other people who claimed the land as their own and Jerusalem, their former glorious capital, in ruins.
Nowadays the interpretation followed by most scholars is that the Achean leaders driven out of their lands by the turmoil at the end of the Mycenean era preferred to claim descendance from exiles of the Trojan War.
The Tudors otherwise rejected or suppressed other religious notions, whether for the Pope's award of Fidei Defensor or to prevent them from being in the hands of the common laity, who might be swayed by cells of foreign Protestants, with whom they had conversation as Marian exiles, pursuing a strategy of containment which the Lancastrians had done ( after being vilified by Wat Tyler ), even though the phenomenon of " Lollard knights " ( like John Oldcastle ) had become almost a national sensation all on its own.
** The Bay of Pigs Invasion ( 1961 ) – an unsuccessful attempt by a CIA-trained force of Cuban exiles to invade southern Cuba with support from US government armed forces, to overthrow the Cuban government of Fidel Castro.
* Moorish exiles from Spain, led by Moulay Ali Ben Moussa Ben Rached El Alami, found the city of Chefchaouen in the north of Morocco.
A group of Italian exiles were to enter Piedmont from Switzerland and spread the revolution there, while Giuseppe Garibaldi, who had recently joined the Giovine Italia, was to do the same from Genoa.

exiles and who
European ancestors also include Spanish and Italian seamen who were granted land by the Portuguese Empire, followed by Portuguese settlers, exiles, and Portuguese Jews who were victims of the Inquisition.
* Anti-Somozistas who had supported the revolution but felt betrayed by the Sandinista government – e. g. Edgar Chamorro, prominent member of the political directorate of the FDN, or Jose Francisco Cardenal, who had briefly served in the Council of State before leaving Nicaragua out of disagreement with the Sandinista government's policies and founding the Nicaraguan Democratic Union ( UDN ), an opposition group of Nicaraguan exiles in Miami.
There he meets the exiles, who have memorized various books for an upcoming time when society is ready to rediscover them.
In the afterword of a later edition, Bradbury notes that the film adaptation changed the ending so that Clarisse ( who, in the film, is now a 20-year-old school teacher who was fired for being unorthodox ) was living with the exiles.
* Granger is the leader of a group of wandering intellectual exiles who memorize books in order to preserve their contents.
Zelaya now supported liberal Honduran exiles in Nicaragua in their efforts to topple Bonilla, who had established himself as a dictator.
The biblical history mentions tension between the returnees and those who had remained in Yehud, the former rebuffing the attempt of the " peoples of the land " to participate in the rebuilding of the Temple ; this attitude was based partly on the exclusivism which the exiles had developed while in Babylon and, probably, partly on disputes over property.
Among the exiles returning to Seychelles was Mr. James Mancham, who returned in April 1992 to revive his party, the Democratic Party ( DP ).
* The Roman synod exiles the prophet Jerome, who has incorporated ideas first propounded by the Roman statesman Cicero.
* King Richard II of England exiles his cousin Henry Bolingbroke ( the future Henry IV of England ) for 10 years in order to end Henry's feud with Thomas de Mowbray, 1st Duke of Norfolk, who is also exiled.
The exiles on the planet are thrilled with his ability and a violent fight breaks out over who will get to spend the most time with their visitor and enjoy the illusionary paradises he can transmit.
In May 1213 King John yielded and thus in July, Stephen ( who since his consecration had lived at Pontigny Abbey in Burgundy ) and his fellow exiles returned to England.
The extant document comprised all that could be said against Elizabeth I, and the indictment is therefore fuller and more forcible than any other put forward by the religious exiles, who were generally very reticent in their complaints.
The invasion of Babylonia by Cyrus was doubtless facilitated by the existence of a disaffected party in the state, as well as by the presence of foreign forced exiles like the Jews, who had been planted in the midst of the country.

exiles and called
In 2075, underground colonies are scattered across the Moon ( Luna ), of whom most inhabitants ( called " Loonies ") are criminals, political exiles, or descendants thereof.
Zech 3. 8 and 6. 12 refer to a man calledThe Branch .” In Zech 6, the Lord tells Zechariah to gather silver and gold from the returned exiles ( who had come back to Judah from Babylonia ), and to go to the house of Josiah son of Zephaniah ( members of the Davidic lineage ).
Polish exiles called on Britain to intervene against Russia during the November Uprising of 1830.
Soares and other political exiles returned home to celebrate what was called the " Carnation Revolution.
In 1961, he helped to publicize the story of Father Nguyen Lac Hoa, the " fighting priest " who had organized a crack militia called the Sea Swallows from his village of anti-communist Chinese Catholic exiles.
Cultural life involving intellectuals and exiles, journalists and politicians was very lively inside and outside the University until the Capital was moved to Florence: its decline commenced when members of the teaching staff were called to government duties or to State management.
Two important groups among the companions are called the Muhajirun or " exiles "-those who had faith in Muhammad when he began to preach in Mecca who fled with him when he was persecuted there-and the Ansar-people of Medina who welcomed Muhammad and his companions and stood as their protectors.
On the counsel of his priest Vasistha, he exiles his son Satyavrata, also called Trisanku.
It arose from an organization of Spaniard exiles called " Casa de España en México " ( House of Spain in Mexico ).
Art critics have their own organisation, a UNESCO non-governmental organisation, called the International Association of Art Critics which has around 76 national sections and a political non-aligned section for refugees and exiles.
4 ) the leaders of the exiles are called the " sages of the Great Synagogue.
With each change of government, which was called hwanguk ( 환국 換局 ), literally turn of the state, the losing faction was completely driven out of politics with executions and exiles.
With each change of government, which was called hwanguk ( 환국 換局 ), literally turn of the state, the losing faction was completely driven out of politics with executions and exiles.
* Slovak National Council ( 1943-1960 ), called " Slovak National Council Abroad " since 1948 ( a body of Slovak exiles )
This was opposed by many other English exiles, especially those seeking favor with Elizabeth I, such as John Aylmer, who published a retort to Knox called Harborowe for Faithful and True Subjects in 1559.

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