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foundation and charter
His academic reputation spread so quickly that on the foundation in 1571 of Jesus College, Oxford he was named in the charter as one of the founding scholars " without his privity " ( Isaacson, 1650 ); his connection with the college seems to have been purely notional, however.
Its foundation dates from 1144 when Alphonse Jourdain, count of Toulouse, granted it a liberal charter.
* The foundation of Oriel College, Oxford, the University of Oxford's fifth oldest college, is confirmed by royal charter.
* June 15 – The city of Bilbao receives a royal foundation charter.
The foundation charter was drawn up on the northern shore of Lake Balaton.
A royal charter of foundation was issued on 12 May 1364, and a simultaneous document was issued by the City Council granting privileges to the Studium Generale.
On the September 29, 1621, a charter for the foundation of a New World Scottish colony was granted by James VI of Scotland to Sir William Alexander.
In the decades after its foundation the abbey was the recipient of considerable endowments, as seen from the dedication of 26 altars donated by individual benefactors and guilds and it was an important centre of pilgrimage after Dunfermline became a centre for the cult of St Margaret ( Malcolm's wife and David's mother ), from whom the monastery later claimed foundation and for which an earlier foundation charter was fabricated.
The foundation of the minster at Pershore is alluded to in a spurious charter of King Æthelred of Mercia ( r. 675-704 ).
Historian H. P. R. Finberg suggests that the foundation charter may have been drafted in the 9th century, based on some authentic material.
Oswald's foundation of a monastery at Pershore is not stated explicitly in the charter, but the Worcester chronicle Cronica de Anglia, written c. 1150, reports it under the annal for 683, and John Leland, consulting the now lost Annals of Pershore, places the event around 689.
The monks claimed that Roger's body, along with those of his family and successors, was due to them as part of the foundation charter of the priory ( as was common practice at the time ).
The foundation charter named a Principal ( David Lewis ), eight Fellows, eight Scholars, and eight Commissioners to draw up the statutes for the college.
De Brome's foundation was confirmed in a charter of 21 January 1326, in which the Crown, represented by the Lord Chancellor, was to exercise the rights of Visitor ; a further charter drawn up in May of that year gave the rights of Visitor to Henry Burghersh, Bishop of Lincoln, Oxford at that time being part of the diocese of Lincoln.
The foundation charter specified that the college should " make provision for those who intend to serve as missionaries overseas and ... educate the sons of clergymen ".
Walter's gratitude towards his aunt and uncle is shown in the foundation charter of Walter's monastery in Dereham, where he asks the foundation to pray for the " souls of Ranulf Glanvill and Bertha his wife, who nourished us ".
The term minster is first found in royal foundation charters of the 7th century ; and, although it corresponds to the Latin monasterium or monastery, it then designated any settlement of clergy living a communal life and endowed by charter with the obligation of maintaining the daily office of prayer.
When ordered to produce the foundation charter of his abbey the abbot refused, apparently because that document would be fatal to his case, and instead played a winning card.
In 1387 Richard II gave a charter for the foundation of the gild of St Mary and St John the Baptist ; this gild functioned as the local government, until its dissolution by Edward VI, who incorporated the town in 1548.
The most important service Linacre conferred upon his own profession and science was the foundation by royal charter of the College of Physicians in London, and he was the first president of the new college, which he further aided by bequeathing to it his own house and library.
Chelmsford is also home to part of the Anglia Ruskin University ( formerly called Anglia Polytechnic ) and to the grammar schools of Chelmsford County High School and King Edward VI Grammar School, founded in 1551 by charter of King Edward VI on the site of an earlier educational foundation ( although evidence suggests it could have been around as early as 1292 ).

foundation and states
) Plutarch placed it in the 37th year from the foundation of Rome, on the fifth of our July, then called Quintilis, also states that Romulus ruled for 37 years.
)" Later, in verse 10, he states " like a wise architect I placed a foundation, then another builds.
( This section contains Matthew 16: 13 – 19, in which Simon, newly renamed Peter, ( πέτρος, petros, meaning " stone "), calls Jesus " the Christ, the son of the living God ", and Jesus states that on this " bedrock " ( πέτρα, petra ) he will build his church — the passage forms the foundation for the papacy's claim of authority ).
Positivism, a philosophy which states that the only authentic knowledge is scientific knowledge, in opposition to pure empiricism and central to the foundation of academic sociology.
The 8th Century English historian Bede disagrees with Gildas, and states that the Saxon invasions continued after the battle of Mons Badonicus, including also Jutish and Anglic expeditions, resulting in a swift overrunning of the entirety of South-Eastern Britain, and the foundation of the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms.
According to its constitution, the Universal House of Justice itself states that " The provenance, the authority, the duties, the sphere of action of the Universal House of Justice all derive from the revealed Word of Bahá ' u ' lláh which, together with the interpretations and expositions of ` Abdu ' l-Bahá and of Shoghi Effendi ... constitute the binding terms of reference of the Universal House of Justice and are its bedrock foundation.
The group's motto was God and the People, and its basic principle was the unification of the several states and kingdoms of the peninsula into a single republic as the only true foundation of Italian liberty.
At the foundation of Lower Saxony in 1946 by the merger of the three former Free States of Brunswick, Oldenburg, Schaumburg-Lippe and the former Prussian province of Hanover the former two states became Verwaltungsbezirke ( roughly administrative regions of extended competence ) within Lower Saxony besides the less autonomous Prussian-style Regierungsbezirke comprising the former Province of Hanover and the tiny Schaumburg-Lippe.
The executive summary states, " The evidence is clear ... that direct systematic instruction in phonics during the early years of schooling is an essential foundation for teaching children to read.
The strictest rule of dating would be to deem the era to be from the point where all three states coexisted as independent states ( 229, with the foundation of Eastern Wu ) up until the downfall of the Shu-Han Kingdom ( at which point, only two kingdoms continued to exist rather than three.
The Principia states Newton's laws of motion, forming the foundation of classical mechanics, also Newton's law of universal gravitation, and a derivation of Kepler's laws of planetary motion ( which Kepler first obtained empirically ).
The foundation legend of the Kingdom of the South Saxons is given by the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, which states that in the year AD 477 Ælle arrived at a place called Cymenshore in three ships with his three sons.
His whereabouts remain unknown and a news article states ," Like many protesters, Wilson Mesilien, coordinator of the pro-Aristide 30 September Foundation wore a T-shirt demanding the return of foundation leader Lovinsky Pierre-Antoine, a human rights activist and critic of both UN and US involvement in Haiti.
The term deformed was used rather than degenerated, because no workers ' revolution had led to the foundation of these states.
All the region belonged to the territory of the Prince-elector of the Kurpfalz, or Electorate of the Palatinate, one of the larger states within the Holy Roman Empire, and the foundation of the new capital of the Kurpfalz, Mannheim, had decisive influence on the further development of the area on the opposite bank of the Rhine.
Historian Geoffrey Best called the period from 1856 to 1909 the law of war ’ s epoch of highest repute .” The defining aspect of this period was the establishment, by states, of a positive legal or legislative foundation ( i. e., written ) superseding a regime based primarily on religion, chivalry, and customs.
As such, constructivists do not see anarchy as the invariable foundation of the international system, but rather argue, in the words of Alexander Wendt, that " anarchy is what states make of it ".
Seismic activity caused by the lake's volcanic foundation could thus cause the lake wall to give way, resulting in up to 50 million cubic metres ( 1. 8 billion cu ft ) of water flooding downhill into areas of the Northwest Province and the Nigerian states of Taraba and Benue.
In addition, Baird's Manual states that KA, unlike other fraternities with claims to the contrary, has maintained a continuous existence since its foundation, making it the oldest undergraduate fraternity that exists today.
Furthermore, some German states had adopted constitutions after the foundation of the German Confederacy.
The first period, or the ancient one, dates from the ancient tribal states to the foundation of Goryeo dynasty.
None of Yue Fei's biographies mention him learning boxing as a child, but martial researcher Stanley Henning states " almost certainly did practice some form of bare handed fighting as a basic foundation for use of weapons.
Nizam-ul-Mulk is remembered as laying the foundation for what would become one of the most important Muslim states outside the Middle East by the first half of the twentieth century.
This document states the foundation of a village of the " House of the Simarros " (" Casa de los Simarro ") in 1470.

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