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intransigent and spiritualist
This led to the schism of the most intransigent and spiritualist, Evolian current ( Nazism was also a reference ), led by Pino Rauti, Lello Graziani and Sergio Baldassini.

intransigent and was
Other sources note that during his time as Patriarch of Venice that " Luciani was intransigent with his upholding of the teaching of the Church and severe with those, through intellectual pride and disobedience paid no attention to the Church's prohibition of contraception ", though while not condoning the sin, he was tolerant of those who sincerely tried and failed to live up to the Church's teaching.
When, in 1619, he was elected Emperor to succeed his cousin Mathias, the ultra-pious and intransigent Ferdinand II, as he became known, embarked on an energetic attempt to re-Catholicize not only the Hereditary Provinces, but Bohemia and Habsburg Hungary as well as most of Protestant Europe within the Holy Roman Empire.
The tension between the Roman and Irish traditions, often exacerbated by Cuthbert's near-contemporary Saint Wilfrid, an intransigent and quarrelsome supporter of Roman ways, was to be a major feature of Cuthbert's lifetime.
Prime Minister Howard was able to point to their intransigent opposition as evidence of broad community concern over a move toward a republican constitution.
This peace, however, was precarious since the more intransigent Catholics refused to accept it.
" Soon afterward, on the television show Meet the Press, he stated that Israel was " stubborn and intransigent.
Chaumette was one of the instigators of the attacks of 31 May and of 2 June 1793 on the Girondists, carrying out a virulent and intransigent attack.
Resistance in the form of rival daimyo, intransigent Buddhist monks, and hostile merchants was eliminated swiftly and mercilessly, and Nobunaga quickly gained a reputation as a ruthless, unrelenting adversary.
Both while he was alive and after his death ( the first edition of his works, for the most part elaborate sermons, was printed at Lyon in 1501 ), Bernardino's legacy was far from benign: of fanatical moralizing temperament, he preached fiery, intransigent sermons against many classes of people.
( It is thought that Keating's description was a linguistic gaffe, and that what he had in mind was " intransigent ".
Like his father, a Republican of the intransigent type, he was bitterly disappointed by the triumph of the monarchical principle after the Revolution of July 1830, in which he had taken part.
The tension between the Roman and Irish traditions, often exacerbated by Cuthbert's near-contemporary Saint Wilfrid, an intransigent and quarrelsome supporter of Roman ways, was to be a major feature of Cuthbert's lifetime.
In spite of his intransigent attitude toward the Italian Communist Party, Pertini was suspicious of many policies enforced by the PSI.
The party's intransigent and non-cooperative attitude, as well as provocations from some demonstrators, aggravated the situation, and this eventually, and tragically, led to a crisis in which the state's stability was at stake.
Huguenots were as intransigent as Catholics: Theodore Beza remarked to the royal envoy that persecutions are futile and that the Reformed church was like an anvil on which many hammers have been broken.
Kidston was encountering difficulties in securing the passage of his legislation through the intransigent Legislative Council and after Lord Chelmsford as Governor refused Kidston's request to appoint sufficient new councillors so as to give Kidston a majority, he resigned in November.
To Bismarck, Paris was the key to breaking the power of the intransigent republican leaders of France, ending the war in a timely manner, and securing peace terms favourable to Prussia.
The intransigent Ubaldini was replaced by Light and Power Workers ' leader Oscar Lescano.
László was notoriously intransigent in his design projects but with his own unique style, few complained because of the overwhelming impact of his completed projects.
Such a statesman was sure to clash with the doctrinaires, like Salmeron, who wanted to imitate French methods ; with Pi y Margall, who wanted a federal republic after purely Spanish ideas of decentralization ; and above all with the intransigent and gloomy fanatics who became the leaders of the cantonal insurrections at Cádiz, Seville, Valencia, Málaga, and Cartagena in 1873.
The intransigent reaction of France ( which was, at the time, the most influent ally of Italy ) and the Pope caused the Italian government to intervene.

intransigent and then
By 2005, many large MTDs in Buenos Aires were co-opted, either by radical, intransigent left-wing ideological factions, or by the local Peronist municipal administrations, linked to former Buenos Aires governor and then interim president Eduardo Duhalde, and others to supporters of former president Néstor Kirchner.

intransigent and founded
He founded Ligue antimilitariste in 1902 with Albert Libertad and George Mathias Paraf-Javal, another intransigent individualist.

intransigent and Rome
Because the intransigent Pius IX rejected all proposals, Italian patriots, under the leadership of Giuseppe Garibaldi, organized an invasion of Latium and Rome in October 1867.

intransigent and still
With the Department of Education still intransigent to the site's conversion to a nationalist museum and with no other apparent function for the building, the Commissioners of Public Works proposed only the prison yard and those cell blocks deemed to be of national importance should be preserved and that the rest of the site should be demolished.
Peace overtures between the two nations early in the new year proved intransigent due to the still unresolved outstanding issues that had led to the breakdown of the Peace of Amiens.

intransigent and part
Émile Faguet described Maistre as " a fierce absolutist, a furious theocrat, an intransigent legitimist, apostle of a monstrous trinity composed of pope, king and hangman, always and everywhere the champion of the hardest, narrowest and most inflexible dogmatism, a dark figure out of the Middle Ages, part learned doctor, part inquisitor, part executioner.

intransigent and .
Johnson grew increasingly intransigent on this position, believing that the southern states had legally never left the Union.
It is usually at the retreat where, isolated from their advisers, the heads resolve the most intransigent issues: leading to the Gleneagles Agreement in 1977, the Lusaka Declaration in 1979, the Langkawi Declaration in 1989, the Millbrook Programme in 1995, and the Aso Rock Declaration in 2003.
Elements of Toryism on the other hand were quite intransigent when it came to the Church of England as the established church, some even spurning their original legitimist ultra-royalist principles in regards to James II to uphold it.
* hard core, the members of a group or movement who form an intransigent nucleus resistant to change.
Though certainly a strong partisan of the Hildebrandine reforms, Desiderius belonged to the moderate party and could not always see eye-to-eye with Pope Gregory VII in his most intransigent proceedings.
In the face of intransigent Portuguese ruling authorities, the main nationalist movement, FRELIMO, began a guerrilla war which gradually wrested control of parts of the northernmost regions of the territory from the Portuguese.
Although now convinced of his unavoidable defeat, Pius IX remained intransigent to the bitter end and forced his troops to put up a token resistance.
The Athenians were initially intransigent, going so far as to imprison a man who suggested that a stretch of the long walls be torn down as the Spartans had insisted, but the reality of their situation soon compelled them to consider compromises.
The pope explained his reasons and yielded certain points, but the fathers were intransigent.
" Smith failed to take advantage of opportunities, and in so doing, he came to appear both intransigent and indecisive.
He remained intransigent.
" An article in the Baltimore Evening Sun referred to him as " the intransigent pianist, who has set the entire musical world by the ears and who is probably the most discussed figure on the concert stage.
The political representatives of the anti-Treaty side had re-grouped in 1926 as Fianna Fáil, leaving a only a minority of intransigent republicans in Sinn Féin and the IRA who refused to recognise the legitimacy of the state.
The Khmer Rouge leadership, however, remained intransigent.

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