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latter and appointed
The latter two were appointed secretaries.
After the accession of the latter to the imperial purple he invited Aedesius to continue his instructions, but the declining strength of the sage being unequal to the task, two of his most learned disciples, Chrysanthius and the aforementioned Eusebius, were by his own desire appointed to supply his place.
( 1 ) The Principal Allied and Associated Powers confer a mandate on one of their number or on a third power ; ( 2 ) the principal powers officially notify the council of the League of Nations that a certain power has been appointed mandatory for such a certain defined territory ; and ( 3 ) the council of the League of Nations takes official cognisance of the appointment of the mandatory power and informs the latter that it council considers it as invested with the mandate, and at the same time notifies it of the terms of the mandate, after assertaining whether they are in conformance with the provisions of the covenant.
The Catholic Church teaches that Jesus personally appointed Peter as leader of the Church and in its dogmatic constitution Lumen Gentium makes a clear distinction between apostles and bishops, presenting the latter as the successors of the former, with the pope as successor of Peter in that he is head of the bishops as Peter was head of the apostles.
The Prime Minister is appointed by the President to assist the latter in the administration of the affairs of the executive.
Ministries of the government are composed of the Premier and his deputies, ministers, and selected other individuals ; all are appointed by the President on the recommendation of the Prime Minister ( whereas the appointment of the latter requires the consent of the State Duma ).
From 1678, the British appointed a deputy-governor for the Territory ( initially for the Territory and Saba and St. Eustatius, until the latter two islands were returned to the Dutch ).
The Estates chose the latter option, and commissioners were appointed by Queen Anne to negotiate the terms of a union.
His partiality for the latter rendered him unpopular amongst his own subjects, and the capricious manner in which he appointed and deposed the high priests made him disliked by the Jews.
This latter group consists of twenty-six Church of England bishops who are appointed in order of superiority.
The latter ignored the order, publicly tearing it up and arguing that Valentinian had not appointed him in the first place.
On the other hand, Leo rewarded both Majorian and Ricimer: the former was appointed magister militum, the latter patricius and magister militum ( February 28, 457 ).
The latter relates that Scipio, who was disgusted by Cato's severity, was actually appointed to succeed him, but, not being able to secure from the senate a vote of censure upon the administration of his rival, passed the time of his command in total inactivity.
Counts Eblo and Aznar Galindo ( also identified as Aznar Sánchez and the latter appointed Duke of Gascony ) were captured by the joint Pamplonese and Banu Qasi forces, strengthening the independence of Kingdom of Pamplona.
At the strategic level, there were ten non-executive board members, who were led by Chairman Tony Hales, and appointed by the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs and the Scottish Government ( eight by the former and two by the latter ).
A number of Italian Americans were serving as top-ranking generals in the military, including Anthony Zinni, Raymond Odierno, Carl Vuono and Peter Pace, the latter three having also been appointed Chief of Staff of their respective services ( Army in the case of Odierno and Vuono, and Marine Corps in that of Pace ).
When Paul turned eighteen, he was appointed Fleet Admiral of the Russian navy and colonel of the Cuirassier regiment, the latter of which was already granted him in 1762.
As Demetrius II did not keep his promise, Jonathan thought it better to support the new king when Diodotus Tryphon and Antiochus VI seized the capital, especially as the latter confirmed all his rights and appointed his brother Simon ( Simeon ) strategos of the seacoast, from the " Ladder of Tyre " to the frontier of Egypt.
From 1820 to 1822 he was superintendent in Keinberg, and in the latter year he was appointed professor ordinarius of systematic and practical theology at Bonn.
Meanwhile his lectures and publications ( among the latter a Grundriss der Neutestamentlichen Hermeneutik, 1816 ) had brought him into considerable repute, and he was appointed professor extraordinarius in the new University of Bonn in the spring of 1818 ; in the following autumn he became professor ordinarius.
The latter year he was appointed Governor of Nova Scotia, which he remained until 1863.
In 1806, when the London Institution was founded in the Old Jewry, he was appointed principal librarian with a salary of £ 200 a year and a suite of rooms ; and thus his latter years were made easy as far as money was concerned.
In 1793 Hardenberg had struck up a friendship with Count Haugwitz, the influential minister for foreign affairs, and when in 1803 the latter went away on leave ( August – October ) he appointed Hardenberg his locum tenens.
The distinction between klephts and armatoloi was not clear, as the latter would often turn into klephts to extort more benefits from the authorities, while, conversely, another klepht group would be appointed to the armatolik to confront their predecessors.

latter and Benedictine
It was established as a devotion with prayers already formulated and special exercises, found in the writings of Lanspergius ( d. 1539 ) of the Carthusians of Cologne, the Louis of Blois ( Blosius ; 1566 ), a Benedictine and Abbot of Liessies in Hainaut, John of Avila ( d. 1569 ) and St. Francis de Sales, the latter belonging to the seventeenth century.
The latter, under the influence of the Benedictine bishop of Cluny Bernard, and the Archbishop of Toledo Rodrigo Jiménez de Rada, who was himself the principal buyer of Mozarab property in the early 13th century fomented a segregationalist policy under the cloak of religious nationalism.
The latter is located in Beechwood Park, the site of a former Benedictine nunnery and satellite airfield during WW2.
The latter was the Tironensian Benedictine house founded by, probably, Richard de Morville, the Anglo-French Lord of Cunningham, who was a great territorial magnate of the district.
The two most characteristic features of the Benedictine Matins are: the canticles of the third nocturn, not found in the Roman liturgy, and the Gospel, sung solemnly at the end, the latter trait, as already pointed out, being very ancient.
Saint Wigbert, born in Wessex around 670, was an Anglo-Saxon Benedictine monk from the monastery of Glastonbury and a missionary and disciple of Saint Boniface who traveled with the latter in Frisia and northern and central Germany to convert the local tribes to Christianity.
Of the convent of the Capuchins and Cordeliers and the abbey of Benedictine nuns, which existed in Valognes prior to 1792, only the latter remains, transformed into the hospice of the Rue des Religieuses.
The early half of the 12th century saw the appearance of several new factors of secularism unknown to an earlier and more simply religious time: the increase of commerce and industry resultant from the Crusades, the growing independence of medieval cities, the secularization of Benedictine life, the development of pageantry and luxury in a hitherto rude feudal world, the reaction from the terrible conflict of State and Church in the latter half of the 11th-century.

latter and monk
The Druk Desi was either a monk or a member of the laity — by the nineteenth century, usually the latter ; he was elected for a three-year term, initially by a monastic council and later by the State Council ( Lhengye Tshokdu ).
The latter is equivalent to the fighters and warriors found in other games, but the former is instead a martial arts class, similar to the D & D monk.
Cyril Stone subsequently remarried and had two children, Michael Stone's half siblings, by his second wife-Tracey and Terence-the latter of whom converted to Buddhism and became a monk in South-East Asia.
The abbey also houses a bar and shop / museum, the latter of which is staffed by a monk.
He illustrated casuistry by citing mostly Jesuitic texts allowing excuses to abstain from fasting ( citing Vincenzo Filliucci's Moralium quaestionum de christianis officiis et casibus conscientiae ... tomus, Lyon, 1622 ; often cited by Escobar ); from giving to the poor ( indirectly citing Gabriel Vasquez from Diana ; for a monk temporarily defrocking himself to go to the brothel ( citing an exact quote of Sanchez from Escobar, who was curving around Pius IV's Contra sollicitantes and Pius V's Contra clericos papal bulls, the latter directed against sodomite clergy )); in the Seventh Letter, propositions allowing homicides ( even to the clergy ) and duels as long as the intention is not directed for revenge ; others permitting corruption of judges as long as it is not intended as corruption ; others allowing usury or Mohatra contracts ; casuistic propositions allowing robbery and stealing from one's master ; others allowing lying through the use of rhetorical " mental reservation " ( restrictio mentalis ; for instance: saying, loudly " I swear that ...", silently " I said that ...", and loudly again the object of the pledge ) and equivocations.
He is often confused with Saint Egbert who served as a monk at Lindisfarne, though the latter never became a bishop there.

latter and bishop
Church, Ministry and Sacraments in the New Testament Paternoster Press: 1993, p. 92f </ ref > Moving on to Ignatius of Antioch, Barrett states that here we find a sharp distinction between ' presbyter ' and ' bishop ': the latter now stands out as " an isolated figure " who is to be obeyed and without whom it is not lawful to baptise or hold a love-feast .< Barrett, C. K.
There was discussion and approval of only two constitutions: the Dogmatic Constitution on the Catholic Faith and the First Dogmatic Constitution on the Church of Christ, the latter dealing with the primacy and infallibility of the bishop of Rome.
There still remains to be mentioned Mommsen's peculiar view that Marcellus was not really a bishop, but a simple Roman presbyter to whom was committed the ecclesiastical administration during the latter part of the period of vacancy of the papal chair.
During his father's life-time he had been beaten by Gervais de Château-du-Loir, bishop of Le Mans ( 1038 ), but later ( 1047 or 1048 ) succeeded in taking the latter prisoner, for which he was excommunicated by Pope Leo IX at the council of Reims ( October 1049 ).
As the commune, however, had begun to erode the lands of the bishop and other local faudataries, the latter sued for help to Frederick Barbarossa, who presented under the city walls with a huge army in the February 1155.
The formal word for a church that is currently a cathedral is cattedrale ; a Duomo may be either a present or a former cathedral ( the latter always in a town that no longer has a bishop nor therefore a cathedral, as for example Trevi ).
In 2006, the patriarchate was invited to hear the appeal of a Russian Orthodox bishop in the United Kingdom in a dispute with his superior in Moscow, though the result of that appeal-and the right to make it-were both rejected by the latter.
Two letters of Magnus Felix Ennodius, bishop of Pavia, survive addressed to him, written when the latter tried to regain horses and money he had lent the pope.
Æthelbald may have influenced the appointment of successive archbishops of Canterbury in Tatwine, Nothelm, and Cuthbert, the latter probably the former bishop of Hereford ; and despite Boniface's strong criticisms, there is evidence of Æthelbald's positive interest in church affairs.
Against the former he upheld the prerogative of the bishops ; against the latter he asserted that it was impossible for a bishop to disregard the commands of the Holy See.
In general, when a bishop celebrates any service other than the Divine Liturgy ( or when he is attending, but not celebrating Liturgy ), he will wear the mantle with Epitrachelion, Cuffs and Omophorion ( the latter being worn outside the mantle ).
Having been made prebendary of Exeter, of Wells and of York, he was consecrated bishop of Hereford on 17 March 1370, was translated to the see of London on 12 September 1375, and became Archbishop of Canterbury on 30 July 1381, succeeding Simon of Sudbury in both these latter positions.
This was also the day on which the Roman Catholic calendar of saints celebrated it at first ; but in the 13th century it was moved to June 14, a date believed to be that of his ordination as bishop, and it remained on that date until the 1969 revision of the calendar, which moved it to January 2, rather than January 1, because the latter date is occupied by the Solemnity of Mary, Mother of God.
The latter resulted in among other things the reorganization of the body-guard and of measures under which key cities, especially Bergen, could better serve as a royal residence and as a bishop.
The latter monarch established Ely as the seat of a bishop in 1107, creating the Isle of Ely a county palatine under the bishop.
Salvian continued his friendly intercourse with both father and sons long after the latter had left his care ; it was to Salonius ( then a bishop ) that he wrote his explanatory letter just after the publication of his treatise Ad ecclesiam ; and to the same prelate a few years later he dedicated his great work, the De gubernatione Dei (" The Government of God ").
Archbishop Wichmann ( 1152 – 92 ) was more important as a sovereign and prince of the Holy Roman Empire than as a bishop ; Albrecht II ( 1205 – 32 ) quarrelled with Otto II, Margrave of Brandenburg ( 1198 – 1215 ), because he had pronounced the pope's ban against the latter and this war greatly damaged the archbishopric.
Examining the initial position reveals why this works: white would like to play either 1. Ra8 or 1. Rg8, but the former is prevented by black's bishop and the latter is prevented by black's queen.
Bede points out that " at that time there was no other bishop in all Britain canonically ordained except Wini " and the latter had been installed irregularly by the king of the West Saxons.
The former allows White to exchange off Black's light-squared bishop, after which the d5-square becomes very weak ; but the latter allows 7. Nf5, when Black can only save the d-pawn by playing the awkward 7 ... a6 8. Bxd7 + Qxd7.
Black also sometimes fianchettoes his king's bishop with ... g6 and ... Bg7 ( the Leningrad Dutch ), but may instead develop his bishop to Be7, d6 ( after ... d5 ), or b4 ( the latter is most often seen if White plays c4 before castling ).

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