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merchants and shall
Robbers of pilgrims and of merchants shall be excommunicated.
If anyone shall dare attack pilgrims going to Rome to visit the shrines of the Apostles and the oratories of other saints and rob them of the things they have with them, or exact from merchants new imposts and tolls, let him be excommunicated till he has made satisfaction.
If a merchant brings suit against another merchant ( in Pistiros ) they shall be judjged among their kinsmen and with regard to whatever is owed to the merchants by Thracians, there shall be no cancellation of these debts. All land and pasture owned by the merchants shall not be taken away from them. He shall not send holders of estates (?
) to the merchants. He shall not install a garrison at Pistiros nor will he transfer Pistiros to another. He shall not exchange the land lots of the Pistirians nor transfer them to another. Neither he nor members of his family shall seize the property of the merchants. He shall not levy road taxes on any goods exported by the merchants from Pistiros to Maronea of from Maronea to Pistiros or to the market place Belana of the Praseoi.

merchants and open
* 1839 – In Humen, China, Lin Tse-hsü destroys 1. 2 million kg of opium confiscated from British merchants, providing Britain with a casus belli to open hostilities, resulting in the First Opium War.
In addition, more than 30 full-time merchants are open year-round and offer specialty foods, fresh meats and seafood, restaurants and cafes, floral, home accessories and much more.
Wary of the power of wealthy merchants, Qing rulers limited their trading licences and usually refused them permission to open new mines, except in poor areas.
The whole matter has assumed the portion of Dayton and her merchants endeavoring to secure a large amount of notoriety and publicity with an open question as whether Scopes is a party to the plot or not.
Unlike Europe, where the royal court, aristocratic families and the established church were in control, the American political culture was open to merchants, landlords, petty farmers, artisans, Anglicans, Presbyterians, Quakers, Germans, Scotch Irish, Yankees, Yorkers, and many other identifiable groups.
* Guy of Dampierre, count of Flanders, licenses the first Lombards merchants to open a changing business in his realm.
:— New York – based merchants open trade with China, followed by Salem, Boston and Philadelphia merchants
For many years merchants would come to the central square from all over Bhutan and market their goods and would sleep in the open air.
Until the Umayyad era, those markets were only an open space where the merchants would bring in their movable stands during the day and remove them during the night ; no one had a specific right to a spot in the market and it was usually first-come first-serve.
When Portuguese under Diogo Lopes de Sequeira had earlier arrived in Malacca in 1509 to open trade relations, he was supported by the local Chinese merchants there ( along with Javanese and Tamil merchants ).
These buildings were open to the public ; merchants could sell their goods, artists could display their artwork, and religious gatherings could take place.
The two countries quickly reached an agreement to open their ports to one another's merchants to allow trade between the two countries and to fill both emperors ' treasuries.
Elegant townhouses were built around the park, which remained largely the private domain of the residents, though now some of the Tory patricians of New York were replaced by Republican ones ; leading New York merchants, led by Abraham Kennedy, in a mansion at 1 Broadway that had a 56-foot facade under a central pediment and a front towards the Battery Parade, as the new piece of open ground was called.
The courtyard was almost always open to the sky, and the inside walls of the enclosure were outfitted with a number of identical stalls, bays, niches, or chambers to accommodate merchants and their servants, animals, and merchandise.
The resistance to open up the country to the Europeans could be summed up in a Nepali percept, " With the merchants come the musket and with the Bible comes the bayonet.
During the fifteenth century the Medici family were required to open banks at foreign locations in order to exchange currencies to act for textile merchants.
Until about 1800, Monkstown was a rural area of open countryside, dotted here and there with large houses owned by the merchants of Dublin.
ISBN 3-520-37105-7 .</ ref > So the Order welcomed English Merchant Adventurers, starting to cruise in the Baltic, competing with Dutch, Saxon and Wendish Hanseatic merchants, and allowed them to open outposts in its cities of Danzig and Elbing .< ref name =" Dollinger 1998 103seq "> Philippe Dollinger, Die Hanse Hanse ( XII < sup > e </ sup >- XVII < sup > e </ sup > siècles ); German, see references for bibliographical details, pp. 103seq.
In the mid-19th century many of the merchants would sell silk, jade and consult feng shui to open shops that favour better spiritual arrangements.
Other treaty provisions included mutual guarantees of an open border between the two realms for travelers, emigrants and merchants ( articles 10, 11 ), while Russia undertook " to leave the power for internal administration, law and order, and the collection of taxes the complete will and use of His Serene Highness the Tsar, forbidding Majesty ’ s Military and Civil Authorities to intervene in any laws or commands ".
Laura Cassidy of the Seattle Weekly described the prevailing aesthetic: " Creatively employing the open, airy brick-walled spaces left behind by industry and manufacturing, and augmenting them with local art and 20th-century detritus, Georgetown's merchants consistently fashion warm, imaginative interiors: places you want to visit and never want to leave.
The two lower floors of the atrium area remain open to the public with retail merchants and a food court.

merchants and close
Nearby merchants gained fame after making frequent appearances on the program, including Rupert Jee, owner of the Hello Deli at 213 W. 53rd St., and Mujibur and Sirajul, Bengali immigrants who worked at a souvenir shop close to the studio.
The local dialect of the village also reflects the close ties to Bergen, with the dialect being more similar to that of Bergen than that of the rest of Askøy except the dialect of Florvaag ; the connection was reinforced into modern times as the wealthy merchants and other residents of Bergen spent their summer there.
It was also close to the then Customs House that stood on the site of today's Clarence Hotel, making it convenient for overseas merchants.
The school's initial curriculum was close to a course of accounting and trade for medieval Italians trained as merchants.
Yet despite receiving occasional financial contributions from English merchants on the continent, Foxe seems to have lived very close to the margin and been " wretchedly poor.
The intrigues of his opponents resulted in a mutiny of a company of Azerbaijani troops garrisoned in Tehran, demanding his removal and execution ; but with the cooperation of Mirza Abu ’ l-Qasem Emam-e Jomeh of Tehran, who ordered the merchants of Tehran to close the bazaar and arm themselves, the mutiny was soon quelled, and Amir Kabir resumed his duties.
From the castle hill, there was a good view over the Diemel Valley, such that a close watch could be kept on the ford that merchants had to cross going to Warburg and Paderborn.
Much depended on the merchants and the captain ; the merchants had to close a large number of favourable deals, and the captain had the extremely difficult task of safely sailing the ship to China and back.
His exiled family and kin then took up residence in Icewind Dale close to Ten Towns living by selling weapons and armour to the local merchants.
This resulted in a U-shaped building, with a courtyard suitable for farm work ; merchants and bureaucrats, however, preferred to close off the front with an imposing front gate.
The service moved in 1923 to St Dunstan in the East and then to St Mary at Hill, but St Magnus retained close links with the local fish merchants until the closure of old Billingsgate Market.
It was at this time that Mali began encouraging some of its local merchants to establish colonies close to the gold fields of West Africa.
We appeal to merchants to close their stores, manufacturers to permit their clerks and laborers to go to the polls, the Board of Trade to close, the Union Leagues and Wide Awakes to come out.
In these two situations he made a close study of local economic conditions, personally, supervising the cultivation of his lands, and entering into relations with the principal merchants of Rouen.
Jewish merchants such as the Radhanites began to develop extensive contacts in the Pontic region during this period, and probably maintained close relations with the proto-Krymchak communities.
Due to close contacts with Riga Vytenis invited Franciscan monks to maintain a Catholic church in Navahrudak for German merchants in 1312.
After the Revolutionary War, Wickham earned a degree in law from the College of William and Mary, where he became a close friend of John Marshall, later fourth Chief Justice of the U. S .. Wickham moved to Richmond and experienced tremendous financial success helping British merchants collect debts from American businessmen.
A Euro-African Creole, or Métis, community of merchants grew up there, in close contact with similar communities in Saint Louis, Gorée and other places along the Petite Côte ( Portudal, Joal ) south to the Gambia River.
The Rashleighs of Fowey and Menabilly were powerful merchants in the time of Henry VIII and Elizabeth I. Philip Rashleigh, younger son of a family from Barnstaple in Devon, had purchased the manor of Trenant close to Fowey from the King after the dissolution of the monasteries in 1545.
In 1901, the decision was made to close the El Volador market, the last major tianguis in the city center, just south of the National Palace and relocate the merchants to the Tepito area.
Maruvurpakkam being close to the shore and hence to the shipyard was naturally preferred by the many overseas travellers, merchants and yavanas ( foreigner ) whose pleasant features arrested the eyes of the spectators living close to each other.

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