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personal and coat
Hearst hopped into a private railroad car with Max Ihmsen and made an arduous personal canvass for delegates in the western and southern states, always wearing a frock coat, listening intently to local politicians, and generally making a good impression.
Despite this, Almagro still obtained an important fortune for his services, and the King awarded him in November 1532 the noble title of " Don " and he was assigned a personal coat of arms.
The quarters of a personal coat of arms correspond to the ancestors from whom the bearer has inherited arms, normally in the same sequence as if the pedigree were laid out with the father's father's ... father ( to as many generations as necessary ) on the extreme left and the mother's mother's ... mother on the extreme right.
With the recent election of Benedict XVI in 2005, his personal coat of arms eliminated the papal tiara ; a mitre with three horizontal lines is used in its place, with the pallium, a papal symbol of authority more ancient than the tiara, the use of which is also granted to metropolitan archbishops as a sign of communion with the See of Rome, was added underneath of the shield.
The omission of the tiara in the Pope's personal coat of arms, however, did not mean the disappearance of it from papal heraldry, since the coat of arms of the Holy See was kept unaltered.
Although Pope Benedict XVI replaced the triregnum with a mitre on his personal coat of arms, it has been retained on the flag.
The Canadian Heraldic Authority ( CHA ) has granted former prime ministers an augmentation of honour on the personal coat of arms of those who pursued them.
The Commandant ( who holds the rank of Colonel ) is a senior member of the Papal Household, and his personal coat of arms or emblem appears at the centre of the Standard of the Swiss Guard for the duration of his command.
This weapon is engraved with the personal coat of arms of Cosimo I de ' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany.
The personal names Úlfarr and Wulfhere both translate roughly as " wolf warrior " or " wolf army ", which explains the presence of a wolf on the town's coat of arms.
42 of 25 January 2002, the Princess was granted her own personal coat of arms and a personal standard.
Brasenose College's coat of arms is quite complex, since it incorporates the personal arms of the founders and the arms of the See of Lincoln.
The three lions rampant are taken from the Earl ’ s personal coat arms.
Some of Knight's personal items appeared in an auction during the debut episode of A & E's Storage Wars, and a vault full of items ( including a coat ) was purchased by featured buyer Barry Weiss.
Until the reign of Benedict XVI the tiara was also the ornament surmounting a Pope's personal coat of arms, as a tasseled hat ( under which a 1969 Instruction of the Holy See forbade the placing of a mitre, a second hat ) surmounted those of other prelates.
In a break with tradition, Pope Benedict XVI's personal coat of arms has replaced the tiara with a mitre.
The triple tiara still featured as one of the ornaments on the personal coat of arms of Popes John Paul I and John Paul II, who never used the actual object.
The coat of arms of Pope Benedict XVI has replaced the tiara with a mitre: " The Holy Father Benedict XVI decided not to include the tiara in his official personal coat of arms.
He had placed his personal coat of arms above the arch, concealed by a piece of wood painted to match the stone, his idea being that his arms would be revealed to future generations after the wood became rotten.
In 1921, Prince Henry was granted a personal coat of arms, being the royal arms, differenced by a label argent of three points, the centre bearing a lion rampant gules, and the outer points crosses gules.
The personal coat of arms of Letizia, Princess of Asturias | the Princess of Asturias surrounded by the ribbon of the Spain | Spanish Order of Charles III.
After the Union of the Crowns in 1603, when England and the Kingdom of Scotland entered a personal union, the arms of England and Scotland were combined in what has now become the Royal coat of arms of the United Kingdom.

personal and arms
Coat of arms of Queen Elizabeth I, with her personal motto: " Semper eadem " or " always the same "
At the least, fifteen per cent of all Hungarian personal arms bear a severed Turk's head, referring to their wars against the Ottoman Empire.
In a military setting, some countries issue machine pistols as personal defense side arms to infantry, paratroopers, artillery crews, helicopter crews or tank crews.
Owain ’ s personal standard — the quartered arms of Powys and Deheubarth rampant — began to be seen all over Wales, especially at rugby union matches against the English.
The right to self-defense is used as a defense of the 2nd Amendment right to bear arms, although the 2nd Amendment refers more to militia and protection of the state than personal protection (" A well regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed ").
This distinguishes between small arms ( revolvers and self-loading pistols, rifles and carbines, submachine guns, assault rifles, and light machine guns ), which are weapons designed for personal use, and light weapons ( heavy machine guns, hand-held under-barrel and mounted grenade launchers, portable anti-aircraft guns, portable anti-tanks guns, recoilless rifles, portable launchers of anti-aircraft missile systems, and mortars of calibres less than 100 mm ), which are designed for use by several persons serving as a unit.
A defining quote from the book which is repeated throughout Heinlein's work is, " An armed society is a polite society ", is very popular with those who support the personal right to keep and bear arms.
At her funeral, Mary's coffin was draped in her personal Royal Standard of the United Kingdom # Consorts of the British monarch | banner of arms.
While political propaganda or personal emphasis may have somewhat distorted the historical accuracy of the story, the Bayeux tapestry presents a unique visual document of medieval arms, apparel, and other objects unlike any other artifact surviving from this period.
Many societies exist that also aid in the design and registration of personal arms, and some nations, like England and Scotland, still maintain to this day the mediæval authorities that grant and regulate arms.
As personal computer hardware speeds improved at a rapid pace in the late 1990s, it created an " arms race " between companies in the video game industry, according to Wired News.
" The sailor Nagorny, who attended to Alexei Nikolaevitch, passed my window carrying the sick boy in his arms, behind him came the Grand Duchesses loaded with valises and small personal belongings.
First, he issued a law, the Novella Maioriani 8 known as De reddito iure armorum (" On the Return of the Right to Bear Arms "), about the personal right to bear arms ; in 440 Valentinian III had already promulgated a law with the same name, Novella Valentiniani 9, after another attack of the Vandals.

personal and Gwynedd
The personal coat of arms of Llywelyn were: Quarterly Or and Gules, four lions passant guardant counter charged, armed and langued Azur, later the arms of the Gwynedd realm.

personal and were
But there were other homesteaders who passed the Lewis murder off as a personal grudge killing, the work of one of his neighbors.
Ironically enough, in this instance such personal virtues were a luxury.
They were repelled by his noisy newspapers, his personal publicity, his presumptuous campaign for the Presidential nomination, and by the swelling cloud of rumor about his moral lapses.
The Prince's perceptions were quick and his energy monstrous, but these qualities were sapped by an Oriental lethargy and a policy of letting nothing interfere with personal passions.
By this time Woodruff had accurately measured Pike as a man of great personal pride, a man who would fly into a towering rage if his integrity were questioned, and who would be anxious to avenge himself.
Twenty-seven assessors stated that they were in favor of improved means for assessing movable personal property, and only five were opposed.
Hardy obviously felt that these poems were peculiarly personal and private ; ;
One year the Department collected a file of case histories to document its argument that men in the field were paying the government's entertainment bills out of personal income.
Anyone who now doubted that a personal duel was under way had only to watch how these exceptionally gifted golfers were playing this most difficult golf course.
Individuals possessing unusual gifts and great personal power were transmuted at death into awesome spirits ; ;
Her `` Rockabye Your Baby '' was as good as it can be done, and her really personal songs, like `` The Man That Got Away '' were deeply moving.
Although they " were expecting to see activity in the brain's reward centers ", based on the idea that " people perform altruistic acts because they feel good about it ", what they found was that " another part of the brain was also involved, and it was quite sensitive to the difference between doing something for personal gain and doing it for someone else's gain ".
experimental methods used in the study of the personal equation were
Reformers debated against beginning instruction with rules and were in favor of helping students learn to write by expressing the personal meaning of events within their own lives.
Doherty suggests that the personal relations of the two kings were strained by constant arguments, though this in not confirmed by historical sources.
The Alexandrists were a school of Renaissance philosophers who, in the great controversy on the subject of personal immortality, adopted the explanation of the De Anima given by Alexander of Aphrodisias.
Painful relations between father and son, quite apart from the prior personal antipathies, were therefore inevitable.
In 1204 his doctrines were condemned by the university, and, on a personal appeal to Pope Innocent III, the sentence was ratified, Amalric being ordered to return to Paris and recant his errors.
One such figure was Phanes of Halicarnassus, who would later on leave Amasis, for reasons Herodotus does not clearly know but suspects were personal between the two figures.
His steel enterprises were bought out at a figure equivalent to 12 times their annual earnings —$ 480 million ( presently, $) which at the time was the largest ever personal commercial transaction.
The system was slow by today's standards, but at the time the additional cost and complexity of networking on PC machines was such that it was common that Macs were the only networked personal computers in an office.
They cited the time delay of ten years between the alleged behavior by Thomas and Hill's accusations, and noted that Hill had followed Thomas to a second job and later had personal contacts with Thomas, including giving him a ride to an airport — behavior which they said would be inexplicable if Hill's allegations were true.
The first two acts were successfully premièred in Zürich in 1937, but for personal reasons Helene Berg subsequently imposed a ban on any attempt to " complete " the final act, which Berg had in fact completed in particell ( short score ) format.

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