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They and married
They were married over the week-end, though he was easily sixty and she could not have been even thirty.
They were married at a lavish ceremony which was duly recorded in Parvenu and all other magazines and newspapers, and then they honeymooned in Bermuda.
They married cousins, Anta and Freya Norberg.
They married.
They later met again at a party and married on November 4, 1842, in the Springfield mansion of Mary's married sister.
They were married at King's Chapel on May 22, 1830 ; he was 30 years old and she was 29.
They married, and Crispus he became a step-father to Lucius.
They had five or six children together, including Edward the Elder, who succeeded his father as king, Æthelflæd, who would become Queen of Mercia in her own right, and Ælfthryth who married Baldwin II the Count of Flanders.
They later married on October 11, 1975, and their only child, Chelsea, was born on February 27, 1980.
They married in October 1978, but divorced in 1981.
They remained married until Perkins ' death of AIDS on September 12, 1992.
They married in Lubbock on August 15, 1958, less than two months later.
They were married on Pearl Harbor Day, 1985.
They were married on July 4, 1971.
They were married until Chaplin's death ; Oona survived him fourteen years, and died from pancreatic cancer in 1991.
They were engaged a few weeks after their return, and were later married at Christ Church, Hampstead on 10 January 1922.
They were Blanche Hoschedé Monet, ( she eventually married Jean Monet ), Germaine, Suzanne Hoschedé, Marthe, Jean-Pierre, and Jacques.
They were married until his death from a heart attack in 1966, in Baltimore, Maryland.
They married in 2000 and have one child together, a daughter named Dominique born on 24 April 2007.
They married in 1954 and the union lasted until her death.
They were parents to a daughter, Louise Borgia, Duchess of Valentinois, ( 1500 – 1553 ) who first married Louis II de La Tremouille, Governor of Burgundy, and secondly Philippe de Bourbon ( 1499 – 1557 ), Seigneur de Busset.
They became engaged on Valentine's Day in 2009, and were married on June 15, 2010, in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
They married on 31 July 1810 in Edinburgh and had four sons and a daughter:
They met in Bloomington, and married in Ann Arbor in 1985.

They and 1763
They brought two children from Ireland, Hugh ( born 1763 ) and Robert ( born 1764 ).
They did this work between 1763 and 1767.
They were written in continuation of a dialogue on the age of Queen Elizabeth included in his Moral and Political Dialogues ( 1759 ) Two later dialogues On the Uses of Foreign Travel were printed in 1763.
They arrived in Philadelphia in November 1763 and began work towards the end of the year.
They were published by his nephew William Sharpe in 1859 as Recollections by Samuel Rogers ; Reminiscences and Table-Talk of Samuel Rogers, Banker, Poet, and Patron of the Arts, 1763 – 1855 ( 1903 ), by GH Powell, is an amalgamation of these two authorities.
They were issued with six different obverses and three reverses in 1761, 1763 – 79, 1781 – 99, and 1813.
They had a son, Frederick Augustus II ( 1696 – 1763 ), who succeeded his father as Elector of Saxony and King of Poland as Augustus III.
They were first incorporated into English rule in 1763 as part of the Indian Reserve.
They document 1763 wars overall, of which 123 ( 7 %) have been classified to involve a religious conflict.
They are followed by such artists as Lawrence Crosse ( died 1724 ), Gervase Spencer ( died 1763 ), Bernard Lens III, Nathaniel Hone and Jeremiah Meyer, the latter two notable in connection with the foundation of the Royal Academy.
They attacked during Pontiac's Rebellion of 1763 – 66, when the Indians succeeded in burning several British forts.
They built a church, St. Mary of the Angels, on Station Island in 1763.
They included a performance in Dublin in 1763 ; David Garrick and Thomas Arne's version in 1770 ; and John Kemble and Thomas Linley's transformation of King Arthur into a two-act after-piece entitled Arthur and Emmeline in 1784.
They began buying supplies in early 1763, and on July 6, 1763, they obtained the necessary license from the French territorial government to trade with the Native Americans ( primarily those living near the Missouri River ).

They and lived
They thought of themselves, to use Jefferson's words, as `` the Argonauts '' who had lived in `` the Heroic Age ''.
They lived in the same house and it didn't seem to be such a hard thing to do, but the sad realities of Lilly's life and the fact that Meltzer didn't love her never satisfied my wishful thinking.
They dwell, in short, in the doltish twilight in which peasants and serfs of the past are commonly reported to have lived.
They lived mainly in the kitchen ; ;
They could still read the opening: `` Once, I was like you, stepping out of my window at the end of day, and letting the winds blow me gently toward the place I lived in.
They are likely to have lived on areas of the ocean floor that received little or no light and fed on detritus that descended from upper layers of the sea to the bottom.
They lived in a range of structures, including pit houses, cliff dwellings, and pueblos, designed so that they could lift entry ladders during enemy attacks, which provided security.
They lived in 100 cantons ( 4. 1 ) from which 1000 young men per year were chosen for military service, a citizen-army by our standards and by comparison with the Roman professional army.
One of their Yukar Upopo, or legends, tells that " They lived in this place a hundred thousand years before the Children of the Sun came.
They lived in Laurens, South Carolina for two years, where Andrew found work as a tailor.
They lived and taught among the Lamanites between the years 91 and 77 B. C.
They had four children, of whom one daughter, Maria Joanna, lived to adulthood.
" They lived in unwalled villages, without any superfluous furniture ; for as they slept on beds of leaves and fed on meat and were exclusively occupied with war and agriculture, their lives were very simple, and they had no knowledge whatever of any art or science.
They lived comfortably at 2 Bolton Gardens, South Kensington, where Helen Beatrix was born on 28 July 1866 and her brother Walter Bertram on 14 March 1872.
They are estimated to have lived between the first and third centuries.
They lived in Marble Hill in Bollinger County.
They lived outside of Paris in Pontoise and later in Louveciennes, both of which places inspired many of his paintings including scenes of village life, along with rivers, woods, and people at work.
They lived in Portland in his early years, and moved to the countryside to Johnson Creek when he was 9 or 10, after the death of his father.
They lived in a rustic, one-room cabin in Locust Ridge, just north of the Greenbrier Valley, in the Great Smoky Mountains in Sevier County, a predominantly Pentecostal area.
They lived in a run-down studio in Chelsea, made up of a single large room with a curtain to separate the kitchen.
They typically live for 50 to 70 years, but the oldest recorded elephant lived for 82 years.
They traditionally lived a coastal lifestyle, subsisting primarily on ocean resources such as salmon, halibut, and whales, as well as rich land resources such as berries and land mammals.
They lived in caves and semi-subterranean dwellings, a few of which have been discovered and excavated revealing relics of early tools and pottery.
They first lived in the President Hotel in Atlantic City, New Jersey, where his daughter Phyllis was raised, then the Knickerbocker Hotel in Hollywood.
They lived in areas of today's southern Poland, western Ukraine, Slovakia and Hungary.

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