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chancellorship and did
As, however, he had obtained a bull ( 20 August 1409 ) enabling him to appoint his successors to the vacated preferments, including his nephew William, though still an undergraduate and not in orders, to the chancellorship of Salisbury, and a prebend at Lichfield, he did not go empty away.
In the course of the Guillaume Affair, he did not make great efforts to persuade Brandt to stay in office and promoted the chancellorship of Helmut Schmidt.
Emperor Xuanzong agreed and did not give Zhang Shougui the chancellorship.
In fact, Gregorian had been offered the chancellorship at UC Berkeley, but had declined because he had been Provost at Penn for only two years and did not feel it was an appropriate time to leave his post.

chancellorship and by
Arnim was a member of a prominent Pomeranian family, related to Bismarck by marriage, and someone who saw himself as a rival and competitor for the chancellorship.
When neither Chancellor Gerhard Schröder's Social Democrats and Greens nor a coalition of Christian and Free Democrats, favored by Angela Merkel and Westerwelle, managed to gain a majority of seats, Westerwelle rejected overtures by Chancellor Schröder to save his chancellorship by entering his coalition, preferring to become one of the leaders of the disparate opposition of the subsequently formed " Grand Coalition " of Christian and Social Democrats, with Merkel as Chancellor.
On leaving the chancellorship, he was nominated in May 1406 by Pope Innocent VII as Archbishop of York, but the appointment was vetoed by King Henry IV in the same year.
Neither the early announcement of the Kaiser's abdication by Max von Baden and Ebert's chancellorship, nor Scheidemann's proclamation of the Republic were covered by the constitution.
Meanwhile Waynflete himself had been advanced to the highest office in the state, the chancellorship, the seals being delivered to him on 11 October 1456 by the king in the priory of Coventry in the presence of the duke of York, apparently as a person acceptable to both parties.
The economic-political instruments were implemented first by Ludwig Erhard ( CDU ), minister of economics under Konrad Adenauer's ( CDU ) chancellorship ( from 1949 to 1963 ), and Alfred Müller-Armack, head of the policy department of the ministry of economics.
William de Vere was promised the chancellorship of England by the Empress Matilda in the 1141 charter by which his brother was made earl, but given the political and military setbacks she suffered in that and subsequent years, it is not surprising that there is no record that he served as her chancellor.
A cleric, he was appointed to the Imperial chancellorship for Italy by the Empress Agnes in 1058, which position he held until 1063 .< ref > Carlo Dolcini, " Clement III, antipapa ", Enciclopedia dei Papi, Rome, 2000: < http :// www. treccani. it / enciclopedia / clemente-iii_ % 28Enciclopedia_dei_Papi % 29 />; Charles A. Coulombe, Vicars of Christ: A History of the Popes, ( Kensington Publishing Corp., 2003 ), 218 .</ ref > In 1058 he participated in the election of Pope Nicholas II but on his death in 1061, he sided with the philo-imperial party to elect Cadalous of Parma as Antipope Honorius II against Pope Alexander II.
Farahani was awarded the position of chancellorship of Persia by Shah at the time of his inauguration.
The king attempted to deprive Neville of the chancellorship in 1236, which the bishop countered by claiming that as he had been appointed during the royal minority with the consent of the great council, only the council could dismiss him.
On 15 October 1266 Giffard was appointed by Pope Clement IV to the Archbishopric of York — as part of this elevation he resigned the chancellorship and was enthroned on 1 November 1266, receiving his temporalities on Boxing day.
He maintained his chancellorship during an unsuccessful campaign for the U. S. House in 1872, but resigned in 1875 to accept the appointment by Tennessee Governor James D. Porter to the vacant Senate seat created by the death of Andrew Johnson.
For example, in 735, after the general Zhang Shougui ( 張守珪 ) scored a major victory over the Khitan, Emperor Xuanzong wanted to reward Zhang Shougui by making him a chancellor, but Zhang Jiuling pointed out that it was inappropriate to use the chancellorship as a reward, even with just the honorable title and no actual authority ( as Emperor Xuanzong considered as well ) and that giving Zhang Shougui the chancellorship for defeating the Khitan meant that there would be no other available awards if he were to defeat the Xi and the Eastern Tujue as well.
Bai, however, was not returned to chancellorship within Emperor Xuānzong's lifetime, and was effectively replaced by Linghu.
He came to his chancellorship in the midst of the Civil War in a state divided by the question of slavery.

chancellorship and French
Under Rondelet's chancellorship, the university attracted students from across France and abroad and received sponsorship from the French crown ; he persuaded King Henry II to fund the construction of an anatomy theatre in Montpellier.

chancellorship and at
In total there were six burned at the stake for heresy during More's chancellorship: Thomas Hitton, Thomas Bilney, Richard Bayfield, John Tewkesbery, Thomas Dusgate, and James Bainham.
Aged 72 at the end of his chancellorship, he was the oldest acting Chancellor after World War II.
Nevertheless he lost the chancellorship and suffered banishment to his estate at Goretovo ( April 1759 ), where he remained till the accession of Catherine II ( 28 June 1762 ).
Chlodwig remained at Strasbourg till October 1894, when, at the urgent request of the Emperor William II, he consented, in spite of his advanced years, to accept the chancellorship as Caprivi's successor.
After his resignation of the German chancellorship in 1909, Bülow lived principally at the villa in Rome which he had purchased with a view to his retirement.
The accession of Adolf Hitler to the chancellorship of Germany in 1933 made Otto Robert Frisch make the decision to move to London, England where he joined the staff at Birkbeck College and worked with the physicist Patrick Maynard Stuart Blackett on cloud chamber technology and artificial radioactivity.
The archbishop was released and took part in a council held at Loddon Bridge, between Reading and Windsor ; Longchamp was excommunicated and deposed from the chancellorship, and Hugh of Lincoln, the Bishop of Lincoln, excommunicated those who had dragged Geoffrey from sanctuary.
In spite of difficult statewide budgetary conditions throughout his chancellorship, Monteith presided over a strong period of growth and advancement at NC State.
( Pembroke, who was at the time allied with Saye, nominated Saye to replace him as high steward when he left the post to take up the chancellorship.
Liu Yan subsequently never against summoned Yang for any audiences, and Yang eventually died at his home without returning to chancellorship.
As a layman, and married, Mason was stripped of his ecclesiastical benefices that year and in October was compelled to resign his chancellorship at Oxford University in favour of Cardinal Reginald Pole.
With the assistance of a native of Baghdad known in England as David Zamio, then resident at Cambridge, he attained great proficiency in Arabic literature ; and after succeeding William Paley in the chancellorship of Carlisle, he was appointed, in 1795, Sir Thomas Adams's Professor of Arabic in Cambridge University.

chancellorship and was
His tenure of the chancellorship was epoch-making.
To strike a deal, Adenauer was forced to make two concessions: to relinquish the chancellorship before the end of the new term, his fourth, and to replace his foreign minister.
Adenauer was not on good terms with his economics minister Ludwig Erhard and tried to block him from the chancellorship.
A relative upstart, Wykeham was made Keeper of the Privy Seal in 1363 and Chancellor in 1367, though due to political difficulties connected with his inexperience, the Parliament forced him to resign the chancellorship in 1371.
It was rumoured in December 1554 that Cecil would succeed Sir William Petre as Secretary of State, an office which, with his chancellorship of the Garter, he had lost on Mary's accession to the throne.
On 3 November 1333 de Stratford was appointed Archbishop of Canterbury and he resigned the chancellorship in the following year ; however, he held this office again from 1335 to 1337 and for about two months in 1340.
While labouring for the establishment of Merton College, the barons triumphed and Walter was removed from the chancellorship in 1263 but after the civil war was restored to the government.
In September 1621 he was mentioned as Weston's most serious competitor for the chancellorship of the exchequer and in March 1622 he was promoted to be secretary of state.
In the following year ( 1638 ), he was promoted to the chancellorship of the church of Sarum, with the prebend of Brixworth annexed to it.
In 1826, he resigned the chancellorship after his nomination in caucus, and was elected again to the U. S. Senate.
On June 21, 1919, he was appointed minister of the Reich for foreign affairs — under the chancellorship of Gustav Bauer — and in this capacity went to Versailles and with Colonial Minister Johannes Bell and signed the peace treaty for Germany on June 29, 1919.
He was for some time professor of law in the University of Florence, and after the dismissal in 1456 from the Florentine chancellorship of the renowned humanist Poggio Bracciolini for incompetence and an interregnum of two years, Accolti himself became Chancellor of the Florentine Republic in 1458.
The Regent Albany's jealousy had deprived Beaton of the chancellorship some years previously, and he was never reappointed, though he enjoyed the full favour of the king.
In the first year of Henry IV Chicheley was parson of Sherston, Wiltshire, and prebendary of Nantgwyly in the college of Abergwilly, Wales ; on 23 February 1401 / 2, now called doctor of laws, he was pardoned for bringing in, and allowed to use, a bull of the pope providing to him the chancellorship of Salisbury Cathedral, and canonries in the nuns ' churches of Shaftesbury and Wilton in that diocese ; and on 9 January 1402 / 3 he was archdeacon of Salisbury.
Consequently, it became not unusual to place the personal custody of the great seal in the hands of a vice-chancellor or keeper ; this, too, was the practice followed during a temporary vacancy in the chancellorship.

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