Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Saint-Domingue" ¶ 22
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

regularise and had
Householders in Deritend and Bordesley had the unusual right to elect their own chaplain-a right they continued to enjoy until 1890 when a specific act of parliament was required to regularise the situation.
Although Louise now had the freedom to marry Alfieri, they did not regularise their relationship, since Alfieri had always opposed the institution of marriage.

regularise and which
Efforts were made to regularise conditions in local prisons but without much success, and these failures led to prison reform in 1877 which nationalised British prisons, including prisons at castles like York.
In 1784, after ten years of service, during which he helped extend and regularise the nascent Raj created by Clive of India, Hastings resigned.
The UK government tried to regularise the definitions of common land with the Commons Registration Act 1965, which established a register of common land.
The Hong Kong Government introduced the Small House Policy in 1972, which is an attempt to regularise village traditions.

regularise and who
Attempts by governor John Skottowe ( 1764 – 1782 ) to regularise the sale of arrack and punch led to some hostility and desertions by a number of troops who stole boats and were probably mostly lost at sea — however, at least one group of seven soldiers and a slave succeeded in escaping to Brazil in 1770.
This is a subcategory of: Category: Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 1. 0 Dual License created to regularise spelling on the user pages of those who use the International English versions of the licence.
This a sub category of: Category: Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2. 0 Dual License created to regularise spelling on the user pages of those who use International English

regularise and was
This eventually forced Ripon to regularise its position ; its city status was recognised by Act of Parliament in 1865.
In 1351, the first of a series of ordonnances was proclaimed, attempting to regularise the organisation of men-at-arms into units of 25 to 80 combatants.
One important contribution of Sultan Omar Ali Saifuddien III was to regularise Islamic administration in Brunei.
An additional act was promoted to regularise the situation.
The only point of the new Letters of Release was to regularise their status as far as the Moscow Patriarchate was concerned, and reduce tension between the Exarchate and the Patriarchate.
After the Fatimid conquest of 973, led by al-Mu ' izz's son, the fifth Fatimid Caliph, ibn Kallis returned to Egypt and was put in charge of the economy, where he was able to regularise the state finances.

regularise and for
Inhabitants were sometimes fined for " encroaching " ( enclosing small areas ) on the common although these may actually have been payments to regularise a new practice rather than a form of punishment.
It has therefore been seen as an important source for efforts to reconstruct Chaucer's original text and intentions, though John M. Manly and Edith Rickert in their Text of the Canterbury Tales ( 1940 ) noted that whoever edited the manuscript probably made substantial revisions, tried to regularise spelling, and put the individual Tales into a smoothly running order.

regularise and .
Most pal battalions were decimated by the end of 1917 / start of 1918 and most were amalgamated into other battalions to regularise battalion strength.
A variety of roles have been attributed to singing games, including exploring language, allowing acceptable criticism and to regularise and ritualise play and other behaviour.
Recent scholarship has shown that the variant spellings given in the Hengwrt manuscript likely reflect Chaucer's own spelling practices in his East Midlands / London dialect of Middle English, while the Ellesmere text shows evidence of a later attempt to regularise spelling ; Hengwrt is therefore probably very close to the original authorial holograph.

slavery and 1685
To regularize slavery, in 1685 Louis XIV enacted the Code Noir, which accorded certain human rights to slaves and responsibilities to the master, who was obliged to feed, clothe, and provide for the general well-being of their slaves.
In 1685, Louis XIV signed into law the Code Noir ( Black Code ), which regulated slavery in the French colonies.
In 1685, in France Jean-Baptiste Colbert promulgated the " Code des Noires " ( Code concerning the Blacks ), whose 60 articles would regulate slavery in the colonies.
The Code in 1685 set the pattern for policing slavery.

slavery and Louis
The Louisiana Territory was broken into smaller portions for administration, and the territories passed slavery laws similar to those in the southern states but trying to encompass the preceding French and Spanish rule ( for instance, Spain had prohibited slavery of Native Americans in 1769, but some slaves of mixed African-Native American descent were still being held in St. Louis when the US took over the Louisiana Territory ).
* Marguerite ( woman of color ), in 1805 filed the first " freedom suit " in St. Louis and succeeded in ending Indian slavery in the state of Missouri in 1836
After two years, the army transferred Emerson to territory where slavery was legal: first to St. Louis, Missouri, then to Louisiana.
By this time, the Blow family had relocated to Missouri and become opponents of slavery, granting the Scotts emancipation by Henry Taylor Blow on May 26, 1857, less than three months after the Supreme Court ruling. Scott went to work as a porter in St. Louis for nearly 17 months before he died from tuberculosis in September 1858.
August 2, 1766 saw the birth of Saint-Pierre de Louis Delgrès, a mixed-race free black who would serve in the French army and fight the British in 1794, before becoming the leader of the unsuccessful resistance in Guadeloupe against General Richepance, whom Napoleon had sent to restore slavery to that colony.
Missouri, a Union state where slavery was legal, became a battleground when the pro-secession governor, against the vote of the legislature, led troops to the federal arsenal at St. Louis ; he was aided by Confederate forces from Arkansas and Louisiana.
In 1819 he went to St. Louis, Missouri, and there in 1819-1820 took an active part in the slavery controversy.
Tensions over slavery increased in St. Louis and three times, pro-slavery opponents destroyed Lovejoy's printing press to try to stop his publication.
In the Border states, slavery was systematically dying out in the urban areas and the regions without cotton, especially in cities that were rapidly industrializing, such as Baltimore, Louisville, and St. Louis.
However, slavery declined in the border states and could barely survive in cities and industrial areas ( it was fading out in cities such as Baltimore, Louisville and St. Louis ), so a South based on slavery was rural and non-industrial.
On August 26, 1856 he fought a duel on Bloody Island ( Mississippi River ) with Thomas C. Reynolds ( then the St. Louis District Attorney ) over the slavery issue.
That said Walker now holds your petitioner and child in slavery, claiming her as his slave, and your petitioner prays that your petitioner and said child may be allowed to sue as a poor person in the St. Louis Circuit Court for freedom & that the said Walker may be restrained from carrying her & said child out of the jurisdiction of the St. Louis Circuit Court till the termination of said suit.
Crispin Bates has noted that Morton's " systematic justification " for the separation of races, along with the work of Louis Agassiz, was also used by those who favoured slavery in the US, with the Charleston Medical Journal noting at his death that " We of the South should consider him as our benefactor for aiding most materially in giving to the negro his true position as an inferior race.
The memoir recounts her mother Polly Berry's legal battles in St. Louis, Missouri for her own and her daughter's freedom from slavery.
Born into slavery in St. Louis, Missouri in 1830, Lucy Ann Berry was the daughter of slaves Polly Berry and a mulatto father
In the 1850s, under Louis Chamerovzow, the society helped John Brown write and publish his autobiography a decade before the American Civil War ended slavery in the United States.

slavery and XIV
In a decree dated 18 April 1591 ( Bulla Cum Sicuti ), Gregory XIV ordered reparations to be made by Catholics in the Philippines to the natives, who had been forced into slavery by Europeans, and he commanded under pain of excommunication of the owners that all native slaves in the islands be set free.
* 1685-Louis XIV of France decrees the Code noir ( Black Code ) that ordered all Jews out of the French colonial empire, defined the rules for slavery, restricted the activities of free Negroes, and forbade the exercise of any religion other than Roman Catholicism.
In 1741 Pope Benedict XIV condemned slavery generally.
In 1639, pope Urban VIII forbade slavery, as did Benedict XIV in 1741.

1.197 seconds.