Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Economic growth" ¶ 14
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Via and these
During these same years Rome organized a rudimentary navy, constructed its first military roads ( construction of the Via Appia was begun in 312 BC and of the Via Valeria in 306 ), and increased the size of its annual military levy as seen from the increase of annually elected military tribunes from 6 to 16.
After these cuts, Via was a much smaller company and immediately took to rationalizing its fleet of cars and locomotives, resulting in a fleet of refurbished stainless steel ( HEP-1 and HEP-2 rebuilds, for " head end power ") and LRC cars, as well as rationalizing its locomotive fleet with GM and Bombardier ( LRC ) units.
) Included in the Auditor General's report was the fact that Via Rail was used as one of several federal government departments, agencies, and Crown corporations to funnel these illicit funds.
Via naturalisation ( by application ), one could achieve citizenship, given these criteria:
Via Rail offers limited daily commuter and weekend service between these three peninsula municipalities and Toronto and many points between.
Via these methods, occupational therapy sought and obtained medical legitimacy in the 1920s.
Via the standard email interface, users post messages by emailing them to, and these are forwarded by email to everyone who subscribes to the list.
Through all these years, the Egyptian collection has always been in Turin, in the building projected for the purpose of housing it, in Via Accademia delle Scienze 6.
Pelletier, however, was not at Via for most of these occurrences, and the Martin government was accused of using an incident as an excuse to remove one of Chrétien's allies.
The path follows the Alta Via 2 and Alta Via 1 footpaths of the Aosta Valley in Italy ( these foothpaths are normally divided in resp.
Foremost among these is the notion that the Partisans responsible for the Via Rasella attack were ordered to come forward and turn themselves in to the SS and wilfully declined to do so.
* Villa of Publius Clodius Pulcher, these are the remains of a Roman villa located on the Appian Way, 23 km of National Road 7 Via Appia, inside the Villa Santa Caterina, owned by the Pontifical North American College.
Between the period of 1992 and 2001, 332 of these locomotives were built for Amtrak, Via Rail, and Metro-North.
The P42 has a maximum speed of, while Via Rail Canada only permits these units to travel at a maximum speed of.
The Via Aquitania connected these important cities in southern Gaul.
Nothing is known historically about these saints except their names, that they were martyrs, and that they were buried on 30 July of some year in the Cemetery of Pontianus on the Via Portuensis.
The graves of these two martyrs were on an estate of the Lady Domitilla near the Via Ardeatina, close to that of Saint Petronilla.
A Sauvé commuter rail station is planned to be constructed to connect these corridors, and will likely replace the nearby Via Rail Ahuntsic railway station.
When Canadian Pacific and Canadian National passenger service was consolidated into Via Rail, Via Rail inherited these units and continues to use RDCs for scheduled services on the Victoria – Courtenay train on Vancouver Island and the Sudbury – White River train in Ontario.
Via Rail reconfigured these routes, making the Canadian a Toronto – Vancouver train and the Super Continental a Montreal – Vancouver train.
In addition to the usual central north-south road ( cardo ), which in Jerusalem headed straight up the western hill, a second major north-south road was added down the line of the Tyropoeon Valley ; these two cardines converge near the Damascus Gate, close to the Via Dolorosa.

Via and intelligence
Via this increasing complexity, according to Nonzero, higher intelligence was thus destined to happen, perhaps even " inevitable " ( see discussion of inevitability below ).
She possesses intelligence in illegal tactics that made her stronger and she used people in order to manipulate them when a bombing in the departure of Via and her family to start a new life began.

Via and growth
After the earliest period, the history of which is essentially unknown, but to which the walls in the core hill portion of the town attest, dated to the 1st century BC, the first stage of the development of Trevi beyond the hill took place under the Empire, when Hadrian restored the main road through the territory, the Via Flaminia, thus spurring the growth of a suburb in the plain at the place now called Pietrarossa, where sporadic excavations over several centuries have brought to light many remains: among them Roman baths that appear to have been still more or less in use in the time of St. Francis, who is known to have visited the area and to have advised people to bathe there.
With the growth of importance of the Via Portuensis from the time of Constantine onwards, that of the Via Ostiensis correspondingly decreased.

Via and leading
Two different routes to Apulia diverged at this point, one ( Via Aurelia Aeclanensis ) leading through the modern Ariano to Herdoniae, the other ( the Via Appia of the Empire ) passing the Lacus Ampsanctus and going on to Aquilonia and Venusia ; while the road from Aeclanum to Abellinum ( mod.
* the Via Tecta ( or the Sacred Way, which is a colonnaded street leading to the sanctuary ) and
The Sistine Chapel was sponsored by Sixtus IV, as was the Ponte Sisto, the Sistine Bridge – the first new bridge across the Tiber since antiquity – and the building of Via Sistina ( later named Borgo Sant ' Angelo ), a road leading from Castel Sant ' Angelo to Saint Peter.
# A passage in Statius describing the repairs of the Via Domitiana, a branch road of the Via Appia, leading to Neapolis.
After World War II, Via Monte Napoleone became one of the leading streets in international fashion, somewhat equivalent to Paris ' Rue du Faubourg-Saint-Honoré, Rome's Via Condotti, London's Bond Street or Oxford Street, and Florence's Via de ' Tornabuoni.
For this prosperity it was doubtless indebted in part to its position on the Via Appia, just at the junction of the two principal arms or branches of that great road, the one called afterwards the Via Trajana, leading from thence by Equus Tuticus into Apulia ; the other by Aeclanum to Venusia ( modern Venosa ) and Tarentum ( modern Taranto ).
It was the starting-point of several important roads leading to the north-eastern portion of the empire — the road ( Via Iulia Augusta ) by Iulium Carnicum to Veldidena ( mod.
The Capitoline Hill cordonata ( centre of picture ) leading from Via del Teatro di Marcello to Piazza del Campidoglio.
It was traversed by two great lines of Roman roads — the Via Claudia Augusta leading from Verona and Tridentum across the Reschen Pass to the Fern Pass and thence to Augusta Vindelicorum ( Augsburg ), the other from Brigantium ( Bregenz ) on Lake Constance by Chur and Chiavenna to Como and Milan.
The Via Aemilia ( National Road № 9 ) still follows its original Roman course as it runs between hills and plain ; it would have been the obvious course to follow as it was the only major Roman road east of the Apennine Mountains leading to and from the Po Valley.
The temple has not survived, but the Via Triumphalis leading up to it may still be seen.
The Via Flaminia was an ancient Roman road leading from Rome over the Apennine Mountains to Ariminum ( Rimini ) on the coast of the Adriatic Sea, and due to the ruggedness of the mountains was the major option the Romans had for travel between Etruria, Latium and Campania and the Po Valley.
The importance of the ancient Via Flaminia is twofold: during the period of Roman expansion in the 3rd and 2nd centuries BC, the Flaminia became, with the cheaper sea route, a main axis of transportation by which wheat from the Po valley supplied Rome and central Italy ; during the period of Roman decline, the Flaminia was the main road leading into the heartland of Italy: it was taken by Julius Caesar at the beginning of the civil war, but also by various barbarian hordes, Byzantine generals, etc.
The termini of the Via Egnatia and the Via Appia, leading from Rome itself, were almost directly opposite each other on the east and west shores of the Adriatic Sea.
Aqaba reached its peak during Roman times, the great long distance road the Via Traiana Nova led south from Bostra through Amman, terminating in Aqaba, where it connected with a west road leading to Philistia and Egypt.
Under his son, Charlemagne, Aosta acquired importance as a post on the Via Francigena, leading from Aachen to Italy.
Situated on the road leading to the Aosta Valley ( part of the medieval Via Francigena ), it straddles the Dora Baltea and is regarded as the centre of the Canavese area.
This initial work for Rucellai involved internal systemization, the construction of a cross-vaulted passage leading from the street ( the Via della Vigna nuova ) to a new courtyard and loggia for which he also was responsible.

1.116 seconds.