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When and dissolution
When the house was ready to pass the Act for dissolution, Mr. Crew who had been as forward as any man in beginning and carrying on the war against the last King, moved, that before they dissolved themselves, they would bear their witness against the horrid murder, as he called it, of the King.
When Gorbachev met with Ronald Reagan during his visit the United States, Reagan called, bizarrely, for the dissolution of the Afghan army.
When a concentrated solution of ammonia is added to a suspension of silver chloride dissolution occurs because a complex of Ag < sup >+</ sup > is formed
When Roberts formally annexed the Transvaal on 3 September, the Salisbury ministry, emboldened by the apparent victory in South Africa, asked for the dissolution of Parliament, with an election set for October.
When corrosion does occur, it is almost always a simple dissolution of the material or chemical reaction, rather than an electrochemical process.
When he got there, he was informed that a series of telephone calls had been made by senior opposition figures ( and some independent TDs ), including Fianna Fáil leader ( and ex-Taoiseach ) Charles Haughey, Brian Lenihan and Sylvester Barrett demanding that the President, as he could constitutionally do where a Taoiseach had ' ceased to retain the support of a majority in Dáil Éireann ', refuse FitzGerald a parliamentary dissolution, forcing his resignation as Taoiseach and enabling the Dáil to nominate someone else for the post.
When asked further if the dissolution of the duo was amicable, she refused to comment further.
When ' the Age Thirty Transition ' is a difficult one, ' in a severe crisis he experiences a threat to life itself, the danger of chaos and dissolution, the loss of hope for the future.
When parliament met the government was defeated and a dissolution was granted.
When this rejection duly took place, he sought and obtained a double dissolution of the Parliament from the Governor-General.
When Munro Ferguson granted Cook a double dissolution, he was furiously denounced by the Labor Party, who maintained that Cook was manipulating the Constitution to gain control of the Senate.
When the official dissolution of the Protectorate was proclaimed after the Liberation of Prague a radio call was issued for Bienert's arrest.
When Sir Patrick Duncan refused a dissolution to his Prime Minister in South Africa in 1939, all these conditions were satisfied: when Lord Byng did the same in Canada in 1926, they appeared to be, but in the event the third proved illusory .</ p >
* When a motion of no confidence is adopted, or a vote of confidence defeated, by the House of Representatives, unless there is a dissolution of the house within ten days.
When dealing with an application for dissolution, nullity or separation where there is a child in the family, the Court must consider if it should exercise its powers under the Children Act 1989.
When he refused, he was beaten up by unknown persons, allegedly with ties to the Russian mafia, at the club office to force him to sign the contract dissolution papers.
Kinnick said, " When the members of any nation have come to regard their country as nothing more than the plot of ground on which they reside, and their government as a mere organization for providing police or contracting treaties ; when they have ceased to entertain any warmer feelings for one another than those which interest or personal friendship or a mere general philanthropy may produce, the moral dissolution of that nation is at hand.
When the current is turned on, it will initiate dissolution of the metallic mercury on the one side of the drop in the capillary and deposition on the other side of the same drop.
When Vanguard split during the Northern Ireland Constitutional Convention, Empey joined the breakaway group which formed the United Ulster Unionist Party, serving as the party's Deputy Leader from 1977 until its dissolution in 1984.
When the Jews began to disperse throughout the Roman empire after the dissolution of the Jewish state in 70 CE, many settled in Mauretania including part of modern-day Morocco.
When it was not agreed by all participating parties of the Motherland Democracy Coalition, Badarchiyn Erdenebat announced the dissolution of the coalition at the parliament without consent of the coalition parties.
When wool production declined after the dissolution of Rievaulx Abbey, Helmsley ’ s weavers turned to flax, much of which was imported.
When a 1961 military coup in Syria led to the dissolution of the UAR, al-Hawrani publicly supported it and signed a statement in favor of the secession ( as did Bitar, but he later withdrew his signature ).
When the dissolution rate of a pure substance is normalized to the surface area of the solid ( which usually changes with time during the dissolution process ), then it is expressed in kg / m < sup > 2 </ sup > s and referred to as " intrinsic dissolution rate ".

When and monasteries
When Italian authorities expropriated convents and monasteries of Catholic orders, turning them into administration or military buildings, Cardinal Pecci protested but acted moderately.
When, in the 17th century, the splendidly equipped Jesuit drama arose, the Passion Plays ( still largely secularized ) were relegated to out-of-the-way villages and to the monasteries, particularly in Bavaria and Austria.
When East Syrian monasteries existed ( which is no longer the case ) seven hours of prayer were the custom in them, and three hulali ( sections ) of the Psalter were recited at each service.
When Christianity spread through the Empire, many churches and monasteries were established among the ruins of Druidic temples.
When institutions, usually monasteries, received grants they were effectively in perpetuity since the institutions were ongoing.
When the fanaticism of the French monasteries and the bigotry of Louis IX.
When Napoleonic armies entered a territory, monasteries were often sacked and church property secularized.
When Christianity became officially tolerated in the Roman Empire, Palestine became the target of Imperial subsidies for churches and monasteries, and Christian pilgrims brought additional revenue.
When the new founded monasteries became abbeys, the abbots were usually chosen among the monks of Fécamp.
When the Company had taken over the area around Rothenburg, it proceeded to Swabia to destroy fortified monasteries and castles to prevent their becoming strongholds of the Swabian League.
When Yicun died, Yunmen began travelling and visited quite a number of monasteries, cementing his reputation as a Ch ' an master.
When the mission reached Lhasa, the Dalai Lama had already fled to Urga in Mongolia, but a treaty was signed by lay and ecclesasiastical officials of the Tibetan government, and by representatives of the three monasteries of Sera, Drepung, and Ganden.
When he was seven years old, he was publicly recognized as one of the reincarnations of Jamyang Khyentse Wangpo by Shechen Gyaltsap Rinpoche ( 1871 – 1926 ) at Shechen, one of the six principal monasteries of the Nyingmapa school.
When the supervision of monasteries passed to another episcopal official — the Great Sakellarios (" sacristan ") — the title of archimandrite became an honorary one for abbots of important monasteries ( compared to an ordinary abbot, a hegumenos ).
When said in the monasteries, Matins was generally said before dawn, or sometimes over the course of a night ; Lauds was said at the end of Matins, generally at the break of day ; Prime at 6 AM ; Terce at 9AM ; Sext at noon ; None at 3PM ; Vespers at the rising of the Vespers or Evening Star ( usually about 6PM ); and Compline was said at the end of the day, generally right before bed time.
When Neath Abbey ( now a magnificent ruin ) was founded in 1129, it was the richest of all Welsh monasteries, and in writings of the sixteenth century was described as the ' fairest Abbey of all Wales '.
When Gregory XI's war against Milan ended in 1375, many Florentines feared that the pope would turn his military attention toward Tuscany ; thus, Florence paid off Gregory XI's main military commander, English condottiere John Hawkwood, with 130, 000 florins, extracted from local clergy, bishops, abbots, monasteries, and ecclesiastical institutions, by an eight-member committee appointed by the Signoria of Florence, the otto dei preti.
When the Emperor tried to relieve the suffering by limiting the wealth of the monasteries, he alienated the church.
When the religious orders, convents, and monasteries in Portugal were closed by the government in 1833, the monastery buildings were handed over to the Santa Casa da Misericórdia de Lisboa ( a society charged with helping the old, the sick, and abandoned or orphaned children ).

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