Xiv Sentence Examples

xiv
  • At the election diet of 1669 he accepted large bribes from Louis XIV.

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  • Is the ferment of the peoples of the west at the end of the eighteenth century and their drive eastward explained by the activity of Louis XIV, XV, and XVI, their mistresses and ministers, and by the lives of Napoleon, Rousseau, Diderot, Beaumarchais, and others?

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  • It should, however, be borne in mind that the apparent differences between different species may be partly Table Xiv.

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  • He was eight years old when the Camisard revolt was finally suppressed, and nineteen when on the 8th of March 1715 the edict of Louis XIV.

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  • He gained the favour of Louis XIV.

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  • Dubois was unscrupulous, but so were his contemporaries, and whatever vices he had, he gave France peace -after the disastrous wars of Louis XIV.

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  • His French poems met with little success, but a description in Latin verse of a tournament (carrousel, circus regius), given by Louis XIV.

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  • Acts xiv.

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  • The military government of Lyons is another independent and special command; it comprises practically the XIV.

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  • The Hotel des Invalides founded by Louis XIV.

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  • On his return to Paris he soon became distinguished as a painter, and was employed by Louis XIV.

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  • The victory at Dunkirk increased his reputation, while Louis XIV.

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  • The administration of the royal province of Auvergne was organized under Louis XIV.

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  • This plan anticipated that employed later by Louis XIV.

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  • The revolt of Masaniello in Naples (1647), followed by rebellions at Palermo and Messina, which placed Sicily for a while in the hands of Louis XIV.

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  • He immediately went over to the opposition, and in concert with Louis XIV.

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  • One of them was defeated by Ammi-zadoq of Babylonia (c. 2100 B.C.); another would have been the Chedor-laomer (Kutur-Lagamar) of Genesis xiv.

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  • He was followed by Janus de Noir, le sieur du Roule, who was sent by Louis XIV.

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  • These figures differ from those in Table XIV.

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  • From then till her death in 30, her son, born in 47, and asserted by Cleopatra to be the child of Julius Caesar, was associated officially with her as Ptolemy XiV.

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  • In 1673 a French expedition organized in Canada under Jacques Marquette and Louis Joliet sailed down the Mississippi to the mouth of the Arkansas, and nine years later (1682) Rene Robert Cavelier, sieur de la Salle, reached the mouth of the river, took formal possession of the country which it drains, and named it Louisiana in honour of Louis XIV.

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  • In the war between France and the Empire, arising out of the attempt of Louis XIV.

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  • He left behind him a colossal collection of MSS., the so-called Nordinska Samlingarna, which were purchased and presented to Upsala university by Charles XIV.

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  • The dimensions of this trade are shown in Table XIV.

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  • By retaining nearly all the continental conquests of France, and by recovering every one of those which the British had made at her expense beyond the seas, he achieved a feat which was far beyond the powers even of Louis XIV.

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  • The allies, in particular, at once suspected that Louis XIV.

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  • The seventh part of the Opus Majus (De Morali Philosophia), not given in Jebb's edition, is noticed at considerable length in the Opus Tertium (cap. xiv.).

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  • The name Soubise appears again in the military history of France in the person of Charles De Rohan, Prince De Soubise (1715-1787), peer and marshal of France, the grandson of the princesse de Soubise, who is known to history as one of the mistresses of Louis XIV.

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  • Owing to his eloquence he was speedily ranked in popular estimation with Corneille, Racine, and the other leading figures of the most brilliant period of Louis XIV.'s reign.

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  • Coronelli (1623), and intended as presents to Louis XIV.

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  • This was the first "Hittite" monument discovered in modern times (early 18th century, by the Swede Otter, an emissary of Louis XIV.).

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  • The château of Maintenon dating from the 16th and 17th centuries was presented by Louis XIV.

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  • In 1648 it came into the possession of France, and in 1673 Louis XIV.

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  • In 1679 Daniel Greysolon, Sieur du Lhut (Duluth), as agent for a company of Canadian merchants which sought to establish trading posts on the Lakes, explored the country from the head of Lake Superior to Mille Lacs and planted the arms of Louis XIV.

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  • In 1665 Colbert made to him on behalf of Louis XIV.

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  • Indeed, we have a categorical statement to this effect in 4 Ezra xiv.

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  • He died on the 6th of February 1740, and was succeeded by Benedict XIV.

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  • Among the most illustrious natives of Bologna may be noted Luigi Galvani (1737-1798), the discoverer of galvanism, and Prospero Lambertini (Pope Benedict XIV.).

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  • This is especially clear from clause xvi., which decrees that the title and estates of the lords-lieutenant of counties should not be hereditary, thus attacking feudalism at its very roots, while clause xiv.

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  • A little later the Academy of Sciences of Paris was established by Louis XIV.

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  • He was at last, in 1662, received back again into favour by Louis XIV.

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  • It is the ode on the fall of the king of Babylon in chap. xiv.

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  • Scarcely had the Palatinate begun to recover when it was attacked by Louis XIV.

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  • He was intended for the bar, but was employed by Colbert, who had determined on the foundation of a French East India Company, to draw up an explanatory account of the project for Louis XIV.

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  • He is credited with a share in the production of the magnificent series of medals that commemorate the principal events of the age of Louis XIV.

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  • The wars carried on here by Louis XIV.

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  • This book, in some respects xiv.

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  • The date is late, for the writer speaks of the "venerable and holy images," as well as "the glorious and precious crosses and the sacred things of the churches" (xiv.), which points to the 5th century, when such things were first introduced into churches.

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  • Hansische Geschichte von der zweiten Halfte des XIV.

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  • Cedar-wood is earliest noticed in Leviticus xiv.

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  • The palace of the princes of Thurn and Taxis in the Eschenheimer Gasse was built (1732-1741) from the designs of Robert de Cotte, chief architect to Louis XIV.

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  • The Messinians suspected the Spanish court of a desire to destroy the ancient senatorial constitution of the city, and sent to France to ask the aid of Louis XIV.

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  • Augustine found a justification for these penal measures in the "compel them to come in" of Luke xiv.

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  • While he lacked in diplomacy the arts of a Louis XIV.

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  • His mother, Dorothea of Saxe-Lauenburg, was the elder sister of Catherine, the first wife of Gustavus Vasa and the mother of Eric XIV.

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  • The tension which had prevailed between the two kingdoms during the last years of Gustavus Vasa reached breaking point on the accession of Gustavus's eldest son Eric XIV.

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  • The refusal of the Whigs to grant terms in 1706, and again in 1709 when Louis XIV.

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  • In France, indeed, the Catholic pulpit now came to its perfection, stimulated, no doubt, by the toleration accorded to the Huguenots up to 1685 and by the patronage of Louis XIV.

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  • He married Anne of Orleans, daughter of Henrietta of England and niece of Louis XIV.

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  • In the war of the Spanish Succession (1700) we find Victor at first on the French side, until, dissatisfied with the continued insolence of Louis XIV.

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  • Motives drawn from homoeopathic magic may thus explain the occasional disuse and prohibition of pictorial and plastic Xiv.

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  • They menaced the coast of Essex, and could easily have covered an invasion of England by a French army if Louis XIV.

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  • The third was undertaken by the king in pursuit of a policy arranged between him and his cousin Louis XIV.

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  • King Louis XIV.

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  • Otto the Great to a considerable extent succeeded; Louis XIV.

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  • The birth of the prince who was destined to reign as Louis XIV.

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  • The king's ideas are best seen in the Memoires de Louis XIV.

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  • In 1876 a statue of Servetus was erected by Don Pedro Gonsalez de Velasco in front of his Instituto Antropologico at Madrid; in 1903 an expiatory block was erected at Champel; in 1907 a statue was erected in Paris (Place de la Mairie du XIV e Arrondissement); another is at Aramnese; another was prepared (1910) for erection at Vienne.

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  • In the above section most critics are agreed that xiv.

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  • In the elaborate arrangement of his matter he is thought to have imitated the great French preachers of the age of Louis XIV.

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  • An attempt was made under Louis XIV.

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  • Jealous of their " sharing the State with the king," Richelieu twenty-five years later reduced the exceptional privileges of the Huguenots, and with the advent of Louis XIV.

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  • Great Britain could not afford to stand aside and watch the accomplishment of an ambition to prevent which she had, at immense sacrifice of blood and treasure, overthrown the power of Louis XIV.

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  • Certain it is that not long after his flight from Pomposa Guido was living at Arezzo, and it was here that, about 1030, he received an invitation to Rome from Pope John XIV.

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  • Gouverneur Morris's father, Lewis Morris (1698-1762), closed a long public career as judge of the vice-admiralty court of New York; his mother was descended from a French Protestant refugee, who had come to America to escape the persecution of Louis XIV.

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  • Returning to Heidelberg he became Privatdozent in theology in 1829, and in 1831 published his Begriff der Kritik am Allen Testamente praktisch erartert, a study of Old Testament criticism in which he explained the critical principles of the grammatico-historical school, and his Des Propheten Jonas Orakel uber Moab, an exposition of the 1 5th and 16th chapters of the book of Isaiah attributed by him to the prophet Jonah mentioned in 2 Kings xiv.

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  • Near the city is a communistic religious community, the Israelite House of David, founded in 1903; the members believe that they are a part of the 144,000 elect (Revelation, viii, xiv) ultimately to be redeemed.

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  • This was the conception expressed by Bossuet, "Tout l'etat est en la personne du prince," or in Louis XIV.'s saying, "L'etat c'est moi."

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  • In the autumn of 1660 Schumacher visited Paris, shortly after Mazarin's death, when the young Louis XIV.

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  • The intercourse between France and Siam began about 16So under Phra Narain, who, by the advice of his minister, the Cephalonian adventurer Constantine Phaulcon, sent an embassy to Louis XIV.

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  • By the treaty of Westphalia (1648) the town was ceded to Louis XIV.

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  • Among them are "Erik XIV."

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  • The Society also gained ground steadily in France; for, though held in check by Richelieu and little more favoured by Mazarin, yet from the moment that Louis XIV.

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  • He next complained to Benedict XIV.

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  • Cardinal Lorenzo Ganganelli, a conventual Franciscan, was chosen to succeed him, and took the name of Clement XIV.

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  • She wrote valuable memoirs of the court of Louis XIV.

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  • The dark tragedy, known as the Sture murders, began with Eric XIV.'s strange treatment of young Count Nils.

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  • It was itself the covenant, for the genitive -rijs Siat4173 in Mark xiv.

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  • In 1665 some 2000 emigrants were sent to Canada; the European population was soon doubled, and Louis XIV.

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  • But once more, in contrast with English experience, the great trading company proved a failure in French hands as a colonizing agent, and in 1674 its charter was summarily revoked by Louis XIV.

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  • In 1682 he accomplished his task, took possession of the valley of the Mississippi in the name of Louis XIV.

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  • The peace of Ryswick proved but a truce, and when in 1701, on the death of the exiled James II., Louis XIV.

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  • Seven months after Charles's return from Scotland Henry secretly departed to Rome and, with the full approval of his father, but to the intense disgust of his brother, was created a cardinal deacon under the title of the cardinal of York by Pope Benedict XIV.

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  • Hence, to obtain great sensibility along with a considerable range, we require very long slender stems, and to these two objections apply in addition to the question of portability; for, in the first place, an instrument with a very long stem requires a very deep vessel of liquid for its complete immersion, and, in the second place, when most of the stem is above xIv.

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  • He made one fatal mistake - he dreamt of the French frontier being the Rhine and the Scheldt, and that a Spanish princess might bring the Spanish Netherlands as dowry to Louis XIV.

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  • Long had been the trial, and greatly had Mazarin been to blame in allowing the Frondes to come into existence, but he had retrieved his position by founding that great royal party which steadily grew until Louis XIV.

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  • But abroad his policy was everywhere successful, and opened the way for the policy of Louis XIV.

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  • By it Spain recovered Franche Comte, but ceded to France Roussillon, and much of French Flanders; and, what was of greater ultimate importance to Europe, Louis XIV.

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  • The metamorphoses of Scylla and of Picus, king of the Ausonians, by Circe, are narrated in Ovid (Metamorphoses, xiv.).

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  • During the French wars of aggression the Luneburg princes were eagerly courted by Louis XIV.

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  • Proceeding to Rome, Otto secured the election of Peter of Pavia as Pope John XIV.

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  • But the latter notice does not seem to agree with xiv.

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  • His brilliant talent, which seems to have been formed by the influence of that world of statues with which Louis XIV.

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  • No better fared Clement's medieval rights to Parma; nor could the sagacious and popular Benedict XIV.

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  • Thus Clement XI., at war with Austria in 1708, debased the currency; Clement (1730-1740) issued paper money and set up a government lottery, excommunicating all subjects who put their money into the lotteries of Genoa or Naples; Benedict XIV.

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  • Since the 12th century, the papal court had already had officials known as penitentiaries (poenitentiarii) for matters of conscience; the organization of the Penitentiary, after several modifications, was renewed by Benedict XIV.

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  • Saint-Simon asserts that her family threw her in the way of Louis XIV.

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  • The Order of St Louis was founded by Louis XIV.

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  • Town after town fell before the French armies, and to de Witt and his supporters there seemed to be nothing left but to make submission and accept the best terms that Louis XIV.

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  • This peace, however, did no more than afford a breathing space during which Louis XIV.

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  • Logically it was wrought iron, the essence of which was that it was (I) " iron " as distinguished from steel, and XIV.

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  • A still greater triumph of diplomatic skill was the conclusion of the Triple Alliance (January 17, 1668) between the Dutch Republic, England and Sweden, which checked the attempt of Louis XIV.

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  • The internal history of the Belgic provinces has little to record during this long period in which the ambition of Louis XIV.

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  • The Jesuits were suppressed by Pope Clement XIV.

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  • But the victory was not followed up, for Louis XIV.

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  • It contains the beautiful chamber of King Eric XIV.

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  • On his father's side he was descended from the brother of Louis XIV., on his mother's from the count of Toulouse, "legitimated" son of Louis XIV.

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  • Lambertini (Pope Benedict XIV.), De servorum Dei beatificatione et beatorum canonizatione (Bologna, 1 7341738), several times reprinted, and more remarkable for erudition and knowledge of canon law than for historical criticism; Al.

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  • This was now easy, and Louis XIV.

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  • The cession of Alsace and the greater part of Lorraine, wrested two centuries before by Louis XIV.

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  • Here we observe that (I) the extract agrees this time with Recognitions, not with Homilies; (2) its framework is that of the Clementine romance found in both; (3) the tenth and last book of Recognitions is here parallel to book xiv.

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  • In the following March accordingly were published, with papal approval, the Index librorum prohibitorum, which continued to be reprinted and brought down to date, and the "Ten Rules" which, supplemented and explained by Clement VIII., Sixtus V., Alexander VII., and finally by Benedict XIV.

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  • The days of French invasions of Germany had for the time ceased, and revenge for the attacks made by Louis XIV.

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  • On this account he was not received with favour by Louis XIV.; so in 1683 he assisted the Imperialists in Hungary, and while there he wrote some letters in which he referred to Louis as le roi du theatre, for which on his return to France he was temporarily banished to Chantilly.

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  • Conti started rather unwillingly for his new kingdom, probably, as St Simon remarks, owing to his affection for Frangoise, wife of Philip II., duke of Orleans, and daughter of Louis XIV.

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  • In 1713 he married Louise Elisabeth (1693-1775), daughter of Louis Henri de Bourbon, prince de Conde, and grand-daughter of Louis XIV.

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  • But Griffenfeldt's difficulties, always serious, were increased by the instability of the European situation, depending as it did on the ambition of Louis XIV.

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  • By his father's will he got, by way of appanage, the duchy of Sodermanland, which included the provinces of Nerike and Vermland; but he did not come into actual possession of them till after the fall of Eric XIV.

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  • In 1750, on the illness of her father, she was appointed by Pope Benedict XIV.

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  • In 1561 it was granted to Louis, duke of BourbonMontpensier, by whose descendants it was held till, in 1682, "Mademoiselle," the duchess of Montpensier, gave it to Louis XIV.'s bastard, the duke of Maine, as part of the price for the release of her lover Lauzun.

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  • Ancren Riwle was edited for the Camden Society by the Rev. James Morton in 1843 from the Cotton MS. (Nero A xiv.).

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  • He edited the Histoire de France depuis les origines jusqu'd la Revolution (1901-), in which he carefully revised the work of his numerous assistants, reserving the greatest part of the reign of Louis XIV.

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  • According to Benedict XIV.

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  • Various other works have been attributed to Moses, such as the Petirath Moshe, the 1 31 4 13Xos Aoywv, uucrrcK&v Mwuetws, The Exodus of Moses (in Slavonic), &c. See Charles, Assumption of Moses, pp. xiv.

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  • No pope has been the subject of more diverse judgments than Clement XIV.

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  • The middle of the 19th century saw quite a spirited controversy over Clement XIV.; St Priest, in his Hist.

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  • He received a commission as lieutenant-general (marechal de camp) from King Louis XIV.

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  • The king who did most for French royalty would have made a sorry figure at the court of a Louis XIV.

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  • To these may be added XIV.

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  • Ample Italian reserves were now on the move, the XIV.

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  • Corps, which came into action between the XIV.

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  • More than once at Easter he is said to have had a convenient illness which dispensed him from granting absolution to Louis XIV.

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  • He exercised a moderating influence on Louis XIV.'s zeal against the Jansenists, and Saint-Simon, who was opposed to him in most matters, does full justice to his humane and honourable character.

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  • In spite of failing faculties he continued his duties as confessor to Louis XIV.

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  • Treaties to which several European powers of different nationalities are parties are now usually drawn up in French (the use of which became general in the time of Louis XIV.), but the treaties of Aix-la-Chapelle of 1748 and 1784 contain, as does the final act of the congress of Vienna, a protest against the use of this language being considered obligatory.

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  • In 1681 it was formally annexed to France by a decree of Louis XIV.'s Chambre de Reunion, and remained French till 1871, when it passed with Alsace-Lorraine to the new German empire.

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  • It was before Termonde that Louis XIV.

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  • She wore mourning for her father in 1701, and before his death James is said to have written to his daughter asking for her protection for his family; but the recognition of his son by Louis XIV.

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  • Two of the bishops of Pavia were raised to the papal throne as John XIV.

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  • The army, which was known as the XIV.

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  • Sagramoso, who commanded the XIV.

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  • Their reform was more than once discussed; and death alone prevented Benedict XIV.

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  • On the other hand, Napoleon quite agreed with Louis XIV.

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  • Still remoter was the danger of another Louis XIV.

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  • This ordinance remained in force till the reign of Louis XIV.

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  • Among Colbert's papers are Memoires sur les affaires de finance de France (written about 1663), a fragment entitled Particularites secretes de la vie du Roy, and other accounts of the earlier part of the reign of Louis XIV.

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  • Voltaire, in his Siècle de Louis XIV (1751), told the story of the mysterious masked prisoner with many graphic details; and, under the heading of "Ana" in the Questions sur l'encyclopedie (Geneva, 1771), he asserted that he was a bastard brother of Louis XIV., son of Mazarin and Anne of Austria.

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  • Voltaire's influence in creating public interest in the "man in the mask," was indeed enormous; he had himself been imprisoned in the Bastille in 1717 and again in 1726; as early as 1745 he is found hinting that he knows something; in the Siècle de Louis XIV he justifies his account on the score of conversations with de Bernaville, who succeeded Saint-Mars.

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  • In Soulavie's Memoires of Richelieu (London, 1790) the masked man becomes (on the authority of an apocryphal note by Saint-Mars himself) the legitimate twin brother of Louis XIV.

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  • On the 19th of July 1669 Louvois, Louis XIV.'s minister, writes to Saint-Mars at Pignerol that he is sending him "le nomme Eustache Dauger" (Dauger, D'Angers - the spelling is doubtful),' whom it is of the last importance to keep with special closeness; Saint-Mars is to threaten him with death if he speaks about anything except his actual needs.

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  • On the 14th of April 1669 Marsilly was kidnapped for Louis XIV.

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  • He points out that Colbert, on the 3rd, 10th and 24th of June, writes from London to Louis XIV.

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  • His protest against Louis XIV.'s extended claim to regalian rights called forth the famous Declaration of Gallican Liberties by a subservient French synod under the lead of Bossuet (1682), which the pope met by refusing to confirm Louis's clerical appointments.

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  • Particular phases of Innocent's activity have been treated by Michaud, Louis XIV.

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  • It was in the year 1672, when the sudden invasion of the Low Countries by Louis XIV.

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  • Louis was thus unexpectedly brought into the line of the succession, and was only five years old when Louis XIV.

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  • On Fleury's death in 1743 no one took his place, and the king professed to adopt the example of Louis XIV.

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  • The complications ensuing from Louis XIV.'s designs on the Spanish Netherlands led to a bid for the Swedish alliance, both from the French king and his adversaries.

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  • For the next four years Sweden remained true to the principles of the Triple Alliance; but, in 1672, Louis XIV.

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  • Thus he rejected advantageous offers of mediation and alliance made to him, during 1712, by the maritime powers and by Prussia; and, in 1714, he scouted the friendly overtures of Louis XIV.

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  • He resided at Paris at St Germain till June 1654, in inactivity, unable to make any further effort, and living with difficulty on a grant from Louis XIV.

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  • On the 25th of January 1669, at a secret meeting between the two royal brothers, with Arlington, Clifford and Arundell of Wardour, it was determined to announce to Louis XIV.

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  • One of the results of the quarrel was Fenelon's banishment from court; for Louis XIV.

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  • In 1688, during Louis XIV.'s invasion of the Palatinate, the castle was taken, after a long siege, by the French, who blew part of it up when they found they could not hope to hold it (March 2, 1689).

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  • The doxology would then be shifted from after xiv.

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  • His works include a number of memorials and projects for stopping duelling, equalizing taxation, treating mendicancy, reforming education and spelling, &c. It was not, however, for his suggestions for the reform of the constitution that he was disgraced, but because in the Polysynodie he had refused to Louis XIV.

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  • The reigning prince is Henry XIV.

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  • Simaetha, deserted by Deiphis, tells the story of her love to the moon; in xiv.

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  • His mother, however, had fallen into disgrace at court, and his application for a commission, repeated more than once, was refused by Louis XIV.

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  • It was about this time that Louis XIV.

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  • The same device was successful against Louis XIV.

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  • Subsequently it was xiv.

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  • He lived for ten years after the appearance of Surena, but was almost silent save for the publication, in 1676, of some beautiful verses thanking Louis XIV.

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  • Worsted, mainly through the genius of Marlborough, in his efforts to secure the whole of the great Spanish monarchy for his grandson, Philip, duke of Anjou, Louis XIV.

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  • Gratian drew his materials from the existing collections, and especially from the 5 P. Fournier, " Le Premier Manuel canonique de la reforme du XI e siecle," in Melanges de l'Ecole francaise de Rome, xiv.

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  • Karlsruhe is the headquarters of the XIV.

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  • Ptolemy had many brilliant mistresses, and his court, magnificent and dissolute, intellectual and artificial, has been justly compared with the Versailles of Louis XIV.

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  • By 1808 the opponents of slavery, found chiefly among the Quaker settlers in the south-eastern counties, began to awake to the danger that confronted them, and in 1809 elected their candidate, xIv.

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  • The years of its power were the years of the victories of Oudenarde (1708) and of Malplaquet (1709), bringing with them the entire ruin of the military power of Louis XIV.

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  • He would have given England that dangerous position of supremacy which was gained for France by Louis XIV.

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  • It was the residence of several succeeding monarchs, and under Louis XIV.

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  • A copy of the Book of the Testimonies to the Mysteries of the Unity, consisting of seventy treatises in four folio volumes, was found in the house of the chief Akil at Bakhlin, and presented in 5700 to Louis XIV.

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  • Mordecai is represented as a fellow-captive of Jeconiah (597 B.C.), and grandvizier in Xerxes's twelfth year (474 B.C.) I This is parallel to the strange statement in Tobit xiv.

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  • According to the apocryphal fourth book of Ezra (or 2 Esdras xiv.) he restored the law which had been lost, and rewrote all the sacred records (which had been destroyed) in addition to no fewer than seventy apocryphal works.

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  • The coalition thus fell into ruin and France occupied a more commanding position than in the proudest days of Louis XIV.

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  • After the Revolution Bonaparte established a monarchy even more absolute than the monarchy of Louis XIV.

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  • Novakovic, Srbi i Turtsi xiv.

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  • On the 19th of March 1692 she married Louis Auguste de Bourbon, duc du Maine, son of Louis XIV.

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  • Displeased with the action of the regent Orleans in degrading the illegitimate children of Louis XIV.

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  • During the war of the Spanish succession Alberoni laid the foundation of his political success by the services he rendered to the duke of Vendome, commander of the French forces in Italy; and when these forces were recalled in 1706 he accompanied the duke to Paris, where he was favourably received by Louis XIV.

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  • He left two sons, Ranuce, who succeeded him, and Edward, who was created a cardinal in 1591 by Pope Gregory XIV.

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  • Thus the Triple Alliance of 1688 between Great Britain, Sweden and the Netherlands, and the Grand Alliance of 1689 between the emperor, Holland, England, Spain and Saxony, were both directed against the power of Louis XIV.

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  • On the restoration of Charles II., Rutherford was taken into employment by his own king on the recommendation of Louis XIV.

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  • Londonderry, Enniskillen, Coleraine, Carrickfergus and some other places defied Sir Phelim O'Neill's xiv.

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  • But elsewhere there are traces of secondary Deuteronomic expansion and of internal incongruities in Deuteronomic narratives; contrast xiv.

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  • See Homer, Iliad xiv.

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  • When Louis XIV.'s armies invaded Germany in September 1688 John George was one of the first to take up arms against the French, and after sharing in the capture of Mainz he was appointed commander-in-chief of the imperial forces.

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  • On the 16th of May the queen took the little four-year-old Louis XIV.

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  • The highest nobility of France, beginning The forms with the princes of the blood, competed for posts of Louis in the royal household, where an army of ten thousand XIV.

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  • Neither the immense fortunes amassed by these men, nor the venality and robust vitality which made their families veritable races of ministers, altered the fact that De Lionne, Le Tellier, Louvois and Colbert were in themselves of no account, even though the parts they played were much more important than Louis XIV.

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  • All the ties of caste, class, corporation and family were severed; the jealous despotism of Louis XIV.

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  • Recipient now of immense ecclesiastical revenues, which, owing to the number of vacant benefices, constituted a powerful engine of government, Louis XIV.

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  • Notwithstanding this, however, Louis XIV.

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  • Founded by a bishop of Ypres on the doctrine of predestination, Louis and growing by persecution, it had speedily recruited xiv.

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  • Colbert now offered his aid in making Louis XIV.

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  • After Colberts day, when the crutches lent by privilege were removed, his achievements lost vigour; industries that ministered to luxury alone escaped decay; the others became exhausted in struggling against the persistent and teasing opposition of the municipal bodies and the bourgeoisieconceited, ignorant and terrified at any innovationand against the blind and intolerant policy of Louis XIV.

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  • The population of the Antilles doubled; that of Canada quintupled; while if in 1672 at the time of the war with Holland Louis XIV.

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  • Richelieu himself had hesitated to tax labor; Louis XIV.

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  • Following the advice of Colbert and de Lionne, Louis XIV.

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  • This peace was neither sufficient nor definite enough for Louis XIV.; and during four years he employed all his diplomacy to isolate the republic of the United Provinces in At Europe, as he had done for Spain.

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  • Avoiding the Spanish Netherlands, Louis XIV.

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  • The war is over, said the new secretary of state for foreign affairs, Arnauld de Pomponne; but Louvois and Louis XIV.

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  • Spain had to cede to Louis XIV,, Franche Comt, Dunkirk and half of Flanders.

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  • What saved Louis XIV.

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  • The peace Of IJtrecht was to France what the peace of Westphalia had been to Austria, and curtailed the former acquisitions of Louis XIV.

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  • The Bavarian dream dissipated, victories gained in Flanders by Marshal Saxe, another adventurer of genius, at Fontenoy, Raucoux and Lawfeld (1745-1747), were hailed with joy as continuing those of Louis XIV.; even though they resulted in the loss of Germany and the doubling of English armaments.

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  • In one respect, indeed, the system of the old monarchy remained intact; the tradition of centralization established by Louis XIV.

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  • They attempted to renew the designs of Louis XIV.

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  • The brief summary of his achievements preserved in 2 Kings xiv.

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  • I Kings xiv.

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  • This edict, it is essential to observe, the responsibility for which rests with a disciplinary congregation in no sense representing the church, was never confirmed by the pope, and was virtually repealed in 1757 under Benedict XIV.

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  • One of his descendants, Henry Charles, marquis de Lavardin (1643-1701), was sent as ambassador to Rome in 1689, on the occasion of a difference between Louis XIV.

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  • He also wrote a treatise entitled De Petal reel de la presse et des pamphlets depuis Francois P r jusqu'a Louis XIV (1834), in which he refuted an empty paradox of Charles Nodier, who had tried to prove that the press had never been, and could never be, so free as under the Grand Monarch.

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  • In 1657, just after his accession, he made an arrangement with his three brothers with the object of preventing disputes over their separate territories, and in 1664 he entered into friendly relations with Louis XIV.

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  • He was ordained in 1651, and embarked on the ambitious and worldly career of a court abbe in the days of Louis XIV.

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  • Her political importance lasted exactly six months, and did her little good, for it created a lifelong prejudice against her in the mind of her cousin, Louis XIV.

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  • Louis XIV founded the first dancing academy in 1661.

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  • His father made his fortune as an upholsterer and then became a courtier to King Louis XIV.

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  • Skilled in the Arts and Science, Louis XIV was also a good huntsman.

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  • Having now secured peace abroad Sobieski was desirous of strengthening Poland at home by establishing absolute monarchy; but Louis XIV.

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  • The possession of Bouillon thenceforward became a constant cause of strife until in 1678 Louis XIV.

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  • There follow a symbolic prediction of the exile (xii.) and a denunciation of non-moral prophets and prophetesses (xiii.) - though Yahweh deceive a prophet, yet he and those who consult him will be punished; and so corrupt is the nation that the presence of a few eminently good men will not save it (xiv.).

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  • The château of Maintenon dating from the 16th and 17th centuries was presented by Louis XIV.

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  • Originally a Phrygian city, as almost every authority who has come into contact with the population calls it, and as is implied in Acts xiv.

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  • His first attempts against the French were successful; and the rupture between Victor Amadeus, duke of Savoy, and Louis XIV.

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  • In the difficulty with which he expressed himself and in a certain indecision of character the king was curiously unlike his father, the frank and impetuous Henry of Navarre, and his absolute son Louis XIV.

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  • But the result of this freedom was confusion and discord, as is indicated by Paul's First Epistle to the Corinthians (see chapters xi., xiv.).

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  • During the seventeen years of his orderly government the country found time to recuperate its forces after the exhaustion caused by the extravagances of Louis XIV.

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  • The bargain was confirmed by gifts and honours from Louis XIV.

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  • But by this time he was prematurely decrepit, and Bernadotte (see Charles Xiv.) took over the government as soon as he landed in Sweden (181o).

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  • Voltaire, in his Siècle de Louis XIV (1751), told the story of the mysterious masked prisoner with many graphic details; and, under the heading of "Ana" in the Questions sur l'encyclopedie (Geneva, 1771), he asserted that he was a bastard brother of Louis XIV., son of Mazarin and Anne of Austria.

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  • Two accidents at this crisis alone saved Sweden from ruin - the splendid courage of the young king who, resolutely and successfully, kept the Danish invaders at bay (see Charles Xi., king of Sweden), and the diplomatic activity of Louis XIV.

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  • Of the powers vested in the county authority under the Highway Act 1878, the most important are those relating to main roads, which are specially noticed hereafter; (ix.) the tables of fees to be taken by and the costs to be allowed to any inspector, analyst or person holding any office in the county other than the clerk of the peace and the clerks of the justices; (x.) the appointment, removal and determination of salaries of the county treasurer, the county surveyor, the public analysts, any officer under the Explosives Act 1875, and any officers whose remuneration is paid out of the county rate, other than the clerk of the peace and the clerks of the justices; (xi.) the salary of any coroner whose salary is payable out of the county rate, the fees, allowances and disbursements allowed to be paid by any such coroner, and the division of the county into coroners' districts and the assignments of such districts; (xii.) the division of the county into polling districts for the purposes of parliamentary elections, the appointment of the places of election, the places of holding courts for the revision of the lists of voters, and the costs of, and other matters to be done for the registration of parliamentary voters; (xiii.) the execution as local authority of the acts relating to contagious diseases of animals, to destructive insects, to fish conservancy, to wild birds, to weights and measures, and to gas meters, and of the Local Stamp Act i 869; (xiv.) any matters arising under the Riot (Damages) Act 1886.

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  • He became cardinal in 1583; and under the invalid Gregory XIV.

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  • Prince Eugene had only thirty thousand men; but his antagonist the duke of Orleans, though full of zeal and courage, wanted experience, and Marshal Marsin, his adlatus, held powers from Louis XIV.

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  • The secretary of state for war, Michelle Tellier, had organized his army; and thanks to his great activity in reform, especially after the Fronde, Louis XIV.

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  • Louis XIV was a very proud and self-confident man; he had such and such mistresses and such and such ministers and he ruled France badly.

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  • To this, modern history laboriously replies either that Napoleon was a great genius, or that Louis XIV was very proud, or that certain writers wrote certain books.

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  • To this question historians reply that Louis XIV's activity, contrary to the program, reacted on Louis XVI.

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  • But why did it not react on Louis XIV or on Louis XV--why should it react just on Louis XVI?

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  • The hall had 8 " Siena " scagliola columns; the dining-room was in Louis XIV style.

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  • Pepys was effectively a minister in his own right, similar in style to Colbert, Louis XIV 's Minister of the Marine.

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  • It is the rich fruit flavor of Chambord, a raspberry and blackberry liqueur once presented to King Louis XIV, that makes these Martinis especially satisfying.

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  • With a lengthy history that includes Louis XIV, Marie Antoinette, and Louis XVI, Harry Winston ultimately acquired the magnificent stone and donated it to the Smithsonian in 1958.

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  • The Marquis cut was inspired by the smile of the Marquise de Pompadour and created for France's Louis XIV.

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  • It featured a dial reminiscent of the Louis XIV styles of the 1700s and was 26mm in diameter.

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  • Always fascinating, the palace of Versailles was once home to Marie Antoinette and King Louis the XIV.

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