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12 May 2007, 4:17 am
Its finale gathers together in a reformed court the whole British royal family (king-father, princess-daughter, long-lost sons and new son-in-law); at the close, the Roman eagle melts into distance as the crooked smoke of altars climbs up to the gods' noses. [read post]
28 Feb 2010, 6:39 pm by Mike Widener
King George V of Hanover later presented the set to the historian Onno Klopp, who followed the King into exile to Vienna. [read post]
11 Jun 2008, 6:00 am
I think the entire process of damage allocation by Matt and Judge King took two months. [read post]
17 Nov 2008, 5:00 am
  I was personally involved in the settlement of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Louisville settlement in Louisville, Kentucky where we represented over 240 individual plaintiffs in a $25.7 million class action settlement. [read post]
11 Jun 2008, 1:00 pm
I think the entire process of damage allocation by Matt and Judge King took two months. [read post]
4 Apr 2012, 9:30 am by Jan Dalhuisen
First, historically, private law was hardly the product of a democratic process, Roman law never was nor were hardly the great modern 19th Century civil codes. [read post]
1 Sep 2009, 4:39 am
. ;2009 NY Slip Op 51832(U) ;Decided on August 25, 2009 ;Supreme Court, Kings County ;Rivera, J. rendered a tri-partate decision, reviewing a dismissal motion pursuant to CPLR 3211(a)(1)  (a)(5) and  (a)(7). [read post]
5 Apr 2012, 11:00 am by Jan Dalhuisen
  This was confirmed by the general acceptance of the Roman law as superior customary law even though in commerce there was local law but it was not nationalistic, it was often regional or municipal and could operate cross border. [read post]
21 Feb 2016, 4:00 pm by Old Fox
In 1545 he had composed a litany for the Reformed church in England, one of his masterpieces, still in use; and by 1538 he had abandoned the traditional Roman Catholic belief in transubstantiation—that Christ is rendered substantially present by the Eucharist (although the properties of bread and wine remain the same)—but retained his belief in the real presence of Christ in the Eucharist. [read post]
21 Dec 2017, 12:02 pm by Jack Sharman
On three occasions in the early medieval period, the Christmas Day celebrations may have been more extravagant than usual: on Christmas Day in 800, 855 and 1066, merrymakers also celebrated the coronations of the very first Holy Roman Emperor and two English kings with interesting legacies. [read post]
3 Jan 2016, 1:20 pm
We heard, for instance, the first twelve verses of Matthew's second chapter, finishing with the wise men's secret departure in order to avoid having to see King Herod again. [read post]
19 Mar 2015, 2:07 pm by David Friedman
And it helps that, in addition to his own troops, he has under his command the feudal army of his ally the king of Kaerlia.The Empire has, from a military standpoint, several significant advantages. [read post]
20 Jan 2013, 3:53 am by Lawrence B. Ebert
The 5th earl bankrolled Howard Carter; Nov. 1922, King Tut. [read post]
28 Mar 2014, 8:00 am by Dave Ratner
One of the first uses of trademark symbols dates back to the Roman Empire, where blacksmiths would often mark the swords they made with a symbol identifying the sword’s maker. [read post]
27 Mar 2020, 6:30 am by Dan Ernst
"Trial by Media: The Queen Caroline Affair" was co-curated by Cynthia Roman, Curator of Prints, Drawings, and Paintings at the Lewis Walpole Library, and Mike Widener, Rare Book Librarian at the Lillian Goldman Law Library. [read post]
15 Jan 2017, 12:00 am by Smita Ghosh
In the Guardian, William Davies reviews David Cannadine’s new book on Margaret Thatcher; Patricia Williams reviews Coretta Scott King’s autobiography in the Times and LA Times reviews Xu Hongci’s No Wall Too High, “one of the most compelling and moving memoirs to emerge from Communist China, which is now appearing in English for the first time. [read post]
13 Aug 2013, 1:17 pm by Buce
I idled away some travel time yesterday reading sections of King Harald's Saga, available, inter alia, on Kindle from Penguin. [read post]
20 Sep 2019, 9:30 pm by ernst
Kesselring (Dalhousie University) on Elizabethan witch trials, and Cassie Watson (Oxford Brookes University) on a 19th-c. poisoning in the Inner HebridesThe exhibit  “Black Citizenship in the Age of Jim Crow,” on loan from the New-York Historical Society, runs from October 18 to December 31 at the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute (Birmingham Times, via the Philadelphia Tribune)From the Washington Post's "Made by History" section: Jamie Pietruska (Rutgers… [read post]
22 Jun 2020, 5:00 pm
Washington, Malcolm X, Harriet Tubman, Frederick Douglas and Martin Luther King. [read post]
12 Feb 2013, 1:17 pm by Robert Hambrick
Roman, overturned a trial court which granted a Motion to Suppress evidence, but in that case that case there was much more evidence consistent with marijuana than just smell. [read post]