888 resultados para Cyprian War, 1570-1571.
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Reprint of part 2 of the author's Historia vinetiana.
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Este tomo forma parte de una "Opera omnia" de Tomás de Aquino que consta de 17 v., publicada en Roma entre 1570-1571 por los herederos de Antonio Blado & Giovanni Gigliotti socios y algunos de Giulio Acconti , según el catalogo de la ICCU
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Edited by Jean Baptiste Alexandre Théodore Teulet. Dedication signed: Charles Purton Cooper.
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Publiés par le marquis Léon de Laborde, Les comptes des bâtiments du Roi (1528-1571), Paris, 1877-1880, 2 vol. In-8°.
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A weekly newspaper published in Hartford, Connecticut by Elisha Babcock and Son, "(Printers of the Laws of the Union)". Babcock arrived in Hartford not long after the war in 1784 and created the Mercury. It became the leading Democratic newspaper in Connecticut and ceased not long after his death in 1821.
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Volumes of interest were published between 1812 and 1815 with articles about the War of 1812. The 1814 Aug. issues report events of the Battle of Chippewa
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Hacer una valoración histórico pastoral de la presencia de la Compañía de Jesús en Asturias y de las primeras actividades que llevó a cabo en torno a la reciente Universidad de Oviedo. Labor educativa y pastoral que durante el periodo de 1570-1572 realizaron los Jesuitas en Oviedo y en el Principado de Asturias. 1) Proyecto de fundación del obispo Don Cristobal de Rojas y Sandoval. 2) Proyecto de Don Andrés de Prada, abad de Tuñón. 3) Proyecto universitario concertado entre los testamentarios del arzobispo Valdés Salas y la Compañía de Jesús. Archivos. Fuentes documentales manuscritas e inéditas. La primera de las actuaciones tendentes a conseguir la fundación de un colegio de la Compañia de Jesús en Oviedo fue obra del obispo Cristobal de Rojas y Sandoval en 1553, quien solicitó del fundador de la Compañía financiación para dicho proyecto. El obispo Don Juan de Ayora y Don Andrés Vazquez de Prada, abad de Tuñón, aunaron sus fuerzas, diez años más tarde, para completar la obra iniciada por Don Cristobal de Rojas. El tercer intento para traer establemente a los Jesuitas a Oviedo consistió en el proyecto de que la Compañía se hiciera cargo del Colegio San Gregorio que funcionaba con las reglas dictadas por su fundador, Don Fernando de Valdés, arzobispo de Sevilla, y al fracasar este proyecto, algunos años más tarde, se amplía el ofrecimiento por sus testamentarios para que los Jesuitas se encarguen de poner en funcionamiento la Universidad. El contrato para la puesta en marcha de la Universidad y el Colegio de Oviedo se hizo en el mes de mayo de 1571. A continuación, dos religiosos de la Compañía emprendieron una embajada misional por Oviedo, donde observaron una actitud de clara hostilidad hacia la Compañía por parte del obispo y el Cabildo de Oviedo, lo que propició la ruptura de las negociaciones en agosto de 1571. En diciembre de 1573 aún no se había llegado a un acuerdo firme. En diciembre de 1573, la Compañía de Jesús decidió no insistir más en el asunto de la Universidad de Oviedo, ejecutando así una filosofía que reflejaba la falta de interés personal o institucional en un asunto controvertido cuando la oposición venía de las instituciones representativas de una colectividad, por lo que renunciaron a exigir el cumplimiento de las escrituras públicas ya firmadas al respecto.
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Published also, 1912, as v. 2 of the Publications of the Lincoln record society.
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Review of 'The Trial of the Catonsville Nine', Brisbane Festival / Brisbane Powerhouse, published in The Australian, 28 September 200.
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In this paper we argue that the term “capitalism” is no longer useful for understanding the current system of political economic relations in which we live. Rather, we argue that the system can be more usefully characterised as neofeudal corporatism. Using examples drawn from a 300,000 word corpus of public utterances by three political leaders from the “coalition of the willing”— George W. Bush, Tony Blair, and John Howard—we show some defining characteristics of this relatively new system and how they are manifest in political language about the invasion of Iraq.
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Air transportation of Australian casualties in World War II was initially carried out in air ambulances with an accompanying male medical orderly. By late 1943 with the war effort concentrated in the Pacific, Allied military authorities realised that air transport was needed to move the increasing numbers of casualties over longer distances. The Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) became responsible for air evacuation of Australian casualties and established a formal medical air evacuation system with trained flight teams early in 1944. Specialised Medical Air Evacuation Transport Units (MAETUs) were established whose sole responsibility was undertaking air evacuations of Australian casualties from the forward operational areas back to definitive medical care. Flight teams consisting of a RAAF nursing sister (registered nurse) and a medical orderly carried out the escort duties. These personnel had been specially trained in Australia for their role. Post-WWII, the RAAF Nursing Service was demobilised with a limited number of nurses being retained for the Interim Air Force. Subsequently, those nurses were offered commissions in the Permanent Air Force. Some of the nurses who remained were air evacuation trained and carried out air evacuations both in Australia and as part of the British Commonwealth Occupation Force in Japan. With the outbreak of the Korean War in June 1950, Australia became responsible for the air evacuation of British Commonwealth casualties from Korea to Japan. With a re-organisation of the Australian forces as part of the British Commonwealth forces, RAAF nurses were posted to undertake air evacuation from Korea and back to Australia from Iwakuni, Japan. By 1952, a specialised casualty staging section was established in Seoul and staffed by RAAF nurses from Iwakuni on a rotation basis. The development of the Australian air evacuation system and the role of the flight nurses are not well documented for the period 1943-1953. The aims of this research are three fold and include documenting the origins and development of the air evacuation system from 1943-1953; analysing and documenting the RAAF nurse’s role and exploring whether any influences or lessons remain valid today. A traditional historical methodology of narrative and then analysis was used to inform the flight nurse’s role within the totality of the social system. Evidence was based on primary data sources mainly held in Defence files, the Australian War Memorial or the National Archives of Australia. Interviews with 12 ex-RAAF nurses from both WWII and the Korean War were conducted to provide information where there were gaps in the primary data and to enable exploration of the flight nurses’ role and their contributions in war of the air evacuation of casualties. Finally, this thesis highlights two lessons that remain valid today. The first is that interoperability of air evacuation systems with other nations is a force multiplier when resources are scarce or limited. Second, the pre-flight assessment of patients was essential and ensured that there were no deaths in-flight.