The gold in Fort Knox doesn't reduce the value of gold in circulation much because it isn't circulating. |
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He recalls the influence of Knox and the Calvinist devotion to learning which was once one of the country's strongest traditions. |
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He formed what was essentially a war cabinet, tapping prominent Republicans Henry Stimson and Frank Knox to run the War and Navy Departments. |
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Platinum last month enjoyed some success in forcing Knox to change its board. |
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Knox went to punt, but a strong rush by Macalester forced the punter to hurry the kick, and the punt went only 5 yards. |
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Knox preached on her behalf, and threatened popery and tyranny should Mary enforce her claim. |
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The current catalog of the high-toned house Westminster John Knox Press, for example, features The Gospel According to the Simpsons. |
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After the Knox Academy was formally dedicated, Lermond actively continued to solicit donations of natural history specimens for it. |
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Dr Marshall places Knox in his context and cuts him down to size without debunking him or letting him be effaced by the tumult of his times. |
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I'll bet John Knox never complained of it, even during his stint as a galley slave. |
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I work pretty much smack bang in the middle of it all in Farringdon, right next to the unmarked Reuters building, which is Fort Knox by the way. |
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John Knox stares stonily down at me from his plinth at the top of the boneyard. |
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He laid it off to Ilkley captain David Knox whose low shot took a bobble and skipped over the arms of the diving Dobson. |
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When Kelly left the ring he put aside his celebrations to demand a re-match against Keith Knox, the man who snatched his unbeaten record. |
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Mr Knox insisted that his customers would not be rowdy, nightclub-style lager louts. |
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Knox gave the order, and the cannons blasted their deadly shot, enfilading the Germans and ripping apart the patrols. |
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Conn had KO'd his last four opponents, including heavyweights Buddy Knox and Gunnar Barlund, both in the 8th rounds. |
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The victors celebrate as if they were just given access to all the gold in Fort Knox, to do with what they will. |
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In Dublin last night was Arthur Knox, chairman of the Durban Insizwa Mining Company with sole rights to the mining of the mineral in South Africa. |
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Yet this masterful, luminous image places him in the august company of the renowned landscapist John Knox, with whom he worked on a series of views of Glasgow. |
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She vividly describes the desolation and frustration of incarceration and puts Knox in every scene. |
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A limp-looking alamort called John Knox gazed from his cameo in the middle of bills with a generous, philantrhopic moue as if he and Jackie were conspiring together as men of riches both. |
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After showing promise, she was plucked out and sent to Bletchley to work in the research unit run by dilly Knox. |
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Meanwhile the South Knox Bubba Research Institute has been doing experiments on the Spaghetti Principle Effect in relation to unraveling strings of Christmas lights. |
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There is another scene in which Meredith pours a cup of coffee from a carafe in the kitchen she shares with Knox. |
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Of course, Knox also cautions contestants to be prepared for the personal ramifications off-camera. |
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Knox will be back in court on March 12 and 26 and on April 16 to hear testimony in the first evidentiary hearings of her appeal. |
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It was not a retrial per se, but rather a fresh look at the appeal process that freed Knox. |
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Knox was found guilty of defaming Patrick Lumumba, whom she initially accused of the crime. |
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Before it was a happy, jolly place and now it is like Fort Knox. |
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But they believed, too, that Knox and Sollecito took pity on her later by covering her with a duvet. |
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Knox wanted to write under a pen name at first, which the paper allowed her to do. |
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However, this same high court threw out the acquittal in the first place, so Knox may need more than luck to walk free. |
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But like Knox, Sabrina changed her story several times and her alibi has yet to be corroborated. |
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On the eve of the Amanda Knox appellate verdict decision, Perugia was alight with a sort of surreal buzz. |
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Knox created a wide range of functional items for the home, including trays, biscuit barrels, plates, picture frames, vases, candlesticks, chamber sticks and candelabra. |
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Mr Knox was devoted all his life to hunting and field sports, and his old horse, which he rode at last hunt not very long since, followed his coffin to the grave. |
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Revealing herself as both Miriam Weeks and alter ego Belle Knox made her feel vulnerable. |
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Outed by a fellow Duke student, Knox inadvertently became a pronounced public figure when she spoke up for herself. |
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Ultimately, the Italian courts and Italian-American extradition agreements may decide the fate of Amanda Knox. |
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The case of Amanda Knox has captivated readers on both sides of the Atlantic for seven years. |
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First of all, although it was inspired by the Amanda Knox case, mine is a completely different story. |
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The case has been a moneymaker for journalists who might have found work scarce if not for Knox. |
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Not cool stuff like jewels or the gold in Ft. Knox, just words and pictures. |
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At the present, the U.S. government, while clinging to a sizeable hoard buried in Fort Knox, seeks to disparage it and make little of it as an unimportant metal. |
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Imagine that all the nuclear weapons and bomb-usable nuclear materials in the world were locked up as good as gold in Fort Knox. |
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This was also the year Duke University student Belle Knox put college girls on the map. |
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Scotland was once the home of John Knox and his stern form of Calvinism. |
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Nencini decided that the appellate court that set Knox free erred in evidentiary and legal matters. |
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Most of us conduct ourselves online as if our computers are built like Fort Knox. |
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In 1921, the Knox Academy brashly issued an honorary membership to Madame Marie Curie, the Polish-French co-discoverer of radium and the only two-time Nobelist in science. |
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Mary surprised Knox by agreeing that the priests would be brought to justice. |
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In order to defend these men, Knox sent out letters calling the nobles to convene. |
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Knox refused and he defended himself in front of Mary and the Privy Council. |
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When the General Assembly convened in June 1564, an argument broke out between Knox and Maitland over the authority of the civil government. |
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Knox was summoned and prohibited from preaching while the court was in Edinburgh. |
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Knox fled to Kyle in Ayrshire, where he completed the major part of his magnum opus, History of the Reformation in Scotland. |
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On 29 July 1567, Knox preached James VI's coronation sermon at the church in Stirling. |
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During this period Knox thundered against her in his sermons, even to the point of calling for her death. |
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If Knox did not leave, he could stay in Edinburgh, but only if he remained captive in the castle. |
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After inducting his successor, Lawson of Aberdeen, as minister of St Giles' on 9 November, Knox returned to his home for the last time. |
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In that regard, Knox is considered the notional founder of the Presbyterian denomination, whose members number millions worldwide. |
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A bust of Knox is in the Hall of Heroes of the National Wallace Monument in Stirling. |
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The Protestant reformer John Knox preached against Mary, condemning her for hearing Mass, dancing, and dressing too elaborately. |
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John Knox took The Form of Prayers with him to Scotland, where it formed the basis of the Scottish Book of Common Order. |
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And it's that daunting task that is chronicled in Becoming Belle Knox. |
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Starring Kenneth More, Muriel Pavlow, Alexander Knox, Sydney Tafler, Nigel Green, Lyndon Brook, Lee Patterson, Dorothy Alison and Michael Warre. |
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The Scots Confession was produced by Knox and five colleagues in four days. |
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Towards the end of 1550, Knox was appointed a preacher of St Nicholas' Church in Newcastle upon Tyne. |
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Introduced in Scotland by clergyman John Knox, it has the status of national church in Scotland. |
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In the Kingdom of Scotland the Protestant Reformation was a popular movement led by John Knox. |
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As a result of the efforts of reformers such as John Knox, a Protestant ascendancy was established. |
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Chesterton, Ronald Knox, Siegfried Sassoon, Evelyn Waugh, Edith Sitwell, Graham Greene and Muriel Spark. |
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The minor appointments were the Virginian Edmund Randolph as attorney general and the Massachusettsian Henry Knox as secretary of war. |
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The most influential figure was John Knox, who had been a disciple of both John Calvin and George Wishart. |
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Knox sparked the Scottish Reformation in 1560 when he began preaching about Protestantism to large groups of people throughout the country. |
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At that point, many in the then church in Scotland broke with Rome, in a process of Protestant reform led, among others, by John Knox. |
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This theory of governance developed in Geneva under John Calvin and was introduced to Scotland by John Knox after his period of exile in Geneva. |
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Early canonical scholars included Ronald Knox in Britain and Christopher Morley in New York. |
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In June 1559 the abbey was attacked by a reformist mob from Dundee having been whipped up into a frenzy by the great reformer John Knox. |
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The survivors, including chaplain John Knox, were condemned to serve as galley slaves. |
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The Lords had intended for the parliament to consider a Book of Reformation, that they had commissioned and which was largely the work of Knox. |
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On his return to Scotland, Knox led the Protestant Reformation in Scotland, in partnership with the Scottish Protestant nobility. |
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Knox helped write the new confession of faith and the ecclesiastical order for the newly created reformed church, the Kirk. |
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John Knox was born sometime between 1505 and 1515 in or near Haddington, the county town of East Lothian. |
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All that is known of his mother is that her maiden name was Sinclair and that she died when John Knox was a child. |
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Knox had avoided being arrested by Lord Bothwell through Wishart's advice to return to tutoring. |
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Knox attempted to obtain the consent of the Bowes family, but her father and her brother Robert Bowes were opposed to the marriage. |
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The Protestant nobles and others, including Knox, were taken prisoner and forced to row in the French galleys. |
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Knox and the other galley slaves continued to Nantes and stayed on the Loire throughout the winter. |
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Even in this state, Knox recalled, his mind remained sharp and he comforted his fellow prisoners with hopes of release. |
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James Balfour, a fellow prisoner, asked Knox whether he recognised the landmark. |
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Soon afterwards, Dudley, who saw Knox as a useful political tool, offered him the bishopric of Rochester. |
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Knox returned to London in order to deliver a sermon before the King and the Court during Lent and he again refused to take the assigned post. |
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Knox was then told to preach in Buckinghamshire and he remained there until Edward's death on 6 July. |
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With the country no longer safe for Protestant preachers, Knox left for the Continent in January 1554 on the advice of friends. |
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Knox disembarked in Dieppe, France, and continued to Geneva, where John Calvin had established his authority. |
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When Knox and a supporting colleague, William Whittingham, wrote to Calvin for advice, they were told to avoid contention. |
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Knox therefore agreed on a temporary order of service based on a compromise between the two sides. |
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After his return to Geneva, Knox was chosen to be the minister at a new place of worship petitioned from Calvin. |
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In the meantime, Elizabeth Bowes wrote to Knox, asking him to return to Margery in Scotland, which he did at the end of August. |
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Though the Queen Regent, Mary of Guise, made no move against Knox, his activities caused concern among the church authorities. |
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William Keith, the Earl Marischal, was impressed and urged Knox to write to the Queen Regent. |
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Shortly after Knox sent the letter to the Queen Regent, he suddenly announced that he felt his duty was to return to Geneva. |
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In the previous year on 1 November 1555, the congregation in Geneva had elected Knox as their minister and he decided to take up the post. |
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In the summer of 1558, Knox published his best known pamphlet, The first blast of the trumpet against the monstruous regiment of women. |
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Although Knox had not targeted Elizabeth, he had deeply offended her, and she never forgave him. |
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Two days after Knox arrived in Edinburgh, he proceeded to Dundee where a large number of Protestant sympathisers had gathered. |
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Knox was declared an outlaw, and the Queen Regent summoned the Protestants to Stirling. |
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At the church of St John the Baptist, Knox preached a fiery sermon and a small incident precipitated into a riot. |
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This was seen as treacherous by Lord Argyll and Lord Moray, who both switched sides and joined Knox, who now based himself in St Andrews. |
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On 1 July, Knox preached from the pulpit of St Giles', the most influential in the capital. |
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From then on, Maitland took over the political tasks, freeing Knox for the role of religious leader. |
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Knox and five other ministers were called upon to draw up a new confession of faith. |
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Before the dissolution of Parliament, Knox and the other ministers were given the task of organising the newly reformed church or the Kirk. |
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She charged that Knox spoke irreverently of the Queen in order to make her appear contemptible to her subjects. |
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Despite her friendly gesture, Knox replied that he would continue to voice his convictions in his sermons and would not wait upon her. |
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Bassist Graham Knox revealed meeting the legendary star was the high point of his career, especially when he warned them to never break up. |
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Brightening the spotlight on SDTV is the fact that prices of HDTV sets will not fall as quickly as many have speculated, Knox said. |
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He contracted all his cargo-hauling assignments from Knox Cartage in Knoxville. |
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Knox has not been extradited to Italy while the case is appealed. |
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She had been sharing a house with Knox, who was also a student, on her year abroad in the Umbrian hilltop town. |
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William Palmer and Jonathan Knox sunbathed and trashed felting, doors, windows and plumbing with a hammer. |
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The Knox County Sheriff's Office confirmed that Vinson had an extensive criminal history of theft and drug charges and had outstanding warrants. |
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By all means it was fair to demonise Knox as a murderer, but whether she was a 'sexy' killer or not, was irrelevant. |
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Cries are now heard round the world that Amanda Knox was railroaded. |
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Pressurize the Cabin is the latest album by Fort Knox Five, celebrating funk from dancehall ska to hip-hop, disco, electro, and Latin rhythms. |
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Second, upon entrance to Knox College and attendance at Knox Spadina, I experienced holy communion by intinction. |
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Stewart and Maitland, wanting to keep good relations with both the Kirk and the Queen, asked Knox to admit he was wrong and to settle the matter quietly. |
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On 13 December 1562, Mary sent for Knox again after he gave a sermon denouncing certain celebrations which Knox had interpreted as rejoicing at the expense of the Reformation. |
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As a result, just two weeks after her return, Mary summoned Knox. |
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During this period, in December 1560, Knox's wife, Margery, died, leaving Knox to care for their two sons, aged three and a half and two years old. |
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The bank said that Anthony Brasher would lead the group, which is a key unit of the Swiss bank's Australian investment bank run by co-heads John Knox and Rob Stewart. |
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Knox sailed secretly to Lindisfarne, off the northeast coast of England at the end of July, to meet James Croft and Sir Henry Percy at Berwick upon Tweed. |
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The Calvinism of the reformers led by Knox resulted in a settlement that adopted a Presbyterian system and rejected most of the elaborate trappings of the Medieval church. |
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Knox knew that the Queen Regent would ask for help from France. |
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The survivors, including chaplain John Knox, were condemned to be galley slaves, helping to create resentment of the French and martyrs for the Protestant cause. |
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Knox left in January 1559, but he did not arrive in Scotland until 2 May 1559, owing to Elizabeth's refusal to issue him a passport through England. |
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In the same year, 1560, John Knox realised his goal of seeing Scotland become a Protestant nation and the Scottish parliament revoke papal authority in Scotland. |
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Meredith, 21, from Coulsdon, Surrey, was found dead in her bedroom on November 2, 2007, in the house she shared with Knox in the Umbrian town of Perugia. |
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Elizabeth Bowes presumably met Knox when he was employed in Berwick. |
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In a letter dated 24 September 1554, Knox received an invitation from a congregation of English exiles in Frankfurt to become one of their ministers. |
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On 2 February 1553 Cranmer was ordered to appoint Knox as vicar of Allhallows Church in London placing him under the authority of the Bishop of London, Nicholas Ridley. |
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The third partner, James Knox, managed the sales department. |
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While Rough was preaching in the parish church on the Protestant principle of the popular election of a pastor, he proposed Knox to the congregation for that office. |
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Knox was indiscreet and news of his mission soon reached Mary of Guise. |
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On 7 April 1549, Knox was licensed to work in the Church of England. |
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Douglas and Cockburn suggested to Knox to take their sons to the relative safety of the castle to continue their instruction in reformed doctrine. |
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Wishart travelled throughout Scotland preaching in favour of the reformation and when he arrived in East Lothian, Knox became one of his closest associates. |
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Knox did not record when or how he was converted to the Protestant faith, but perhaps the key formative influences on Knox were Patrick Hamilton and George Wishart. |
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A conversation with a grave robber reveals that medical professor Dr Knox will pay three pounds for a fresh cadaver to use in his anatomical demonstrations. |
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A conversation with grave robber Fergus reveals that medical professor Dr Knox will pay three pounds for a fresh cadaver to use in his anatomical demonstrations. |
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Knox was probably educated at the grammar school in Haddington. |
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Similar results were found earlier by Phene and Weatherhead and Knox. |
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While in exile, Knox was licensed to work in the Church of England, where he rose in the ranks to serve King Edward VI of England as a royal chaplain. |
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Knox and the other chaplains considered this to be idolatry. |
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Knox was asked to come to London to preach before the Court. |
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Their organisation was sufficient in 1555 for Knox to return to Scotland. |
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Yet another source for Defoe's novel may have been the Robert Knox account of his abduction by the King of Ceylon in 1659 in An Historical Relation of the Island Ceylon. |
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It reformed its doctrines and government, drawing on the principles of John Calvin which Knox had been exposed to while living in Geneva, Switzerland. |
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In early March 1776, heavy cannons that the Patriots had captured at Fort Ticonderoga were brought to Boston by Colonel Henry Knox, and placed on Dorchester Heights. |
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The ever suave Sean Connery stars as dapper agent 007 who must prevent Auric Goldfinger and his pint-sized henchman Oddjob from raiding the gold reserves at Fort Knox. |
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Knox Presbyterian Church, Ottawa is an established congregation that values workship with strong preaching, quality music, education for all ages, and social action. |
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A faithful member, respected elder of Knox, Winnipegosis, Man. |
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Mary summoned Knox to Holyrood after hearing that he had been preaching against her proposed marriage to Don Carlos, the son of Philip II of Spain. |
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John Knox is regarded as the leader of the Scottish Reformation. |
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American statesmen of Scottish descent in the early Republic included Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton, Secretary of War Henry Knox, and President James Monroe. |
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However, what the rulers feared were Knox's ideas more than Knox himself. |
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He graduated from Knox College, Toronto, in 1948 and served congregations in many parts of Canada including a multi-point rural charge in Carragana, Sask. |
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The Knox Dolomite, a massively bedded, partially crystalline, gray magnesian limestone of Cambrian and Ordovician age, is some 3500 feet thick in this area. |
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Reformed churches were founded in Germany, Hungary, the Netherlands, Scotland, Switzerland and France by such reformers as John Calvin, Huldrych Zwingli, and John Knox. |
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The gene duplication event that gave rise to class I and class II knox gene superfamilies occurred before the divergence between bryophytes and spermatophytes. |
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