The question of Being, far from being too abstract or theoretical an issue, will prove to be important for understanding exile. |
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She spent long years in exile and became a symbol for Greeks all over the world as well as for Greek national music. |
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In this experience of final exile the fate of the White Guelphs repeats that of the Ghibellines. |
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These struggles eventually led to the exile of the White Guelphs, one of whom was Dante Alighieri. |
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He launched into a sensitive, empathetic account of Mekas's early life and his exile from Lithuania. |
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Her exile from words may have led to her enchantment with literature, diction and cadence. |
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The death penalty was applied to a narrower range of offences, and sentences of internal exile abolished. |
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And in the body, that repository of desire, diasporic exile is used to unleash eroticism's transformative possibilities. |
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In 1954 he was one of the French Dominicans ordered into exile because of their support for the worker-priest experiment. |
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The mood was jubilant and Edith thought that her exile and imprisonment were finally over. |
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Success meant the Norwegians would have a legitimate government in exile and a reason to fight on. |
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It is trying to beat and buy its way out of that political exile by the abuse of state power, including selective food distribution. |
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He was a very successful and wealthy man, but he was also an ill man and he died in exile from Germany when I was five years old. |
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They had changed their ancient attitude of being a people in exile to being citizens with a homeland. |
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The premise here is that Napoleon didn't die in exile on the island of St. Helena. |
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He had called for the unification of Italy and was consequently forced to die in exile in Chiswick. |
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Hundreds of Navajo died during the 400-mile Long Walk and the ensuing four-year exile at Bosque Redondo. |
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Notions of reason and absurdity, exile and homeland have always framed South African art production. |
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The complexity and the paradox of exile are manifested through different configurations of the exilic absence. |
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An eclectic collection of expatriate figures in exile have found it difficult to unite over common principles. |
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Do you consider yourself an expatriate writer, and if so, what does your exile serve? |
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The ex-agent is currently living in exile in France, where he has fled to escape prosecution for his exposure of state secrets. |
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The Jacob cycle is a life cycle, from birth to death, from exile to return. |
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However, I was arrested quickly, spent six months in jail, and was then sent into internal exile on the island of Ventotene. |
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After an exile of three and a half years, he returned triumphantly to boxing. |
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Of course he was in exile and did have a great affinity for those kinds of characters, for tramps and vagrants and displaced, placeless people. |
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I Saw Ramallah is an intensely lyrical account of the poet's return to his hometown on the West Bank from protracted exile abroad. |
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Any intellectual who didn't manage to flee into exile was killed during his bloodlust. |
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Helped by a friend's allowance, and then a substantial inheritance, they lived well in self-imposed exile in Italy. |
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It was while in exile in Malaysia in the 90s, that they turned their attention to Australia. |
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He returned again to Scotland after six years of exile, and lived for some time in the Castle. |
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Peter refuses to grow up, and because of that has entered a self-imposed exile in Neverland. |
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After a self-imposed exile from tennis, one of the game's greats is back and ready to mix it with his fiercest rival. |
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For the last few decades he has lived in obscurity, in self-imposed exile in Italy. |
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In 1901 he became bankrupt and moved into self-imposed exile in Bruges, where he lived for the next quarter of a century. |
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Her death in self-imposed exile contrasted markedly with her earlier life as an icon of the Nationalist regime. |
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Breezing through the audition process, Lemar found himself in self-imposed exile with twelve other students. |
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He then went into self-imposed exile in America but bounced back in 1984 to start a new line of luxury silk raincoats. |
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Barring exile, however, it seems like the only thing to do is to settle in for the long haul. |
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If truth must be an exile from the mainstream of politics, let it thrive on the margins. |
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But 25 years of European exile and a gradual mellowing of the spirit have tamed the Australian rocker's legendary excesses. |
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He had then been arrested and detained without trial and he fled into exile. |
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Tibetan refugees attribute much of their success in exile to the ongoing guidance of His Holiness the Dalai Lama and their Protector. |
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Products of a village culture and ill-equipped for life in urban-industrial America, the Hmong found their exile particularly difficult. |
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While Cuban exile leaders pine for a return to their ancestral home, many people of African descent in Cuba say they will never let that happen. |
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Not very confident of India accepting accession, he was reconciled to a state of permanent political exile in India. |
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From his seat in exile at Rumtek, he had built a spiritual and worldly empire with millions of followers and extensive assets. |
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Walden, as a sign of our exile from nature, complements what is considered to be a modern alienation from the sacred as well. |
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A 17-year-old hikikomori sufferer killed a passenger after leaving his self-imposed exile and hijacking a bus. |
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A tax exile living in Geneva, McManus has a large string of horses trained in England, Ireland and France. |
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Charles eventually relieved Rupert of all responsibilities and ordered him into exile. |
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But exile also means his understanding that the ontological and fundamental condition of man is always to live one's life alone. |
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He may have to live in exile from his own country, and while this is unfortunate, there are worse fates. |
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Of course, this is the type of exile demanded by postmodern poetics, but in Kaminsky's hands the technique is used for humanitarian purposes. |
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Was she so crushed by exile and loss that her plays are wish fulfillment fantasies of revenge and triumph? |
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Themes of emigration, pilgrimage, diaspora, exile and new homelands are woven into the psalms and canticles. |
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Her presence and nurturance literally restore Okonkwo to life in the wake of Ikemefuna's death and his forced, seven-year exile in Mbanta. |
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It's warm and friendly, but also a home in which an exile could easily bunker down in bitter isolation. |
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Already in 1943, Bohuslav Martinu, in exile in America, had composed his brooding symphonic meditation Memorial to Lidice. |
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It was agreed that a popular front government should be installed incorporating three members of an imperialist-backed exile regime in London. |
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When released, he resumed exile on the continent, in touch with Shaftesbury and William of Orange. |
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The mid-540s places the first exile about fifty-five years prior and post-dates the second exile by more than forty years. |
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A broken man, Sheriff flees into exile on an oil tanker and declares himself a refugee when the ship reaches international waters. |
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As with his friend James Joyce, another Irish literary nomad, internal exile turned quickly into literal emigration. |
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By 1482 she was near to completing terms for his return from exile in Brittany. |
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I did know, by hearsay, that she was on familiar terms with the exile court. |
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After five years in an Iraqi dungeon, his death sentence was commuted to permanent exile. |
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On August 20, 1940, at his exile retreat in Coyoacan, Mexico, a Stalinist police agent plunged an ice pick into Trotsky's brain. |
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They saw themselves as God's chosen people, a nation in exile from its land. |
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In these laments, the demise and exile of specific noble families challenge the spirit of the Gaels and their culture. |
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This is because the reconstruction of the temple would give control of the temple cult to the priests and Levites returning from exile. |
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So Mo Mowlam went into exile and wrote her side of the story, determined to right the wrongs done to her. |
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She plays Themba's daughter who returns from exile to learn the unpalatable truth about her father. |
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He was captured by the Prussians and deposed, spending the rest of his life in exile in England. |
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A military coup in 1955 deposed him, sending him into exile first in Paraguay and ultimately in Madrid. |
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Kabila spent most of his life in exile in Tanzania, where he learned English and Swahili, but neither French nor Lingala, the two most widely spoken languages in Kinshasa. |
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As a result, the Interior Ministry circulated a warning that the Penal Code envisages two years imprisonment, corrective labour or internal exile for offenders. |
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Prison was followed by internal exile and attempted suicide. |
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He did indeed go into exile rather than abandon his observance of the papal decree of 1099 condemning the lay investiture of clergy with churches and ecclesiastical offices. |
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He disagrees with the notion that Spenser was alienated from the queen and court, his only reward being exile and a small irregularly paid pension. |
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He was eventually allowed to leave, but he was forced to resign as ambassador and now lives in Washington, effectively in exile. |
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In previous centuries, a Roman aristocrat who made a political misstep ended in obscurity or exile. |
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After Olympic boxer Guillermo Rigondeux defected, his family suffered a form of domestic exile. |
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To Palmer, the coincidence of his bullpen exile and his return to form was galling. |
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He was standing in front of the firing squad when his sentence was commuted to exile in Siberia. |
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Moreover, neither the Polish government in exile nor the leaders of the Home Army condoned anti-Semitic measures. |
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You will never marry Constance now, and if you marry any one else in your exile, I will visit you as I did my doctor last night. |
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This nineteenth century green man holds out the prophetic possibility of restoration with nature, and in doing so reinforces our own sense of exile from it. |
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The rest have been forced into exile, he said, moving to places like the United States, Spain, the Czech Republic, and Chile. |
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And that's why I hid myself away in their attic room for much of my three week exile, tuning into UK radio on the giant wireless set, keeping in touch with home. |
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Perhaps for all of them, the experience of exile led to a sense of alienation from their homeland, and to a growing feeling of pessimism about the prospects for change there. |
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The saving grace is that Sharif is emerging from several years in political exile. |
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It would seem like a self-defeating move for a government contractor to become a tax exile. |
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Padre Goyo got back to Mexico in May from a three-month hiatus that he called a self-imposed exile in Europe. |
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He took it as a sign from Heaven, signaling the end of a 34-year exile. |
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Funding and direction are said to come from a Lao exile living in the United States who claims to be fighting for democracy and the return of monarchy to Laos. |
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While half a dozen trips from Lisbon back to Angola since 2003 have given this exile a renascent interest in his roots, this is not quite an ethnic homecoming. |
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It is as though the written Amharic language, here mixed with other semiotic systems, becomes a mirror for the layered and amalgamated nature of oral language in exile. |
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Mehmet slaughtered many of the population and forced the rest into exile, later repopulating the city by importing people from elsewhere in Ottoman territory. |
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But, intimately acquainted with the Kirshner world through his familial ties, Andras's repugnance is complicated by a potent blend of envy, exile, and secret longing. |
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Although the government probably thinks it can afford to lose a few scribblers and daubers this kind of self-imposed exile strikes at a nation's soul. |
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The Central American woman leaves her homeland fleeing annihilation and destruction, but her exile in the US does not offer her more visibility or presence. |
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Since then, Ford has served as the envoy in exile to the fractious Syrian opposition. |
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Starting with his persona's acute consciousness of exile, Wright's poetic journeys retrace and reverse the Middle Passage from Africa to the Americas. |
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Babylon could be a euphemism for Rome or it could just be a metaphor for imagined exile. |
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A twinned, imagined narrative of a fictitious Fidel Castro and a Miami exile intent on assassinating him. |
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Both the Republicans in Congress and the American-Cuban community in exile have been speaking out against the warming relations. |
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Iran has the highest number of women journalists in prison, and hundreds of Iranian journalists are forced to live in exile. |
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Cultural sovereigns in their own right, Ovid and Dante, despite official exile from their native home, had made their poetic stand against tyranny and despotism. |
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They have just finished their 12-year exile in the forest after losing the game of dice and are about to enter the phase of having to live in disguise. |
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She was the daughter of a Protestant Italian liberal exile who loathed the Papacy as much as he loved Dante and mixed both enthusiasms in his view of Italian history. |
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Deeply attached to his native land, he died in exile in France. |
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Venice eventually surrendered and Manin died in exile in Paris. |
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His regime collapsed immediately and he died in exile in England. |
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Prospero, a bitter victim of a tragedic past who remembers past injustice in pastoral exile along the lines of Sannazaro's Arcadia, must make others remember the prior tragedy as well. |
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Except for the hymn singers and praise sayers, the laureates and anthem-grinders, poetry's community has been established by tradition as on the outside, in exile. |
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After serving a hard labour sentence in Reading Gaol following ruinous legal battles he went into self-imposed exile in Paris as Sebastian Melmoth. |
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Rebels took up arms against Taylor in 1999, however, battling their way to the capital in June and forcing the cornered president into exile in Nigeria two months later. |
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Berezovsky is now in exile in London, an avowed enemy of President Putin. |
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The section is completed with fine sculptures in both terracotta and bronze of seated women by Jules Dalou, a political exile to London from the Paris Commune. |
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His harrowing experience of exile has turned him into a theroid monster. |
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He now lives in self-imposed exile atop an Italian mountain. |
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After several years of self-imposed exile on an ocean liner, Richie is ready to come home and face his demons, and his two siblings have the same idea. |
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But, in exile in London, these radically dissimilar writers met to speak their shared language and to exchange reminiscences of Hungarian food and Hungarian music. |
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And yet, he'd just been diagnosed with consumption, an illness that had shadowed him for years prompting doctors to exile him from the harsh Muscovite winters. |
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Landscape has relevance here because it naturalises in material form the values of the powerful, marking out moral geographies that exclude and exile feared social groups. |
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These monks are practicing Buddhists in exile from their homeland. |
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After her rescue and a year in exile upriver, she had rethought her vow never to return. |
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As a long-time exile in the pay of the CIA, he was always a strong candidate in Washington and US officials were clearly involved in steering the choice. |
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She also incarnates expatriate women, like Hooda, living in exile in London and perpetually nursing her Scotch, and the American woman watching CNN in dismay. |
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Another exile took pity on them and gave them shelter for a while. |
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In France, the government was hostile and the philosophes fought against its censorship, sometimes being imprisoned or hounded into exile. |
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When Warwick restored Henry VI in 1470, Jasper Tudor returned from exile and brought Henry to court. |
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The exile returned to England in 1057 with his family, but died almost immediately. |
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Tiro died in Aceh's provincial capital Banda Aceh, where he had stayed since late last year after 30 years in exile in Sweden. |
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A revolution in Spain overthrew Queen Isabella II, and the throne remained empty while Isabella lived in sumptuous exile in Paris. |
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When David returned from exile in 1341 to rule in his own right, Edward lost most of his support. |
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He ruled until 1651 when the armies of Oliver Cromwell occupied Scotland and drove him into exile. |
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Malcolm Canmore was an exile at Edward's court after Macbeth killed his father, Duncan I, and seized the Scottish throne. |
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By 1649, the struggle had left the Royalists there in disarray and their erstwhile leader, the Marquess of Montrose, had gone into exile. |
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In 829 he conquered Mercia, driving its King Wiglaf into exile, and secured acknowledgement of his overlordship from the king of Northumbria. |
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Cenwealh married Penda's daughter, and when he repudiated her, Penda again invaded and drove him into exile for some time, perhaps three years. |
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He handed Attalus over to Honorius's regime for mutilation, humiliation, and exile, and abandoned Attalus's supporters. |
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Although he was proclaimed King in Jersey, Charles was unable to secure the crown of England and consequently fled to France and exile. |
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Essex committed suicide and Monmouth, along with several others, was obliged to flee into Continental exile. |
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He would rather live in exile with his principles intact than continue to reign as a limited monarch. |
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Official policy of the court in exile initially reflected the uncompromising intransigence that got James into trouble in the first place. |
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In France, the government was hostile, and the philosophes fought against its censorship, sometimes being imprisoned or hounded into exile. |
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In 317 Constantine issued an edict to confiscate Donatist church property and to send Donatist clergy into exile. |
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It nationalised all church lands, as well as lands belonging to royalist enemies who went into exile. |
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When he heard the news of her death while on exile in Elba, he locked himself in his room and would not come out for two full days. |
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Columba and twelve companions went into exile on Iona and founded a monastery there. |
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Verica, the king whose exile prompted Claudius's conquest of AD 43, styled himself a son of Commius. |
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Following Napoleon's exile in 1814, he served as the ambassador to France and was granted a dukedom. |
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Mauritania has not rescinded its recognition of Polisario's Western Saharan exile government, and remains on good terms with Algeria. |
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Late in the year, perhaps shipwrecked on their way to a European exile, Edgar and his family again arrived in Scotland, this time to remain. |
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The legal Belgian government was reformed as a government in exile in London. |
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Belgium itself was occupied, but a sizeable Resistance was formed and was loosely coordinated by the government in exile and other Allied powers. |
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After Napoleon's surrender and exile to the island of Elba, peace appeared to have returned. |
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The warmest of welcomes back to undead glamazon Katie Price, who has emerged from a 37-second self-imposed exile to promote her new book. |
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Units of the Norwegian Armed Forces evacuated from Norway or raised abroad continued participating in the war from exile. |
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The last monarch involuntarily removed from power was James VII and II, who fled into exile in 1688 during the Glorious Revolution. |
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Fortunato Prandi who acted as interpreter in Turin was an Italian exile and follower of Giuseppe Mazzini. |
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In spring of 1241 he returned from exile, gathered an army, and drove out the invaders. |
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The Provisional Government of Bangladesh operated in exile from Calcutta, India. |
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The rebellion eventually reached the capital, and Aristide was forced into exile, after which the United Nations stationed peacekeepers in Haiti. |
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Wolsey then began a secret plot to have Anne Boleyn forced into exile and began communicating with the Pope to that end. |
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While in exile, he helped guide the Greek bishops of southern Italy to adopt Roman rites at the Council of Bari. |
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His principled opposition to royal prerogatives over the church, meanwhile, twice led to his exile from England. |
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The bishops sided with the king, the Bishop of Durham presenting his case and even advising William to depose and exile Anselm. |
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As late as the 1980s, imprisonment and exile were still employed to destroy the remaining Protestant churches. |
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A deposed monarch may go into exile as pretender to the lost throne, hoping to be restored in a subsequent revolution. |
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The historian Peter Brown speculated that one reason for Wilfrid's exile in 678 was that he was overshadowing the king as a patron. |
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Nations that imprison, torture, assassinate, or drive their writers into exile fall into the deadlands of their own darkness. |
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At that point, Henry offered a compromise that would allow Thomas to return to England from exile. |
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Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia spent the four years in exile, from 1936 to 1940, at Fairfield House in Bath. |
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When Henry Bolingbroke returned from exile in 1399, Richard was imprisoned in the White Tower. |
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The Gesta tells various stories of his supposed adventures as a young man while in exile in Cornwall, Ireland and Flanders. |
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Rather than allowing Bolingbroke to succeed, Richard extended the term of his exile to life and expropriated his properties. |
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The Seafarer is the story of a somber exile from home on the sea, from which the only hope of redemption is the joy of heaven. |
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While both are poets of exile, Dante is more of a belonger and less of a loner. |
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According to the Talmud, the Ark was either hidden by King Josiah or transported to exile in Babylon. |
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In 1845, an Italian political exile called Gatteschi, whom she had met in Paris, threatened to publish letters she had sent him. |
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Antipope Clement III was an alternative pope for most of this period, and Pope Urban spent much of his early pontificate in exile from Rome. |
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In exile in Jersey and then Guernsey, Victor Hugo took an interest in the vernacular literature. |
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See list of governments in exile for unrecognised governments without control over the territory claimed. |
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Most South Sudanese value knowing one's tribal origin, its traditional culture and dialect even while in exile and diaspora. |
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Robert Walpole managed to wind it down with minimal political and economic damage, although some losers fled to exile or committed suicide. |
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Charles returned from exile, leaving The Hague on 23 May and landing at Dover on 25 May. |
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The Highland chiefs sent word to James, now in exile in France, asking for his permission to take this oath. |
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Brendan of Birr spoke on his behalf with the result that he was allowed to go into exile instead. |
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During this period, the principal members of the House of Stuart lived in exile in mainland Europe. |
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The Kaiser, kings and other hereditary rulers all were removed from power and Wilhelm fled to exile in the Netherlands. |
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Authors of books left the country in droves, and some wrote material highly critical of the regime while in exile. |
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However, Orlyk's project for an independent Ukrainian State never materialized, and his constitution, written in exile, never went into effect. |
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Its parallel government in exile, was led by Bujar Bukoshi and its Minister of Defence until 1998 was the former Yugoslav colonel Ahmet Krasniqi. |
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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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Finally he came to terms with Hisham and went into exile in 790, together with other brothers of his who had rebelled with him. |
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Conrad's subsequent refusal to follow in Apollo's footsteps, and his choice of exile over resistance, were a source of lifelong guilt for Conrad. |
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Niven's status as a tax exile in Switzerland is believed to have been one of the reasons why he never received a British honour. |
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As a revolutionary mullah, Rowhani fled Iran with the Ayatullah Khomeini in 1977 and lived with him in exile until the revolution was over. |
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Miguel Trovoada, a former prime minister who had been in exile since 1986, returned as an independent candidate and was elected president. |
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By 1891, the Al Rashid were victorious and the Al Saud were driven into exile in Kuwait. |
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The 1548 Imperial Diet of Augsburg required the public to hold imperial documents for travel, at the risk of permanent exile. |
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Nawaz Sharif, two-time Prime Minister of Pakistan, had planned a triumphant return to his native soil nearly seven years after choosing exile. |
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However, he was unsuccessful in this endeavor, and was eventually forced into exile in Yemen. |
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In 1809, in retaliation for being forced into exile, the Prince Regent ordered the Portuguese conquest of French Guiana. |
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By the time the Old Pretender arrived in Scotland the rising was all but defeated and he returned to continental exile. |
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Sinuhe, the Egyptian exile who lived in northern Canaan about 1960 BC, wrote of abundant olive trees. |
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In World War II the bulk of the Norwegian Army during their years in exile in Britain consisted of a brigade in Dumfries. |
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His possible exile from Arcadia is attributed by one modern scholar to rivalry between Tegea and Sparta. |
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Marri returned to Pakistan after the fall of the left-wing government in Kabul after being in exile there for several years. |
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The king summoned Louis to him from his exile in Burgundy, but the Dauphin refused to come. |
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Instead of wallowing in comedy exile, slate was earning a book deal. |
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Dostum fled the country to Pakistan, where he lived in exile in Peshawar. |
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Meanwhile, the friends of the unfortunate exile, far from resenting his unjust suspicions, were stirring anxiously in his behalf. |
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It was founded by Roger Williams, a religious exile from the Massachusetts Bay Colony. |
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Furthermore, Spain had begun to exile or jail any person who called for liberal reforms. |
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Failure to do so meant possible imprisonment, exile, and, in some cases, death. |
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These activities were to result in two imprisonments and a temporary exile to England. |
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This is also when Edward IV and Richard III of England spent time in exile here. |
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He was kept in exile in Switzerland until 1950, while his brother Prince Charles presided as regent. |
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The elected government of Belgium, under Hubert Pierlot, escaped to form a government in exile. |
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It has been suggested that it was during this exile that he learned the skill of land reclamation. |
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During the 1650s, the city was the base for Charles II of England and his court in exile. |
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Banishment or forced exile from a polity or society has been used as a punishment since at least Ancient Roman times. |
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About 1568 to 1569, the Jaga invaded Kongo, laying waste to the kingdom and forcing the manikongo into exile. |
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He blamed the exile of the Medici as the work of God, punishing them for their decadence. |
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With his exile in 1494, the first period of Medici rule ended with the restoration of a republican government. |
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Gaveston's return from exile in 1307 was initially accepted by the barons, but opposition quickly grew. |
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In the Russian Empire and the Soviet Union Turukhansk was often used as a destination for political exile. |
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Fearing that he might be deposed if he refused, Edward agreed to exile the Despensers and pardoned the Marcher Lords for their actions. |
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Many others were forced to escape into exile, or were victims of other reprisals and removed from their jobs and positions. |
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Printing was censored and leading Protestant reformers such as John Calvin were forced into exile. |
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Additionally, the children of Rhodri ap Gruffudd, a brother of Llywelyn the Last, survived in exile. |
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After regaining power, Richard did not punish Henry, although he did execute or exile many of the other rebellious barons. |
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Acts of aggression can become so intense that targeted dolphins sometimes go into exile after losing a fight. |
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In 1939 Wolfgang Paalen was the first to leave Paris for the New World as exile. |
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Months later, Iturbide would go into exile and Santa Anna would eventually hold nine terms as president. |
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Following a season in exile at Worcester City, five became four, as Barry Town joined the League of Wales. |
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Following the election of the Labour Party's Harold Wilson as Prime Minister in 1974, Jones became a tax exile. |
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Bassey began to live as a tax exile in 1968, and was unable to work in Britain for almost two years. |
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He considered becoming a tax exile in the 1960s but ultimately decided he would miss Britain too much. |
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Following the outbreak of the French Revolution in 1789, Pasquale Paoli was able to return to Corsica from exile in Britain. |
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Louis XIV also revoked the Edict of Nantes, forcing thousands of Huguenots into exile. |
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Peace returned in 1324 when Afonso Sanches was sent into exile and the Infante swore loyalty to the king. |
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According to the book of Ezra, the Persian Cyrus the Great ended the Babylonian exile in 538 BCE, the year after he captured Babylon. |
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Bristol was the place of exile for Diarmait Mac Murchada, the Irish king of Leinster, after being overthrown. |
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His most trusted advisor was Dunstan, who he recalled from exile and made Archbishop of Canterbury. |
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The Emperor Gratian issued a decree which deprived the Priscillianists of their churches and sentenced them to exile. |
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Under William Rufus this arrangement had collapsed, the King and Archbishop Anselm had become estranged and Anselm had gone into exile. |
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Maxtla similarly turned against the Acolhua, and the king of Texcoco, Nezahualcoyotl, fled into exile. |
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Matters escalated, with Anselm going back into exile and Henry confiscating the revenues of his estates. |
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He accompanied the future King Charles II into exile, and mediated with the Long Parliament. |
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Louis Philippe was deposed in the revolutions of 1848, and fled to exile in England. |
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When in 1051 Earl Godwin was sent into exile, Harold accompanied his father and helped him to regain his position a year later. |
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A force of Goths under Catualda, a Marcomannian exile, bought off the nobles and seized the palace. |
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A government in exile based in London supported the Allies, sending a small group of volunteers who participated in the Normandy invasion. |
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In the 1680 Pueblo revolt, Indians in 24 settlements in New Mexico expelled the Spanish, who left for Texas, an exile lasting a decade. |
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Marius along with his son then returned from exile in Africa with an army he had raised there and combined with Cinna to oust Octavius. |
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In May 1919, the Bessarabian Soviet Socialist Republic was proclaimed as a government in exile. |
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After his release in 1964, he refused to apologize, and was eventually sent into exile. |
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Postumus Agrippa was murdered at his place of exile either shortly before or after the death of Augustus. |
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He renewed the Lex Iulia de Adulteriis Coercendis, under which adultery was punishable by exile. |
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He ensured that libellous writings, especially those directed against himself, were punishable by exile or death. |
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Later he went into exile on the Portuguese island of Madeira and finally settled in Estoril, near Lisbon. |
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These banned private foreign trade upon penalty of death for the merchant and exile for his family and neighbors. |
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In the same year he was promoted to the rank of magister militum, but then led a military revolt that forced Nepos to flee into exile. |
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In October 1927, Grigory Zinoviev and Leon Trotsky were expelled from the Central Committee and forced into exile. |
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A wealthy citizen who moves to a jurisdiction with lower taxes is termed a tax exile. |
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In some cases a person voluntarily lives in exile to avoid legal issues, such as litigation or criminal prosecution. |
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Due to a conflict with him, she must leave the Polis and go away into exile. |
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In ancient Rome, the Roman Senate had the power to declare the exile to individuals, families or even entire regions. |
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Auden, describes the exile of Karl Rossmann in the posthumously published novel Amerika. |
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After his accession, Robert continued Norman support for the English princes Edward and Alfred, who were still in exile in northern France. |
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Constantius used his power to exile bishops adhering to the Nicene creed, especially St Athanasius of Alexandria, who fled to Rome. |
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In 1688 it sponsored the immigration of 200 French Huguenot refugees forced into exile by the Edict of Fontainebleau. |
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Tostig went into exile in Flanders, along with his wife Judith, who was the daughter of Count Baldwin IV of Flanders. |
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This wish, however, the son ignored, and had his favourite recalled from exile almost immediately. |
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Upon the exile of Henry's father in 1398, Richard II took the boy into his own charge and treated him kindly. |
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He claimed the title in exile in France and loyalists revolted in his name across Wales. |
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Robert was an exile from the French court, having fallen out with Philip VI over an inheritance claim. |
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Peter appealed to England and Aquitaine's Black Prince for help, but none was forthcoming, forcing Peter into exile in Aquitaine. |
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However, with severe reverses in France, Suffolk was stripped of office and was murdered on his way to exile. |
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They were declared traitors and forced to flee to France, where Margaret of Anjou was already in exile. |
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He and Richard, Duke of Gloucester, fled from Doncaster to the coast and thence to Holland and exile in Burgundy. |
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Henry had spent much of his childhood under siege in Harlech Castle or in exile in Brittany. |
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Many of Buckingham's defeated supporters and other disaffected nobles fled to join Henry Tudor in exile. |
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Many of the new Iraqi ministers spent years in exile in Iran, an archfoe of Washington, and Zebari made a point of repeatedly speaking in Farsi during the news conference. |
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The rebel government soon went into exile and never controlled Kentucky. |
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Rinpoche, who lives in exile in India, has control over 100 monasteries in eastern part of the Tibet autonomous region and Tibetan areas in Sichuan. |
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The two intertwined themes of treasure and exile form a meaningful cluster of ideas that reinforce the tropological, or moral, theme of his hagiographical poem. |
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A secret list that deprives people of the right to fly and places them into effective exile without any opportunity to object is both unAmerican and unconstitutional. |
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In the early 1900s, the Bafut fought several wars with the German colonizers and their allies, ending in 1907 with the exile of the fon of that time. |
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Gottscheerish is an outlying dialect of Bavarian that was flourishing in Gottschee but is now only known by the oldest members of the community in exile. |
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Scilly has been identified as the place of exile of two heretical 4th century bishops, Instantius and Tiberianus, who were followers of Priscillian. |
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Historians generally have found problems with Adam's claims, such as that Sweyn was driven into exile in Scotland for a period as long as fourteen years. |
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Norwich was besieged and surrendered, and Ralph went into exile. |
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By 1050, however, relations between the king and the earl had soured, culminating in a crisis in 1051 that led to the exile of Godwin and his family from England. |
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It was during this exile that Edward offered the throne to William. |
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