Opening the new season on January 27 is That'll be the Day, a riotous romp through the golden age of rock 'n' roll. |
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The past thirty years have been a golden age for the study of cognitive development. |
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The 17th and 18th centuries saw a golden age of frame-making develop in France. |
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This knee-jerk nostalgia for nursing's mythical golden age simply will not do. |
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The golden age envisaged here may, perhaps, be spiritually rich, but it is materially poor. |
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Indeed, the past eight years may come to be regarded as something of a golden age of American democracy. |
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Quickly paced, with each song segueing seamlessly into the next, it's a homage to the golden age of crossover. |
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It was directed and filmed by a couple of the classic talents in the golden age of Tinseltown's movie making machine. |
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It's a glimpse into the golden age of kings, a lost world of luxury, political scheming, extravagance, and hedonism. |
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It is the last movie house from that golden age still showing pictures, and Derek has begun to write its definitive history. |
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History has already anointed the 1970s as the last golden age of American cinema. |
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The golden age of building in Shanghai was the period between the two world wars. |
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So many greats in an era that we now know was the last golden age of heavyweight boxing, an era over which he reigned supreme. |
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This period is often viewed by modern-day Thais as a golden age of Siamese religion, politics, and culture. |
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I think that we are in, if not a golden age, then, at least, a very bright silver age. |
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The senior band of 35 plays a wide range of music from the golden age of swing to more up tempo and funky numbers. |
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The golden age was a constant springtime of pleasure, peace, and contentment. |
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Critics could rightly charge that the report had waxed nostalgic about an imaginary golden age. |
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Elsewhere, the empire is generally considered to have been enjoying a golden age of tranquillity and prosperity. |
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They hate the dynamism and boundless optimism of its people while they are static and look backward to an imagined golden age. |
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In the south there was often a hankering for a past golden age on the reserves, with a rich communal life, some farming and a blended culture. |
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It is an imperialist movement, yearning for an imagined golden age which it hopes to recreate. |
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But I'd like a report twenty years or so from now, when you may well look back on this time as a golden age. |
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But the evidence proves the Mesolithic was hardly a golden age of peace and universal goodwill between people. |
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Are these events recorded to tantalise us with a past golden age in which we can have no part? |
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Of course Cracow was our medieval historical capital and it symbolised to us the golden age of Polish history. |
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Now, the golden age of Cordoba is evoked as a symbol of the harmony that might be possible in the future. |
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Commentators always assume there was a golden age of cinema that must have passed them by. |
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Most of the rest of the media seemed to join in, yearning for a lost golden age. |
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This saucy, stylish, frolicsomely funny show is an affectionate spoof of the golden age of the silver screen. |
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He was a porter on a Pullman sleeping car during the golden age of rail travel. |
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Both men were pivotal figures in the golden age of the Hollywood studio system. |
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It celebrates not only Christmas but the artistic and commercial peak of the golden age of popular song writing. |
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All the critics and commentators had to do was sit back and wait for the new golden age of cinema. |
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This discovery inaugurated the golden age of trade between Europe and Asia. |
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The young pair is remarkably candid in the book about their iffy journalistic methods and practices circa 1972, part of Broder's golden age. |
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Great prosperity at home and peace abroad enshrine the current period as a golden age in the nation's history. |
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As with so many sports, the dawn of a new century brought nostalgia for a supposedly vanished golden age. |
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But as someone under the age of 30, who grew up in London, I find that the supposed golden age before mass immigration is somewhat alien. |
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The series about the history of speed and the intense rivalry to be the fastest revisits the golden age of the train. |
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A petition from a discontented hillman evocatively recalled a golden age when the villagers had full control over their forest habitat. |
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From the golden age came many cartoons with characters that were based on comic strips. |
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In sum, the golden age of Facebook game virality is over with these changes. |
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No, he just has to perpetuate that pathetic myth that Britpop was some kind of idyllic golden age for British music. |
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The hyper-realism of his early work, captured in the first four spy movies, is an ancient memory, a golden age now expired. |
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In order for society to advance, the theory went, it needed to go back to some golden age in the past. |
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To say that, I recognise, is to risk appearing as a reactionary, someone constantly harking back to a mythical golden age. |
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It has been a glorious century and mankind will be eternally grateful for its legacy, playing golden age recordings until they wear out. |
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Verily, we must be living in a golden age of journalism if the number of prize-winning rags and hacks is anything to go by. |
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It is clearly a handsome design from an era some proclaim to be the technical golden age of Scottish housebuilding. |
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The golden age of rail travel in the Southwest lives again at a dusty town in eastern Arizona. |
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That leaves grunge, which is indeed emerging as a golden age of rock, perhaps the genre's last hurrah. |
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It's an homage to both the history of the building and the golden age of cinema. |
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His protest involves, however, no retreat into a mythical golden age and sternly rejects any hints of aestheticism. |
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Relics from a golden age of flight when Zeppelins and airships ruled the skies have been on sale at a Swindon auction house. |
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It was no coincidence that the golden age of British television happened under his leadership. |
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The resurgent Thai cinema is in love with a golden age that never really existed. |
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I don't buy the idea that the pre-industrial period was a golden age of self-determination and leisure for the vast majority of the British. |
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Research has shown that knowledge of this art had its golden age at some remote period in the past. |
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Julius says the next 100 years are going to be a glorious golden age of maths, of science. |
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Picking up the torch of the golden age, the CFL proves that a sports league where no one is in it for the money can thrive in an entertainment-jaded age. |
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Comedy is supposedly enjoying a national golden age at the moment. |
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Cast an eye over the history of the Supreme Court, and you will see no golden age of apolitical judging. |
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There was jubilation at the museum last night that the icon of Britain's golden age of steam is coming to York and will continue to run on our railways. |
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A golden age Gold jewellery is the predominant commercial outlet for gold sales and personal adornment using gold has been a feature of most societies since ancient times. |
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The Second Republic was also considered the another golden age for Korean Cinema. |
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In a worst-case scenario, historians will someday have to explain why the golden age of Western democracy, like the age of the Antonines, lasted only about two hundred years. |
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If nothing else, the Kardashian Empire shows us just how much celebrity culture has changed since the golden age of Hollywood. |
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When the golden age of Hollywood musicals faded, two young tappers appeared on television variety shows with their father as Hines, Hines, and Dad. |
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This was the golden age of steam and his first job was cleaning locomotives inside and out, which meant scraping the ashes out of the fireboxes, a hard, dusty and dirty job. |
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There never was a golden age of First Amendment textualism or absolutism in American history, even if you limit the First Amendment to Congressional power. |
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Whether or not Witchcraft was handed down in an unbroken line from time immemorial or whether there was ever a golden age of matriarchy is totally irrelevant. |
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Historical novelist Lucinda Brant pinpoints the 18th century as the golden age of the power paunch. |
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Action Comics No.1 is the book that ushered in the golden age of superheroes in tights. |
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It was like a time machine to the golden age of smoking, when there were ashtrays on elevators and in movie theaters. |
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The old netsuke, those made in the golden age between the late 18th century and the middle of the 19th, show over a century of natural aging and wear to their surfaces. |
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Guest conductor Timothy Vernon joins the orchestra once again to present hummable selections from the golden age, the masterworks, and from traditional carols. |
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The argument is centered on the analysis of the Indo-Aryan myth of a golden age, as recounted in Europe and India from the Enlightenment to the present. |
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These changes provoked the anger of William Cobbett, who wished to return to a golden age when England was still a land of prosperous yeomen farmers and contented cottagers. |
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Their brand of country harks back to the genre's golden age in the 1950s and 60s, with none of the nauseating sheen or gimmicky lyrics of contemporary countrypolitan material. |
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At the age of 24, he began writing about a gloriously talented baseball team for a cultivated newspaper during the golden age of the American summer game. |
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They looked back longingly to a mythical golden age in a medieval past. |
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The citizens imagine an ideal golden age without the need for labour. |
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The 19th century was a golden age for wine writing in Britain. |
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Yet this big screen resurgence cannot compare to the original golden age. |
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Everyone accepts that the 1970s were a golden age for American cinema. |
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In that golden age, pink and red flags were not publicly mixed. |
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Revenues were substantial, and the orchestra seemed to many to be entering into a golden age. |
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In 1527, the Landsknechts of Emperor Charles V sacked the city, putting to an abrupt end the golden age of the Renaissance in Rome. |
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The long and triumphant reign of its first emperor, Augustus, began a golden age of peace and prosperity. |
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From the 15th to the 18th century, Brittany reached an economic golden age. |
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Sultan Yusuf Mahamud Ibrahim, the third Sultan of the House of Gobroon, started the golden age of the Gobroon Dynasty. |
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Ruled by King Osman Mahamuud during its golden age, it controlled much of northeastern and central Somalia in the 19th and early 20th centuries. |
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Many of the historic cities in the region, such as Amud, Maduna, Abasa, Berbera, Zeila and Harar, flourished during the kingdom's golden age. |
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Although the game was revived after the end of the war, the golden age of Argentine hurling had passed. |
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Elizabeth was praised as a heroine of the Protestant cause and the ruler of a golden age. |
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Broadway audiences welcomed musicals that varied from the golden age style and substance. |
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Perhaps one of the first ideological movements towards privatization came during China's golden age of the Han Dynasty. |
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The reign of Shah Jahan, the fifth emperor, between 1628 and 1658, was the golden age of Mughal architecture. |
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For Zemmour, like many right-wing intellectuals, is a temporal irredentist, and the golden age for him lies in the heyday of Gaullist France. |
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Other authors of Spain's golden age of literature, such as Francisco de Quevedo, Lope de Vega and Luis de Gongora, ignored him. |
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But Mr Nickels resolved to rescue mementoes and reminders of the golden age of the privately-operated charabancs. |
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The golden age of the button was in 18th century France, when they adorned redingotes and waistcoats. |
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It is a teensy, weensy time machine that returns everything to a golden age when all was well. |
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My golden age comes to a halt with the ascendancy of music videos. |
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To posterity the civil wars and dissolution that followed his death made him appear to be the last king of a golden age. |
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The Nara period of the 8th century marked the emergence of a strong Japanese state and is often portrayed as a golden age. |
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The ensuing stability contributed to heralding in the golden age of Hindu culture in the 4th and 5th centuries. |
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All this ado about the golden age is but an empty rattle and frivolous conceit. |
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Disraeli and Gladstone dominated the politics of the late 19th century, Britain's golden age of parliamentary government. |
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The Rashtrakuta period marked the beginning of the golden age of southern Indian mathematics. |
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The rule of the Chalukyas marks an important milestone in the history of South India and a golden age in the history of Karnataka. |
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During its golden age, the company made some fundamental institutional innovations in economic and financial history. |
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The Dominion of Newfoundland reached its golden age under Prime Minister Sir Robert Bond of the Liberal Party. |
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Later historians have considered his reign to be the height of the Ming dynasty's golden age. |
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During the reign of the early emperors of Rome there was a golden age of historical literature. |
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Ruled by King Osman Mahamuud during its golden age, it controlled much of northern and central Somalia in the 19th and early 20th centuries. |
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It is generally regarded as a high point in Chinese civilization, and a golden age of cosmopolitan culture. |
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The golden age of Rome, known as Pax Romana due to the relative peace established in the Mediterranean world, began with his reign. |
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The Oyo Empire experienced its golden age, as did the Benin Empire. |
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Given that she almost conked out in her prime several times, it's incredible that this 75-year-old near-final Hollywood golden age survivor is still with us. |
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Historians often depict it as the golden age in English history. |
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The kingdom of Hungary experienced a golden age during the 14th century. |
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These results came at the beginning of the golden age of general relativity, which was marked by general relativity and black holes becoming mainstream subjects of research. |
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The reign of Shah Jahan was the golden age of Mughal architecture. |
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It experienced a golden age in the 17th century thanks to Louis XIV, who employed a number of talented musicians and composers in the royal court. |
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The golden age of Sicilian poetry began in the early 13th century with the Sicilian School of Giacomo da Lentini, which was highly influential on Italian literature. |
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The height of a civilization is referred to as a golden age. |
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During its golden age of growth from 2002 to 2006, Turkey became one of the most prominent globalizers in terms of exposing its trade and finance sector to global trends. |
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The young Alcuin came to the cathedral church of York during the golden age of Archbishop Ecgbert and his brother, the Northumbrian King Eadberht. |
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Under Richards Leicester entered a golden age winning the Premiership Rugby title in 1999, 2000, 2001 and 2002 as well as back to back Heineken Cups. |
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The Tang period was a golden age of Chinese literature and art. |
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The ascension of the Macedonian dynasty in 867 marked the end of the period of political and religious turmoil and introduced a new golden age of the empire. |
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He left his successors an internally stable state, which was in the midst of its golden age, but before long signs of political weakness would emerge. |
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During the golden age of animation Chuck Jones helped bring to life many of Warner Brothers' most famous characters including Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Elmer Fudd and Porky Pig. |
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The Victorian era marked the golden age of the British circus. |
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His time in charge was looked on as something of a golden age. |
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