Many dwellings have been semiabandoned as inhabitants have moved to farms on the plain to return mainly for summer or for festivals. |
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The Ausonians, the most ancient inhabitants of Italy, computed the day from midnight. |
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I should have long ere this paid my devoirs to the inhabitants of Raymond Castle. |
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As in the Iberian Peninsula, the inhabitants of Hispaniola were given new landmasters, while religious orders handled the local administration. |
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This large continuous harassment incensed Spain and put their the inhabitants in fear. |
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Turner and his followers killed nearly 60 white inhabitants, mostly women and children. |
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It was also where the inhabitants of the city gathered for public activities. |
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By 1500, Venice, Milan, Naples, Paris and Constantinople each probably had more than 100,000 inhabitants. |
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Many of the inhabitants of Northumbria were Danes, who had enjoyed lesser taxation than in other parts of England. |
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Isabella is also said to have gifted in perpetuity a water supply to the inhabitants of Tiverton, Devon. |
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Together with Shanklin, Sandown forms a built up area of 21,374 inhabitants. |
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These first inhabitants may have been ancestors of modern Indigenous Australians. |
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By 1634, the entire Colony consisted of eight shires or counties with a total population of approximately 5,000 inhabitants. |
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The South African black majority still has a substantial number of rural inhabitants who lead largely impoverished lives. |
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Of the Canadian and United States Arctic communities, Barrow, Alaska is the largest settlement with about 4,000 inhabitants. |
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The rise in technology has led to skyscrapers and broad urban areas whose inhabitants rely on motors to transport them and their food supply. |
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Indeed, the inhabitants of Constantinople continued to refer to themselves as Romans, as did their eventual conquerors in 1453, the Ottomans. |
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Although the French king gained sovereignty, existing rights and customs of the inhabitants were largely preserved. |
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On one occasion in 1709, for instance, Frederick IV of Denmark paid the region's inhabitants a visit and was greeted as their king. |
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It was stormed and taken by the Athenians in 415 BC, and the inhabitants, among them the famous courtesan Lais, sold as slaves. |
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The inhabitants of the old province of Dacia displayed no awareness of impending dissolution. |
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In 845, 600 Viking ships sailed up the River Elbe and destroyed Hamburg, at that time a town of around 500 inhabitants. |
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Europe's largest urban development since 2008, the HafenCity, will house about 10,000 inhabitants and 15,000 workers. |
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Their settlements had up to 15,000 inhabitants, making them among the first large farming communities in the world. |
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With almost 20 million inhabitants, the country is the seventh most populous member state of the European Union. |
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But the very first interest of the inhabitants was the restoration of housing areas. |
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In 1462, the Archbishop Adolf II raided the city of Mainz, plundering and killing 400 inhabitants. |
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Although the Visigoths plundered Rome, they treated its inhabitants humanely and burned only a few buildings. |
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The interwar period saw a rapid growth in the city's population, which surpassed one million inhabitants. |
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After that, population started to decline slowly as inhabitants began to move to nearby suburbs of Rome. |
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In addition, Rome has only 21 taxis for every 10,000 inhabitants, far below other major European cities. |
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The Rus' stayed there for several months, killing many inhabitants of the city and amassing substantial plunder. |
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From 1814 to 1955, inhabitants of Barcelonnette and the surrounding Ubaye Valley emigrated to Mexico by the dozens. |
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The number of inhabitants with Italian ancestry is likely much greater but undeterminable. |
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The number of inhabitants with Italian ancestry is generally indeterminable, and the use of French language is now ubiquitous. |
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As the Grand Duchy of Finland was formed its inhabitants struggled to properly identify themselves ethnically. |
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In the Sahara, the distinction between sedentary oasis inhabitants and nomadic Bedouins and Tuaregs is particularly marked. |
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Its inhabitants spoke Cumbric, a Brittonic dialect closely related to Old Welsh. |
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They are recorded in the late 7th century Tribal Hidage as the inhabitants of a minor territory of 600 hides. |
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In international comparison the importance of these urban areas is stronger than their number of inhabitants suggests. |
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Although independent of the Roman Empire, which dominated southern Europe at this time, the inhabitants traded with the Romans. |
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The Boeotians, inhabitants of central Greece, whose credentials were impeccable, were routinely mocked for their stupidity and gluttony. |
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Ripley even made a map of Europe according to the alleged cephalic index of its inhabitants. |
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Long stretches of the Italian, Portuguese and Spanish coasts were almost completely abandoned by their inhabitants. |
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After several months of fighting native inhabitants through wilderness and swamp, the party reached Apalachee Bay with 242 men. |
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The inhabitants called themselves Romaioi, and even as late as the 19th century Greeks typically referred to modern Greek as Romaika. |
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This gave the inhabitants the ability to monopolise foreign trade and almost all banking and shipping in the Crusader states. |
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A large number of the inhabitants moved to the coastal lagoons, looking for a safer place. |
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Most of the inhabitants of Manchuria, except for the wild Jurchens, were at peace with China. |
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During Dutch colonial rule, the head of the Cheng Hoon Temple was appointed chief over the community's Chinese inhabitants. |
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Thereupon he was sent to take Ryazan, but the stubborn opposition of the inhabitants led to the city being burnt. |
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The International zone of Tangier had a 373 square kilometer area and, by 1939, a population of about 60,000 inhabitants. |
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Most of the inhabitants of Tangier speak Darija, mainly influenced by Spanish. |
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The symbolism for their residents is the same as for inhabitants of palaces and other sacred mountains. |
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Cities were destroyed and their inhabitants slaughtered if they defied Mongol orders. |
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The wealth of Hormuz attracted raids so often that the inhabitants sought refuge off the mainland and initially moved to the island of Kishm. |
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He promised he would allow the Emperor and any other inhabitants to leave with their possessions. |
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Long stretches of the Spanish and Italian coasts were almost completely abandoned by their inhabitants, because of frequent pirate attacks. |
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The indigenous inhabitants of the peninsula, the Lebou, lived as fishermen and farmers. |
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A sizeable diaspora community exists across the world, slightly outnumbering inhabitants on the islands. |
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Cape Verde counted 25 researchers in 2011, a researcher density of 51 per million inhabitants. |
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They set about sailing upriver, but their advance faced unremitting hostility from the Mandinka inhabitants upriver. |
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The Toledo rebellion was sufficiently weakened that Amrus was able to enter Toledo and convince its inhabitants to submit. |
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In 794, the Berber garrison of Tarragona massacred the inhabitants of the city. |
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The 2011 Population and Housing Census counted 2,113,077 inhabitants of Namibia. |
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The inhabitants eventually organized themselves into small bands of a few families, grouped into larger tribes and chieftainships. |
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In 1606, the government of Philip III ordered all inhabitants of Hispaniola to move close to Santo Domingo, to avoid interaction with pirates. |
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According to official government data, the Lisbon Metropolitan Area has 3,121,876 inhabitants. |
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Gradually, this inland sea became a massive swampy, freshwater lake and the marine inhabitants adapted to life in freshwater. |
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Nowadays, it is credited that the majority of the inhabitants of the pernambuco's agreste has some Dutch ancestry. |
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They discouraged the alum mining near Volterra in Italy, apparently pushing its inhabitants to revolt against Florentine rule. |
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De Ojeda and the men of the other expedition returned to Turbaco and killed all of its inhabitants to avenge de la Cosa's death. |
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Access to the archipelago is prohibited to casual tourists, the media, and its former inhabitants. |
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This gave rise to discontent, and, to check an eventual rebellion, the government ordered all the inhabitants to surrender their arms. |
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The islands passed under the control of the Mahra sultans in 1511, and its inhabitants were Islamized during their rule. |
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Almost all inhabitants of Socotra, numbering nearly 50,000, live on the homonymous main island of the archipelago. |
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But he made a note that it had been known as Simoundu and Salike, and the inhabitants Salai. |
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Frightful tortures inflicted on its unfortunate inhabitants were connected with its destruction. |
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The first recorded Chinese inhabitants of the area were people seeking refuge in Macau from invading Mongols during the Southern Song. |
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Today, the island's only inhabitants are the nine person staff of the Norwegian meteorological and radio station at Herwighamna. |
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Cartagena highlights in number of inhabitants and the city of Bucaramanga is relevant in terms of metropolitan area population. |
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The first task was the reduction, or relocation of native inhabitants into settlements. |
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In prehistoric times, Negritos were some of the archipelago's earliest inhabitants. |
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Negritos were also among the archipelago's earliest inhabitants, but their first settlement in the Philippines has not been reliably dated. |
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Negritos, such as the Aeta and the Ati, are considered among the earliest inhabitants of the islands. |
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Calling it Tikegen Land, Andreyev found evidence of its inhabitants, the Krahay. |
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The journey takes only about three and a half hours, making Acapulco a favorite weekend destination for Mexico City inhabitants. |
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In 1574, Manila was temporarily besieged by the Chinese pirate Lim Hong, who was ultimately thwarted by the local inhabitants. |
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He stood off a group of islands from which local inhabitants hurled stones at his ship. |
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The Spaniards took little interest in the island after enslaving the native Lucayan inhabitants. |
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The rapid abandonment of Aguateca by its inhabitants has provided a rare opportunity to examine the remains of Maya weaponry in situ. |
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The elite inhabitants of the city either fled or were captured, and never returned to collect their abandoned property. |
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This would make the port more important than it had been, and led to increased prosperity for the inhabitants. |
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Spanish observers estimated that approximately 100,000 inhabitants of the city died from all causes. |
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They were received with a warm welcome of hospitality and provisions from the Tumpis, the local inhabitants. |
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According to early Spanish articles the Lima area was once called Itchyma, after its original inhabitants. |
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Later, as the original inhabitants died out and the local Quechua became extinct, the Cuzco pronunciation prevailed. |
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In 1861, the number of inhabitants surpassed 100,000 and by 1927, had doubled. |
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With 240,191 inhabitants in the beginning of 2009, Ghent is Belgium's second largest municipality by number of inhabitants. |
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For thousands of years, indigenous peoples were the only inhabitants of the territory that is now Maine. |
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Point Reyes' first inhabitants, the Coast Miwok, lived on the land for thousands of years. |
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The inhabitants of New Netherland were American Indians, European Colonists, and Africans, the last chiefly imported as enslaved laborers. |
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According to Pomponius Mela all the inhabitants of the coastal areas were Celtic people. |
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The islands' indigenous inhabitants are the Torres Strait Islanders, Melanesian peoples related to the Papuans of adjoining New Guinea. |
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Tensions between Tasmania's black and white inhabitants rose, partly driven by increasing competition for kangaroo and other game. |
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The indigenous inhabitants of the Pacific Islands are referred to as Pacific Islanders. |
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The inhabitants had also fled the city, preventing their enlistment for aid. |
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Another ecological concern affecting the island is the illegal felling of timber by local inhabitants. |
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In 1382 the Golden Horde under Khan Tokhtamysh sacked Moscow, burning the city and carrying off thousands of inhabitants as slaves. |
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As late as 1798, the islet near Sardinia was attacked by the Tunisians and over 900 inhabitants were taken away as slaves. |
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It is the most populous city in Tuscany, with 383,083 inhabitants in 2013, and over 1,520,000 in its metropolitan area. |
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The state seal depicts the Cerro de la Bufa, a landmark of the capital, surrounded by the weapons of the original inhabitants. |
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By 2009, the rate was 62 per 100,000 inhabitants, one of the highest in the world. |
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With approximately 186 million inhabitants, Nigeria is the most populous country in Africa and the seventh most populous country in the world. |
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Esperanto is also found in the comic book series Saga as the language Blue, spoken by the inhabitants of Wreath. |
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Most inhabitants live in urban areas near the Saint Lawrence River between Montreal and Quebec City, the capital. |
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Between 1991 to 2000, Quebec produced more scientific papers per 100,000 inhabitants than the United States and Germany. |
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Another notable dialect is Torres Strait English, spoken by the inhabitants of the Torres Strait Islands. |
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The peninsula is as large as Connecticut, Delaware, Massachusetts, and Rhode Island combined but has fewer than 330,000 inhabitants. |
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On this pretext, Neill ordered all villages beside the Grand Trunk Road to be burned and their inhabitants to be killed by hanging. |
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He began recruiting from amongst American supporters of slavery and the Manifest Destiny Doctrine, mostly inhabitants of Kentucky and Tennessee. |
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However, the UK began to consult with their inhabitants as to their wishes. |
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The original inhabitants of the area now known as Lesotho were the San people. |
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The inhabitants of the new city gradually razed the old, constructing Salisbury Cathedral and other buildings from the materials at Old Sarum. |
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Around 1500, at the beginning of the military and naval expansion, Woolwich had only a few hundred inhabitants. |
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We will suppose the means of subsistence in any country just equal to the easy support of its inhabitants. |
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Most of the new inhabitants came from Eastern Europe, but immigrants also came from France, Ireland, and the United Kingdom. |
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Mons succeeded Valenciennes as the capital of the county of Hainaut in 1295 and grew to 8,900 inhabitants by the end of the 15th century. |
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Some historians claim it was placed there in order to bring luck to the city and its inhabitants. |
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Most inhabitants live in rural areas and small villages, and in cities along the coast. |
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The earliest known inhabitants of New England were American Indians who spoke a variety of the Eastern Algonquian languages. |
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Compared to the national average, Providence has an average rate of violent crime and a higher rate of property crime per 100,000 inhabitants. |
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The Canadien inhabitants feared the loss of a shrinking area of good lands to potential American immigrants. |
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Many of the inhabitants were left without shelter, freezing to death in the snow. |
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Historically within Cumberland, the village had 714 inhabitants according to the census of 2001, increasing to 737 at the 2011 Census. |
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Manchester waterworks supplied an area containing 800,000 inhabitants, about 380,000 of whom lived within the city boundary. |
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In the course of the Mongol invasion of Rus, the Mongols under Batu Khan burned the city to the ground and killed its inhabitants. |
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Its remaining inhabitants built and manned antitank defences, while the city was bombarded from the air. |
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Towns of between 25,000 and 30,000 inhabitants are Ashford, Epsom, Farnham, Staines and Redhill. |
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After the siege, Hannibal sold all the inhabitants as slaves, and distributed the proceeds from those sales to his soldiers. |
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The inhabitants then shifted to a seafood based diet, which allowed the population to increase. |
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The climate, geology, and topography of Oldham were unrelenting constraints upon the social and economic activities of the human inhabitants. |
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During the Wars of the Roses the inhabitants sided with House of Lancaster. |
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The earliest recorded inhabitants were the Carvetii tribe of Britons who made up the main population of ancient Cumbria and North Lancashire. |
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At East Okement Farm, the inhabitants had to vacate their home during local training. |
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Settlements might have a surrounding stone wall to keep domesticated animals in and protect the inhabitants from other tribes. |
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And yet the inhabitants were still expected to travel many miles to church each Sunday, over hills and rough terrain. |
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Likewise, the inhabitants of conquered cities were frequently massacred during the Crusades against the Muslims in the 11th and 12th centuries. |
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Burgh commons were areas of common land where property rights or privileges of use were held by the burgh for their inhabitants. |
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The DPA remains true to its original objectives and has also added other activities in support of Dartmoor and its inhabitants. |
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The inhabitants, also, of Ur had fallen into polytheism, or, if we may so speak, allotheism, the worship of other gods. |
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The Langham is proof of the felicific power of good architecture, the power to promote, both in its inhabitants and in passers-by, happiness. |
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Gharials, Gavialis gangeticus are the inhabitants of deep, fast flowing rivers. |
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His gnomery at Lamport Hall, Northamptonshire, lasted until the second world war, when soldiers used the ceramic inhabitants for target practice. |
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Although Edinburgh is the capital of Scotland, the largest city is Glasgow, which has just over 584,000 inhabitants. |
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In 685 it was invaded by Caedwalla, who tried to replace the inhabitants with his own followers. |
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London's urban area is the second most populous in the EU, after Paris, with 9,787,426 inhabitants at the 2011 census. |
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These legal powers include the ability to enact legislation which can directly affect all member states and their inhabitants. |
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Early inhabitants of Yorkshire were Celts, who formed two separate tribes, the Brigantes and the Parisi. |
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After the Restoration, many inhabitants of the Northumbrian region supported the Jacobite cause. |
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Physically different from the usual local inhabitants found before this period, they instead resembled the Germanic populations of the north. |
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A legend exists in various forms that giants were either the original inhabitants, or the founders of the land named Albion. |
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By AD 211, with Caracalla's edict known as the Constitutio Antoniniana, all free inhabitants of the Empire became citizens. |
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Instead, quite different customs predominated in the Irish record that were apparently influenced by the traditions of the earlier inhabitants. |
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In general, classical writers referred to the inhabitants of Britain as Pretannoi or Britanni. |
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The Roman inhabitants sought reinforcements from the procurator, Catus Decianus, but he sent only two hundred auxiliary troops. |
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A system of eleven Roman aqueducts provided the inhabitants of Rome with water of varying quality, the best being reserved for potable supplies. |
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This vast iland seems to have been first peopled by Fins and Laplanders, whom Ihre thinks the first inhabitants of the whole. |
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The indigenous inhabitants of Mauretania developed kingdoms of their own, independent of the Vandals, with strong Roman traits. |
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The term Pritani may have reached Pytheas from the Gauls, who possibly used it as their term for the inhabitants of the islands. |
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The first inhabitants were the Britons, who came from Armenia, and first peopled Britain southward. |
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In this view, held by the majority of historians until the mid to late twentieth century, much of England was cleared of its prior inhabitants. |
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They seldom interacted with the local inhabitants, except when doing business. |
|
The Romans did not subdue a country to put the inhabitants to fire and sword, but to incorporate them into their own community. |
|
The number is probably in the higher end, and an estimate of around 6 million inhabitants seems likely. |
|
Of the major cities, London was in a class of its own, with perhaps as many as 70,000 inhabitants. |
|
Out of the 40,000 inhabitants on Guadeloupe, at the end of the 17th century, there were more than 26,000 blacks and 9,000 whites. |
|
It is estimated to have destroyed the homes of 70,000 of the City's 80,000 inhabitants. |
|
By the 1660s, London was by far the largest city in Britain, estimated at half a million inhabitants. |
|
The inhabitants were growing desperate to remove their belongings from the City, especially the upper class. |
|
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The Latin word Scotti, originally the word referred specifically to the Gaels, but came to describe all inhabitants of Scotland. |
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In modern times the words Scot and Scottish are applied mainly to inhabitants of Scotland. |
|
It was mostly Greek Cypriots volunteers and Turkish speaking Cypriot inhabitants of Cyprus but also included other Commonwealth nationalities. |
|
The largest urban area by far is the Greater London Urban Area with 9 million inhabitants. |
|
When King Henry V conquered Harfleur in 1415, he ordered the inhabitants to leave and imported English immigrants to replace them. |
|
By the end of 1721, New Orleans counted 1256 inhabitants, of which about half were slaves. |
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At the time of the Roman invasion, the inhabitants of the entire area spoke a Brythonic Celtic language. |
|
Some peasants lived in large settlements that numbered as many as 700 inhabitants. |
|
A civil parish can range in size from a large town with a population of around 80,000 to a single village with fewer than a hundred inhabitants. |
|
However, some areas have seen house prices fall considerably, putting inhabitants at risk of negative equity. |
|
As the borough had more inhabitants than Portsmouth and had absorbed Devonport and East Stonehouse, the King agreed to the request. |
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The building of the Ely to King's Lynn railway in 1847 cut the area off even further, and the inhabitants could only cross to Ely by boat. |
|
Shimane prefecture had an estimated 743 centenarians per million inhabitants. |
|
Carthage resisted well at the first strike, with the participation of all the inhabitants of the city. |
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This resulted in a significant Irish community, and to this day the town still has a large number of inhabitants of Irish descent. |
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In King's Caple, the only part of Archenfield east of the Wye, Domesday lists the inhabitants as one Frenchman and five Welshmen. |
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In Northern Germany, Standard German was a foreign language to most inhabitants, whose native dialects were subsets of Low German. |
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Blackpool was a centre for tourism for the inhabitants of Lancashire's mill towns, particularly during wakes week. |
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During his return to Northumbria Wilfrid's ship was blown ashore on the Sussex coast, the inhabitants of which were at that time pagan. |
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Wilfrid spent the next five years preaching to, and converting the pagan inhabitants of Sussex, the South Saxons. |
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In the town of Strood, also in Kent, Becket is said to have caused the inhabitants of the town and their descendants to be born with tails. |
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Originally, Indians were the ones who taught the native inhabitants about writing. |
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With a population of around 59 million, this gives a rough proportion of 7 Pagans per 10,000 inhabitants of the United Kingdom. |
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Castles were established by Norman invaders of England for both defensive purposes and to pacify the country's inhabitants. |
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The inhabitants of the Channel Islands were mainly of Norman descent until modern time. |
|
Sea and Sardinia, a book that describes a brief journey undertaken in January 1921, is a recreation of the life of the inhabitants of Sardinia. |
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The novel is also a meditation upon the lives of a nation's inhabitants in the midst of war, and of the people left behind. |
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Before then, the Weald was used as summer grazing land, particularly for pannage by inhabitants of the surrounding areas. |
|
For two days the Crusaders proceeded to massacre the inhabitants and pillage the city. |
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Normans is the name given to the inhabitants of Normandy, and the region is the homeland of the Norman language. |
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If the first inhabitants of the Faroe Islands were Irish monks, then they must have lived as a very small group of settlers. |
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The indigenous inhabitants at that time consisted of several ethnicities such as Punti, Hakka, Tanka and Hoklo. |
|
Historically, most inhabitants of the British Empire held the status of British subject, which was usually lost upon independence. |
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Territorial nationalists assume that all inhabitants of a particular nation owe allegiance to their country of birth or adoption. |
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As late as the middle centuries of the 1st millennium the inhabitants of Ireland did not appear to have a collective name for themselves. |
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In the book, the first inhabitants of Great Britain were a race of giants underneath Albion. |
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The next inhabitants were Trojans under Brutus who landed at Totnes and defeated the giants. |
|
It is thought that by about the 6th century BCE most of the inhabitants of the isles of Ireland and Britain were speaking Celtic languages. |
|
Around four million of Poland's eleven million inhabitants died in famines and epidemics. |
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The net migration rate has ranged from zero to four immigrants per 1,000 inhabitants per year. |
|
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In the same period, it was also referred to as Cumbria, and its inhabitants as Cumbrians. |
|
In 1815, the sacking of Palma on the island of Sardinia by a Tunisian squadron, which carried off 158 inhabitants, roused widespread indignation. |
|
These contracts allowed an income option to the inhabitants of these colonies that were not related to the Spanish conquistadores. |
|
In the Hawaiian Islands, the earliest indigenous inhabitants arrived around 1 AD from Polynesia. |
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The first, he says, about thirty years before, had many inhabitants, many holding leasehold estates under the lord of the manor for three lives. |
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In villages where two or more populations lived together, the inhabitants would often speak each other's language. |
|
With about 82 million inhabitants, Germany is the most populous member state of the European Union. |
|
As a result of the partitions, millions of Polish speaking inhabitants fell under the rule of the two German monarchies. |
|
Most of the Polish inhabitants of Kresy were expelled along the Curzon Line in accordance with Stalin's agreements. |
|
The later Iron Age inhabitants of the Northern Isles were probably Pictish, although the historical record is sparse. |
|
Another of Snowdonia's famous inhabitants is the Snowdon or rainbow beetle. |
|
Despite the lack of permanent inhabitants, the British Antarctic Territory issues its own postage stamps. |
|
There is no governor appointed to represent the Queen on the territory, as there are no longer any native inhabitants. |
|
Some terms and place names used by the islands' former Gaucho inhabitants are still applied in local speech. |
|
Water supply and sanitation in Gibraltar have been major concerns for its inhabitants throughout its history. |
|
With only about 50 permanent inhabitants, originating from four main families, Pitcairn is the least populous national jurisdiction in the world. |
|
As there are no permanent inhabitants on the islands, there is no legislative council and no elections are held. |
|
As there are no native inhabitants, economic activity in South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands is limited. |
|
According to a report quoted by Mark Thompson, as many as 580,000 inhabitants of Kosovo were arrested, interrogated, interned or reprimanded. |
|
They mixed among themselves and with the indigenous inhabitants of the continent. |
|
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The later Iron Age inhabitants of the northern and western Hebrides were probably Pictish, although the historical record is sparse. |
|
This myth is construed by Robert Graves and others as reflecting a clash between the inhabitants during Mycenaean times and newer immigrants. |
|
Most inhabitants in the Horn of Africa follow one of the three major Abrahamic faiths. |
|
As a result, the rise of California was a calamity for the native inhabitants. |
|
Karigasniemi, with some 300 inhabitants, is the only settlement of some size along the river. |
|
The economy is centered around tourism, given that the city's many hotels provide the principal source of jobs for its inhabitants. |
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The number considered tolerable by the WHO is about 10 homicides per 100,000 inhabitants. |
|
By the end of the 19th century and beginning of the 20th, Burghausen had become an impoverished provincial town with barely 2,500 inhabitants. |
|
The official language is Dutch, which is spoken by the vast majority of the inhabitants. |
|
Finland has an average population density of 18 inhabitants per square kilometre. |
|
The inhabitants of a small Mesolithic 1 site in the Levant left little more than their chipped stone tools behind. |
|
It is by no means clear what material the inhabitants burned in their hearths. |
|
In 212, during the reign of Caracalla, Roman citizenship was granted to all freeborn inhabitants of the empire. |
|
After the Acts of Union 1707, the terms British and Briton came to be applied to all inhabitants of the Kingdom of Great Britain and its empire. |
|
The earliest inhabitants were Brythonic Celts, recorded by the Romans as the Novantae tribe. |
|
This property was used for the advantage of the inhabitants of the burgh, funding such facilities as public parks, museums and civic events. |
|
The use of these assets are to be for the benefit of the inhabitants of the former burgh. |
|
Constructing the new palace meant destroying the old town and moving its inhabitants to a new settlement. |
|
Most of the Comyn castles in Moray, Aberdeen, and Buchan were destroyed and their inhabitants killed. |
|
Many were killed by the pursuing Scottish army or by the inhabitants of the countryside that they passed through. |
|
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The French contemporary chronicles made long details of the reactions of the inhabitants of Paris under Burgundian rule. |
|
The seaport cities of colonial America were truly British cities in the eyes of many inhabitants. |
|
Of the 650,000 inhabitants of the South in 1750, about 250,000 or 40 percent, were slaves. |
|
The rivers and lakes abound with fish, from which the inhabitants prepare their favourite condiment of ngapee. |
|
Edward in turn invaded Scotland and captured Berwick, destroying much of the town and massacring many of the inhabitants. |
|
During the 19th century, the inhabitants of Skye were also devastated by famine and Clearances. |
|
The inhabitants of Caithness at the northeastern tip of Scotland also used the stone to a considerable extent. |
|
Planned settlements set up for white inhabitants included Welkom, Sasolburg and Secunda. |
|
The most successful is Ashdod with more than 200,000 inhabitants, a port and developed infrastructure. |
|
In 1961 the first new town of Shannon was commenced and a target of 6,000 inhabitants was set. |
|
Most of the Prypiat's former inhabitants were resettled to Slavutych which was planned and built for that purpose. |
|
East Kilbride grew from a small village of around 900 inhabitants in 1930 to eventually become a large burgh. |
|
The 2011 Census recorded the town's population at 33,698 inhabitants, making it the largest settlement in North Ayrshire. |
|
In common with many of the new highland lairds, Colonel Gordon expelled most of the inhabitants to make way for sheep farming. |
|
Nevertheless, until the 1960s Breton was spoken or understood by many of the inhabitants of western Brittany. |
|
Before 212, for the most part only inhabitants of Italy held full Roman citizenship. |
|
Before 212, for the most part only inhabitants of Italia held full Roman citizenship. |
|
Gildas obeyed the king's summons and travelled all over the island, converting the inhabitants, building churches, and establishing monasteries. |
|
Unlike in other Welsh territories, inhabitants of Caerwent and Caerleon retained the use of defensible Roman town walls throughout the period. |
|
A difficult question is what the consequences are for the inhabitants of a territory undergoing state succession. |
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If the succession is partial, the inhabitants can become nationals of a state whose territory they reside outside of. |
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The other inhabitants of Britain, who did not enjoy citizenship, the Peregrini, continued to live under the laws of their ancestors. |
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But for the majority of British inhabitants, who were peasants tied to the soil, citizenship would not dramatically alter their daily lives. |
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The term Welsh is derived from an Old English word meaning 'foreigner', referring to the old inhabitants of southern Britain. |
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They burned the town and slaughtered some of its inhabitants and started a siege. |
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The slum's inhabitants were the poorest of society and had a bad reputation. |
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The inhabitants of the lower Rhondda, in the vicinity of Porth and Dinas, would need to trek to Llantrisant to hear a service. |
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Most of the male inhabitants of the town were mariners or employed in occupations linked with the sea. |
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According to the United Kingdom Census 2001, Fishguard had 3,193 inhabitants and 1,465 households. |
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Out of 162,241 inhabitants of the county in 1880, only 12,785 had the vote. |
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Early inhabitants of Wales gave names first to noteworthy natural features, such as rivers, hills, mountains, harbours and shores. |
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In 1850, only 980 Arabs were registered as original inhabitants of the city. |
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The Tripuri people are the original inhabitants of the state of Tripura in northeast India. |
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Some evidence of neolithic inhabitants has been found in the island's sand dunes, though its name is likely of Norse origin. |
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As a result, the town's population has swollen from a few hundred inhabitants to close to twenty thousand over a period of 50 years. |
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As inhabitants of the largest environment on Earth, microbial marine systems drive changes in every global system. |
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The original inhabitants of Sicily were three defined groups of the ancient peoples of Italy. |
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In 1798 the islet near Sardinia was attacked by the Tunisians and over 900 inhabitants were taken away as slaves. |
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In Sardinia 1,295,462 vehicles circulate, equal to 613 per 1,000 inhabitants. |
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Little is recorded on the earliest inhabitants of the islands, though many legends exist. |
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