There is no quota on the total number of animals that landowners may kill, though they are restricted to one mountain lion per person. |
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For the landowners, an eye-catching stadium would offer an attractive catalyst for the wider development of the area. |
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The newly emancipated peasants could then be hired, very cheaply, for much more profitable enterprises, by the richer landowners. |
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To prevent beaches from disappearing, landowners build rock walls called groins perpendicular to the coast. |
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In the early eighteenth century, rents were falling and landowners had little incentive to press for short lets. |
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Many landowners believed that gauchos were ill-suited for agricultural labor and favored the hiring of foreigners. |
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The ultimate goal is to have all the sections on private land protected by easements sold to the CTA by landowners. |
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The earl was one of the absentee English landowners who owned most of the property in Ireland. |
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A Wakefield Council spokeswoman said it shared the frustrations of landowners but it was powerless to act. |
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Large landowners are therefore not compelled to let go of their holdings even when the lands are not actively cultivated. |
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The general duty to take reasonable care to avoid foreseeable harm applies to landowners. |
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Many landowners require that pilots flying on their land be covered by liability insurance. |
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The strategy could involve a point-blank refusal by landowners to give bodies such as power companies, councils or the Army access to their land. |
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The Forestry Commission is urging Yorkshire landowners to think twice before felling trees to ensure their actions do not fall foul of the law. |
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The general parceling out led to the disappearance of the commons when the land not divided among landowners was given to the crown. |
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Use this form to report any illegal incursions, damage to trails, or sections which have been closed by the landowners. |
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The first members of these clubs were military officers, landowners, and professional and business men. |
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Elections were controlled through a clientelistic system based on the influence of landowners who thus wielded considerable power. |
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As industrial employment declined, the luxury of patrician landowners living from landed income maintained the demand for urban services. |
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Ideology justifies the rule of each ruling class, whether as chieftains, patricians, landowners, or those with capital, the bourgeoisie. |
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Max's paternal grandfather was a member of the Red Army and had to carefully hide the fact his wife's parents had been landowners. |
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While the novel makes some room for the landowners the film mentions them only in passing. |
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Giving the story local flavor and human interest are the experiences of local landowners and plant employees. |
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In the West, paradoxically, zoning laws were the last line of defence against the egotistical urges of private landowners. |
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During the 14th century, landowners found it profitable to commute labour services for fixed cash payments. |
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The trust has also built artificial holts in which otters can breed, and encouraged farmers, landowners and the public to do the same. |
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But dealers have hit back, claiming landowners are guilty of selling the trees themselves. |
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For example, governments can try to overcome the information problems associated with landowners and renters. |
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They labored on vast tobacco, sugarcane, and henequen plantations, in virtual slavery enforced by their continuing debt to the landowners. |
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Some eastern rural areas are still dominated by large landowners, traditional clan heads, and religious leaders. |
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Plans for England's largest onshore wind farm, near Bradwell and Tillingham, could be abandoned after two more landowners pulled out. |
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Furthermore, to take precautions against uninvited guests was thought too onerous a burden to place on landowners. |
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Even the most stiff nominal tax rate would turn out to be a very meager tax burden for landowners. |
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The Act further provides for the prosecution of landowners who illegally evict occupiers from their land. |
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The camper says that landowners who need eight hundred hands print up thousands of handbills and thousands of workers show up. |
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Power was in the hands of a tightly knit group of substantial landowners and a few city merchants. |
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Nevertheless, many private landowners maintain feeders and dole out mineral supplements to retain the deer and buttress antler growth. |
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The volunteers were prepared to offer advice to local farmers and landowners on tree planting schemes as well as local schools. |
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He supported small business over large landowners and was a liberal progressive in his politics. |
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In the 18th and 19th centuries, there was a vogue for the building of follies on the estates of landowners. |
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Between these towns, farmers who had been recruited by seigneurial landowners filled the fertile river valley lands. |
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Indeed, landowners were expropriated almost immediately, while banks, commerce and industry were nationalized. |
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Since local farmers preferred keeping all unplowed land in grass, absentee landowners votes were needed to allow Kriss to expand his operations. |
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I very much appreciate the support and friendship of the landowners of 3rd Unnamed Cave, who must remain nameless. |
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The Scottish borderers played a major role both as chief landowners and as undertenants during the plantation of Ulster under James the First. |
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Several landowners are taking action to monitor, conserve and enhance the blue-eyed grass populations on their ground. |
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There is talk of landowners denying the armed forces access to their firing ranges and a blockade of London is mooted. |
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Grouse-shooting on the Yorkshire moors on the Glorious Twelfth the following day would be cautious, with landowners anxious to preserve stocks. |
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Police also want to hear from landowners who have a gate made of tubular steel, which is set back from the road, on their grounds. |
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He points out that landowners have weakened the case for shutting access, by allowing deer stalking from last week. |
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Elsewhere, many landowners funded their own troupes of serf dancers, performing folk and ballet. |
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Though the rise of coal mining was critical, the process began when landowners began to think in new ways about forests. |
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Small landowners, with their small plots of land called minifundia, are gradually being forced out. |
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Monasteries were foremost among the great landowners because, as in western Europe, they received donations and bequests from the laity. |
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Water voles are making a comeback in East Yorkshire, thanks to backing from farmers and landowners for a campaign on their behalf. |
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Many landowners cut their best remaining timber to supplement their income and feed their families. |
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As you might imagine, this is quite a big deal for landowners, and is important to keep sites open. |
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The eighth century had seen the regional kingdoms and larger monasteries of Britain and Ireland became major landowners and economic powers. |
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The farmers and landowners hotline received more than 600 enquiries on Monday alone, and by the following day, 400 movements were authorised. |
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That would be partly because a lot of landowners are killing hares to keep lurchers and poachers off their land. |
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In exchange, the landowners manage their land to provide habitat for the desired species. |
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Local landowners are well aware of their rights over land and highly litigious when they are aggrieved. |
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Advisors will also be working with individual landowners, helping to improve the image of water voles and thus decrease the use of rodenticides. |
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Farmers and landowners are being urged to save rare arable plants by wildlife conservation charity, The Game Conservancy Trust. |
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The guide provides instructions on riparian buffer installation and maintenance for farmers and landowners. |
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What is happening to our country when well-off landowners can be allowed to treat those less fortunate as pawns in some commercial game? |
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Government bodies since the 1950s have pushed landowners and offered subsidies to plough up or lime the heather to allow the spread of grass. |
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It should be no part of the plan that it is for private landowners to retain land effectively as a public reserve. |
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This is apart from the serious problems and costs it will cause landowners and land managers. |
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The bill still gives new powers to landowners to suspend rights of access to land and water for management reasons. |
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Would any local landowners like to write in and offer their land for this scheme? |
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It will also be an offence for landowners to permit their land to be used for hunting. |
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The reality is that landowners will and do provide land for exactly these purposes. |
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A lot of landowners are careful about letting the hunt on their land because of repercussions. |
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In areas that are privately owned, the council encourages the landowners to keep their land free from litter. |
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Police are urging landowners to take care when burning heather on their land. |
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Although it reduced the power of the landowner, small absentee landowners emerged. |
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They gained support from the Indians and landless peasants by promising to end the abuses committed by landowners. |
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The government would in turn pay farmers and landowners for quota allotments initially granted to limit production and support prices. |
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The cost of reforestation, however, has prevented most private landowners from changing the land use on their own. |
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They are dying out because the wild flowers on which their caterpillars feed are being killed off by farmers, landowners and foresters. |
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But while property sharks may be kicking up their heels, small-time Plateau landowners and their tenants are bearing the brunt. |
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Key innovators were often British settlers, but Afrikaners, still the predominant landowners, were drawn into the commercial pastoral economy. |
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An increasing number of Maori landowners are striving to achieve economic and sustainable farming operations as kaitiaki of their land. |
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Many landowners have to spend time, effort and money to clear the ragwort from our land that has been caused by the council's infestation. |
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English landowners introduced the European rabbit to the continent in 1859, seeking game animals for sport hunting. |
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Pannage, or Common of Mast, stretches back to medieval times and allows commoners, as landowners in the area are known, to graze pigs in the forest. |
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He was told that advance warning signs were put in place and that, if he could obtain permission from landowners, the council would remove some trees. |
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The Mayor said all landowners needed to report rabbit sightings and work with the council and rabbit board to prevent the outbreak getting out of control. |
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There have been sightings of the boys in the Northwich and Cuddington areas and police are appealing to landowners, walkers and ramblers to help track them down. |
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These lending associations provide loans and financial services to agricultural producers, agribusinesses, country homeowners and other rural landowners. |
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Faced with difficulties from recalcitrant landowners and political opponents, the scheme eventually necessitated financial rescue by the king himself. |
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If the precedent of other provinces was followed in Britain, larger landowners would have had recourse to two strategies to protect their interests. |
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Scottish Natural Heritage has come under fire for dictatorial, arrogant attitudes, ignoring the needs and wishes of landowners, and assuming it knows best. |
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Thousands of landowners, many of whom have already signed leases with landmen fanning out across the state, contemplate a new era of gas production. |
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Since a second round of letters went out to landowners in late 2001 seeking to buy right of way, CSX has taken few public steps with the project, a township official said. |
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Taking the lead are small landowners or Western farmers who make appealing pleas to be left alone to enjoy their property and take care of it conscientiously. |
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The destruction wrought by sudden, violent, and uncontrollable flooding, however, was recognized as a recurrent problem for riverine communities, landowners, and businesses. |
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Survival of this species in the wild will require international cooperation among law enforcement agencies, landowners, conservationists, and aviculturists. |
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It appears that, in a time of constant conflict between Saxons and Danes, some Viking landowners chose to celebrate their military status and Scandinavian heritage. |
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Peter Baum, administration officer with Casino Rural Lands Protection Board, said some landowners in the Malanganee area are already carting water. |
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The Ila admitted the 30-year-old error last week in a letter to attorney Tawfiq Jabarin, who is representing the landowners. |
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Their background was probably very varied, some perhaps landowners, others military men, Roman or barbarian, who had been invited to take control or seized power. |
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For a decade landowners and gamekeepers have been fighting for licenses to kill birds of prey in order to preserve grouse and pheasants for shooting. |
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The peasantry in 1300 were living in a world where land was scarce and opportunities for economic advancement were limited by the tight controls of the landowners. |
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There are two Pagan landowners in this metro area who host regional festivals and rent their properties to individuals and groups for special rituals. |
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The difficulty both for contemporaries and for historians has been to find a term suitable for describing landowners below the ranks of the gentry. |
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Indeed, the tories of that day, many of them big landowners, found an intellectual champion in one Thomas Malthus. |
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To have the tally-hoes of the English shires coming in droves to Ireland's hunting counties would severely disrupt the relationship between the hunts and the landowners. |
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The rest was in the hands of the Church and nobility, protected against sale by entail or mortmain, or owned by urban corporations, or bourgeois landowners. |
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Therefore, George advocated allowing landowners to keep a small percentage of the land rent, mainly to avoid the prospect of having all unimproved land revert to the commons. |
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When I questioned one member about this, he suggested that was because the committee knew the reformers well, while the landowners were an unknown quantity. |
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The first four conditions were designed to avoid conflict between competing landowners and to keep at least part of the river open to navigation and upstream fishermen. |
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Also, actions by the state in relation to rezoning, planning permission or infrastructure should not result in significant, untaxed gains to landowners. |
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But large landowners, the boyar aristocracy, retained 60 per cent of the land while 30 per cent of the peasants' plots were under two hectares in size. |
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It has caused huge upset and distress to communities, deprived landowners of their property and cut people off from facilities provided at great expense from their taxes. |
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Nineteenth-century scholars and 11th-century landowners may not have had much in common, but they did share a profound suspicion of the state and its financial doings. |
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Esslingen was a former free city and its community contained not only the actual city but 13 villages with small peasant landowners, most of them vintagers. |
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Two of the Task Force's twenty recommendations were that government should not impose any extraordinary tax on non-resident landowners or limit the size of their holding. |
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The NRA have come in for strong criticism locally both from landowners affected by the route of the road and various political and business interests. |
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We know that he was born into a family of high standing in France and he describes himself as a squire, certainly suggesting that his family were wealthy landowners. |
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It's a fascinating read, and reveals the extent to which rakish elements amongst landowners and the aristocracy staked huge wagers on the outcome of sporting events. |
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All office holders, whether noble or bourgeois, were landowners. |
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During the course of the season the antlers are given to long standing friends of the hunt and the meat carcasses are distributed amongst the hunting landowners. |
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Farmers and landowners planning to plough up or alter moor and heathland in the Peak District have been warned that they now need prior permission. |
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In July 1999, after Cayuga County broke off settlement talks with the Cayuga tribe, tribal officials announced that they would seek to evict 7,000 landowners. |
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Instead of breaking the power of the clergy and the landowners and liberating the religious and national minorities, they relied on oppression and chauvinism. |
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This principle states that, despite the superficial power enjoyed by the capitalists and landowners, the true bosses under capitalism are the consumers. |
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As a result of land reallocations in the past, partible inheritance practices among landowners resulted in plots of dwindling size in only a few generations. |
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Membership included Liberal Imperialist MPs, a number of Fabians, Liberal landowners, imperialistically minded journalists, and nonconformist ministers. |
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Ten years ago people were allowed to reclaim their family farms from the Soviet collectives and, as a result, the country now has a massive three million landowners. |
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It was also a class-bound, inegalitarian society, dominated by a numerous gentry, where over half the arable land belonged to some 10,000 landowners. |
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Farmers and other landowners can help to protect and conserve wildlife. |
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The fruitloops in Byron Bay have gone off the deep end again, refusing to allow landowners to build seawalls to protect their properties from erosion. |
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All farmers, landowners and parish councils in the National Park can apply for grants from the money which has come through Yorkshire and Humber Regional Development Agency. |
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The Diggers put their beliefs into practice by manuring fields and sowing crops on wastelands in Surrey until they were driven away by local landowners. |
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Private agencies or NGOs carrying out development projects for the Government shall also be directed to pay compensation amount to the landowners. |
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Realizing that the total expropriation of the landowners was out of the question, he pleaded for providing the freedmen with sufficient allotments. |
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The remaining Irish landowners were to be granted one quarter of the land in Ulster. |
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Occasionally the landowners battled each other using armies of Ukrainian peasants. |
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What was more, the new landowners were explicitly banned from taking Irish tenants and had to import workers from England and Scotland. |
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This episode prompted Chichester to expand his plans to expropriate the legal titles of all native landowners in the province. |
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These scars represent potentially restorable habitat, provided landowners are willing to participate in restoration activities. |
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Mao's government carried out mass executions of landowners, instituted collectivisation and implemented the Laogai camp system. |
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By the end of Charles II's reign, most of Castile was in the hands of a select few landowners, the largest of which by far was the Church. |
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Conditions in 16th century Europe support the view that the separation of constantly rising prices and fixed rents destroyed landowners. |
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But landowners and the rich were not the only ones gaining from the price revolution. |
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This issue arises, for example, in the duty of care that landowners have for guests or trespasses, known as occupiers' liability. |
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Almost all of the upper class and nearly a quarter of the middle class are substantial landowners. |
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In 1831, Old Sarum had eleven voters, all of whom were landowners who lived elsewhere. |
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Tull's methods were adopted by many great landowners and helped to provide the basis for modern agriculture. |
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The Maratha group of castes is a largely rural class of peasant cultivators, landowners, and soldiers. |
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The buying and selling of sheep and wool were no longer centred on the great Abbeys, being handled locally by the new landowners and tenants. |
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Most notably the Gilpin family who were the main landowners in the village. |
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The earliest punts were privately owned by local landowners, and charged a toll. |
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Potter was one of the largest landowners in the area, eventually donating her many properties to the National Trust. |
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The Argles Memorial Hall was built in 1931 on land donated from the local landowners. |
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The project aims to work constructively with landowners and the shooting community. |
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Examples were made of major landowners such as Earl Edwin of Mercia, their properties confiscated and redistributed amongst Norman barons. |
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From the 16th and 17th centuries some landowners began to develop the industry and several dynasties of coalowners emerged. |
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If they agreed, they received property and spent the rest of their lives as wealthy landowners. |
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This survey allowed the government to begin taxing landowners directly, moving it beyond dependence on revenue from crown lands. |
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Between 1784 and 1815, the abolition of serfdom made the majority of the peasants into landowners. |
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In the 13th century about twenty percent of a farmer's yield went to the king, church and landowners. |
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In the 1700s textile industrialists supported by traders and landowners campaigned for a turnpike to connect with growing industrial towns. |
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Common mosses were areas of bog where the right to dig peat for fuel were shared by neighbouring landowners. |
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As the traditional uses of greens and loans declined, they were often absorbed by the neighbouring landowners. |
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They could include any of the other six types of common land and were sometimes shared with landowners outside the burgh. |
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These rights have occasionally resulted in conflicts between walkers and landowners. |
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The 1949 Countryside Act created the concept of designated open Country, where access agreements were negotiated with landowners. |
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Permission has been obtained from all landowners across whose land the Waymarked Ways and Ulster Way traverse. |
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Merchants were those who bought and sold goods while landowners who sold their own produce were not considered to be merchants. |
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He was in good circumstances, being one of the larger landowners in the town. |
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Firstly, some 300 native landowners who had taken the English side in the Nine Years War were rewarded with land grants. |
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They have sent good soldiers to the Confederate Army, and are now landowners and taxpayers. |
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It became common practice for landowners to bind their mesnie knights to their service with annual payments. |
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While nominally democratic, from 1790 until 1865, wealthy male landowners were in control of South Carolina. |
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It could be levied on land, landowners, and slaveholders, as well as on people. |
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With such a scheme, Pliny probably hoped to engender enthusiasm among fellow landowners for such philanthropic ventures. |
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In Eastern Europe, on the other hand, landowners were able to exploit the situation to force the peasantry into even more repressive bondage. |
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Attempts by landowners to forcibly reduce wages, such as the English 1351 Statute of Laborers, were doomed to fail. |
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Other landowners also encouraged the Earl to make the pilgrimage and agreed to go with him, and preparations began for the trip. |
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As a result, the tax revenues collected by the samurai landowners were worth less and less over time. |
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Usually the owner of the water area is the partition unit of the landowners of the shores, a collective holding corporation. |
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Some landowners currently may perceive a diminution in value for their land after finding an endangered animal on it. |
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As major landowners, the monasteries played a significant part in the early efforts at drainage of the Fens. |
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On the contrary, wealthy merchants bought themselves into the nobility by becoming landowners and acquiring a coat of arms and a seal. |
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Wind projects also revitalize the economy of rural communities by providing steady income to farmers and other landowners. |
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For example, the towns of Port Talbot and Tredegar took the names of their main landowners and developers. |
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The commissioners often simply reported verbatim the prejudiced opinions of landowners and local Anglican clergy. |
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In north Wales, attempts were made by many English landowners to retrieve the situation. |
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The major landowners looked eastwards towards Henry's court for political leadership, and many also possessed estates in Wales and England. |
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In spite of concerted efforts to uphold the statute, it eventually failed due to competition among landowners for labour. |
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Holbein also portrayed various courtiers, landowners, and visitors during this time. |
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After the Dissolution of the Monasteries, the abbey's lands passed to secular landowners, who used it as a residence or country house. |
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The station was named after Euston Hall in Suffolk, the ancestral home of the Dukes of Grafton, the main landowners in the area. |
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As many as 130 landowners turned up to witness the event ranging from Sir John of Combo to Sir William Murray of Fort. |
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In 1754, 22 noblemen, professors, and landowners founded the Society of St Andrews Golfers. |
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The free peasants lived in small huts, whereas the landowners and their employees lived in proper villae rusticae. |
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Sinking feeling PLANS to re-allocate certain water abstraction licences from rivers or aquifers have alarmed a landowners group. |
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His parents, Robert Rookwood and Dorothea Drury, were wealthy landowners, and had educated their son at a Jesuit school near Calais. |
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The great landowners struggled with the shortage of manpower and the resulting inflation in labour cost. |
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The only building which remained from the previous Water Board landowners became the music department for St Paul's Juniors. |
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As landowners settled the region, they began channelizing the creek in the late 1880s to drain the plain to the lagoon. |
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William systematically dispossessed English landowners and conferred their property on his continental followers. |
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Recently, some landowners have announced plans to build large game reserves on their land and release the species within them. |
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The suids were released into the wild by wealthy landowners as big game animals. |
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Ricardo saw an inherent conflict between landowners on the one hand and labour and capital on the other. |
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The species has a rich history on the island but became extinct in Ireland in the 1900s due to persecution from landowners. |
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Genseric settled his Vandals as landowners and in 442 was able to negotiate very favourable peace terms with the Western court. |
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One of the biggest changes here is that the payments are not designed for landowners who let their land in conacre. |
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The swamp rabbit is a species that could benefit from cooperative habitat management by public agencies and private landowners. |
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Different landowners decided to introduce the improvements that required clearance at different times and for different reasons. |
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Details are still being debated by the council, landowners and other interested parties. |
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In England, hunting was sharply restricted to landowners and enforced by armed gameskeepers. |
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Those who would pay the bulk of taxation, the clergy, merchants and landowners, naturally comprised the members. |
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The following year, he organised the resistance of landless farmers in County Tipperary against the landowners and their agents. |
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As manual labour they had status below the gauchos and the Argentine, Chilean and European landowners and administrators. |
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This was a body of the principal landowners liable to pay land tax, and was unelected. |
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With the 2008 Health Check of the CAP, a first step was taken towards limiting CAP payments to very large landowners. |
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Led by peasants, the revolt found great support among the Ukrainian landowners who opposed the war. |
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The French Revolution of 1789, in which the French monarchy had been overthrown, worried many British landowners. |
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Fourth, the rural peasants demanded liberation from the heavy system of taxes and dues owed to local landowners. |
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The new coalition of traditional landowners and sympathetic industrialists constituted the new Conservative Party. |
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The Lords were far more powerful than the Commons because of the great influence of the great landowners and the prelates of the realm. |
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They now work with local authorities and landowners to develop restoration plans and secure funding. |
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The bison's circumstances remain an issue of contention between Native American tribes and private landowners. |
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The House of Lords, which consisted mostly of powerful landowners, rejected the Budget. |
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Cromwell's paternal grandfather Sir Henry Williams was one of the two wealthiest landowners in Huntingdonshire. |
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In the early 1990s, there was a grass roots effort by Dooly County, Georgia, landowners to deal with the issue of over-harvest of young bucks. |
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Like the gentrified and protective large landowners of the past,, the Forestry Commission is doing exactly the same with the same intention. |
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Land enclosure has been condemned as a gigantic swindle on the part of large landowners. |
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The Montagu family went on through marriage to become the Dukes of Buccleuch, one of the largest landowners in Britain. |
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This threatened landowners' wealth, which encouraged the landowners to become more efficient, and they saw enclosure as a way of doing this. |
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This made him one of the principal landowners in Munster, but he had limited success inducing English tenants to settle on his estates. |
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This was sometimes undertaken by small landowners, but more often by large landowners and lords of the manor. |
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The Act Concerning Peter's Pence and Dispensations outlawed the annual payment by landowners of one penny to the Pope. |
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In the Roman world, local merchants served the needs of the wealthier landowners. |
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The very wealthy landowners managed their own distribution, which may have involved exporting. |
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Some resorts, especially those more southerly such as Bournemouth and Brighton, were built as new towns or extended by local landowners to appeal to wealthier holidaymakers. |
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The poor law system charged a Parish Rate to landowners and tenants, which was used to provide relief payments to settled residents of the parish who were ill or out of work. |
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Ordinary consumers, many now in fuel poverty, are funding this Kafkaesque economic nightmare by way of subsidies to wealthy landowners, rich investors and major utilities. |
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His sister Sarah, who had accompanied him to Ireland, married into the Travers family, and her descendants were prominent landowners in Cork for centuries. |
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Rognvald returned to Norway to see how the landowners had prepared. |
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This lends support for the view, propounded to me by landowners in east central Alberta, that the region is now more treed than when it was homesteaded. |
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These were created to prevent the exploitation of the indigenous peoples by the encomenderos or landowners, by strictly limiting their power and dominion. |
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There are about a dozen large landowners on Skye, the largest being the public sector, with the Scottish Government owning most of the northern part of the island. |
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There was support for the railway from the towns at either end, but opposition from the landowners over whose land the railway was proposed to pass. |
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It enriched both the Southern landowners and the Northern merchants. |
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Derek Lutton and Bill Beckett found falling Conacre rents encouraged landowners to seek sources of income other than letting land to neighbouring farmers. |
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In the midst of this, Gaelic Irish landowners in Ulster, led by Phelim O'Neill and Rory O'More, planned a rebellion to take over the administration in Ireland. |
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The evangelical element had been demanding the purification of the Church, and it attacked the patronage system, which allowed rich landowners to select the local ministers. |
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Some landowners felt the railways were a threat to amenities or property values and others requested tunnels on their land so the railway could not be seen. |
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Many landowners where driven out by the high water, and federal and state governments acquired the nucleus of the Big Muddy NWR and several state conservation areas. |
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By the early 19th century, most burgh commons had been appropriated by the wealthy landowners who dominated burgh councils, and very few have survived. |
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The extent of indebtedness among Highland landowners was enormous. |
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Norman landowners were keen to increase their revenues and established new towns such as Barnsley, Doncaster, Hull, Leeds, Scarborough, Sheffield, and others. |
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Upper class Indians, rich landowners and businessmen were favoured. |
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Many of those sold to landowners in New England eventually prospered, but many of those sold to landowners in the West Indies were worked to death. |
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The Nga Whenua Rahui Fund has negotiated agreements and established Joint Management Committees involving DOC representatives and Maori landowners. |
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Neighbouring landowners might try to encroach on the town boundaries, or the Marches as they were known, moving them back 100 yards or so to their own benefit. |
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It was in the Anglo Saxon interest that the native British carry on as usual to ensure the economy produced food and goods for the new landowners. |
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Britain had a sophisticated financial system based on the wealth of thousands of landowners, who supported the government, together with banks and financiers in London. |
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George's Hill near Weybridge to implement egalitarian ideals of common ownership, but were eventually driven out by the local landowners through violence and litigation. |
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Nevertheless, the labour shortage had created a community of interest between the smaller landowners of the House of Commons and the greater landowners of the House of Lords. |
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This is somewhat controversial, as riparian landowners and those responsible for local fisheries maintain that the East and West Dart should not be paddled. |
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But the current ESA could still provide incentives to public land managers to either act like private landowners or stick to the ESA overzealously. |
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Common lands and waterways owned by a partition unit were created by an agreement where certain land was reserved for the common use of all adjacent landowners. |
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In towns, which expanded greatly during the period, landowners turned into property developers, and rows of identical terraced houses became the norm. |
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Its failure bankrupted these landowners, but not the burghs. |
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Apart from these more spectacular pieces of resistance, in some places chantry priests continued to say prayers and landowners to pay them to do so. |
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This land was now divided up among the large local landowners, leaving the landless farmworkers solely dependent upon working for their richer neighbours for a cash wage. |
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The Abolition of Heritable Jurisdictions Act of 1747 ended the hereditary right of landowners to govern justice upon their estates through barony courts. |
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As Chancellor, Becket enforced the king's traditional sources of revenue that were exacted from all landowners, including churches and bishoprics. |
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This new tax would have had a major effect on large landowners, and was opposed by the Conservative opposition, many of whom were large landowners themselves. |
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