Firing at point-blank range, roughly one hundred militia men killed one of their opponents. |
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Aid workers have been caught in crossfire between warring groups of militia or bandits. |
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The Senate Judiciary Committee agreed that marshals could summon both the militia and regular troops to serve in a posse comitatus. |
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The militia was a part-time force charged with a wide range of duties and organized at the village level, but supervised from higher echelons. |
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The due process clause permits military justice but restricts its application to the armed forces or to the militia during times of war. |
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The government called off helicopters sent to attack the rebel militia, averting a threatened rebel offensive. |
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By the 1808 Treaty of Paris the Prussian army was restricted to a mere 42,000 men and forbidden to raise a militia. |
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The older men were discharged from service in the militia as not fully reliable. |
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When London needed yeomanry, police, militia or regiments to suppress the United Irishmen, the Fenians or the IRA, Orangemen were there. |
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The Taliban emerged from Pakistan's universities and religious schools as a loosely organised student militia. |
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The force employed was the local Nuer militia, backed by government troops and aircraft. |
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For six weeks there was no confrontation between the militia and regulars, but they did exchange proclamations. |
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Apart from some garrison artillery, the regular army comprised staff officers and instructional cadres for the volunteer militia. |
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A signed note from a militia official or a local tribal leader is usually enough to pass muster. |
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The police made no more than a token effort to disguise their enthusiasm for the militia cause. |
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And conscription was only used to recruit the militia, a reserve army never now mobilized except in wartime. |
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A former congressional staffer stands by to emphasize the vital difference between an army of volunteers and an armed militia. |
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His militia has been really very badly hurt, and it maybe why he's reconsidering his options. |
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She described him as a drinker and wife abuser who was also a patriot who served as a militia captain during the Revolutionary War. |
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The US is buying off regional warlords and militia commanders for a variety of reasons. |
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The soldiers were quartered in city hall, three hundred militia in Fort James. |
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He was appointed quartermaster of a militia brigade and contributed his own money for the purpose. |
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Based on eyewitness accounts, the report described how Pashtun villages were attacked after being disarmed by local militia commanders. |
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The military base is the principle strategic airhead for the militia, supporting its small fleet of helicopters and warplanes. |
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I see from the Independent that Mugabe is arming his youth militia with weaponry from China and Iran. |
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We think of Washington at Valley Forge, or we think of Washington with his ragtag band of militia men beating the British. |
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When Albany refused to go along with the New York junto, Leisler sent some militia under the command of his son-in-law, Jacob Milbourne. |
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After weeks of dreadful anticipation, a rebel militia advances against government forces. |
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In 1675 Maryland abandoned the pretense of a militia and shifted to reliance on paid rangers, though they rarely called upon them. |
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The uprising led to a fierce, and widely condemned, retaliation by government forces and allied militia. |
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The country was carved up among rival militia, the economy was in ruins and the social fabric in tatters. |
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In New Guinea militia brigades held the gains of 1943 while AIF formations were withdrawn to Queensland to rest and re-train. |
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It had its own assembly and militia, the power of veto over federal decisions and control of education and other public services. |
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He'd be better off in a coastal battery or at the head of a militia regiment that guards railway bridges. |
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Movements by leaders and fighters during and after the air strikes indicated the militia was unstrung by the attack, he said. |
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Meanwhile the peasants' militia had been destroyed when they loyally opposed the Guangxi mutineers. |
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The proprietors ordered the first governor to organize the militia with musters weekly or monthly. |
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His militia, the Army of the Mahdi, is running courts and jailing people in the basements of tenement buildings. |
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One is the fear of the funded components that mission creep of the militia would compete for funding with their own operations. |
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He is one of 11 former militia commanders from different military units around the country, that have been sent to Japan in two groups so far. |
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It was the ubiquity of the militia that made British victories over the Continentals in the field so meaningless. |
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Many of those fleeing are trying to escape the press gangs to which the militia have resorted to fill the ranks of their army. |
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When the colonial militia deployed at Concord, the uniform was work clothes. |
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From February onward army and blackshirt militia units mobilized and embarked for the long journey through the Suez Canal to Eritrea and Somalia. |
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Volunteer soldiers came to military duty no better armed, equipped, or trained than had their earlier militia counterparts. |
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The White House is already threatening sanctions against Sudan if militia attacks in Darfur continue. |
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A dozen men armed with clubs set upon a corporal in the colonial militia when he tried to execute a sentence on a man delinquent in his duty. |
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Massachusetts enjoyed a qualified success with its militia by expending money and energy on the effort. |
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Establishing a safe area of operations for the Belgians brought these soldiers into direct confrontation with a clan warlord's militia. |
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Under this rubric are included such forces as the local militia and the constabulary. |
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I mentioned at the beginning that he is the one commander of a militia force who hasn't come in on this deal. |
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The trio were arrested by the Colombian authorities in August 2001 and accused of travelling on false passports and training the FARC militia. |
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One minute they're playing video games, the next they're acting as lookouts for patrols of militia men. |
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Men plow fields, cut grain, litigate in court, and serve in the local militia. |
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The British stories that civilians were forced to take up arms by the militia and were used by the militia as human shields were also lies. |
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His promises to subdue the militia in West Timor and restore law and order in Ambon are nothing but hot air. |
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There had been a demonstration the day before that ended in a charge on the governors' mansion, but it had not led to major militia fighting. |
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Her archconservative, often libertarian, and sometimes extreme views made her popular with militia movements. |
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On the other hand, the report says, the boys in the militia mostly felt guilt and shame and are traumatized by their experience. |
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This tiny force is completely outgunned and outnumbered by an estimated 200,000 militia fighters under the control of various local strongmen. |
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During the first part of Hals's career the militia companies continued to play a vital role in the defence of each city. |
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The evidence suggests that a strong case can be made for a planned strategy using militia. |
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Medics and militia commanders said the dead man was a militiaman but five of the injured were civilians. |
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His is one of a number of forces with armed militia operating in the country. |
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Most of the children escaped, although it is reported that some of the older ones were forcibly recruited into the rebel militia. |
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Johnson's army, on the other hand, was composed primarily of New England militia men, Mohawk and Oneida Indians, and almost no British regulars. |
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Sure they were bothered by the state police and hassled by the communist militia, but that just spiced up the spirit of adventure. |
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It is this dynamic that the intelligent field commander of a local militia or opposition group exploits. |
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Using brutal tactics Duvalier created a rural militia to intimidate the population. |
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At 21, he had become a chemist and bookseller in New Haven, and a few years later success in foreign trade earned him a captaincy in the militia. |
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It expanded by calling upon the states for militia, officered by men chosen and characterized by bonds of friendship, popularity, and politics. |
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He comes from Liberia where he was forced to become a child soldier and fight in a rebel militia. |
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The purpose of this follow-on operation was to further reduce the offensive capabilities of the militia. |
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The security personnel then resorted to aerial firing to scare away the rioters, which prompted the Taliban militia to fire back in retaliation. |
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He plans to double the number of the security forces, and create a million-man militia. |
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There was no claim of responsibility, but renegade groups in one militia have said they will not observe the truce. |
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Pro-Taylor militia fighters raced through the city in jeeps at dawn yesterday with mounted cannons and rocket-propelled grenade launchers. |
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In England the French rather than the German threat gave rise to the Volunteer Force, which supplemented the regular army and militia. |
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By 1901 there were 230,000 volunteers, augmented by the Royal Navy and Royal Artillery Volunteers, the militia and the yeomanry. |
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He seems to have gone round the bend and gone after militia crazies and gun nuts, looking for his kind. |
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Society suffers from dangerous sects and cults, militia movements, media control, and misrepresentations of psychiatric treatment and mental disorders. |
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As in America, the citizens' militia was an integral part of a patriot ideology that extolled the right of a free people to bear arms in defence of liberty. |
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By 1915, Fallon farmers seriously considered forming a militia to wrest control of the dams and canals along the Truckee and Carson Rivers from the federal government. |
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Orwell's frustration was tempered by his growing realisation of the significance of the militia as an example of how socialism itself could be organised. |
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A healthier outlet for these energies was required, and pumping contests became popular events at picnics, holiday parades, county fairs, and militia musters. |
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He was also a Captain in the burgher militia, making him the first known Uys to partake in the long military tradition of the family in South Africa. |
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The term militia had social, military, and political significance and was linked to the organization of the different Byzantine duchies and the exarchate. |
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In other words, a bunch of guys grabbing their guns and waving a flag emblazoned with a rattlesnake is not a militia. |
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It is worth mentioning that ricin plots have been associated with domestic militia groups in the recent past. |
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Finally satisfied with the job that they had done, Loren and his militia gunmen gathered up their weapons and disappeared like wraiths into the darkness. |
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From the militia perspective, the shia factions in Iraq break down as follows. |
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The austerity measures have created a pool of discontented young men, with no prospect of a job or a future, who are being exploited by militia leaders for their own ends. |
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Without stopping, as soon as the sun rose Banastre Tarleton ordered his unrested Legion and dragoons to charge into the American militia in the center. |
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The leader of the Tutsi militia, Laurent Nkumba, was arrested in Rwanda in January 2009, so Goma was peaceful while we were there. |
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What Boston celebrates as Patriots' Day has been morphed by many into a militia rally incorporating guns, Waco and Oklahoma City. |
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Outside the cities, in the towns and villages, the situation is even more anarchic with local militia leaders and tribal chiefs battling for control. |
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Even when armed, the militia showed an unfamiliarity with guns. |
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His militia has either melted away or been killed or captured. |
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He was killed when his plane was shot down and that only encouraged the Hutu militia to slay Tutsi men, women and children, anywhere they could find them. |
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The military still had not released names but said the four included a Republican Guard corps-level chief of staff, a guard division commander and a paymaster for the militia. |
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We have destroyed significant armoury of the Taliban militia. |
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A brutal renegade Taliban militia says they interrogated, then killed, the Indian author, bizarrely claiming she was a spy. |
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But there is a middle way from clean-cut hunkdom to looking like a militia leader who might boil a hitchhiker alive. |
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However, during the truce, the party's militia would respond with force in the event it came under attack from government security forces, the rebel leader said. |
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One member is married to a former Ohio militia leader, he says, and another was kicked off Pat Buchanan's presidential campaign for alleged ties to white supremacists. |
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Before winter, the colonial militia that had captured Fort Beausejour would return home and Lawrence would be left with 250 redcoats to control 13,000 Acadians. |
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These men became free burghers or citizens who had gained their release from their contracts with the VOC by taking up plots of land and by entering into a burgher militia. |
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Men with avocational interests in military affairs organized uniformed militia units, voluntarily meeting to train and purchasing their own uniforms. |
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The only time he felt nervous was when the janjaweed militia were a few miles off and the rebels casually lay down to sleep. |
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But to stop a marauding militia that has kidnapped tens of thousands of kids over decades, a more potent force is required. |
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A third line of defence was the bourgeois militia or citizen guard. |
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Parked around the loading dock were some of the vehicles, mostly civilian but with a variety of military transports, which the militia used as part of their duties. |
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Islamist brigades including Suqur al-Sham, a 9,000-strong militia, are openly breaking with Western-favored rebel factions. |
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Members of the militias led by bin-Ahmed and al-Gharabi overlapped with the February 17 militia, the cable says. |
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In a running battle that took a heavy toll of British soldiers' lives, the New England militia forced the redcoats back to Boston and besieged the port city. |
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The affair quickly escalated and colonial militia began to entrench themselves enthusiastically around Boston Harbour, overlooking the British garrison. |
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The militia were a body of drilled troops, conscripted by law, and subject to military discipline inclding court martial. |
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But April 19th has deeper significance for members of the militia movement and their inheritors throughout the United States. |
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The incident began in Kunar province in operations against a Salafi militia known as jamaat Ud-Dawa Wal Quran. |
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White Guards continued their existence as a volunteer militia until the Second World War. |
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The Luddites rapidly gained popularity, and the British government took drastic measures, using the militia or army to protect industry. |
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The Easter Rising of 1916 was carried out by the latter group together with a smaller socialist militia, the Irish Citizen Army. |
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Due to fear of rebellions and other uprisings, they were forbidden to be armed at militia levels. |
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Although a king could raise personal militia from his lands, he could only muster a significantly large army through the support of his nobles. |
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Wolsey had many years before conducted the censuses required for an overhaul of the system of militia, but no reform resulted. |
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The Militia Ordinance was passed on 5 March by Parliament and gave Parliament control of the local militia called Trained Bands. |
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Charles raised an army using the medieval method of commission of array, and Parliament called for volunteers for its militia. |
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Before joining Parliament's forces Cromwell's only military experience was in the trained bands, the local county militia. |
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The people thus incited, De Witt and his brother, Cornelis, were brutally murdered by an Orangist civil militia in The Hague on 20 August. |
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On 27 July, a tricolour cockade was adopted as part of the uniform of the National Guard, the national police force that succeeded the militia. |
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He raised and was responsible for the efficiency of the local militia units of the county, and afterwards of the yeomanry, and volunteers. |
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For that purpose Harold had of course to trust to the landfyrd, the militia of the shires. |
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Harley obtained a commission as a major of militia foot in Herefordshire, which he held for several years. |
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Instead of the expected welcome the Jacobites were met by hostile militia armed with pitchforks and very few recruits. |
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The Continental Congress appointed George Washington to take command of the militia. |
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On the night of April 18, 1775, General Gage sent 700 men to seize munitions stored by the colonial militia at Concord, Massachusetts. |
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Throughout the winter New Jersey militia continued to harass British and Hessian forces near their three remaining posts along the Raritan River. |
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The New Jersey militia strongly rallied, however, and the British quickly returned to their bases. |
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A predominantly Bosniak special militia known as the Schutzkorps was established and carried out the persecution of Serbs. |
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The SLA and some militia groups began to enter the camps but the RUF did not. |
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The system of the Swiss militia was proposed as the best form of protection. |
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British attempts to disarm the Massachusetts militia at Concord in April 1775 led to open combat. |
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On April 18, 1775, 700 troops were sent to confiscate militia ordnance stored at Concord. |
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In Virginia, the Royal governor, Lord Dunmore, had attempted to disarm the militia as tensions increased, although no fighting broke out. |
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On March 3, 1776, the Americans landed after a bloodless exchange of fire, and the local militia offered no resistance. |
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On June 7, an invasion of 6,000 men under Hessian general Wilhelm von Knyphausen met stiff resistance from the local militia. |
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In 1775, the standing British Army, exclusive of militia, comprised 45,123 men worldwide, made up of 38,254 infantry and 6,869 cavalry. |
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Attempts were made to draft such levies, much to the chagrin of the militia commanders. |
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Recruiting adequate numbers of Loyalist militia in America proved difficult due to high Patriot activity. |
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The reforms reorganised the militia, yeomanry and volunteers into the new Territorial Army. |
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The bulk of his forces were militia who needed to harvest their crops, so on 8 September Harold dismissed the militia and the fleet. |
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They set up a militia called the Ulster Volunteers and imported 25,000 rifles from Germany. |
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In response to this the government had pushed through a Militia Act which created a large militia to defend Britain. |
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Eventually Turner was captured with 17 other rebels, who were subdued by the militia. |
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In a frenzy of fear and retaliation, the militia killed more than 100 slaves who had not been involved in the rebellion. |
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Congress followed in July, authorizing a militia draft within a state when it could not meet its quota with volunteers. |
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In the Colony of New South Wales Governor Lachlan Macquarie proposed a colonial militia but the idea was rejected. |
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Governor Ralph Darling felt a mounted police force was more efficient than a militia. |
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The system was established during the Cold War and still exists, but the members of the militia now are volunteers only. |
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From 1760s to the 1860s, local militia units were used to support British Army units stationed in Canada. |
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From 1867 to 1880s, the departure of British forces in Canada meant militia units were the only army available on Canadian soil. |
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The first notable militia in French history was the resistance of the Gauls to invasion by the Romans until they were defeated by Julius Caesar. |
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The Basij militia founded by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini in November 1980 is composed of 10,000 regular soldiers. |
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The earliest historical record of militia is found in the Old Testament and particularly the Book of Judges. |
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Since the revolution, reports of clashes and violence by militia groups have been increasing. |
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Many localized militia saw service, together with British Imperial troops, during the New Zealand land wars. |
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The Portuguese Army was then organized in three lines, with the 2nd and 3rd being militia forces. |
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The 2nd line was made of the auxiliary troops, also militia units with the role of regional defense. |
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Besides the regular militias, a number of volunteer militia units were formed to fight on both sides of the war. |
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During the 20th century, some experiments with militia type forces were made. |
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Neither the Russian Empire, nor the Soviet Union ever had an organised force that could be equated to a militia. |
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In some of these states militia was renamed back to police such as Ukraine while in the other states it remains such as Belarus. |
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In 1861, the Ceylon Light Infantry Volunteers were raised as a militia, but soon became a military reserve force. |
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This became the Ceylon Defence Force in 1910 and consisted of militia units. |
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The militia clauses of the Swiss Federal Constitution are contained in Art. |
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The latter developed into the militia, and was usually embodied by a royal warrant. |
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The militia was supposed to be mustered for training purposes from time to time, but this was rarely done. |
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The militia in Jamestown saw constant action against the Powhatan Federation and other native polities. |
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The militia was widely embodied at various times during the French and Napoleonic Wars. |
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A number of camps were held at Brighton, where the militia regiments were reviewed by the Prince Regent. |
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The Parliament of Ireland passed an act in 1715 raising regiments of militia in each county and county corporate. |
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The old traditional system continued, so that militia regiments only existed in some places. |
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This was resented by some and the Militia Club, soon to become the Poker Club, was formed to promote the raising of a Scottish militia. |
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Although muster rolls were prepared as late as 1820, the element of compulsion was abandoned, and the militia transformed into a volunteer force. |
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Until 1861 the militia were an entirely infantry force, but in that year a number of county regiments were converted to artillery. |
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In 1877 the militia of Anglesey and Monmouthshire were converted to engineers. |
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The militia must not be confused with the volunteer units created in a wave of enthusiasm in the second half of the nineteenth century. |
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The militia was transformed into the Special Reserve by the military reforms of Haldane in the reforming post 1906 Liberal government. |
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Three units still maintain their militia designation in the British Army, two in the Territorial Army and one in the Army Cadet Force. |
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The history of militia in the United States dates from the colonial era, such as in the American Revolutionary War. |
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Regulation of the militia was codified by the Second Continental Congress with the Articles of Confederation. |
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During the nineteenth century, each of the states maintained its militia differently, some more than others. |
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Prior to the Civil War, militia units were sometimes used by southern states for slave control. |
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The British raised regiments of local militia and shipped in more regular forces from Britain and Ireland. |
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News of this disaster sent a fresh wave of panic around the British colonies, and the entire militia of New England was mobilised overnight. |
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Elsewhere he identifies the settlers as 40,000 prisoners of war, only a fraction of the yearly draft of militia. |
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The structure of the Swiss militia system stipulates that the soldiers keep their Army issued equipment, including all personal weapons, at home. |
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During French rule small local volunteer militia units or colonial militias were used to provide defence needs. |
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Such wealth gave rise to social upheavals, which were for the most part harshly contained by the militia. |
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It gained flexibility and high prestige by close ties to a guild of organized militia, comprising professionals and specialized units. |
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They are the standing army, and the militia, jailers, constables, posse comitatus, etc. |
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In burning slabs like pyroclastic flow the top of the tower slewed off, militia pods falling out and tumbling. |
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Delaware is notable for being the only slave state from which no Confederate regiments or militia groups were assembled. |
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Free men of color had been members of the militia for decades under both Spanish and French control of the colony of Louisiana. |
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Anne withheld royal assent from the Scottish Militia Bill 1708 in case the militia raised in Scotland was disloyal and sided with the Jacobites. |
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He enlisted in a Delaware militia company, but saw no active service during the war. |
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Because the militia was still seeking him, he walked to London, where he found employment with Henry Maudslay as a fitter and turner. |
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By convention, irregular military is understood in contrast to regular armies which grew slowly from personal bodyguards or elite militia. |
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The number of British regular troops present in Canada in July 1812 was officially stated to be 6,034, supported by Canadian militia. |
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The failure of New England to provide militia units or financial support was a serious blow. |
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Salaberry's force of Lower Canada militia and Indians numbered only 339, but had a strong defensive position. |
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These overall Baltimore defences had been planned in advance and foreseen by the state militia commander, Maj. |
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It prompted the state of Georgia as well as the Mississippi territory militia to immediately take major action against Creek offensives. |
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These figures do not include deaths among Canadian militia forces or losses among native tribes. |
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In April 1768 Carleton had proposed the restoration of the seigneurial militia system. |
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There also appeared to be a few cossacks and Russian-speaking militia. |
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We don't see much of Mohammad's army, though there is a terrific scene of Marines sharing the lad mag FHM with the militia. |
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In response, the South Ossetian militia was mobilized and additional medical supplies were stockpiled at the Tskhinvali hospital. |
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The abduction of hundreds of young Nigerian girls by the militia Boko Haram has been front-page news for weeks. |
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Spending millions on speech is more like raising your own militia. |
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Soon the planter militia broke the slave line and the slaughter began. |
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He is accused of working with Interahamwe militia to murder Tutsis that were attempting to cross border to Burundi. |
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In 1990-91, Habyarimana began to transform an armed gang into a militia called Interahamwe. |
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In February 1778, an expedition of militia to destroy British military supplies in settlements along the Cuyahoga River was halted due to adverse weather. |
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The militia objected to serving outside their home states, were not open to discipline, and performed poorly against British forces when outside their home states. |
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Free Companies would often specialize in forms of combat that required longer periods of training that was not available in the form of a mobilized militia. |
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In 1720, Rogers led local militia to drive off a Spanish attack. |
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The city maintained a militia as a permanent paramilitary body. |
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Army and state militia troops from surrounding counties and states. |
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Furthermore, the size of the Cape garrison could be reduced if there were many colonists capable of being called up for militia service as needed. |
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The militia is the sum total of persons undergoing this change of state. |
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The militia thus appealed to agricultural labourers, colliers and the like, men in casual occupations, who could leave their civilian job and pick it up again. |
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In the late 17th century came calls for the resurrection of militia in Scotland that had the understated aim of protecting the rights of Scots from English oppression. |
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Except for the London trained bands, both sides in the Civil War made little use of the militia, preferring to recruit their armies by other means. |
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Consequently, an elite force was created, composed of members of the militia who were prepared to meet regularly for military training and exercise. |
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With the decay of the feudal system and the military revolution of the 16th century, the militia began to become an important institution in English life. |
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It is primarily organised according to the principle of a militia. |
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With the escalation of the Sri Lankan Civil War, local villagers under threat of attack were formed into localized militia to protect their families and homes. |
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This was due to the reason that the Kings never maintained a standing army instead had a Royal Guard during peace time and formed a militia in wartime. |
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The first militias formed in Sri Lanka were by Lankan Kings, who raised militia armies for their military campaigns both within and outside the island. |
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From 1911 to 1926, the Portuguese Army was organized as a militia army. |
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The Einwohnerwehr, active in Germany from 1919 to 1921 was a paramilitary citizens' militia consisting of hundreds of thousands of mostly former servicemen. |
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He supported the local militia, providing money for weapons. |
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Lincoln responded by establishing martial law, and unilaterally suspending habeas corpus, in Maryland, along with sending in militia units from the North. |
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Soon Numan had picked up a fiercely loyal fan militia called the Numanoids, who followed him with the obsessive tenacity that only sustained ridicule can foster. |
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A final attempt in 1812 by American General Henry Dearborn to advance north from Lake Champlain failed when his militia refused to advance beyond American territory. |
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Overnight, the local militia converged on and laid siege to Boston. |
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The Indonesian Armed Forces was formed during the Indonesian National Revolution, when it undertook a guerrilla warfare along with informal militia. |
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Disappointed, he settled for a colonelcy in the Illinois militia. |
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The Houthi militia has clashed repeatedly with tribes as they have advanced into confessionally mixed areas of central Yemen since overrunning the capital last September. |
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During the training mission, a patrol returning from a visit to Jordanian peacekeepers was taken captive by a militia group known as the West Side Boys. |
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British colonial militia from Virginia were then sent to drive them out. |
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In 1913, during the general strike known as the Dublin Lockout, Connolly and James Larkin formed a workers militia, the Irish Citizen Army, to defend strikers from the police. |
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They were met by a quickly assembled group of around 500 British reservists, militia and sailors under the command of John Campbell, 1st Baron Cawdor. |
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Furthermore, despite the fact that at its height, the British fielded some 56,000 men in the colonies exclusive of mercenaries and militia, they lacked sufficient numbers. |
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The development of the Continental Army was always a work in progress, and Washington used both his regulars and state militia throughout the war. |
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A detachment sent out to seize supplies was decisively defeated in the Battle of Bennington by American militia in August, depriving Burgoyne of nearly 1,000 men. |
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The militia converged on Boston, bottling up the British in the city. |
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In 1725 Wade raised the Black Watch as a militia to keep peace in the unruly Highlands, but in 1743 they were moved to fight the French in Flanders. |
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The militia tasked with controlling the situation fired into the mob. |
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Violent scenes in 1682 forced London's militia into action, and to prevent any repetition the following year a proclamation was issued, banning bonfires and fireworks. |
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Both nations enlisted large numbers of sedentary militia who were unsuited for campaigning, and were mostly employed to release regular forces for active duty. |
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The Paris militia, formed on 13 July, adopted a blue and red cockade. |
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The generals supervised militia forces and security commissions, collected taxes and ensured support for the government in the English and Welsh provinces. |
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The generals not only supervised militia forces and security commissions, but collected taxes and ensured support for the government in the English and Welsh provinces. |
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The NUP leader left the country in August 2014 after a month in jail over remarks he made against the government militia known as the Rapid Support Force. |
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At Turnham Green on the outskirts of London, the royalist army met resistance from the city militia, and faced with a numerically superior force, Charles ordered a retreat. |
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Lloyd, ostensibly straight, plays a gay man before his straight friends, who are themselves playing specific types of other straight men, homophobic militia types. |
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According to local residents, the Fazah owns a shop in the souk and pays protection money to a local militia to ensure the well-being of his business. |
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On Thursday, the militants overrun and destroyed three checkposts at Hassan Khal and Jina Kor areas, killing two and kidnapping 23 militia personnel. |
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The British, having cleared the open field, now faced the problem of advancing through the trees into the sniper fire of several hundred Virginia militia. |
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Jackson's army of 1,000 regulars and 3,000 to 4,000 militia, pirates and other fighters, as well as civilians and slaves built fortifications south of the city. |
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He decided to combine his force with that of the Georgia militia. |
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When he left the next day, the reinforcements and local militia attacked. |
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In contrast to the American militia, the Canadian militia performed well. |
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He retains a detailed knowledge of uniforms and parade punctilio, and his sartorial finery is legendary within the Waitati Militia. |
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In reality, Camerons, MacDonalds and Chattans fought Campbells, Munros and the many other clansmen that joined the ranks of the Argyll Militia. |
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Militia officials would select patrollers from each district's rolls to serve for designated periods. |
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He hugged me, introduced me to some of The Fine Arts Militia, and they did a banging performance knocking us all down with the funk. |
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Militia units, particularly elite volunteer regiments, used the occasion to march in parades and display their military prowess and social standing. |
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The War Hawks retreated and regrouped, and the Militia tended its wounds. |
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The government hoped to defend the mainland by fortifying the coast with Martello towers, embodying the Militia, and extending the Militia Acts to Scotland and Ireland. |
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Militia men bought and maintained their own weapons and armour, according to their family status and wealth. |
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In December 1641, Parliament asserted control over appointment of Army and Navy commanders in the Militia Ordinance. |
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A Militia Act was passed to create a sizable force to defend Britain which would free up regular troops for operations overseas. |
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Pym's Militia Bill was intended to wrest control of the army from the king, but it did not have the support of the Lords, let alone Charles. |
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In response to the Militia Ordinance, Charles revived the Commissions of Array as a means of summoning an army instead. |
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Like many other American states, Texas maintains a recognized State Militia, the Texas State Guard. |
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The military of Belize dates back to 1817, when the Prince Regent Royal Honduras Militia, a volunteer organization, was founded. |
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The Guernsey Militia was operational in 1337 and would help defend the island for a further 600 years. |
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Far to the North, Bermuda's regiment of Militia and its coastal batteries prepared to resist an invasion that never came. |
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The club played at the Militia Barracks from 1870 to 1888 before moving to Cardigan Fields, near Headingley, Leeds. |
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He shared Tom Wintringham's socialist vision for the Home Guard as a revolutionary People's Militia. |
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The Militia Act 1882 revested the jurisdiction of the lieutenants in the crown. |
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The king rejected the Grand Remonstrance and refused to give royal assent to the Militia Ordinance. |
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Night lettergrams were sent to each of the 226 unit commanders of the Active Militia. |
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Volunteers have served since the regiment's inception in Montreal on January 31st, 1862 as the 5th Battalion, Volunteer Militia Rilles of Canada. |
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In addition, the local Militia also kept in a high state of readiness, training on Dartmoor, often at Haytor. |
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Regional units included the Zhob Militia, the Kurram Militia, and the Chagai Militia. |
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In the 17th Century, however, Bermuda's defence was left entirely in the hands of the Militia. |
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