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Declaration & interpretation du roy sur l'edict de la pacification des troubles pour le faict de la religion; Declaration & interpretation dv roy svr l'edict de la pacification des troubles pour le faict de la religion
Further interpretation concerning the Edict of Pacification of 29 March 1562. This specific interpretation restricted the practice of the protestant religion to the individual's own private home, and not in a public meeting place. "Donne à Paris, le quatorzieme iour de Decembre, l'an de grace mil cinq cens soixante trois." ; Electronic reproduction; [24] p. ; 16 cm. (8vo).
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Declaratio[n] & interpretation du roy sur l'edict de la pacification des troubles pour le faict de la religion. : publié en la cour de Parlement à Paris, le xx Decembre, 1563; Declaration et interpretation dv Roy svr l'edict de la pacification des trouble pour le faict de la religion; Declaratio et ...
Renewal of the Decree of Amboise, March 1563, which recognized the Reformed faith. ; Electronic reproduction; [24] p. ; 17 cm. (4to)
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Herodiani Histor. lib. 8
In: http://mdz-nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:12-bsb11088417-6
cum Ang. Politiani interpretatione, et huius partim supplemento, partim examine Henr. Stephani . ; Volltext // Exemplar mit der Signatur: Regensburg, Staatliche Bibliothek -- 999/Class.157
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Challenges in completing EMU: asymmetric competition vs fiscal harmonisation. A case study of the Benelux countries
In: http://orbilu.uni.lu/handle/10993/35335
This paper aims to investigate the concept, context and socio-economic consequences of fiscal competition in the integrated economic space of EMU in completion, to pinpoint the positive and negative factors at work via a case study of the Benelux countries – both founder members of the EU and pioneers of EMU – and to examine the impact on European and international regulations in the field. In particular, it will endeavour to provide a comprehensive interpretation of fiscal policy in the Benelux countries via a comparative approach and from a historical perspective. It will look at the development of respective domestic fiscal policies, driven by national interests and by membership of a Community that is subject to requirements in terms of harmonisation and taxation, but also by constant contact (and frequent clashes) with the multilateral international environment.
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Monumenta emblematorum Christianorum virtutum : tum politicarum, tum oeconomicarum chorum centuria una adumbrantia
In: http://hdl.handle.net/2027/uiuo.ark:/13960/t6qz2rb5c
Contemporary leather binding in poor condition, with gilted spine . ; Book dealers label inside front cover: Marks & Co., Antiquarian Booksellers, 84 Charing Cross Rd., London, W.C. 2. ; Irregularities in pagination: p. 430 and 431 numbered 422 and 423 respectively. ; On verso of first fly-leaf a ms. signature in ink: "G. P.(?) Boyer, April 9, 1881" ; on verso of t.p. ms. note in different hand: "Siempre ellmismo. Hop with patiente. H. Groot." ; Includes portrait of Georgette de Montenay with emblem by Pierre Woeiriot. ; "Rhythmis gallicis elegantissimis primùm conscripta, figuris aeneis incisa, & ad instar Albi amicorum exhibita, . et nunc interpretatione Metrica, Latina, Hispanica, Italica, Germanica, Anglica & Belgica, donata." ; Title within engraved, ornamental border. ; Signatures: A-2E8. ; Praz ; McGeary & Nash. Emblem books at the University of Illinois, ; Mode of access: Internet.
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Copyright at the CJEU: Back to the start (of copyright protection)
In its 2009 decision in Infopaq (C-5/08), the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) achieved a landmark result: the de facto, horizontal harmonization of the originality requirement. After that, nothing could stay the same. After providing an overview of the harmonization process in the copyright field over the past 30 years or so and, with that, the environment in which Infopaq came to be, this chapter considers Infopaq and the expansive effect of subsequent case law on other copyright subsistence requirements. The analysis also notes how the eventual outcome of Cofemel (C-683/17), insofar as works of applied art are concerned, is perfectly in line with such a jurisprudence. The chapter further considers the legal and institutional difficulties that such a string of CJEU decisions has given rise to and is yet to resolve before concluding that further questions are likely to be posed to the CJEU in the not too distant future. In other words: the construction of EU copyright is far from over.
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"Up and down" : Genoese financiers and their relational capital in the early reign of Philip II
Defence date: 26 January 2021 ; Examining board: Professor Regina Grafe (European University Institute); Professor Luca Molà (University of Warwick); Professor Carmen Sanz Ayán (Universidad Complutense de Madrid); Professor Manuel Herrero Sánchez (Universidad Pablo de Olavide) ; This doctoral thesis analyses the process of state construction in the early modern period from a joint perspective that amalgamates the agencies of state officials, lending communities, and local elites in the Hispanic Monarchy during the four initial years of Philip II's reign. The project examines the convergence of private agendas inside and outside the royal administration, which were channelled by the Genoese lending community to overcome the consolidation of royal short-term debt in 1557 and its consequences. The application of an institutional approach, based on the works of Avner Greif, to the analysis of the social organisations that prevented a failure of coordination in the Hispanic Monarchy offers a fresh perspective on a topic normally assessed under predatory models. The specific study of two Genoese lenders who contributed to the establishment of a more viable and efficient financial system in the monarchy, Costantin Gentil and Nicolao de Grimaldo, provides details about how interregional transactions and local economies contributed to the consolidation of the early modern state.
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Wealth, Violance and Status: Lay and Ecclesiastical ?lites in the Middle Loire Valley, c. 850- c. 1150
APPROVED ; Interpretations of the period following the disintegration of the Carolingian empire in Western Europe at the end of the ninth century have long divided historians, between those who believe a violent rupture in political and social structures took place around the year 1000 and those who argue for an essential continuity. This thesis aims to transcend these debates, by approaching medieval society through a case-study in the Loire valley region relying on two fresh methodological insights. Firstly, it will investigate changes in the economic structures which provided society's material base; secondly, it will analyse how those ?lites claimed, performed and maintained their status. Based on these two approaches, the thesis explores changing patterns of ?lite behaviour in order to better understand the social and economic changes which took place from the late ninth century onwards. The thesis examines the effects of shifting landholding patterns, the emergence of seigneurial customs, changing attitudes to church patronage and lay violence, and the methods by which ?lites were identified in documents, to establish their implications for the ways by which ?lites could claim and maintain their status. It concludes that there was a significant and fundamental transformation of social and economic structures, beginning in the middle of the tenth century, in the middle Loire valley, although the pace of change is slower than would be appropriate for a 'Feudal Revolution'. Nevertheless, the breakdown of the Carolingian political order unleashed a wave of competition amongst local and regional ?lites, which saw them innovate and adapt the heritage of Carolingian culture to create a new, 'feudal' social order. This was fuelled by the changes in economic structures which provided ?lites with more wealth to promote their own status; the competition for status in turn fuelled ?lites' need for more wealth and their incentive for economic expansion.
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