outlawry

  • 31Edward I of England — Edward I redirects here. For other kings who might be known by this name, see King Edward. Edward I Longshanks …

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  • 32Ban (law) — A ban is, generally, any decree that prohibits something. Smoking is banned in public buildings in many parts of the world. Bans are formed for the prohibition of activities within a certain political territory. Some see this as a negative act… …

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  • 33Anglo-Saxon law — While there is virtually no evidence of Anglo Saxon law per se (i.e. case law and jurisprudence), a significant amount of the literature of law from the Anglo Saxon period still survives. Discussion of Anglo Saxon law must, therefore, be confined …

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  • 34Ergi — (noun) and argr (adjective) are two Old Norse terms of insult, denoting effeminacy or other unmanly behavior. Argr (also ragr ) is unmanly and ergi is unmanliness ; the terms have cognates in other Germanic languages such as earh , earg , arag ,… …

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  • 35Hostis humani generis — (Latin for enemy of mankind ) is a legal term of art, originating from the admiralty law, and referring to the peculiar status, before the public international law, of maritime pirates, since time immemorial, and slavers, since the 18th century.… …

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  • 36Newtone — в студии (Кирилл Fender и HarDrum) …

    Википедия

  • 37proscription — proscriptive /proh skrip tiv/, adj. proscriptively, adv. /proh skrip sheuhn/, n. 1. the act of proscribing. 2. the state of being proscribed. 3. outlawry, interdiction, or prohibition. [1350 1400; ME proscripcioun < L proscription (s. of&#8230; …

    Universalium

  • 38Cassidy, Butch — orig. Robert Leroy Parker born April 13, 1866, Beaver, Utah, U.S. died 1909?, Concordia Tin Mines, near San Vicente, Bol.? U.S. outlaw. Taking his name from an older outlaw mentor, Cassidy was a cattle rustler and a robber from the mid 1880s. In&#8230; …

    Universalium

  • 39Islamic views on slavery — …

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  • 40Nīþ — For the cursing pole, see Nithing pole. In historical Germanic society, nīþ (Old Norse: níð; Old English: nīþ, nīð); was a term for a social stigma implying the loss of honour and the status of a villain. A person affected with the stigma is a&#8230; …

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