In 196 BC Rome established a new Thessalian Confederacy which survived the absorption of the area into the Roman province of Macedonia. |
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In short, Higham asserts Lincoln signed his own death warrant by permitting Union merchants to trade with the Confederacy during the Civil War. |
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It was the tyrants ruling the Confederacy with an iron fist who kept her from her mother and me. |
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Theodore Roosevelt was an heir, and an ideologue, of the defeated Confederacy. |
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Only the most revisionist historian would characterize the Confederacy as an insurgency. |
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The Oneidas are members of the Iroquois Confederacy, also known as the League of the Haudenosaunee, or Six Nations. |
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His historic march to the sea was the campaign that broke the back of the Confederacy. |
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With an independent Confederacy, Northern goods would have been transformed into dutiable foreign trade. |
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Over the course of the Civil War, 19 officers of the Confederacy wore the rank of lieutenant general. |
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In fact, we think she's a Utopian sent to foment unrest within the Confederacy. |
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The submission of Clopton to his beating was symbolic of the defeat the Confederacy would suffer in less than a year. |
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Alexander Stephens, vice president of the Confederacy, summed up the Southern attitude in his 1861 Cornerstone Speech. |
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And it is a situation impossible to brush under the carpet because the Confederacy transformed the Union. |
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They severed the last railroad lifeline into Atlanta, making the citadel of the Confederacy as it was touted no longer tenable. |
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I recall wondering if the Sons of the Confederacy or some such organization might summon up similar chutzpah to package a Jim Crow tour of the Old South. |
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He wrangled horses for the Confederacy during the Civil War. |
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Early in the eighteenth century the Tuscarora, another Iroquoian-speaking tribe living in North Carolina, moved into the territory occupied by the Confederacy. |
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The Confederacy failed, narrowly in several instances, to wrest even temporary control of important American waters, despite vigorous efforts to obtain a strong navy. |
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The recent cooperation between the Republic and the Confederacy after the Confederate Civil War was a start on lifting the shroud of hatred that separated Terrans and Gaians. |
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Rather, they have lain dormant to haunt us in various guises since the Confederacy was brought to heel. |
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Virginia secessionists and their cotton state allies, after all, would have to make concrete predictions about the economic vitality of the Confederacy. |
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Stuart, the close friend of General Jackson and dashing beau sabreur of the Confederacy, is considered one of the great cavalry commanders of the Civil War. |
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Thus, the Confederacy could have entered the second year of the war in a stronger position than it actually did, having embargoed exports of raw cotton. |
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The New Swiss too, being primarily Terrans, had more fealty to their brother and sister Terrans in the Republic than to the Gaians in the Confederacy. |
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The decision by the Confederacy in February 1861 to levy a tariff on the import of goods provoked a discussion about the expanding trade between the Upper and Lower South. |
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The recurring raids prompted the French to help their Indian allies attack the Iroquois in 1609, opening a new technological era for the people of the Confederacy. |
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Its ports were so isolated they were unattractive even to blockade runners, and goods imported there took months to filter north to the heart of the Confederacy. |
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This time, the heirs of the Confederacy have learned that is more effective to suborn the government than secede. |
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While the figures of 360,000 army deaths for the Union and 260,000 for the Confederacy remained commonly cited, they are incomplete. |
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They were a tribe of the Powhatan Confederacy, who had three towns in the area of modern Smithfield. |
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The Old Swiss Confederacy was an alliance among the valley communities of the central Alps. |
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After 1490, canton was increasingly used in French and Italian documents to refer to the members of the Swiss Confederacy. |
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The Powhatan Confederacy was a confederation of numerous linguistically related tribes in the eastern part of Virginia. |
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The Powhatan Confederacy controlled a territory known as Tsenacommacah, which roughly corresponded with the Tidewater region of Virginia. |
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In the late 17th century, the Iroquois Confederacy expanded into the Western region of Virginia as part of the Beaver Wars. |
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By June 1865, the Union Army controlled all of the Confederacy and liberated all of the designated slaves. |
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Still, afterward, the Iroquois Confederacy offered shelter to refugees of the Mascouten, Erie, Chonnonton, Tutelo, Saponi and Tuscarora nations. |
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The current six tribes of the Iroquois Confederacy are the Seneca, Cayuga, Onondaga, Oneida, Tuscarora and Mohawk. |
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Throughout these wars, New England was allied with the Iroquois Confederacy and New France was allied with the Wabanaki Confederacy. |
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It broke the power of the Creek Confederacy and opened to settlement a great province of the future Cotton Kingdom. |
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In 1860, there were more cotton spindles in Lowell than in all eleven states combined that would form the Confederacy. |
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He rejected the offer, stating in essence, that the Union could afford to leave their men in captivity, the Confederacy could not. |
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The Seneca, Onondaga, and Cayuga of the Iroquois Confederacy also allied with the British against the Americans. |
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The Emancipation Proclamation over time would reinforce the political liability of supporting the Confederacy. |
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Since support of the Confederacy now meant supporting the institution of slavery, there was no possibility of European intervention. |
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Through 1862, Napoleon III met unofficially with Confederate diplomats, raising their hopes that he would unilaterally recognize the Confederacy. |
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The state was quickly defeated in the Civil War, a result of Union strategy to cut the Confederacy in two by seizing the Mississippi. |
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During the American Civil War, the Confederacy sent out several commerce raiders, the most famous of which was the CSS Alabama. |
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Many of the supplies brought into the Confederacy were carried aboard privately owned vessels. |
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Since support of the Confederacy now meant support for slavery, there was no longer any possibility of European intervention. |
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Under their leader, Akali Phula Singh, they won many battles for the Sikh Confederacy during the early 19th century. |
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The contract was arranged through the Fraser Trenholm Company, a cotton broker in Liverpool with ties to the Confederacy. |
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Between 21 May and 28 November 1861, six more Southern states seceded and joined the Confederacy. |
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When Semmes returned to the Confederacy from England, he brought this ceremonial Stainless Banner with him. |
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The Mughal empire, which was descended from the Mongol Khanate, was bested by the upcoming Maratha Confederacy. |
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The Confederacy had a larger area than it could defend, and it failed to keep its ports open and its rivers clear. |
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When Abraham Lincoln won the 1860 election on a platform of halting the expansion of slavery, seven states broke away to form the Confederacy. |
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By June 1865, the Union Army controlled all of the Confederacy and had liberated all of the designated slaves. |
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The proclamation made the abolition of slavery an official war goal that was implemented as the Union took territory from the Confederacy. |
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The Confederacy was outraged by armed black soldiers and refused to treat them as prisoners of war. |
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On March 21, 1861, Vice President Alexander Stephens of the Confederacy, delivered the Cornerstone Speech. |
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The Confederacy collapsed, slavery was abolished, and 4 million slaves were freed. |
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The 1863 Union Siege of Vicksburg split the Confederacy in two at the Mississippi River. |
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Before Lincoln took office in March 1861, seven slave states had declared their secession and joined to form the Confederacy. |
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The system of exchanges collapsed in 1863 when the Confederacy refused to exchange black prisoners. |
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Lacking the technology and infrastructure to build effective warships, the Confederacy attempted to obtain warships from Britain. |
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Emboldened by Second Bull Run, the Confederacy made its first invasion of the North. |
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Leonidas Polk's invasion of Columbus, Kentucky ended Kentucky's policy of neutrality and turned that state against the Confederacy. |
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About 12,000 Indian warriors fought for the Confederacy, and smaller numbers for the Union. |
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Despite sympathy for the Confederacy, France's own seizure of Mexico ultimately deterred them from war with the Union. |
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In 1813, at the Battle of Lake Erie the Americans won control of Lake Erie and at the Battle of the Thames, defeated Tecumseh's Confederacy, securing a primary war goal. |
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It also helped to turn European opinion further away from the Confederacy. |
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Joseph Brant of the powerful Mohawk nation, part of the Iroquois Confederacy based in New York, was the most prominent Indian leader against the Colonial forces. |
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Some of the more prolific slave traders were linked with the Oyo Empire in the southwest, the Aro Confederacy in the southeast and the Sokoto Caliphate in the north. |
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For much of the 17th century, English contact and conflict was mostly with the Algonquian peoples that populated the coastal regions, primarily the Powhatan Confederacy. |
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In the peace treaty of October 1646, the new weroance, Necotowance, and the subtribes formerly in the Confederacy, each became tributaries to the King of England. |
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Opechancanough's death resulted in the disintegration of the Powhatan Confederacy into its component tribes, whom the colonists continued to attack. |
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The Landsgemeinde assembly is a tradition with continuity back to the later Middle Ages, first recorded in the context of the formation of the Old Swiss Confederacy. |
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The Confederacy, governed by nobles of various cantons, facilitated management of common interests and ensured peace on the important mountain trade routes. |
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The establishment of the Old Swiss Confederacy dates to the late medieval period, resulting from a series of military successes against Austria and Burgundy. |
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He also argues that if the Confederacy had fought using unconventional tactics, they would have more easily been able to hold out long enough to exhaust the Union. |
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Historians have debated whether the Confederacy could have won the war. |
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To fight an offensive war, the Confederacy purchased ships from Britain, converted them to warships, and raided American merchant ships in the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. |
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Not long after the battle the Confederacy was forced to scuttle the Virginia to prevent its capture, while the Union built many copies of the Monitor. |
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A Unionist secession attempt occurred in East Tennessee, but was suppressed by the Confederacy, which arrested over 3,000 men suspected of being loyal to the Union. |
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During a brief invasion by Confederate forces, Confederate sympathizers organized a secession convention, inaugurated a governor, and gained recognition from the Confederacy. |
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The Latin name of the Swiss Confederacy, Confoederatio Helvetica, harks back to the Helvetii, the name of Galicia to the Gallaeci and the Auvergne of France to the Averni. |
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The Confederacy awarded him posthumously the Confederate Medal of Honor and the medal was finally minted and presented in 1977 by The Sons of Confederate Veterans. |
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The new editorial board supported an immediate peace between the Union and the Confederacy in the Civil War in the United States with slavery left intact in the Confederacy. |
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In Latin texts, a canton of the Helvetic Confederacy is rendered pagus. |
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During 1861 to 1862, at the beginning of the American Civil War, Napoleon III considered recognizing the Confederacy in order to protect his operations in Mexico. |
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