Strasbourg were reduced to 10 men early in the second half when striker Lionel Rouxel was dismissed for elbowing an opponent. |
|
After submitting a thesis on abelian functions, he received his doctorate in 1895 from the University of Strasbourg. |
|
I do not myself consider that the Strasbourg jurisprudence can be so neatly encapsulated. |
|
The Strasbourg case law refers to actual bodily injury or intense physical or mental suffering. |
|
However, some commentators argue that new material in the Strasbourg papyrus lends weight to the traditional interpretation. |
|
There are 50 people, including personal assistants, travelling from all over Ireland to the Strasbourg rally. |
|
The idea of adding the EU's emblem to the red ensign was rejected in a vote in Strasbourg on tighter controls on maritime safety. |
|
Strasbourg is a central seat of administration for them, that's right, just as it is for the European Commission. |
|
In the following year they surveyed the perpendicular to the meridian east of Paris, triangulating the area between Paris and Strasbourg. |
|
The Strasbourg Court has also upheld the procedure for challenging land reform orders issued by local authorities in Austria. |
|
The approach under the Strasbourg jurisprudence and under English domestic law is the same. |
|
Almost equally unpublicised was a meeting at the Council of Europe in Strasbourg this week. |
|
Its citizens would directly elect its own president, who would choose a cabinet, with an inner core of MEPs at Strasbourg acting as a democratic counterbalance. |
|
This nuanced study of the U.K. shows how difficult it can be to really tell if Strasbourg judgments and decisions have in practice been properly executed. |
|
Polls nevertheless have put UKIP in first place in the UK, with estimates it could virtually double its seats in Strasbourg. |
|
He came to Strasbourg, France, to witness the free speech argument in Harry Evans's landmark thalidomide case. |
|
The last time a Pope addressed the parliament in Strasbourg was in 1988 when an Iron Curtain still divided the continent. |
|
A similar daintiness animates the statues added around 1300-22 to Strasbourg Cathedral, the minster at Freiburg im Breisgau, and Cologne Cathedral. |
|
Before the Findlay decision was given in Strasbourg, the British government had in fact sought and obtained legislation in Parliament to reform the court martial system. |
|
There was intense behind-the-scenes activity in Strasbourg last night as political groups tried to reach a compromise before the report is debated today. |
|
|
Anti-immigration and anti-euro currency, she has set her sights on blocking the controversial EU-U.S. trade pact in Strasbourg. |
|
By taking the offensive in strength in Lorraine, the French seized the initiative and forced the Germans to fight the decisive battle there between Metz and Strasbourg. |
|
What a scene it must have been for the immense army of journalists, lobbyists and poules de luxe who follow the Euro parliament's caravanserai from Brussels to Strasbourg. |
|
His plan is to make us all stakeholders in the new European order by giving the national parliaments of Europe more of a say in what goes on in Brussels and Strasbourg. |
|
The kingdom of Alamannia between Strasbourg and Augsburg lasted until 496, when the Alemanni were conquered by Clovis I at the Battle of Tolbiac. |
|
It was printed for the first time between 1474 and 1482, probably at Strasbourg, France. |
|
Even the state's loss in a battle at the European Court of Human Rights at Strasbourg in 2007 did not settle the matter. |
|
Besides its headquarters in Strasbourg, the Council of Europe is also present in other cities and countries. |
|
Calvin was invited to lead a church of French refugees in Strasbourg by that city's leading reformers, Martin Bucer and Wolfgang Capito. |
|
Born in Strasbourg in 1887, Arp was already participating in the vibrant artistic scene in his native Alsace as a 15-year-old. |
|
This is one of the results of a new European survey presented today at Heart Failure 2003 in Strasbourg. |
|
So watch Yellen's Senate testimony, Dr Draghi's speech at Strasbourg, Portugal's bond market and the Germen Zew index. |
|
It took until two minutes before the break for McManaman to force the first save of the game out of Strasbourg keeper Alex Vencel. |
|
The UMP was poised to win several key cities, including Strasbourg and Toulouse. |
|
In early 2011, the Parliament voted to scrap one of the Strasbourg sessions by holding two within a single week. |
|
Under the Act, individuals retain the right to sue in the Strasbourg court. |
|
It is overseen and enforced by the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg, and the Council of Europe. |
|
Studying Protestants in Strasbourg also exposes the cutting issues of identity that were so much a part of the Second Reich. |
|
The provisional arrangements placed Parliament in Strasbourg, while the Commission and Council had their seats in Brussels. |
|
Both the Brussels and Strasbourg hemicycle roughly follow this layout with only minor differences. |
|
|
In the Oaths of Strasbourg, in 842, Charles and Louis agreed to declare Lothar unfit for the imperial throne. |
|
Considered a milestone in European history, the Oaths of Strasbourg symbolize the birth of both France and Germany. |
|
The most important tributaries in this area are the Ill below of Strasbourg, the Neckar in Mannheim and the Main across from Mainz. |
|
Strasbourg is the seat of the European Parliament, and so one of the three European capitals is located on the Upper Rhine. |
|
The Secretariat of the European Parliament is located in Luxembourg, but the Parliament usually meets in Brussels and sometimes in Strasbourg. |
|
The economic and cultural capital as well as largest city of Alsace is Strasbourg. |
|
Strasbourg began to grow to become the most populous and commercially important town in the region. |
|
It took up winter quarters, demanded the submission of Metz and Strasbourg and launched an attack on Basel. |
|
The Roman dioceses of Strasbourg and Basel covered Alsace and that of Chur, as mentioned, Rhaetia. |
|
The European Council should not be mistaken for the Council of Europe, an international organisation independent of the EU based in Strasbourg. |
|
At the invitation of Martin Bucer, Calvin proceeded to Strasbourg, where he became the minister of a church of French refugees. |
|
In August he set off for Strasbourg, a free imperial city of the Holy Roman Empire and a refuge for reformers. |
|
Calvin probably wrote it during the period following Cop's speech, but it was not published until 1542 in Strasbourg. |
|
Under the leadership of Martin Bucer, the cities of Strasbourg, Constance, Memmingen, and Lindau produced the Tetrapolitan Confession. |
|
All the EU's judicial bodies are based in Luxembourg, separate from the political institutions in Brussels and Strasbourg. |
|
One of the best is Chez Yvonne at 10 Rue de Sanglier in Strasbourg, where French president Jacques Chirac is seen when he's in town. |
|
Goalkeeper Alexander Vencel is with Strasbourg, top midfielder Peter Dubovski plays for Real Oviedad and Ivan Maravcik has to get to Belfast from Bastia in Corsica. |
|
Anthony Harriman of the Louis Pasteur University in Strasbourg, France, devised a system in which donors and acceptors intercalate into DNA, with random separations. |
|
The endless Eurobabble generated in the red tape jungles of Brussels and Strasbourg are not going to make any more sense if they are presented in gaelic. |
|
This is what happened in Strasbourg, as Lorna Jane Abray shows, and similar stories are told by Bruce Gordon for Berne and by the late Hans Guggisberg for Basel. |
|
|
It was in Strasbourg that German was first used for the liturgy. |
|
The headquarters of the Council of Europe are in Strasbourg, France. |
|
There are European Youth Centres in Budapest, Hungary, and in Strasbourg. |
|
The Strasbourg seat is seen as a symbol of reconciliation between France and Germany, the Strasbourg region having been fought over by the two countries in the past. |
|
This was considered to be a replacement for the loss of the University of Strasbourg on the west bank of the Rhine, which reverted to France with the rest of Alsace. |
|
Given France's declared intention to veto any relocation to Brussels, some MEPs have advocated civil disobedience by refusing to take part in the monthly exodus to Strasbourg. |
|
The Le Havre Palace of Justice is located on the Boulevard de Strasbourg. |
|
It locates the formal seat of European Parliament in the French city of Strasbourg, where votes take place, with the Council, on the proposals made by the Commission. |
|
Weighing in at over 19 stone, the 6ft 1in scrummager is a well-travelled commodity, having previously packed down with Narbonne, Strasbourg, Auch, Pay's d'Aix and Bourgoin. |
|
In 1955, the Council of Europe was formed in Strasbourg following a speech by Sir Winston Churchill, with the idea of unifying Europe to achieve common goals. |
|
He was later jailed for trying to lead a revolt in Strasbourg. |
|
He went to Strasbourg, where he published a pamphlet against the Trinity. |
|
It stated the Parliament would retain its formal seat in Strasbourg, where twelve sessions a year would be held, but with all other parliamentary activity in Brussels. |
|
All 47 member states of the Council of Europe have signed this Convention, and are therefore under the jurisdiction of the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg. |
|
He was a UK delegate to the Council of Europe Consultative Assembly in Strasbourg from 1952 to 1955, majoring on simplifying European visa and border controls. |
|
After Frisia, he stopped at the court of Dagobert II in Austrasia, where the king offered Wilfrid the Bishopric of Strasbourg, which Wilfrid refused. |
|
In a challenge, the Strasbourg Court held that having a politician sitting in judgment in a court was a breach of any litigants' right to a fair trial. |
|