The most powerful secular landlords in England founded new communities for canons and built outsized churches for them. |
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Now the police are keen to extend the scheme to the whole of Craven and will write to landlords and licensees explaining how it works. |
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He called for landlords, the drinks industry and hoteliers to work together to ease the passage of the Bill. |
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There will also be informal ballots organised by individual landlords at hundreds of pubs in Manchester. |
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If louts strike at one pub or club, landlords and managers can get onto the phone to the next pub to tell the doormen who to look out for. |
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It's a far cry from the message that went out last month when licensing officials urged landlords not to rush applications. |
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Croydon Council managed to solve the problem by providing landlords with their licences by the next day. |
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Council officers will explain what grants are available to help landlords renovating homes. |
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Rather than charge monthly rent, most landlords used to require tenants to put up huge cash deposits, often hundreds of thousands of dollars. |
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How can landlords be allowed to harass tenants who pay their rent, just because they have other plans for the property? |
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In 1997, a change in the law meant it became easier for landlords to evict tenants who weren't paying their rent. |
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Rogue landlords have been renting out student houses in Lismore Park and Lismore Lawn as holiday homes to unsuspecting tourists. |
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Even the tax on income from rentals is low, so absentee landlords are proliferating. |
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With rent control illegal for commercial and office spaces, non-residential landlords are free to raise rents to market value or above. |
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How do prospective renters convince landlords that they and their pets are model citizens? |
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All of us afflicted by landlords merely vow to hate them without mercy for the entire day. |
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Pub landlords and club owners claim a ban will ruin trade and could lead to the loss of jobs. |
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He believes that this is a city-wide problem and there are other landlords and restaurateurs in the same situation. |
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Others admit they are afraid to take on private landlords or commercial mortgage lenders. |
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Almost all private landlords will only let properties on a shorthold tenancy, in order to protect their investment. |
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The agency would strive towards securing long term lets which would suit tenants and landlords. |
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Alien finds that landlords generally collected Ricardian rent from enclosed farmers. |
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She said Government policy required all registered social landlords to ensure rents were brought into line with what is known as a target rent. |
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He humiliated and cheated the poor peasants, while toadying to landlords and potentates. |
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The other landlords in the town thought we were taking their lock-in trade so they wanted to get us closed down and, eventually, we were. |
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Government and landlords tried to keep the lid on rising wages and changing social aspirations. |
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Keep in mind landlords are legally allowed to raise the rent a lot less than most people realize. |
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Raves, graffiti, squeegee kids and mall rats have all become sources of evil in the eyes of local landlords. |
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Almost a tenth of all houses are occupied by tenants renting from private landlords. |
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The peasants also refused to pay taxes, tithes and manorial dues to their landlords, whom they held responsible for their economic plight. |
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York landlords could soon be fined for serving people who have had one too many. |
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There are currently a number of Government proposals that will require landlords to make their properties thermally efficient. |
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The inspectors had received repeated death threats from landlords who objected to government inspections. |
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He says that tied pubs don't give landlords the freedom to buy local products. |
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Because many landlords had lost their serfs, the lords relaxed ancient obligations and duties. |
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It's hardly surprising if he's behind with his rent and his new landlords have a more profitable venture in mind. |
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The landlords refuse to get off their fat behinds and allow the agents to fix a serious water leakage problem with our air conditioner. |
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The transferral of leases makes landlords unhappy because it forces them to supply a valid reason to refuse a potential tenant. |
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And with 24 years under her belt she has outlasted five landlords and scores of regulars. |
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And landlords could see themselves handed large bills for licences and alterations to their pubs just to have a singalong in their bar. |
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Private landlords often play a key role in encouraging other owners to get work done. |
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He wrote sympathetically about highlanders under the cosh from rapacious landlords. |
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For their part, landlords are put off by the fact that an unfurnished house is subject to much more wear and tear than a furnished one. |
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There was also good news, with only around 1 in 5 landlords reporting any unlet periods in the past six months. |
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The landlords had neglected the upkeep a few years back and it had got a bit slum like. |
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These cruel landlords are every day unpeopling their kingdom by forbidding their miserable tenants to till the earth. |
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The landlords were shown mock-up samples of narcotics ranging from cannabis and ecstasy to heroin and crack cocaine. |
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They demanded the nationalisation of the mines and the expropriation of the landlords. |
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The situation has not been helped by unscrupulous landlords renting out property to anybody no matter what their history. |
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Mrs Strong said that unscrupulous landlords in the area were attracting unruly tenants. |
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The majority of the houses obtained by private landlords were now exhibiting signs of neglect and dilapidation. |
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Their landlords must ensure they always present themselves as persons of respectability, judgment, soberness and economy. |
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A few of the new landlords were Bretons and men from Flanders and Lorraine but most were Normans. |
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Those who became landlords fairly recently, to make a fast buck from rising house prices, are most likely to panic. |
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It was the expression of the built-up frustration and rage amongst Muslims against the British Government and landlords. |
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The rental sector remains highly fragmented, made up mainly of individual landlords who each own a small number of buy-to-let homes. |
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As house prices continue their increasing prices, more are being bought by buy-to-let landlords. |
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Surely this pattern can be taken as an indication of the preferences of landlords and other northerners. |
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A share tenant system has made most farmers captives of landlords, or caciques. |
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Plans to transfer thousands of council homes into the hands of not-for-profit landlords could be put to six public ballots. |
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But councillors claim absentee and obstructive landlords and residents could block the scheme in some streets. |
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Thus statutes were passed with the object of giving landlords a return sufficient to induce them to make accommodation available. |
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With each new tenant, landlords can increase the rent by as much as they like. |
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By that time a number of landlords were only too glad to sell up and be expropriated. |
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Often in debt, they are economically and politically dependent on local headmen and landlords. |
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At most ports, which act as landlords to private sector operators, the cost will trickle down to private companies. |
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Some landlords attempted to reassert forced labor dues, which the peasants heroically resisted. |
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But the overwhelming response from city landlords has been an outright rejection of the request. |
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The Parliament of landlords which took over politics in 1640 was not interested in preserving a peasantry engaged in subsistence production. |
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Teeth chattered as they boarded the coach which was to transport them to London for yet another fight with their landlords. |
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Irish landlords were bad enough in the past, but this new importation from England beats them hollow. |
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Last year a new team was set up to tackle arsonists by clamping down on rogue landlords and homeowners who leave empty houses to rot. |
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Police have been in contact with local landlords and hoteliers to advise them on policing during the military deployment. |
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Mr. Peter's new-patented invention is very interesting, especially for landlords and hoteliers. |
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Figures indicate that landlords have been increasing rents in response to rent allowance limits set by health boards. |
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The winners will be Irish landlords, existing house-owners and industrialists. |
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These are the same landlords who clamoured over cheap two and three-bed houses in the first place, driving inflation. |
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The result for tenants and landlords would be increasingly complicated tenancy contracts which would be designed in favour of the landlord. |
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She said the value of houses has plummeted so low landlords are able to buy property at rock bottom cost and then rent them out for profit. |
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The report also recommended that the college work with local landlords to discuss possibly converting those buildings into campus housing. |
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Tenants of farms and copyholders were evicted by business-minded landlords. |
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When landlords allow student housing to deteriorate, there is a corresponding decrease in property value that impacts surrounding properties. |
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She's now couch-surfing, staying with friends and trying to recover some of the money her landlords owe her. |
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The current credit crunch will lead to landlords selling their properties, which will help to bring prices down. |
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I find it interesting that not long ago we fought hard for freedom from foreign landlords. |
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Just as private landlords gear up to increase their returns, so property companies do likewise. |
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Leeds Council has been working successfully for a number of years with many responsible landlords who provide decent accommodation. |
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The system makes it difficult for immigrants to work and be treated decently by landlords. |
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It could apply to hotel and motel owners, cruise ship operators, stadium owners, landlords, real estate managers, and event promoters. |
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There did not seem to be a wealthy propertied class of landlords or a bourgeoisie. |
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His band of desperados specialized in looting feudal landlords and Mughal treasury. |
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Other property owners, tenants or landlords have failed to provide any smoke or fire detection systems. |
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The lower courts, he stated, are also continuing with the hearing of ejectment suits filed by various landlords. |
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But until relatively recent times, anybody who worked in farming, except landlords, were dirt poor and worked in abject poverty. |
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The dispossession of the peasantry gave landlords a golden opportunity to amalgamate small plots into large farms. |
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There is the structural violence of coerced theft and dispossession imposed by landlords. |
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Drawn by these enticements, some 29,000 landlords now lease Section 8 apartments in New York City. |
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But pub landlords and club managers in Manchester remain divided about the effect a 24-hour opening law will have. |
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At present, landlords cannot evict tenants who are willing to pay prevailing market rates. |
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While evicting the tenants would increase the landlords income, it would cause hardship on the tenants. |
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Some landlords are also evicting people without so much as an appearance in court, in violation of due process. |
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Under the loans scheme, homeowners and landlords can release equity from their properties to carry out urgent and major work. |
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Economic progress was thus fastest in England, where landlords expropriated the peasants and created a dynamic agrarian capitalism. |
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Revolution, in the sense of the expropriation of landlords and capitalists without compensation, was not the aim. |
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This will be used to make sure drinks have not been watered down by dishonest landlords. |
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Police are today warning landlords to be on the lookout for under-age drinkers celebrating their exam success or drowning their sorrows. |
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Many landlords are themselves affected by the disease and are aware of the difficulties that will arise at the coming quarter day. |
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This was probably the era of the warreners when the landlords right to free warren was leased out. |
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They're washing their hands of the problem but also guaranteeing the landlords get their revenues, which are, of course, a form of tax revenue. |
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In the case of periodic tenancies the legislature left landlords free to bring them to an end by the service and expiry of valid notices to quit. |
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By the 19th century, the traditional rents were so out of line with real values that landlords sought to convert them to rack rents. |
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They were a subdued and powerless people owing their very existence to landlords and their agents who worked them to the bond with rack rents. |
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The board is currently adjudicating on 300 formal complaints made against landlords and tenants. |
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I think there were a few suspects and I was in the frame, but the landlords didn't know until New Year's Eve. |
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Now there are rapacious landlords getting paid by the city to house homeless families. |
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The destitute found the fare either by selling their remaining assets or by assistance from ratepayers and landlords. |
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As many as three bidders are chasing after one of the biggest landlords in Britain, Canary Wharf. |
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They will gang together, move into an area and have a lot of muscle with the landlords. |
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Strict rent control laws here hold down rents but give landlords little incentive to shell out for earthquake proofing. |
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They started emerging from the waters again in the 19th century, when landlords began to reclaim land from the lochs. |
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Commons were enclosed, and waste land reclaimed, by landlords or squatters, with consequent extinction of common grazing rights. |
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The pastoralist class disperse the great mass of peasants who traditionally worked the land under the thumb of feudal landlords. |
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The council says private landlords are responsible for the worst housing in the town. |
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Most letting agents or landlords look for a reference from a previous landlord or an employer reference. |
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The best way of finding a model tenant is to make sure that you obtain at least two references from previous landlords. |
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Mr Prescott also used today's speech to announce sweeping housing reforms to tackle rogue landlords and reform the right to buy. |
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It's the case now that the older properties are attracting social security tenants, unless, that is, the landlords invest in a refurb. |
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Her plan puts the onus on landlords to collect the information and pass it along to the city every time a new tenant moves in. |
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For this reason, many landlords tend to hold onto such properties until 10 years have expired from the date of first letting. |
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See the great estates of absentee English landlords patrolled by land agents like Michael Kitchen. |
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During the first phase of the land war only half a dozen landlords and four land agents died from gunfire. |
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I know most of the landlords and landladies here and they certainly wouldn't sell alcohol to children. |
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Council officers are still urging landlords and landladies to get their applications for the new licences in before the deadline of 6 August. |
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Special tax breaks are available to landlords who intend renting their property to tourists. |
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The relationship between landlords and tenants is a recurring theme in Irish history. |
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Some landlords also use supermarket billboards and cards in newsagent's windows. |
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For example, how exactly will landlords and tenants bring disputes before the board? |
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Here he witnessed how the Irish were treated not just by the army but also by the landlords who owned the land there. |
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Over 80 percent are kept empty by private landlords, banks and building societies. |
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The majority of families forced to rent from private landlords will be no better off than before. |
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Others look to the peasantry to form armed bands which can take land from the big landlords and distribute it to the poor. |
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The oversupply of rental property has resulted in landlords cutting rents to attract tenants. |
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In the interim, she decided to set up a company that would unify potential tenants and landlords. |
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A lot of landlords are finding it difficult to accept lower rents and one or two have actually sold. |
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In some parts there are basically too many landlords chasing too few tenants, which is pushing down rents. |
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Almost a tenth of all houses in Swindon are occupied by tenants renting from private landlords. |
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Some land was owned by landlords who rented to cultivators, some was in the hands of owner-operators. |
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Soon the association was strong enough to boycott local landlords who were evicting their tenants and offering the land to others at increased rents. |
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Why does he not come straight out and say that he wants all landlords to evict every tenant who might be accused of upsetting the next door neighbour. |
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Currently, many peasants living near big cities or along the south-east coast have become landlords, leasing land to labourers from provinces in the interior. |
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It's what many landlords are doing, particularly those who choose to subvert the dire sales market and are renting out their homes, rather than selling them for a song. |
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Students living in hostels, unlike other tenants, are not covered by the Residential Tenancy Act 1986, which lays out the minimum standards required of landlords. |
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He says vacancies are up because rent decontrol allowed landlords to raise rents once tenants left, until they virtually priced themselves out of the market. |
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Fearing arrest and imprisonment for harbouring satyagrahis, the local landlords refused to accommodate the marchers in the traveller's inns under their control. |
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In other words, the noble landlords and magnates, whose values were decidedly not those of Puritan asceticism, were in the vanguard of capitalism. |
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There are two million buy-to-let landlords in the private sector. |
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Saturday we had lunch with our landlords, who are actually friends from whom we sublease our apartment, to discuss the schedule of the imminent sale of the place. |
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Not content with the evictions and other brutal acts, the landlords in open courts declared that they would exterminate those who opposed Toryism. |
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The new Italian state rushed through legislation allowing capitalist landlords to buy up the common lands and sheep runs which covered much of inland Puglia. |
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However, the law will also allow landlords to evict tenants much faster. |
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Smith said the rise in interest rates is likely to increase the popularity of residential investment properties which offer guaranteed rents to landlords. |
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While offices and shops are smoke-free already, banning smoking immediately in pubs would serve only to put many landlords out of business and many punters unhappy. |
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He incorporates the church's contributions throughout, whether considering monastic institutions as landlords or parish priests' glebes as part of the English manor. |
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If the demoted tenancy is breached, the council as landlords can evict the tenant without having to satisfy the court that this is justified or reasonable. |
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Although landlords are always keen to land a creditworthy tenant able to sign a lease for at least 15 years or more, this time the highest rental offer will win the day. |
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A monastic house, with a fixed centre, needed regular supplies of foodstuffs, but other great landlords, who were more peripatetic, would probably be more interested in money. |
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The landlords have never been castigated for ousting their tenantry. |
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We never saw landlords and used to imagine they were oversized and overdressed and living the high life on the rents they received from their tenants. |
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In an attempt to curb the significant number of landlords throughout Italy who haven't been declaring rental income, new legislation has been enacted. |
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This interpretation of crofting law would enable crofters to become their own landlords but continue to enjoy the advantages of remaining tenants. |
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Therefore many greedy landlords do not do repairs, unless forced to. |
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The primary goal of a city should not be to enrich already wealthy landlords and construction companies. |
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Tenants may, and many do, sublet to others, becoming landlords themselves. |
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Officers have discovered the hidden population consists largely of asylum seekers, many of whom are concealed from the poll by tax-dodging landlords. |
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At the moment, there is so much exploitation by so-called landlords and dishonest estate agents out to fleece people desperate for rented shelter. |
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For their part, landlords resented the tendency of British governments and rational commentators to fail to recognize the difficulties they encountered. |
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Whilst most landlords are well aware of the current situation in farming, many will offer a nominal decrease which will fix the rent for a further three-year period. |
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The landlords despaired of this campaign because it foiled their plans to relet the evicted holding to a solvent tenant or stock the farm with their own cattle. |
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It appears charges were never filed, but his landlords began an eviction process against him shortly after. |
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The council also wants to start targeting private landlords in a bid to encourage them to consider letting their properties to people receiving housing benefit. |
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But Mrs Snobar Hanif said they interviewed the tenants personally and only accepted them after obtaining references from previous landlords and checking with police. |
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In the event that the landlords would not have agreed to such a request, the pursuers would not have concluded missives and entered into the lease. |
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It is important to source your tenant from a reliable agency and where possible to get references from previous landlords or even from an employer. |
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Nor does he believe in the slash-and-strip-the-assets approach of some other out-of-town landlords. |
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A royal family held power through links with local leaders, landlords and military figures who had a power base in different areas of the country. |
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Energy efficiency lowers maintenance costs as a result of reduced condensation and damp and makes it cheaper for landlords and tenants to heat their properties. |
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In Aberdeen, smokers and landlords appeared to be toeing the line. |
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In the latter half of the 18th century, Russian authorities destroyed this Zaporozhian Host and gave its lands to landlords. |
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It abolished tithes owed to local churches as well as feudal dues owed to local landlords. |
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To stimulate a higher labor productivity, many landlords freed large numbers of slaves. |
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However, the few surviving farms' tenants found their bargaining positions with their landlords greatly strengthened. |
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Large houses were turned into flats and tenements, and as landlords failed to maintain these dwellings, slum housing developed. |
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Wages rose as landlords sought to entice the reduced number of available workers to their fields. |
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Most peasants in Western Europe managed to change the work they had previously owed to their landlords into cash rents. |
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Partly at the urging of landlords, governments attempted to legislate a return to the economic conditions that existed before the Black Death. |
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Violence erupted, starting on the Isle of Skye, when Highland landlords cleared their lands for sheep and deer parks. |
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Thus, according to Smith, the landlords should be in favour of policies which contribute to the growth of in the wealth of nations. |
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Voters in some constituencies resisted outright domination by powerful landlords, but were often open to corruption. |
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For example, Cornwallis recommended turning Bengali Zamindar into the sort of English landlords that controlled local affairs in England. |
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Moreover, Indian landlords had a stake in the cash crop system and discouraged innovation. |
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With the passing of the Crofters' Act in 1886 the Liberal prime minister William Gladstone emancipated crofters from the rule of the landlords. |
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Many of these landlords lived in England and were known as absentee landlords. |
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The middlemen leased large tracts of land from the landlords on long leases with fixed rents, which they then sublet as they saw fit. |
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They had to work for their landlords in return for the patch of land they needed to grow enough food for their own families. |
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West Clare was one of the worst areas for evictions, where landlords turned thousands of families out and demolished their derisory cabins. |
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Games were organised between landlords with each team comprising 20 or more tenants. |
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The richer landlords were able to fund their own famine relief for their tenants. |
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Conversely, some landlords were criticised for using the voluntarily raised relief funds to avoid supporting their tenants through the crisis. |
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Beyond the human impact, the financial effect on landlords was overwhelming. |
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Many Highland landlords were in debt, despite rising commodity prices and the associated farm incomes which allowed higher rents to be charged. |
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In places some people were given economic incentives to move, but in many instances landlords used violent methods. |
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Another important form of resistance was in rejecting ministers appointed by the landlords. |
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Some more sympathetic landlords supplied a free passage to what was hoped to be a better life. |
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One of the most notorious slum landlords was Peter Rachman, who owned around 100 properties in the Notting Hill area of London. |
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In many parts of England, tenants were bound to present freshly harvested wheat to their landlords on or before the first day of August. |
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They eventually moved to the Kuban region, due to the distribution of Zaporozhian Sich lands among landlords and the resulting scarcity of land. |
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Many landlords will not rent to felons, although a blanket ban on renting to felons may violate federal housing law. |
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Eventually the farmers agreed to raise wages, and the parsons and some landlords reduced the tithes and rents. |
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Rent therefore represented a kind of negative money that landlords could pull out of the production of the land, by means of its scarcity. |
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Written records show that in the 12th century landlords were paid in salmon, in lieu of rent at Burton upon Trent. |
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In 1733, low crop prices caused the introduction of adscription, an effort by the landlords to obtain cheap labor. |
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But I expect the murderous thoughts of landlords brandishing Allen keys are a minor consideration for a group turning over pounds 8bn per annum. |
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Although it is extremely hard work, for the first time in over 10 years most landlords and landladies have been more upbeat. |
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They plan to sell Kerching packages to customers like social landlords and sponsors, like banks, accountancy firms and financial advisers. |
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Defaulting landlords were forewarned that their garbage collection would stop if they failed to pay service fees. |
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We doubt even the Tory Prime Minister intended for a third of ex-council houses to be bought by landlords to re-let. |
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Rera also recently created Ejari, an online tenacy contract registration site where agents and landlords must register all contracts. |
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Unfortunately, I think too many legislators think of slumlords or greedy landlords when they think of apartments. |
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A CHAINSAW and baseball bat wielding man threatened landlords and drinkers in a spree of incidents at North East pubs. |
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Licensing boards should insist on pub and club landlords and owners in trouble spots using toughened or plastic glass. |
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Recently built, furnished subleases that often trade at a discount to direct space from landlords are faring well. |
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New York City's office subleasing marketing is drying up, and landlords are readying for rent hikes in its wake, Crain's reported. |
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To a man, Cyrenaica's new landlords insist they are the launchpad for a countrywide liberation, with Tripoli as the capital, not a separatist movement. |
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The landlords feared that the reforms were a threat to their power, while the commoners believed that religious freedom was an invitation to atheism. |
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The ANC was criticized by a number of Africanist members who accused the leadership of protecting the interests of the landlords at the expense of the tenants. |
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Although serfdom declined in Western Europe it became more common in Eastern Europe, as landlords imposed it on those of their tenants who had previously been free. |
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Under the new political system, the Oprichniki were given large estates, but unlike the previous landlords, could not be held accountable for their actions. |
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The regulations, which make it compulsory for all landlords to fit smoke alarms in rented homes, are expected to come into effect from October 1 this year. |
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Properties owned by Saxon landlords were transferred into Norman hands and, on the death of Bishop Leofric in 1072, the Norman Osbern FitzOsbern was appointed his successor. |
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Kelp collection and processing was a very profitable way of using this labour, and landlords petitioned successfully for legislation designed to stop emigration. |
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The fine resented their clansmen paying rent to other landlords. |
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All kinds of landlords, from the highest to the lowest rank, tried to found new villages and towns on their estates, in order to gain economical, political or military power. |
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Private renting from housing landlords was the dominant tenure. |
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But as landlords increased rents protests by tenants became more frequent. |
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Serfdom died out in Scotland in the 14th century, although through the system of courts baron landlords still exerted considerable control over their tenants. |
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Supertram, Sheffield City Council and landlords were in talks to try and hide anchor points as much as possible and blend them into the structures. |
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The LSL Buy to Let Index recently showed rents are increasing and four in five landlords surveyed believe they will continue to do so in the coming year. |
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The new regime stresses the economic contribution of social landlords, consumer values in testing VFM and the transformative nature, or otherwise, of social landlordism. |
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A new law passed in Virginia requires that landlords install new locks or security devices on apartments rented by tenants who have a restraining order against a cotenant. |
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Maintaining dialogue, both with these tenants and other landlords is critical, as the courts have so far been reluctant to interfere with prepack arrangements. |
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Founded in 1987, BCL employs more than 30 professionals and provides agency, investment and professional advice to a range of retail clients, landlords and investors. |
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For example, local Cairene custom dictates that Sudanese immigrants must go through either housing agencies or middlemen just in order to meet landlords and secure apartments. |
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