The legislation was enacted without such an official proclamation of emergency and goes beyond the requirements of the situation. |
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The eye is staggered by the range of it, the boldness of it, the proclamation of Nature's passionate excess. |
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We will now conduct the ceremony for the adoption and proclamation of a written resolution by the representatives of the five great religions. |
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It became the song sung by Stephen repeating God's proclamation that redemption is found in the life, death, and resurrection of Christ. |
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But, in that poll, there's no proclamation of how many people are truly undecided. |
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Certainly that generation which remembers the Great Depression of the 1930s might raise their eyebrows in surprise at this broad proclamation. |
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Its proclamation requires sobriety and seriousness, for it relates to the realities of the Lord's own presence and the judgement to come. |
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It won't follow a list of fiats from government or a proclamation from computer modelers. |
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Certainly proclamation of faith is essential in the Eucharist, but do we need the Creed to accomplish that? |
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The psalmist had adapted this picture to refer to the spiritual offerings of prayer, praise and proclamation. |
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In 1802, the Upper Canada Gazette published the proclamation announcing the Treaty of Amiens to the townspeople. |
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In 2003, he signed a proclamation heralding the recovery of the American alligator. |
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Bragg was forced to issue his own proclamation to the men of Kentucky, but the Kentuckians were not in a suasible mood. |
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In fact, if you read Hebrews aloud, you will quickly recognize how much it resembles an oral proclamation or a stirring homily. |
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In each gospel some of the parables are linked explicitly to Jesus' proclamation of the kingdom of God. |
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The proclamation, which took the form of a fatwa, was endorsed by religious leaders throughout the Sultan's dominions. |
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The best antidote to error is the full and fearless proclamation of the truth. |
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Third, he explains how the recommendation came to John Paul II, who was quite obviously positively disposed to the proclamation. |
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The latest proclamation from the Empress states that all women, other than the empress herself, must leave the kingdom for unspoken reasons. |
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Containing an official proclamation in several languages of the day, it was used by 19th and 20th century scholars to translate hieroglyphics. |
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Crying out that he was about to damage cathedral property with four drawing pins, he affixed a prophetic proclamation to the main doors. |
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The woman was a bit startled by this proclamation, but she was equally intrigued by the derelict's intuition, since she was indeed single. |
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The territorial sea is a 12 nautical mile limit which is established by proclamation made under section 7 of the Seas and Submerged Land Act. |
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In an ideal world being gay and playing professional sport shouldn't be something that ordinarily requires a public proclamation. |
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Pastor Noel Ramsey gave a brief history of the church and concluded with a clear proclamation of what the church believes. |
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The president has no authority to do by executive agreement what he cannot otherwise do by executive proclamation. |
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But upon receiving this intimation, he issued the following proclamation, dismissing the Legislature, without date. |
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At the end of his sabbatical year, he signed the official proclamation declaring worldwide eradication of the disease. |
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This was received with acclamation, and the proclamation was made from the Hotel de Ville. |
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Dorotea had come to the mountains to hide because she heard a public proclamation offering a reward for her whereabouts. |
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Caesar's time, authoritatively printed in the calendar, has triumphed over the archaic oral proclamation of the kalends by the priesthood. |
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In 1306 King Edward I of England issued a proclamation banning the use of sea coal in London due to the smoke it caused. |
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The original proclamation of a Memorial Day in 1868 was of course occasioned by the Civil War. |
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The tranquillity of the image is a proclamation of Ireland's return to peace after long years of armed conflict, first with the British and then with its own intransigents. |
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Certainly the proclamation was variously appreciated and feared in its own day, by friends and foes alike. |
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One obvious answer is that this acknowledgment constitutes the poem's initial proclamation that it intends to carry out violations of New Critical principles. |
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Converts accepted their own ineradicable sinfulness, but they were psychologically freed by the proclamation that God nevertheless considered them innocent or righteous. |
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Martin Luther King asked President John Kennedy to issue a new emancipation proclamation on the centenary of the first. |
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The indicative is a statement of fact or the proclamation of truth. |
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All satisfy the three defining criteria of outstanding holiness, eminence of doctrine, and an official proclamation by pope or general church council. |
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You might note that the Crown law officer who drafted the lease got the proclamation wrong in the recitals but otherwise the documents are there, your Honours. |
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Only a few years after the proclamation of South Australia, people were put in gaol if they could not pay their debts, even though the colony itself was stone broke! |
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In recognition of the work of the Alliance on behalf of the community, the councilman issued an official proclamation on behalf of the City of Los Angeles. |
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Rather, let us stand firm in this evil day, clad in the whole armour of God, seeking to grow in our understanding and proclamation of the whole counsel of God. |
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Between April and October, the town crier issues a daily proclamation at the High Cross, where in bygone times you would have found bear-baiting, stocks and a whipping post. |
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The overtly political lyrics have since been toned down, following a proclamation from on high that Eurovision songs should not be political in content. |
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All princesses wishing to apply must respond to this proclamation and attend the initiation ball which is to be held in a sennight on the eve of the Festival of the Roses. |
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In his proclamation of the birth of the messianic child and its reign of peace without end, the prophet gave new hope to a deeply oppressed and depressed people. |
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After months of silence, the streets of the town will once again be filled with the sound of proclamation following a decision by certain industrious members of the community. |
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The party knew fully well that proclamation of the act would take time, and said that it was dishonest to seek political mileage from the issue by playing to the gallery. |
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The President declares a proclamation of amnesty that will pardon any Confederate state that supports the union, but both the North and the South criticize it. |
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The pope's trip commemorates the 150th anniversary of the proclamation of the Immaculate Conception, the dogma that says Mary was born without original sin. |
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This walk wasn't going to be a proclamation of Ben's undying love. |
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With that proclamation, he rushed back up the steps followed by the lead knight, leaving the knights to look worried and confused in front of a group of comely women. |
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Although the elevation of mind and heart of people and preacher alike is the purpose of biblical proclamation, teaching or instruction is hardly outlawed. |
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Moving a nation forward is not a matter of merely gossamery proclamation. |
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It is imperative that the Democrats ask Bush whether he intends to honor that obligations and force him to make a public proclamation of his steadfast commitment to do so. |
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Washington obliged by issuing a proclamation that Thursday, November 26, 1789, would be a day of public thanksgiving. |
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He then sent out missionaries and interpreters to read out the proclamation that had been drafted by Palacios Rubios. |
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On the day indicated by the Sovereign's proclamation, the two Houses assemble in their respective chambers. |
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He died soon after the edict's proclamation, destroying what little remained of the tetrarchy. |
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The proclamation of Edward IV's children as illegitimate was also reversed, restoring Elizabeth's status to a royal princess. |
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At the same time, he shared in the drafting of a proclamation giving Anabaptists and Sacramentaries ten days to get out of the country. |
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On 9 July, from Kenninghall, Norfolk, she wrote to the privy council with orders for her proclamation as Edward's successor. |
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In 1661, Charles II issued a proclamation forbidding overhanging windows and jetties, but this was largely ignored by the local government. |
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He published a proclamation releasing his captives, discharging his debts, and promising to henceforth govern according to the law. |
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A herald would then make a proclamation of the readiness of the champion to fight anyone denying the monarch. |
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The Constitution will come into operation immediately on the issue of the proclamation. |
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Mar's proclamation brought in an alliance of clans and northern Lowlanders, and they quickly overran many parts of the Highlands. |
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During Henry VIII's reign, the sovereign, on the advice of the Council, was allowed to enact laws by mere proclamation. |
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Before the passage of the Act, Parliament could be dissolved by royal proclamation by virtue of the Royal Prerogative. |
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The earlier flag of Great Britain was established in 1606 by a proclamation of King James VI and I of Scotland and England. |
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On 26 August 1942, Haile Selassie issued a proclamation that removed Ethiopia's legal basis for slavery. |
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Under the Banking and Financial Dealings Act 1971, bank holidays are proclaimed each year by the legal device of a royal proclamation. |
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Royal proclamation is also used to move bank holidays that would otherwise fall on a weekend. |
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The Gorsedd holds the right of proclamation and of governance while the Council organises the event. |
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However, since North Dakota alphabetically appears before South Dakota, its proclamation was published first in the Statutes At Large. |
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When King James died in March 1625 the Privy Council drafted a proclamation. |
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The final reading and high point of the Liturgy of the Word is the proclamation of the Gospel by the deacon or priest. |
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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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With the proclamation of the First Brazilian Republic, in 1889, the Brazilian nobility was extinguished. |
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This site was one of Norway's most important places for the proclamation of kings. |
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With the proclamation of Wilhelm as Kaiser, Prussia assumed the leadership of the new empire. |
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Bans is common and ordinary amongst the Feudists, and signifies a proclamation, or any public notice. |
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The indigenous people were upset by this proclamation and so Ojeda tried to placate them by offering them trinkets. |
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In 1810, parts of West Florida were annexed by proclamation of President James Madison, who claimed the region as part of the Louisiana Purchase. |
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This part of the service climaxes with the singing of the Gloria and the Alleluia and the proclamation of the Gospel of the resurrection. |
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With the proclamation of the Edict of Nantes, and the subsequent protection of Huguenot rights, pressures to leave France abated. |
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The proclamation restricted the province to an area along the banks of the Saint Lawrence River. |
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After the court was opened by the crier making proclamation, the names of those summoned to the grand jury were called and they were sworn. |
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Most contemporary and modern accounts suggest that he was coerced by the sepoys and his courtiers to sign the proclamation against his will. |
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Upon the summons of a new Parliament, the Sovereign would issue a proclamation summoning Scottish peers to the Palace of Holyroodhouse. |
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Written during a kind of public break from her mother, this book was Martineau's proclamation of independence. |
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Here his hand trembled as he set his pen to the proclamation that declared slaves thenceforth and forever free. |
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Mayor Bill de Blasio sent a proclamation and two commissioners to read it. |
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Thus, the practice of proclamation is God's drawing us into the active life or God's triunity. |
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In the past century, evangelicals overemphasized verbal proclamation and underemphasized deeds of love and signs of God's presence and power. |
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Bush made a campaign stop a decade ago and a proclamation to protect the giant sequoias. |
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Short on literary flourish, the proclamation was long on impact. |
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But it wasn't until 1966 that President Lyndon Johnson signed a proclamation declaring that the third Sunday of June was Father's Day. |
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He brings this thesis to bear on the proclamation of word, the use of liturgical symbols, the prayer of euchology, and the full range of liturgical arts. |
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When imagination fails doctrines become ossified, witness and proclamation wooden, doxologies and litanies empty, consolations hollow, and ethics legalistic. |
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The king sent a proclamation for their repair to their houses. |
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The proclamation helped stiffen resistance to the American attacks. |
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By a decree of 7 April 1942, a Military Court of Justice of the Nippon Army was established, and the civil courts were reopened by a proclamation dated 27 May. |
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Congress intended the Thirteenth Amendment to be a proclamation of freedom for all slaves throughout the nation and to take the question of emancipation away from politics. |
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The formal proclamation was made from the stage of the Bolshoi Theatre. |
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A borough of more than 20,000 people could become a city by proclamation. |
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In September 1862 the Battle of Antietam provided this opportunity, and the subsequent War Governors' Conference added support for the proclamation. |
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Following Henry Avery's capture of the mogul ship quote, the East India Company petitioned the Privy Council in 1696 to issue a proclamation of arrest. |
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It was already an ancient tree at the time of Richard II's proclamation that ordered the general planting of yews to support the army and the use of yew in the Longbow. |
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A proclamation was sent to London, announcing that Edward, now known just as Edward of Caernarvon, had freely resigned his kingdom and that Prince Edward would succeed him. |
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The movement of the St Andrew's Day Scottish holiday to the nearest Monday when 30 November is a weekend day is statutory and does not require a proclamation. |
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After war broke out, Dunmore issued a proclamation on November 7, 1775, promising freedom for slaves who fled their Patriot masters to fight for the Crown. |
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The next day she issued a proclamation that there would be no alteration in the current state of religion and that her servants should not be molested or troubled. |
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In England, the pamphlet was officially condemned by royal proclamation. |
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On 24 August, James IV held a council or parliament at Twiselhaugh and made a proclamation for the benefit of the heirs of anyone killed during this invasion. |
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In England, Henry I's proclamation of the Charter of Liberties in 1100 bound the king for the first time in his treatment of the clergy and the nobility. |
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The royal proclamation gave no distinctive name to the new flag. |
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In the majority of cases, the claim or proclamation was retrospective, often by cricket writers using reverse analysis via a study of known results. |
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The SFA stood by this proclamation, despite pleas to the contrary by the Scotland players, supported by England captain Billy Wright and the other England players. |
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Violent scenes in 1682 forced London's militia into action, and to prevent any repetition the following year a proclamation was issued, banning bonfires and fireworks. |
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On 26 August 1942 Haile Selassie issued a proclamation outlawing slavery. |
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Just one person in the town, a tailor ever afterwards known as Peeping Tom, disobeyed her proclamation in one of the most famous instances of voyeurism. |
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The proclamation required that the coins weigh one and two ounces respectively, bringing the intrinsic value of the coins close to their face value. |
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A subsequent proclamation by John of Gaunt's legitimate son, King Henry IV, also recognised the Beauforts' legitimacy, but declared them ineligible ever to inherit the throne. |
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Thus at the end of 1538, a proclamation was issued forbidding free discussion of the Sacrament and forbidding clerical marriage, on pain of death. |
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A subsequent proclamation by John of Gaunt's legitimate son, Henry IV, also recognised the Beauforts' legitimacy but declared them ineligible ever to inherit the throne. |
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Firstly, the King was authorised to issue a royal proclamation within six months of the Act's passing, authorising him to alter the royal style and titles. |
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