Cambridge took immediate control of its printing in 1698 and exercises it through a board of syndics. |
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It is true that these were the men whom communities normally nominated as syndics, local tax-collectors, or churchwardens. |
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Fournier has noted that the syndics of the Estates sought to put an end to rulings of the Parlement of Toulouse on seigneurial rights. |
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In many areas, the parish council and the official village assembly blurred together, and sometimes the churchwardens and syndics of the village were the same people. |
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There were elected councils or committees of syndics which supervised the clubs' daily routine, one of the syndics elected the bursar and the clerk. |
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Some labor requirements, which had already been commuted into cash, were abolished, but the syndics increased the percentage of tithe taken to replace the lost revenue. |
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The council of syndics of the Kaliningrad naval assembly is actively cooperating with the Military Council, the commanders of the Baltic Fleet, organizations of war veterans. |
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In France, syndics are appointed by the creditors of a bankrupt to manage the property. |
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Victor's family is one of the most distinguished of that republic and his ancestors were counselors and syndics. |
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Rembrandt's Syndics of the Drapers' Guild is a subtle treatment of a group round a table. |
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By then, many of the French refugees had been granted citizenship and with their support, Calvin's partisans elected the majority of the syndics and the councillors. |
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The University of Cambridge has its syndics, who are chosen from the senate to transact special business, such as the regulation of fees, the framing of laws, etc. |
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By 1547, opposition to Calvin and other French refugee ministers had grown to constitute the majority of the syndics, the civil magistrates of Geneva. |
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