Enforcement of Sea Fishing Conventions (Amendment) Order, 2013
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Federal Research Division Country Profile: Bulgaria, October 2006
Library of Congress – Federal Research Division Country Profile: Bulgaria, October 2006 COUNTRY PROFILE: BULGARIA October 2006 COUNTRY Formal Name: Republic of Bulgaria (Republika Bŭlgariya). Short Form: Bulgaria. Term for Citizens(s): Bulgarian(s). Capital: Sofia. Click to Enlarge Image Other Major Cities (in order of population): Plovdiv, Varna, Burgas, Ruse, Stara Zagora, Pleven, and Sliven. Independence: Bulgaria recognizes its independence day as September 22, 1908, when the Kingdom of Bulgaria declared its independence from the Ottoman Empire. Public Holidays: Bulgaria celebrates the following national holidays: New Year’s (January 1); National Day (March 3); Orthodox Easter (variable date in April or early May); Labor Day (May 1); St. George’s Day or Army Day (May 6); Education Day (May 24); Unification Day (September 6); Independence Day (September 22); Leaders of the Bulgarian Revival Day (November 1); and Christmas (December 24–26). Flag: The flag of Bulgaria has three equal horizontal stripes of white (top), green, and red. Click to Enlarge Image HISTORICAL BACKGROUND Early Settlement and Empire: According to archaeologists, present-day Bulgaria first attracted human settlement as early as the Neolithic Age, about 5000 B.C. The first known civilization in the region was that of the Thracians, whose culture reached a peak in the sixth century B.C. Because of disunity, in the ensuing centuries Thracian territory was occupied successively by the Greeks, Persians, Macedonians, and Romans. A Thracian kingdom still existed under the Roman Empire until the first century A.D., when Thrace was incorporated into the empire, and Serditsa was established as a trading center on the site of the modern Bulgarian capital, Sofia. -
Rosina, Margherita. "Wartime Fabrics in the Historical Archives of Como
Rosina, Margherita. "Wartime fabrics in the historical archives of Como weavers and in the collections of the Fondazione Antonio Ratti." Fashion, Society, and the First World War: International Perspectives. Ed. Maude Bass-Krueger, Hayley Edwards-Dujardin and Sophie Kurkdjian. London: Bloomsbury Visual Arts, 2021. 151–162. Bloomsbury Collections. Web. 23 Sep. 2021. <http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9781350119895.ch-010>. Downloaded from Bloomsbury Collections, www.bloomsburycollections.com, 23 September 2021, 09:59 UTC. Copyright © Selection, editorial matter, Introduction Maude Bass-Krueger, Hayley Edwards- Dujardin, and Sophie Kurkdjian and Individual chapters their Authors 2021. You may share this work for non-commercial purposes only, provided you give attribution to the copyright holder and the publisher, and provide a link to the Creative Commons licence. 1 0 Wartime fabrics in the historical archives of Como weavers and in the collections of the Fondazione Antonio Ratti M a r g h e r i t a R o s i n a Th e archives of Como manufacturers, which have never been studied before, and sample books held at the textile museum Museo Studio del Tessuto (MuST), which is part of the Fondazione Antonio Ratti (FAR), in Como, highlight how high-level Italian silk production never ceased during the war. 1 Th is essay focuses on silk fabrics, since they are the production of excellence of the Como district as well as the main fi eld covered by Antonio Ratti’s collecting practice. Th e supremacy of France in the silk weaving trade remained undisputed for at least three centuries and was still unchallenged in the early twentieth century. -
Bulletin of the EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES
lssN 0378.3693 Bulletin OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES Commission No 718 1984 Volu m e 17 ,2 The Bulletin of the European communities reports on the activities of the Gommission and the other community institutions. lt is edited by the Secretariat-General of the Commission (rue de la Loi 200, 8-1049 Brussels) and published eleven times a year (one issue covers July and August) in the otficial community languages spanish and Portuguese. Beproduction is authorized provided the source is acknowledged' The following reference system is used: the first digit indicates the part number, the second digit the chapter number and the subsequent digit or digits the point number. citations should therefore read as follows: Bull. EC 1-1 979, point 1 '1.3 or 2.2.36. supplements to the Bultetin are published in a separate series at irrequ- tai intervals. They contain olficiat Commission material (e.9. communica' tions to the Council, programmes, rePotts and prqosals)' The Supple' ments do not aryear in Spnish and Portuguese. Printed in Belgium \ Bulletin \ OF THE EUROPEAN . ECSC_EEC_EAEC Commission of the European Communities Secretariat-General Brussels No7/A press 1984 Sent to in October 1984 Volume 17 contents PART ONE PET$Iff'' 1. Averting the danger of an abuse of a dominant position: The IBM case 2. First meeting of the second elected European Parliament 10 ACTIVITIES PART TWO IN JULY/AUGUST 1984 1. Building the Community 16 - Economic and monetary Policy 16 - lnternal market and industrial affairs 17 - lndustrial innovation and the information market 25 - Customs union 26 - Competition 28 - Financial institutions and taxation 40 - Employment, education and social policy 42 - Culture 45 - Regional policy 45 - Environment and consumers 46 - Agriculture 47 - Fisheries 55 - Transport 58 - Energy 59 - Research and development 60 2. -
Pedigree of the Wilson Family N O P
Pedigree of the Wilson Family N O P Namur** . NOP-1 Pegonitissa . NOP-203 Namur** . NOP-6 Pelaez** . NOP-205 Nantes** . NOP-10 Pembridge . NOP-208 Naples** . NOP-13 Peninton . NOP-210 Naples*** . NOP-16 Penthievre**. NOP-212 Narbonne** . NOP-27 Peplesham . NOP-217 Navarre*** . NOP-30 Perche** . NOP-220 Navarre*** . NOP-40 Percy** . NOP-224 Neuchatel** . NOP-51 Percy** . NOP-236 Neufmarche** . NOP-55 Periton . NOP-244 Nevers**. NOP-66 Pershale . NOP-246 Nevil . NOP-68 Pettendorf* . NOP-248 Neville** . NOP-70 Peverel . NOP-251 Neville** . NOP-78 Peverel . NOP-253 Noel* . NOP-84 Peverel . NOP-255 Nordmark . NOP-89 Pichard . NOP-257 Normandy** . NOP-92 Picot . NOP-259 Northeim**. NOP-96 Picquigny . NOP-261 Northumberland/Northumbria** . NOP-100 Pierrepont . NOP-263 Norton . NOP-103 Pigot . NOP-266 Norwood** . NOP-105 Plaiz . NOP-268 Nottingham . NOP-112 Plantagenet*** . NOP-270 Noyers** . NOP-114 Plantagenet** . NOP-288 Nullenburg . NOP-117 Plessis . NOP-295 Nunwicke . NOP-119 Poland*** . NOP-297 Olafsdotter*** . NOP-121 Pole*** . NOP-356 Olofsdottir*** . NOP-142 Pollington . NOP-360 O’Neill*** . NOP-148 Polotsk** . NOP-363 Orleans*** . NOP-153 Ponthieu . NOP-366 Orreby . NOP-157 Porhoet** . NOP-368 Osborn . NOP-160 Port . NOP-372 Ostmark** . NOP-163 Port* . NOP-374 O’Toole*** . NOP-166 Portugal*** . NOP-376 Ovequiz . NOP-173 Poynings . NOP-387 Oviedo* . NOP-175 Prendergast** . NOP-390 Oxton . NOP-178 Prescott . NOP-394 Pamplona . NOP-180 Preuilly . NOP-396 Pantolph . NOP-183 Provence*** . NOP-398 Paris*** . NOP-185 Provence** . NOP-400 Paris** . NOP-187 Provence** . NOP-406 Pateshull . NOP-189 Purefoy/Purifoy . NOP-410 Paunton . NOP-191 Pusterthal . -
The War and Fashion
F a s h i o n , S o c i e t y , a n d t h e First World War i ii Fashion, Society, and the First World War International Perspectives E d i t e d b y M a u d e B a s s - K r u e g e r , H a y l e y E d w a r d s - D u j a r d i n , a n d S o p h i e K u r k d j i a n iii BLOOMSBURY VISUAL ARTS Bloomsbury Publishing Plc 50 Bedford Square, London, WC1B 3DP, UK 1385 Broadway, New York, NY 10018, USA 29 Earlsfort Terrace, Dublin 2, Ireland BLOOMSBURY, BLOOMSBURY VISUAL ARTS and the Diana logo are trademarks of Bloomsbury Publishing Plc First published in Great Britain 2021 Selection, editorial matter, Introduction © Maude Bass-Krueger, Hayley Edwards-Dujardin, and Sophie Kurkdjian, 2021 Individual chapters © their Authors, 2021 Maude Bass-Krueger, Hayley Edwards-Dujardin, and Sophie Kurkdjian have asserted their right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988, to be identifi ed as Editors of this work. For legal purposes the Acknowledgments on p. xiii constitute an extension of this copyright page. Cover design by Adriana Brioso Cover image: Two women wearing a Poiret military coat, c.1915. Postcard from authors’ personal collection. This work is published subject to a Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial No Derivatives Licence. You may share this work for non-commercial purposes only, provided you give attribution to the copyright holder and the publisher Bloomsbury Publishing Plc does not have any control over, or responsibility for, any third- party websites referred to or in this book. -
Nationalism from the Left Balkan Studies Library
Nationalism from the Left Balkan Studies Library Editor-in-Chief Zoran Milutinović, University College London Editorial Board Gordon N. Bardos, Columbia University Alex Drace-Francis, University of Liverpool Jasna Dragović-Soso, Goldsmiths, University of London Christian Voss, Humboldt University, Berlin Advisory Board Marie-Janine Calic, University of Munich Lenard J. Cohen, Simon Fraser University Radmila Gorup, Columbia University Robert M. Hayden, University of Pittsburgh Robert Hodel, Hamburg University Anna Krasteva, New Bulgarian University Galin Tihanov, The University of Manchester Maria Todorova, University of Illinois Andrew Wachtel, Northwestern University VOLUME 2 Nationalism from the Left The Bulgarian Communist Party during the Second World War and the Early Post-War Years By Yannis Sygkelos LEIDEN • BOSTON 2011 On the cover: Venev, Rabotnichesko Delo #03, 20.09.1944. The beast of fascism has been killed by the national and the red flags. Yet the national flag overshadows the red one. The sun of the new socialist era is shining, demonstrating the date of the communist takeover. This book is printed on acid-free paper. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Sygkelos, Yannis. Nationalism from the left : the Bulgarian Communist Party during the Second World War and the early post-war years / by Yannis Sygkelos. p. cm. — (Balkan studies library ; 2) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-90-04-19208-9 (hardback : acid-free paper) 1. Bulgarska komunisticheska partiia—History. 2. Communism—Bulgaria—History— 20th century. 3. Nationalism—Bulgaria—History—20th century. 4. Bulgaria— Politics and government—1944–1990. I. Title. II. Series. JN9609.A8K6854581 2011 324.2499’07509044—dc22 2010048896 ISSN 1877-6272 ISBN 978 9004 19208 9 Copyright 2011 by Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, The Netherlands. -
Flag of Armenia 1 Flag of Armenia
Flag of Armenia 1 Flag of Armenia Use National flag. Proportion 1:2 Adopted August 24, 1990 Design A horizontal tricolour of red, blue, and orange The national flag of Armenia, the Armenian Tricolour (known in Armenian as եռագույն, erraguyn), consists of three horizontal bands of equal width, red on the top, blue in the middle, and orange on the bottom. The Armenian Supreme Soviet adopted the current flag on August 24, 1990. On June 15, 2006, the Law on the National Flag of Armenia, governing its usage, was passed by the National Assembly of Armenia. Throughout history, there have been many variations of the Armenian flag. In ancient times, Armenian dynasties were represented by different symbolic animals displayed on their flags.[1] In the twentieth century, various Soviet flags represented the Armenian nation. Symbolism The meanings of the colors have been interpreted in many different ways. For example, red has stood for the blood shed by Armenian soldiers in war, blue for the Armenian sky, and orange represents the fertile lands of Armenia and the workers who work them.[2] The official definition of the colors, as stated in the Constitution of the Republic of Armenia, is: All Articles originate from VentiWiki (http://venti.local/trunk/) Flag of Armenia 2 All Articles originate from VentiWiki (http://venti.local/trunk/) Flag of Armenia 3 Design Since the Armenian government does not specify the exact shades of red, blue, and orange, two different versions of the flag are in common use. The more common version consists of brighter shades, whereas the colors of the less common version are more muted. -
The Vexilloid Tabloid #12, January 2007
Portland Flag Association Publication 1 Portland Flag Association “Free, and Worth Every Penny!” Issue 12 January 2007 INSIDE THIS ISSUE: DESIGNING FLAGS FOR FUN AND EXERCISE By Doug Lynch & John Hood Designing Flags For Fun & Exer- 1 ored paper, or whatever catches his Most of you know Doug Lynch, the eye. “Making a flag design with cut Confusable Flags 2 designer of the Portland City Flag. paper is consistent with the many January 2007 Flutterings 3 But did you know that just to keep years of making flags of cut and Next Meeting Announcement 4 his fingers limber and, “To keep you sewn cloth. We literate word people Flags in the News 4 amused,” he designs flags for any tend to gather and register our think- The Most Dangerous Flag 6 occasion. Having taken up the pen ing on flat, white paper; however, a Flag Related Websites 6 and brush in high school, Doug has limp, draped, furled piece of colored spent eighty years as a commercial cloth is our actual perception and The Flag Quiz 7 artist, graphic designer, teacher, art experience of a real flag,” he says. director and preservationist. Is it any As for what will become of Doug‟s wonder then that he should provide “finger exercises”, he says that if Portland with, what was considered some small town in Kansas wants in the NAVA survey, as the seventh one, he‟ll be delighted! Following are best city flag in the United States? a few of his creations. Most are ex- This, in turn, earned him the Vexil- actly as he drew them, but some have lonnaire Award in Montreal in 2003. -
The International Brigades in the Spanish War
The International Brigades in the Spanish PROCEEDINGS War 1936-1939: Flags and Symbols Sebastià Herreros i Agüí FFIAV Associació Catalana de Vexil·lologia “To my father” panied people gathered in Barcelona to celebrate the Olimpiada Popular (Fig. 1), meeting organised by sev- eral leftist organisations to show their opposition to the official Olympic Games of Berlin. This “People’s Olym- piad”, in which a young 18 year old athlete, Isaac Galan, Someone has described the presence of the international who later would be registered as the father of my wife volunteers in the Spanish War 1936-1939 as the “last Anne, provided the first 300 brigadists who, organised romantic war of the twentieth century”. I think there are in columns, immediately headed for the Aragon front. no such romantic wars. All wars are cruel. In the pre-war theatre of the Second World War, the Spanish War was the training field for new military tactics: massive troop transport from Africa to Spain, intimidatory bombardments over civil targets, etc. These tactics were used in the following European confrontation: Sicily, Normandy, Coventry, Dresden... The Spanish War was not only a “Civil War”, but the confrontation and clash of ideas: defence of democracy Fig. 1 against totalitarism. This confrontation of ideas – IDEA > IDEAL > IDEALISM > IDEALISATION – fed the romantic The first columns were organised in Barcelona, but there flavour, of defence of ideals, that impregnated the were also international groups in Madrid and Irun. majority of the “brigadists” who came from all around the world. In Barcelona were formed: The “franquist” propaganda has shown the brigades as ♦ Grupo Thaelmann a part of International Communism. -
Official Journal L324
Official Journal L 324 of the European Union ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Volume 60 English edition Legislation 8 December 2017 Contents II Non-legislative acts REGULATIONS ★ Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) 2017/2243 of 30 November 2017 on repealing Implementing Regulation (EU) No 1212/2014 concerning the classification of certain goods in the Combined Nomenclature ............................................................................................ 1 ★ Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) 2017/2244 of 30 November 2017 concerning the classification of certain goods in the Combined Nomenclature .............................................. 3 ★ Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) 2017/2245 of 30 November 2017 concerning the classification of certain goods in the Combined Nomenclature .............................................. 6 ★ Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) 2017/2246 of 30 November 2017 concerning the classification of certain goods in the Combined Nomenclature .............................................. 8 ★ Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) 2017/2247 of 30 November 2017 concerning the classification of certain goods in the Combined Nomenclature .............................................. 11 ★ Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) 2017/2248 of 30 November 2017 concerning the classification of certain goods in the Combined Nomenclature .............................................. 14 ★ Commission Regulation (EU) 2017/2249 of 4 December 2017 establishing a prohibition of fishing for red seabream -
Flag of Armenia - Ventiwiki
Flag of Armenia - VentiWiki http://venti.local/trunk/index.php/Flag_of_Armenia Flag of Armenia From VentiWiki Flag of Armenia The national flag of Armenia, the Armenian Tricolour (known in Armenian as եռագույն, erraguyn), consists of three horizontal bands of equal width, red on the top, blue in the middle, and orange on the bottom. The Armenian Supreme Soviet adopted the current flag on August 24, 1990. On June 15, 2006, the Law on the National Flag of Armenia, governing its usage, was passed by the National Assembly of Armenia. Use National flag. Throughout history, there have been many variations of the Proportion 1:2 Armenian flag. In ancient times, Armenian dynasties were Adopted August 24, 1990 represented by different symbolic animals displayed on their Design A horizontal tricolour of red, blue, and orange flags.[1] In the twentieth century, various Soviet flags represented the Armenian nation. Contents 1 Symbolism 2 Design 3 History 3.1 19th century 3.2 Transcaucasian Democratic Federative Republic 3.3 Democratic Republic of Armenia 3.4 Early Soviet Armenia and the Transcaucasian SFSR 3.5 Armenian SSR 4 Usage 4.1 National flag days 5 Influence 6 See also 7 References 8 External links Symbolism The meanings of the colors have been interpreted in many different ways. For example, red has stood for the blood shed by Armenian soldiers in war, blue for the Armenian sky, and orange represents the fertile lands of Armenia and the workers who work them.[2] 1 of 7 3/26/08 2:14 PM Flag of Armenia - VentiWiki http://venti.local/trunk/index.php/Flag_of_Armenia The official definition of the colors, as stated in the Constitution of the Republic of Armenia, is: Red symbolizes the Armenian Highland, the Armenian people's continued struggle for “ survival, maintenance of the Christian faith, Armenia's independence and freedom. -
Treaty of Lisbon 1 Treaty of Lisbon
Treaty of Lisbon 1 Treaty of Lisbon Treaty of Lisbon Treaty of Lisbon amending the Treaty on European Union and the Treaty establishing the European Community Type of treaty Amends existing treaties Signed 13 December 2007 Location Lisbon, Portugal Sealed 18 December 2007 Effective 1 December 2009 Signatories EU Member States Depositary Government of Italy Languages 23 EU languages Treaty of Lisbon at Wikisource The Treaty of Lisbon or Lisbon Treaty (initially known as the Reform Treaty) is an international agreement that amends the two treaties which comprise the constitutional basis of the European Union (EU). The Lisbon Treaty was signed by the EU member states on 13 December 2007, and entered into force on 1 December 2009. It amends the Treaty on European Union (TEU; also known as the Maastricht Treaty) and the Treaty establishing the European Community (TEC; also known as the Treaty of Rome). In this process, the Rome Treaty was renamed to the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU). Prominent changes included the move from required unanimity to double majority voting in several policy areas in the Council of Ministers, a more powerful European Parliament as its role of forming a bicameral legislature alongside the Council of Ministers becomes the ordinary procedure, a consolidated legal personality for the EU and the creation of a long-term President of the European Council and a High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy. The Treaty also made the Union's bill of rights, the Charter of