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Federal Register/Vol. 83, No. 150/Friday, August 3, 2018/Notices
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 150 / Friday, August 3, 2018 / Notices 38161 Community Community map repository address Canadian County, Oklahoma and Incorporated Areas Project: 12–06–1030S Preliminary Date: February 8, 2018 City of El Reno ......................................................................................... Municipal Building, 101 North Choctaw Avenue, El Reno, OK 73036. Aransas County, Texas and Incorporated Areas Project: 15–06–0811S Preliminary Date: March 16, 2018 City of Aransas Pass ................................................................................ City Hall, 600 West Cleveland Boulevard, Aransas Pass, TX 78336. San Patricio County, Texas and Incorporated Areas Project: 15–06–0811S Preliminary Date: March 16, 2018 City of Aransas Pass ................................................................................ City Hall, 600 West Cleveland Boulevard, Aransas Pass, TX 78336. [FR Doc. 2018–16666 Filed 8–2–18; 8:45 am] 97.048, Disaster Housing Assistance to Brown Fund; 97.032, Crisis Counseling; BILLING CODE 9110–12–P Individuals and Households In Presidentially 97.033, Disaster Legal Services; 97.034, Declared Disaster Areas; 97.049, Disaster Unemployment Assistance (DUA); Presidentially Declared Disaster Assistance— 97.046, Fire Management Assistance Grant; DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND Disaster Housing Operations for Individuals 97.048, Disaster Housing Assistance to and Households; 97.050, Presidentially Individuals and Households In Presidentially SECURITY Declared Disaster Assistance to Individuals -
Was There a Custom of Distributing the Booty in the Crusades of the Thirteenth Century?
Benjámin Borbás WAS THERE A CUSTOM OF DISTRIBUTING THE BOOTY IN THE CRUSADES OF THE THIRTEENTH CENTURY? MA Thesis in Late Antique, Medieval and Early Modern Studies Central European University Budapest May 2019 CEU eTD Collection WAS THERE A CUSTOM OF DISTRIBUTING THE BOOTY IN THE CRUSADES OF THE THIRTEENTH CENTURY? by Benjámin Borbás (Hungary) Thesis submitted to the Department of Medieval Studies, Central European University, Budapest, in partial fulfillment of the requirements of the Master of Arts degree in Late Antique, Medieval and Early Modern Studies. Accepted in conformance with the standards of the CEU. ____________________________________________ Chair, Examination Committee ____________________________________________ Thesis Supervisor ____________________________________________ Examiner ____________________________________________ Examiner CEU eTD Collection Budapest May 2019 WAS THERE A CUSTOM OF DISTRIBUTING THE BOOTY IN THE CRUSADES OF THE THIRTEENTH CENTURY? by Benjámin Borbás (Hungary) Thesis submitted to the Department of Medieval Studies, Central European University, Budapest, in partial fulfillment of the requirements of the Master of Arts degree in Late Antique, Medieval and Early Modern Studies. Accepted in conformance with the standards of the CEU. ____________________________________________ External Reader Budapest May 2019 CEU eTD Collection WAS THERE A CUSTOM OF DISTRIBUTING THE BOOTY IN THE CRUSADES OF THE THIRTEENTH CENTURY? by Benjámin Borbás (Hungary) Thesis submitted to the Department of Medieval Studies, -
2011-13 W Isconsin State B Udget
Comparative Summary of Budget Recommendations 2011 2011 Act 32 - Budget State Wisconsin 13 (Including Budget Adjustment Acts 10, 13, and 27) Volume I Legislative Fiscal Bureau August, 2011 2011-13 WISCONSIN STATE BUDGET Comparative Summary of Budget Provisions Enacted as 2011 Act 32 (Including Budget Adjustment Acts 10, 13, and 27) Volume I LEGISLATIVE FISCAL BUREAU ONE EAST MAIN, SUITE 301 MADISON, WISCONSIN LEGISLATIVE FISCAL BUREAU Administrative/Clerical Health Services and Insurance Bob Lang, Director Charles Morgan, Program Supervisor Vicki Holten, Administrative Assistant Sam Austin Liz Eck Grant Cummings Sandy Swain Eric Peck Education and Building Program Natural Resources and Commerce Dave Loppnow, Program Supervisor Daryl Hinz, Program Supervisor Russ Kava Kendra Bonderud Layla Merrifield Paul Ferguson Emily Pope Erin Probst Al Runde Ron Shanovich General Government and Justice Tax Policy, Children and Families, and Workforce Development Jere Bauer, Program Supervisor Chris Carmichael Rob Reinhardt, Program Supervisor Paul Onsager Sean Moran Darin Renner Rick Olin Art Zimmerman Ron Shanovich Sandy Swain Kim Swissdorf Transportation and Property Tax Relief Fred Ammerman, Program Supervisor Jon Dyck Rick Olin Al Runde INTRODUCTION This two-volume document, prepared by Wisconsin's Legislative Fiscal Bureau, is the final edition of the cumulative summary of executive and legislative action on the 2011-13 Wisconsin state biennial budget. The budget was signed by the Governor as 2011 Wisconsin Act 32 on June 26, and published on June 30, 2011. This document describes each of the provisions of Act 32, including all fiscal and policy modifications recommended by the Governor, Joint Committee on Finance, and Legislature. The document is organized into eight sections, the first of which contains a Table of Contents, History of the 2011-13 Budget, Brief Chronology of the 2011-13 Budget, Key to Abbreviations, and a User's Guide. -
Social Change in Eleventh-Century Armenia: the Evidence from Tarōn Tim Greenwood (University of St Andrews)
Social Change in Eleventh-Century Armenia: the evidence from Tarōn Tim Greenwood (University of St Andrews) The social history of tenth and eleventh-century Armenia has attracted little in the way of sustained research or scholarly analysis. Quite why this should be so is impossible to answer with any degree of confidence, for as shall be demonstrated below, it is not for want of contemporary sources. It may perhaps be linked to the formative phase of modern Armenian historical scholarship, in the second half of the nineteenth century, and its dominant mode of romantic nationalism. The accounts of political capitulation by Armenian kings and princes and consequent annexation of their territories by a resurgent Byzantium sat very uncomfortably with the prevailing political aspirations of the time which were validated through an imagined Armenian past centred on an independent Armenian polity and a united Armenian Church under the leadership of the Catholicos. Finding members of the Armenian elite voluntarily giving up their ancestral domains in exchange for status and territories in Byzantium did not advance the campaign for Armenian self-determination. It is also possible that the descriptions of widespread devastation suffered across many districts and regions of central and western Armenia at the hands of Seljuk forces in the eleventh century became simply too raw, too close to the lived experience and collective trauma of Armenians in these same districts at the end of the nineteenth and beginning of the twentieth centuries, to warrant -
Personal Names and Denomination of Livonians in Early Written Sources
ESUKA – JEFUL 2014, 5–1: 13–26 PERSONAL NAMES AND DENOMINATION OF LIVONIANS IN EARLY WRITTEN SOURCES Enn Ernits Estonian University of Life Sciences Abstract. This paper presents the timeline of ethnonyms denoting Livonians; specifies their chronology; and analyses the names used for this ethnos and possible personal names. If we consider the dating of the event, the earliest sources mentioning Livonians are Gesta Danorum and the Tale of Bygone Years (both 10th century), but both sources present rather dubious information: in the first the battle of Bråvalla itself or the date are dubious (6th, 8th or 10th century); in the latter we cannot be sure that the member of the Rus delegation was really a Livonian. If we consider the time of recording, the earliest sources are two rune inscriptions from Sweden (11th century), and the next is the list of neighbouring peoples of the Russians from the Tale of Bygone Years (12th century). The personal names Bicco and Ger referred in Gesta Danorum, and Либи Аръфастовъ in Tale of Bygone Years are very problematic. The first certain personal name of a Livonian is *Mustakka, *Mustukka or *Mustoikka (from Finnic *musta ‘black’) written in 1040–1050s on a strip of birch bark in Novgorod. Keywords: Livs, Finnic peoples, ethnonyms, anthroponyms, onomastics DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.12697/jeful.2014.5.1.01 1. Introduction This paper (1) seeks to present the timeline of ethnonyms denoting Livonians; (2) to specify their chronology; (3) and to analyse the names used for this ethnos and possible personal names. It is supple- mental to the paper by Mauno Koski on words denoting Livonians (Koski 2011). -
Vehicle List and Driver Assignments
Effingham County Board of Education Vehicle List 6/30/2013 Vehicle List and Driver Assignments Insurance Veh# Make Year Model Cost Assigned Driver/Location Tag # Vin # Car# Book Value 940 L0163292 1994 94 INT 39,994.15 Spare BB 66 15915 1HVBBACNXSH623821 151 - 941 L016393 1994 94 INT 39,994.15 Spare BB 66 15916 1HVBBACN1SH623822 153 - 942 L016394 1994 94 INT 39,994.15 BB 66 15917 1HVBBACN3SH623823 152 - 944 L016396 1994 94 INT 39,994.15 Spare BB 66 15918 1HVBBACN7SH623825 155 - 945 L016397 1994 94 INT 39,994.15 Spare BB 66 15919 1HVBBACN9SH623826 156 - 946 L016398 1994 94 INT 39,994.15 Spare BB 66 15920 1HVBBACNOSH623827 158 - 947 L016399 1994 94 INT 39,994.15 Spare BB 66 15921 1HVBBACN2SH623828 157 - 951 L020327 1995 95 FORD 41,995.62 BB 66 15923 1FDXB80C1SVA75535 165 - 952 L020328 1995 95 FORD 41,995.62 Spare BB 66 15924 1FDXB80C3SVA75536 164 - 953 L020329 1995 95 FORD 41,995.62 Spare BB 66 15925 1FDXB80C5SVA75537 168 - 954 L020330 1995 95 FORD 41,995.62 Spare BB 66 15926 1FDXB80CXSVA79843 169 - 956 L020332 1995 95 FORD 41,995.62 Spare BB 66 15928 1FDXB80C8SVA76228 166 - 962 L024118 1996 96 FORD 41,995.62 Spare BB 66 15963 1FDXB80C5VVA03628 176 - 963 L024119 1996 96 FORD 41,995.62 Spare BB 66 15964 1FDXB80C7VVA03629 175 - 964 L024117 1996 96 FORD 41,995.62 Spare BB 54 15965 1FDXB80C3VVA03627 177 - 965 L024116 1996 96 FORD 41,995.62 Spare BB 54 15966 1FDXB80C1VVA03626 178 - 970 L028102 1997 97 INT 44,597.30 Spare BB 66 16029 1HVBBABN8VH496962 181 - 971 L028103 1997 97 INT 44,597.30 Spare BB 66 16048 1HVBBABNXVH496963 182 - 973 L028105 -
Charters: What Survives?
Banner 4-final.qxp_Layout 1 01/11/2016 09:29 Page 1 Charters: what survives? Charters are our main source for twelh- and thirteenth-century Scotland. Most surviving charters were written for monasteries, which had many properties and privileges and gained considerable expertise in preserving their charters. However, many collections were lost when monasteries declined aer the Reformation (1560) and their lands passed to lay lords. Only 27% of Scottish charters from 1100–1250 survive as original single sheets of parchment; even fewer still have their seal attached. e remaining 73% exist only as later copies. Survival of charter collectionS (relating to 1100–1250) GEOGRAPHICAL SPREAD from inStitutionS founded by 1250 Our picture of documents in this period is geographically distorted. Some regions have no institutions with surviving charter collections, even as copies (like Galloway). Others had few if any monasteries, and so lacked large charter collections in the first place (like Caithness). Others are relatively well represented (like Fife). Survives Lost or unknown number of Surviving charterS CHRONOLOGICAL SPREAD (by earliest possible decade of creation) 400 Despite losses, the surviving documents point to a gradual increase Copies Originals in their use in the twelh century. 300 200 100 0 109 0s 110 0s 111 0s 112 0s 113 0s 114 0s 115 0s 116 0s 1170s 118 0s 119 0s 120 0s 121 0s 122 0s 123 0s 124 0s TYPES OF DONOR typeS of donor – Example of Melrose Abbey’s Charters It was common for monasteries to seek charters from those in Lay Lords Kings positions of authority in the kingdom: lay lords, kings and bishops. -
UNIVERSITY of CALIFORNIA RIVERSIDE Modeling
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA RIVERSIDE Modeling, Characterization and Simulation of On-Chip Power Delivery Networks and Temperature Profile on Multi-Core Microprocessors A Dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Electrical Engineering by Duo Li December 2010 Dissertation Committee: Dr. Sheldon X.-D. Tan, Chairperson Dr. Yingbo Hua Dr. Frank Vahid Copyright by Duo Li 2010 The Dissertation of Duo Li is approved: Committee Chairperson University of California, Riverside ACKNOWLEDGMENT There are many thanks to many people who made this dissertation possible. First of all, I would like to thank my Ph.D. advisor Dr. Sheldon Tan for the continuous support to my Ph.D. study and research work. Thank him for guiding me on my research road and providing me the great lab research environment. I could not have finished my dissertation successfully without his encouragement, sound advice, good teaching and lots of good ideas. Besides my advisor, I would like to thank the rest of my Ph.D. dissertation committee members Dr. Yingbo Hua and Dr. Frank Vahid, for their encouragement, comments and questions. I would like to thank all my labmates for their support and encouragement. I could not have had the better understanding on my research without the frequent discussions with them. I would like to thank my parents Daping Li and Yuqin Cong for giving birth to me, rasing me, teaching me, supporting me and loving me all the time. Last but not the least, I would like to thank my lovely wife Shan Shan. Thanks for being with me together during my Ph.D. -
Pobie Bank Reef Special Area of Conservation 2020 Cruise Report (1220S)
JNCC/MSS Partnership Report Series Report No. 5 Pobie Bank Reef Special Area of Conservation 2020 Cruise Report (1220S) Albrecht, J. & Stirling, D. May 2021 © Crown Copyright 2021 ISSN 2634-2081 For further information please contact: Joint Nature Conservation Committee Monkstone House City Road Peterborough PE1 1JY www.jncc.gov.uk Marine Monitoring Team ([email protected]) This report should be cited as: Albrecht, J. & Stirling, D. (2021). Pobie Bank Reef Special Area of Conservation 2020 Cruise Report (1220S). JNCC/MSS Partnership Report No. 5. JNCC, Peterborough, ISSN 2634-2081. Acknowledgements: We thank the captain, crew and scientists of the MRV Scotia cruise 1220S. JNCC EQA Statement: This report is compliant with the JNCC Evidence Quality Assurance Policy https://jncc.gov.uk/about-jncc/corporate-information/evidence-quality-assurance/ and was reviewed by MSS and JNCC. i Contents 1 Background and introduction ...................................................................................................... 1 1.1 Pobie Bank Reef Special Area of Conservation ..................................................................... 1 1.2 Aims and objectives ...................................................................................................................... 2 2 Survey design and methods ........................................................................................................ 5 2.1 Survey design......................................................................................................................... -
A Century of Turmoil
356-361-0314s4 10/11/02 4:01 PM Page 356 TERMS & NAMES 4 •Avignon A Century • Great Schism • John Wycliffe • Jan Hus • bubonic plague of Turmoil • Hundred Years’ War MAIN IDEA WHY IT MATTERS NOW • Joan of Arc During the 1300s, Europe was torn apart Events of the 1300s led to a change in by religious strife, the bubonic plague, attitudes toward religion and the state, and the Hundred Years’ War. a change reflected in modern attitudes. SETTING THE STAGE At the turn of the century between the 1200s and 1300s, church and state seemed in good shape, but trouble was brewing. The Church seemed to be thriving. Ideals of fuller political representation seemed to be developing in France and England. However, the 1300s were filled with disasters, both natural and manmade. By the end of the century, the medieval way of life was beginning to disappear. A Church Divided At the beginning of the 1300s, the papacy seemed in some ways still strong. Soon, however, both pope and Church were in desperate trouble. Pope and King Collide The pope in 1300 was an able but stubborn Italian. Pope Boniface VIII attempted to enforce papal authority on kings as previous popes had. When King Philip IV of France asserted his authority over French bishops, Boniface responded with a papal bull (an official document issued by the pope). It stated, “We declare, state, and define that subjection to the Roman Vocabulary Pontiff is absolutely necessary for the salvation of every Pontiff: the pope. human creature.” In short, kings must always obey popes. -
NCUA 5300 Call Report Account Descriptions Page 1 of 42 Effective
NCUA 5300 Call Report Account Descriptions Account Code Account Description Page 002 Amount of Leases Receivable 6 003 Loans Held for Sale 1 007 Land and Building 2 008 Other Fixed Assets 2 009 Total Other Assets 2 009A Accrued Interest on Loans 2 009B Accrued Interest on Investments 2 009C All Other Assets 2 009D Total Intangible Assets 2 009D1 Identifiable Intangible Assets 2 009D2 Goodwill 2 009E Non-Trading Derivative Assets, net 2 010 TOTAL ASSETS 2 010 TOTAL ASSETS 12 010 TOTAL ASSETS 13 010A Average of Daily Assets over the calendar quarter 12 010B Average of the three month-end balances over the calendar quarter 12 010C The average of the current and three preceding calendar quarter-end balances 12 011A Other Notes, Promissory Notes and Interest Payable < 1 Year 3 011B1 Other Notes, Promissory Notes and Interest Payable 1 - 3 Years 3 011B2 Other Notes, Promissory Notes and Interest Payable > 3 Years 3 011C Total Other Notes, Promissory Notes and Interest Payable 3 013 Total Shares 3 013A Total Shares < 1 Year 3 013B1 Total Shares 1 - 3 Years 3 013B2 Total Shares > 3 Years 3 014 TOTAL LIABILITIES, SHARES, AND EQUITY 4 018 Total Shares and Deposits 3 018A Total Shares and Deposits < 1 Year 3 018B1 Total Shares and Deposits 1 - 3 Years 3 018B2 Total Shares and Deposits > 3 Years 3 020A Total number of Delinquent Loans 30 to 59 Days 8 020B Total Delinquent Loans 30 to 59 Days 8 020C Amount of All Other Non-Real Estate Loans 30 to 59 days delinquent 8 020C1 Amount of New Vehicle Loans Delinquent 30 to 59 days 8 020C2 Amount of Used -
Br 1100S, Br 1300S
BR 1100S, BR 1300S PARTS LIST Standard Models After SN1000038925: 56413006(BR 1100S), 56413007(BR 1100S C / w/sweep system), 56413889(OBS / BR 1100S C / w/o sweep system) 56413010(BR 1300S), 56413011(BR 1300S C / w/sweep system), 56413890(OBS / BR 1300S C / w/o sweep system) Obsolete EDS Models: 56413785(BR 1100S EDS), 56413781(BR 1100S C EDS / w/sweep system), 56413782(BR 1300S EDS), 56413783(BR 1300S C EDS / w/sweep system), 56413897(BR 1100S C EDS / w/o sweep system) 56413898(BR 1300S C EDS / w/o sweep system) 5/08 revised 2/11 FORM NO. 56042498 08-5 TABLE OF CONTENTS 10-7 BR 1100S / BR 1300S 1 DESCRIPTION PAGE Chassis System ................................................................................................................................................. 2-3 Decal System ..................................................................................................................................................... 4-5 Drive Wheel System........................................................................................................................................... 6-7 Drive Wheel System (steering assembly) .......................................................................................................... 8-9 Electrical System.............................................................................................................................................10-11 Rear Wheel System ......................................................................................................................................