A History of Diplomacy in the International Development of Europe: The struggle for universal empireLongmans, Green, and Company, 1905 |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-5 di 100
Pagina ix
... force has been a determining element in the conflicts of nations , as it is in the maintenance of civil order within the State ; but it is not mere aimless or undirected force that has produced the present international system . On the ...
... force has been a determining element in the conflicts of nations , as it is in the maintenance of civil order within the State ; but it is not mere aimless or undirected force that has produced the present international system . On the ...
Pagina 4
... forces when engaged in war , but could declare war , make peace , and conduct all negotiations with foreign powers . Although the Senate had , under the Republic , almost entire charge of foreign affairs , under the Empire it fell , in ...
... forces when engaged in war , but could declare war , make peace , and conduct all negotiations with foreign powers . Although the Senate had , under the Republic , almost entire charge of foreign affairs , under the Empire it fell , in ...
Pagina 5
... force of perma- nent ordinances . He had the right to convoke the Senate , to preside over it , to take part in its deliberations , to send written proposals of laws , and to demand the precedence of business proposed by him ...
... force of perma- nent ordinances . He had the right to convoke the Senate , to preside over it , to take part in its deliberations , to send written proposals of laws , and to demand the precedence of business proposed by him ...
Pagina 6
... force of law ; but its authority had passed into the hands of its imperial master . It controlled taxation , but only on his initiative . It made appropriations of money , but it did so only at the suggestion of the Emperor , and the ...
... force of law ; but its authority had passed into the hands of its imperial master . It controlled taxation , but only on his initiative . It made appropriations of money , but it did so only at the suggestion of the Emperor , and the ...
Pagina 11
... force of arms alone that Rome held her place of proud pre - eminence over neighboring peoples , but by the pursuit of a policy in which justice was the prominent feature . Cicero contrasts the treatment which the Republic accorded to ...
... force of arms alone that Rome held her place of proud pre - eminence over neighboring peoples , but by the pursuit of a policy in which justice was the prominent feature . Cicero contrasts the treatment which the Republic accorded to ...
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Altre edizioni - Visualizza tutto
A History of Diplomacy in the International Development of Europe, Volume 1 David Jayne Hill Visualizzazione completa - 1911 |
A History of Diplomacy in the International Development of Europe, Volume 1 David Jayne Hill Visualizzazione completa - 1921 |
A History of Diplomacy in the International Development of Europe, Volume 1 David Jayne Hill Visualizzazione completa - 1911 |
Parole e frasi comuni
Adrian alliance Alps ambassadors ancient army authority barbarian became bishops Boniface Byzantium cardinals Carloman Cassiodorus century CHAP Charles Charles Martel Charles the Bald Charles the Fat Christendom Christian Church cities civil clergy Clovis conquest Conrad Constantinople coronation crusade death defend diplomacy Documents Duchy Duke East ecclesiastical election embassy Emperor envoys Europe faith feudal force Frankish Franks Frederick Gaul Geschichte Gregory Gregory III hand Henry Holy imperial crown influence Innocent Innocent III invaders Italian Italy John VIII kingdom lands Lateran palace League legates Lewis the German Liutprand Lombard Lombard League Lothair Milan monarchy negotiations nobles Odoacer Otto Otto II palace Papacy papal Paris peace Peter Philip Pippin political pontiff Pope possession princes realm received relations rendered restored Roman Empire Roman law Rome royal rule Saracens secure Senate sent Sicily spiritual Stephen supremacy temporal territory throne tion treaty unity vassal Venice Visigoths
Brani popolari
Pagina 330 - Church, and to our lord pope Innocent and to his Catholic successors, the whole kingdom of England and the whole kingdom of Ireland, with all their rights and appurtenances, for the remission of our...
Pagina 306 - Histoire de la lutte des papes et des empereurs de la maison de Souabe...
Pagina 351 - Count Palatine of the Rhine, the Duke of Saxony, the Margrave of Brandenburg, and the King of Bohemia The...
Pagina 219 - N' futurus Imperator, juro me servaturum Romanis bonas consuetudines, et firmo Chartas tertii generis et libelli sine fraude et malo ingenio.
Pagina 400 - in the beginnings," but "in the beginning" God created the heavens and the earth. Indeed we declare, announce, and define that it is altogether necessary to salvation for every human creature to be subject to the Roman pontiff.
Pagina 10 - ... quod populi priscorum Latinorum hominesque prisci Latini adversus populum Romanum Quiritium fecerunt, deliquerunt, quod populus Romanus' Quiritium bellum cum priscis Latinis iussit esse senatusque populi Romani Quiritium censuit, consensit, conscivit, ut bellum cum priscis Latinis fieret, ob earn rem ego populusque Romanus populis priscorum Latinorum hominibusque priscis Latinis bellum indico facioque.
Pagina 410 - We have decreed that we will accept no magistrate in our valleys who shall have obtained his office for a price, or who is not a native and resident among us. Every difference among...
Pagina 284 - ... Germany, to scatter the virus conceived by their iniquity, to denude the altars, to carry away the vessels of the house of God, to strip the crosses: lest an opportunity should be given them of proceeding further, we caused them to return to Rome by the way on which they had come. And, inasmuch as the kingdom, together with the empire, is ours by the election of the princes from God alone...
Pagina vii - A history of diplomacy, as the author justly insists, properly includes ' not only an account of the progress of international intercourse, but an exposition of the motives by which it has been inspired and the results which it has accomplished.' More even than that — it must include also ' a consideration of the genesis of the entire international system and of its progress through the progressive stages of its development.