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| | <b>Philipb> III of Macedon - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | It became soon clear that <b>Philipb> was too dangerous to live, as many enemies of Olympias saw him as a useful tool against her, and so the 25 December 317 BC had him executed, while his wife was forced to commit suicide. |  | | From that moment <b>Philipb> Arrhidaeus was to be under the sway of his bride, a proud and determinated woman bent on substantiating his' husband power. |  | | Cassander's refusal to accept his father decision sparks the second war of the Diadochi, in which Eurydice sees once more a chance to free <b>Philipb> from the control of the regent. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philip_III_of_Macedon
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| | <b>PHILIPb> IV. (FRANCE) - LoveToKnow Article on <b>PHILIPb> IV. (FRANCE) |
 | | <b>PHILIPb> V. would have been some signs of it. |  | | <b>Philipb> was a lover of poetry, surrounded himself with Provencal poets and even wrote in Provencal himself, but he was also one of the most hard-working kings of the house of Capet. |  | | It is typical of <b>Philipb>'s character and career that he should die thus, in an expedition undertaken against the interests of his kingdom, at the instigation of his ambitious uncle. |
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http://www.1911encyclopedia.org/P/PH/PHILIP_IV_FRANCE_.htm
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| | Herod - International Standard Bible Encyclopedia |
 | | The last days of Herod were embittered by endless court intrigues and conspiracies, by an almost insane suspicion on the part of the aged king, and by increasing indications of the restlessness of the nation. |  | | Herod the Great encouraged the circulation of the legend of the family descent from an illustrious Babylonian Jew (Ant., XIV, <b>ib>, 3), but it has no historic basis. |  | | The Jews, loyal to the dynasty of the Maccabees, accused Herod before the Roman court, but he was summarily acquitted by Antony. |
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http://www.studylight.org/enc/isb/view.cgi?number=T4306
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| | Domestic Problems |
 | | Herod sent him to Rome and designated in his will that Antipater was his successor to the throne and in the event that Antipater's death might occur before his own, Herod (<b>Philipb>), son of Mariamne II, the high priest's daughter, was named as his successor. |  | | Herod again changed his mind and nominated Archelaus, the older son of Malthace, as king and his brothers Antipas as tetrarch of Galilee and Perea and <b>Philipb> as tetrarch of Gaulanitis, Trachonitis, Batanea, and Paneas. |  | | Salome and Pheroras (brother of Herod and Salome) reported to Herod that his life was in danger because the two sons were not going to leave the murder of their mother unavenged and that Archelaus, king of Cappadocia (father of Glaphyra), would help them to reach the emperor and bring charges against their father. |
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http://www.bible-history.com/herod_the_great/HERODDomestic_Problems.htm
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| | King Herod the Great |
 | | Herod (73-4 BCE) was the pro-Roman king of the small Jewish state in the last decades before the common era. |  | | Herod was born 73 BCE as the son of a man from Idumea named Antipater and a woman named Cyprus, the daughter of an Arabian sheik. |  | | Herod managed to convince Mark Antony, who made a tour through the eastern provinces that had supported Caesar's murderers, that his father had been forced to support their side. |
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http://www.livius.org/he-hg/herodians/herod_the_great01.html
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| | Herod Antipas |
 | | Herod Antipas: Jewish leader, ruler of Galilee and Peraea between 4 BCE and 39 CE. |  | | She had been the wife of Herod Antipas' half-brother (who was also called Herod). |  | | Herod Antipas' subjects were convinced that the war with Aretas that broke out in 36, and the Arabian successes during this war, were a divine punishment (text). |
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http://www.livius.org/he-hg/herodians/herod_antipas.html
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| | Commentary Magazine - A Rumor of War, by <b>Philipb> Caputo |
 | | ...For this reason <b>Philipb> Caputo's first-person narrative about preparation for battle, battle itself, and the aftermath of battle, which offers a vivid sense of what it was like to fight in Vietnam, grips the reader in a way that more general works do not... |  | | ...Caputo does confess to his own murderousness, but <b>Ib> believe he does so only to prove that he is not guilty, that he is a victim of malign forces, namely, the government and the military, whose patsy he supposedly was in Vietnam... |  | | ...It is absurd and insane, Caputo says, because it has been conceived "much as if we had murdered two people in the course of a bank robbery during peacetime... |
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http://www.commentarymagazine.com/Summaries/V64I4P88-1.htm
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| | CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Herod |
 | | As she had married Herod <b>Philipb> -- not the tetrarch of the same name -- who lived as a private citizen at Rome, by whom she had a daughter, Salome, she acted against the law in leaving him to marry Antipas. |  | | The speech of Herod on the occasion, though full of piety, may be interpreted by what he said to the wise men: "that <b>Ib> also may come and adore him" (Matt., ii, 8; Jos., "Ant.", XV, xi, 1). |  | | Yet Antigonus called Herod a half-Jew (Jos., "Ant.", XIV, xv, 2, and note in Whiston), while the Jews, when it furthered their interests, spoke of Herod their king as by birth a Jew (Jos., "Ant." XX, viii, 7). |
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http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/07289c.htm
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| | Philip_IV_of_France |
 | | <b>Philipb> IV arrested Jews so he could seize their goods to accommodate the inflated costs of modern warfare, condemned by his enemies in the Catholic Church as his spendthrift lifestyle. |  | | On October 13, 1307, what may have been all the Knights Templar in France were simultaneously arrested by agents of Philippe the Fair, to be later tortured into admitting heresy in the Order. |  | | A member of the Capetian dynasty, <b>Philipb> was born at the Palace of Fontainebleau at Seine-et-Marne, the son of King <b>Philipb> III and Isabella of Aragon. |
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http://www.plasmatvwholesaler.com/search.php?title=Philip_IV_of_France
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| | In Herod's Footsteps |
 | | Ironically, her grandson, Herod Agrippa <b>Ib>, continued the Herod dynasty: He governed territory formerly belonging to <b>Philipb> (the area north and east of the Sea of Galilee) from AD 37?41 and was king of Judea from AD 41?44. |  | | Herod <b>Philipb> received the territory north and east of the Sea of Galilee. |  | | Or maybe he thought about the 45 members of the Sanhedrin whom he had murdered, the hundreds of family and staff whom he had suspected of plotting against him, or the thousands of subjects who died in his brutal campaign to claim a country they believed he had no right to rule. |
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http://community.gospelcom.net/Brix?pageID=3553
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| | Ojukwu expected at Effiong |
 | | Effiong said that it would have been wrong for her to task any of the governors without recourse to the Akwa Ibom State government. |  | | But some family members of the late General, it was gathered, had insisted that their dead relation be brought home for burial. |  | | Effiong, who reunited Nigeria when he handed the instrument of surrender of the break away Biafra Republic in 1970 to then Lt Col. Olusegun Obasanjo, died last year and will be buried on February 28 in his native Akwa Ibom State. |
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http://www.kwenu.com/news/ojukwu_effiong.htm
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| | Herod |
 | | Herod Phillip, 4 BCE to 34 CE Herod <b>Philipb>, 4 B.C.E.-34 C.E. Meshorer 5, AE 18. |  | | Herod of Chalcis (III), 41 to 48 CE Grandson of Herod the Great and Mariamne, also brother of Agrippa <b>Ib>. Claudius gave his authority over the Temple, holy vessels and selection of high priest. |  | | Herod Antipas, 4 BCE to 40 CE 4 BCE to 40 CE AE 19. |
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http://members.verizon.net/vze3xycv/RulersCoins/herodpic.htm
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| | Amazon.com: Books: <b>Philipb> V of Spain: The King Who Reigned Twice |
 | | <b>Philipb> V is a king who is more often talked about than subjected to scholarly inquiry. |  | | Although he postures this scholarly work as a personal biography of <b>Philipb> V and not a historical review of the king's reign, Kamen's rehabilitation is sometimes excessive: for instance, his claim that, under <b>Philipb>, "Spain awoke to adequate food supplies" is undermined by his own admission that royal policies aggravated the problem of poverty. |  | | Here, he argues that <b>Philipb> in fact helped ensure the economic, political and cultural revival of his adopted country, that he was entirely uninterested in absolutist power and that the salacious accusations regarding his sexual appetite are without foundation. |
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http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0300087187?v=glance
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| | 7.30 Report - 14/02/2005: Govt condemns torture |
 | | <b>PHILIPb> RUDDOCK: Well, we were declined consular access, and that's why we assert very strongly, when a claim is made that a consular official witnessed at an airport the administration of torture, that it is in fact untrue. |  | | <b>PHILIPb> RUDDOCK: Well, let me just make it very clear, our officers know what our position is in relation to torture, and <b>Ib> think it's highly unlikely, when you have a number of officers in that position, that they would all be complicit in behaviour of the sort that you're alleging. |  | | <b>PHILIPb> RUDDOCK: <b>Ib> believe they undertook questioning of their own in which there was no administration of any torture or any duress applied. |
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http://www.abc.net.au/7.30/content/2005/s1302643.htm
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| | King <b>Philipb>'s War: Information From Answers.com |
 | | <b>Philipb> was the Christian name assigned to Metacomet, the sachem of the Wampanoag Indians. |  | | Upon the death (1662) of his brother, Alexander (Wamsutta), whom the Native Americans suspected the English of murdering, <b>Philipb> became sachem and maintained peace with the colonists for a number of years. |  | | <b>Philipb>'s wife and son were captured, and he was killed (Aug., 1676) by a Native American in the service of Capt. Benjamin Church after his hiding place at Mt. Hope (Bristol, R.<b>Ib>.) was betrayed. |
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http://www.answers.com/topic/king-philip-s-war
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| | Steamfitters Local v. <b>Philipb> Morris [01/11/00] |
 | | <b>Philipb> Morris, Inc., 551 N.W.2d 490 (Minn. 1996) (affirming denial [**72] of motion to dismiss state antitrust, consumer protection, and equitable claims, but dismissing tort claims) n24 |  | | <b>Philipb> Morris, Inc., 577 N.W.2d 401 (Iowa 1998) (affirming dismissal of deception, special duty, and indemnity claims) |  | | Just as we have found the link between defendants' alleged fraud--providing false information regarding the safety of their products--and plaintiffs' alleged injuries too attenuated to support a RICO claim, we also find the link too remote to support a common-law fraud claim. |
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http://ash.org/steamfit.html
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| | Habib set free from Guantanamo Bay - World - www.smh.com.au |
 | | The Attorney-General, <b>Philipb> Ruddock, said last night that the US would not charge Mr Habib, who had been accused of aiding al-Qaeda. |  | | Mrs Habib said her husband had not been informed of his release and did not know when he was coming home. |  | | However, he said it remained "the strong view" of the US that Mr Habib had prior knowledge of the September 11 attacks. |
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http://www.smh.com.au/news/World/Habib-set-free-from-Guantanamo-Bay/2005/01/11/1105423493208.html
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| | Amazon.co.uk: Books: A Rumor of War |
 | | Caputo talks about what lies beyond the cozy chambers of government, the "soundbites," and the media circus. |  | | One of the book's strongest assets is that Caputo did a remarkable job in capturing the day-to-day routines of the battlefield (although 'battlefield' might be considered an inaccurate term in describing Vietnam's blind jungle patrols and the sudden firefights with an unseen enemy). |  | | Caputo came back from Vietnam an opponent of the war. |
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http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/0712664459/ref=pd_sxp_elt_l1/202-9842119-6538240
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| | Chapter 5 - AN INTERVIEW WITH <b>PHILIPb> THE TETRARCH TO COMPARE SAMSON AND JESUS |
 | | <b>Philipb>'s encratic gospel and lifestyle is possibly his reaction to the libertine lifestyle associated with Mennius of Tyre. |  | | The brother of Saul, Herod <b>Philipb> Costobaris also known as Joseph of Arimathea, was yet another <b>Philipb>, son of Imma Shalom of Gamaliel. |  | | <b>Philipb>: As Jesus hung upon the cross, <b>Ib> remembered that his father Joseph had made the cross without knowing how it would be used. |
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http://www.bible-luke.com/book/chap5.htm
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| | PM - Amnesty calls for truth over Habib movements |
 | | <b>PHILIPb> RUDDOCK: He was born in Egypt, and their law does not deprive a person of nationality, of citizenship if they take out the citizenship of another country, so he becoming an Australian citizen would not have automatically lost his Egyptian citizenship. |  | | <b>PHILIPb> RUDDOCK: We became aware, but it was informally, that he may have been moved to Egypt and we made enquiries in Egypt and the Egyptians denied they had him. |  | | Speaking on ABC radio in Perth, the Attorney-General <b>Philipb> Ruddock said the Government has no evidence Mr Habib was ever in Egypt. |
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http://www.abc.net.au/pm/content/2004/s1149751.htm
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| | The American Academy of Diplomacy - Book Award |
 | | The book chronicles the life of the late <b>Philipb> Habib, former Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs, with a particular focus on his role as Special Negotiator in the Middle East during the crisis confronting the US following the Israeli invasion of Beirut in 1982. |  | | The book is the result of seven years of writing and research from over 150 hours of interviews and 10,000 pages of declassified documents. |  | | Habib was given the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Reagan in September of 1982. |
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http://www.academyofdiplomacy.org/awards/book-2002.html
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| | Treaty of Utrecht Renunciations to France and Spain <b>Philipb> V Headship Royal House of France Bourbon Orléans |
 | | The reciprocal renunciations made by <b>Philipb> V, King of Spain, to the throne of France, and by two Princes of the House of France to the Spanish throne, were intended to settle the balance of power in Europe on a permanent basis by permanently separating the French and Spanish Crowns. |  | | <b>Philipb>, therefore, introduced a new system of succession in Spain on 10 May 1713; the semi-Salic system, which gave priority to all his male descendants with the provision that in the event of their extinction, the throne would pass to the nearest female dynast. |  | | To provide a surety of his rights and those of his descendants, <b>Philipb> V determined to insure for his family the same guarantee that had governed his rights to the throne of France. |
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http://www.chivalricorders.org/royalty/bourbon/france/success/sucprt2.htm
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| | ufo - UFOS at close sight: the Ilkley Moor encounter of the 3rd kind |
 | | Some UFO enthusiasts are hopeful that more evidence will emerge to substantiate the claims of <b>Philipb> Spencer; and there are those who do not believe that the figure is alien, but there is not definitive proof either way. |  | | After four years of being a metropolitan policeman in London, <b>Philipb> Spencer had left his job and moved with his wife and baby to the West Yorkshire area of Ilkley moor to be closer to her family. |  | | If the story is a hoax, it could only have been set up under the improbable yet not impossible motive that he planned a hoax for the inner satisfaction of fooling the ufology community. |
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http://ufologie.net/htm/ilkleymoor.htm
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| | <b>Philipb> Habib and Ariel Sharon: Archive Entry From Brad DeLong's Webjournal |
 | | When the Israeli invasion of Lebanon began, the White House's first reaction was to summon Special Presidential Envoy <b>Philipb> Habib to meet with Reagan, and to send him off to the Middle East to stop the war--to find an acceptable political solution. |  | | Sharon was a killer, obsessed by hatred of the Palestinians,' Habib said. |  | | At one point Habib finds that the PLO agreement to terms he thought he had achieved had slipped away because the PLO was no longer frightened of the IDF. |
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http://www.j-bradford-delong.net/movable_type/archives/000001.html
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| | Did Mark Make a Mistake? : Christian Courier |
 | | The other <b>Philipb> of the Herod family was the first husband of Herodias; he is the one referred to in Matthew 14:3; Mark 6:17. |  | | This “Herod,” mentioned by Josephus, could also have had the name “<b>Philipb>,” just as the “Herod” who murdered John was also called Antipas, and the “Herod” who killed James was known as Agrippa as well (Acts 12:1ff). |  | | <b>Philipb> was disinherited by his father, and so merely lived a private life in Rome. |
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http://www.christiancourier.com/questions/markConfusedQuestion.htm
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| | Dale CURSED IS THE U.S. ENVOY WHO TRIES TO BRING PEACE TO THE MIDDLE EAST |
 | | "Boykin's main argument is that Ambassador <b>Philipb> Habib did all that an intelligent and determined diplomat could do to end the fighting in Beirut and later remove foreign forces (Israeli and Syrian) from Lebanon. |  | | Habib's efforts notwithstanding, he failed in his next assignment--to obtain the departure of all foreign forces from Lebanon. |  | | The author describes at length the ambassador's strenuous work habits and the difficulties he encountered in reporting to both President Reagan and Secretary of State Alexander Haig. |
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http://www.unc.edu/depts/diplomat/archives_roll/2002_07-09/book_sept02/book_dale_peace.html
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| | KING <b>PHILIPb> II: |
 | | As we will see, it is very probable that the assayer mark was purposefully left off of the coins because <b>Philipb> II was being "prudent" (3) in what appears to have been a monetary experiment. |  | | On the other hand, according to the official "instructions" for the minting of coins at King <b>Philipb> II's private Mint in Segovia, all coins were to be struck to the same weight, fineness and design standards employed at all the other Spanish mints. |  | | The absence of the assayer mark on all of the silver coins struck at the Segovia Mill Mint during the reign of King <b>Philipb> II has always been one of the biggest mysteries of modern Spanish coinage and was always worthy of a detailed numismatic investigation. |
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http://www.segoviamint.org/english/articles/a1.htm
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| | On One Of Those Days |
 | | <b>Philipb> left Patrick to finish grooming his horse and hurried in the direction of the office. |  | | <b>Philipb> sat down on the desk chair which left the bench the only place to sit but Morgan opted to stand, <b>Philipb> remained sitting though he felt it left him at a disadvantage. |  | | <b>Philipb> turned and looked at Nike and could swear that if a horse could blush she would have been doing so. |
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http://web.telia.com/~u85549749/slash_01;07.htm
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| | Arab - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Efforts to reconcile the Biblical and Arab genealogies later led to conflicting attempts to trace Adnan to Ishmael (Ismail), the eldest son of Abraham and Hagar. |  | | Following the Islamic conquest of the 8th century, however, the language of the nomadic Arabs came to be regarded as preserving the highest purity by the grammarians following Abi Ishaq, and the term kalam al-ʿArab "language of the Arabs" came to denote the uncontaminated language of the Bedouins. |  | | Jews from Arab countries - mainly Mizrahi Jews and Yemenite Jews - are today usually not categorised as Arab. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arab
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| | King <b>Philipb> |
 | | <b>Philipb> began to enlist the aid of other tribes in an attempt to stop the English expansion. |  | | King <b>Philipb>Âs War was one of the most devastating wars ever fought in America. |  | | The importance of SassamonÂs murder was that several days prior he had warned the Plymouth authorities of a possible uprising by <b>Philipb> and the Wampanoags. |
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http://www.jacksonsweb.org/roll3.htm
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