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The military commander's power over enemy propertyChild, John L. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (LL. M.)--Judge Advocate General's School, 1954. / "April 1954." Typescript. Includes bibliographical references. Also issued in microfiche.
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The concept of the enemy in the Book of ProverbsMcGinnis, Charles E. January 1986 (has links)
Thesis (M. Div.)--Grace Theological Seminary, 1986. / Abstract. Bibliography: leaves 67-71.
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The origins and development of the eschatological opponent theme with particular emphasis upon the second beast of Revelation 13Garrity, Michael J. January 1993 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Southern California College, 1993. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 122-132).
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Landesverrat durch Warenlieferung an den Feind /Karger, Hans. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Universität Breslau.
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The provenance and technology of Iron Age war booty from southern ScandinaviaBirch, Thomas January 2013 (has links)
Across southern Scandinavia are some 30 known weapon depositions made in former lakes from the Roman Iron Age (0-375 CE), seven of which are large-scale war booty sacrifices entailing material culture from whole defeated armies. The major weapon deposits contain spears, lances, shields, swords, knives and other militaria, representing a colossal sum of iron – at one site, some 6000 objects totalling 500kg of iron metal. This thesis presents an enquiry into the provenance of the iron used to make these weapons. The aim was to learn more about the origins of the armies through provenancing their weapons. Using laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS), as well as other analytical techniques, this study analysed 13 lances, a single spear and 10 knives from two of the main weapon deposits, and was able to demonstrate regional and subregional provenance hypotheses for each item. The results demonstrate that the iron used in weapon manufacture originated from across Scandinavia, notably Norway and Jutland. The sampled weapons were studied metallographically, showing the lances to be highly standardised weapon products made in a single workshop by distinguished crafstpeople. The knives reflect a diverse range of construction methods associated with localised non-specialist manufacture. The results were used to support an existing 'band of brothers' theory, instigating that the armies were made up of individuals from across Scandinavia (represented by their personal items) who were issued standardised war gear as part of a larger collective force. In order to provenance the iron weapons, it was necessary to develop a robust analytical method. This involved studying the behaviour of trace elements in experimental smelting systems to improve the existing methodology by further validation and refinement. The results from the method development are deemed to be a significant step in iron provenance studies in archaeology.
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De handel op den vijand 1572-1609 ...Kernkamp, Johannes Hermann, January 1900 (has links)
Proefschrift--Utrecht. / "Overzicht van geraadpleegde archivalia en litteratuur": v. 1, p. [238]-250.
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De handel op den vijand 1572-1609 ...Kernkamp, Johannes Hermann, January 1900 (has links)
Proefschrift--Utrecht. / "Overzicht van geraadpleegde archivalia en litteratuur": v. 1, p. [238]-250.
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The enemies of God's people a comparison of Pauline and Jewish exegesis /Schulz, Charles R. January 1998 (has links)
Thesis (S.T.M.)--Condordia Seminary, St. Louis, Mo., 1998. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 98-103).
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Encountering the Enemy: An Inquiry into the Limits of GenerativityMorgan, Matthew John 01 December 2010 (has links)
This project involves a sustained investigation into the sense of the enemy. Chapter one begins by focusing on a common understanding of the enemy found within our homeworld: the political enemy. As will become clear, this mode of encountering the enemy has become the dominant framework for understanding the enemy in our liberal-democratic home. Our task at this point is to identify the political elements from which our mode of understanding the enemy emerges. Once this dominant understanding has been developed, I will treat it as a clue for a fuller investigation into the sense of the enemy. In chapter two, we see that even positions critical of liberal-democratic thought tend to occupy a similar political understanding of the enemy. Working with the writings of Carl Schmitt, we observe how even his critical posture towards the liberal-democratic understanding of the enemy is itself operating within a similar articulation of the enemy. I argue that Schmitt's articulation is similar to the liberal-democratic articulation in that they are both modern in nature. The task of the third chapter is to understand the problematic aspects of the modern understanding of our world so as to clear the way for a fuller understanding of the enemy. This is followed by the fourth chapter that is devoted to finding a way to think outside of the modern liberal-democratic model of politics that regulates our homeworld understanding of the enemy. In so doing, chapters three and four help us find an opening into a more essential structure organizing the sense of the enemy. Once this goal is accomplished, the final chapter investigates the way we encounter the enemy within generative and intersubjective lived experience.
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A Century of AshKusch, Zachary 05 1900 (has links)
Contained within is a sample, consisting of the first twelve chapters, which portray the final days of the fictional Polian War. The events are a springboard for the rest of the novel, and indeed the series.
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