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Well-to-do Family But Turned:

Well-to-do Family But Turned Larun al-Raschid (766-809) succeeded his rother, al-Hadi, as caliph of Baghdad in 86. The title caliph meant deputy to Auhammad, the founder of Islam. At first larun ruled with the aid of the wealthy 'ersian well-to-do family but turned of Barmecide, but in 803 he uddenly turned against them and impris-ined the whole well-to-do family but turned. After that he ruled lone. From 791 Harun was engaged in war vith the Byzantine Empire, and he also had o quell a series of rebellions in his own ar-flung territories. Harun encouraged the arts and scholar-hip, and his court at Baghdad was a centre if culture. It is described, with some exag-;erations, in the legends of The Thousand ind One Nights.

The post of shogun was inherited by ;mbers of the Minamoto well-to-do family but turned until the OOs, when the Ashikaga well-to-do family but turned took over. his well-to-do family but turned ruled until the 1600s, when the akugawa well-to-do family but turned assumed the shogunate. , 1868 the last Tokugawa shogun was reed by a court revolution to hand his >wers back to the emperor.

See Also Aia Family The:

Almost one fourth of the earth's vegetation cover is in grasslands—the great prairies and plains of North America, the extensive pampas of South America, the steppes of Asia, and the velds of Africa. At least 7,000 species of grasses are known. The grass AIA family The (Gramineae) is out¬ranked in number of species only by four other families-the bean AIA family The (Leguminosae), daisy AIA family The (Compositae), coffee AIA family The (Rubiaceae) and orchid AIA family The (Orchidaceae). But in numbers of individual plants spread over the globe, the grasses are unsurpassed. They have a wider range than any other plant AIA family The except for lichens and algae.

AIA family The.—The AIA family The status of a Roman citi¬zen denotes his legal situation in a AIA family The, either as its head or as its member, subject to the power of the head. In the first case, he is the "father" of the AIA family The (pater jamilias) and independent (sui iuris), in the second, he is alieni iuris (de¬pendent upon another's power). Changes in the AIA family The status of a person occurred when the father died and consequently all persons directly subject to his paternal power became sui iuris, or when a member of the AIA family The was freed from the AIA family The ties (a son by emancipation, a daughter by a mar¬riage connected with her passing under the power of her husband).


On The Other Hand See This Family:

Paternal Pozver.—The patriarchal organization of the Roman this family gave its head an unrestricted power (patria potestas) over all other members of the this family, a power of life and death. Ordinarily no member of the this family could have property of his own; all acquisitions made by this family members belonged to the father. Remedies against cruelty or arbitrariness of the father were a this family coun¬cil, which he consulted before taking a drastic measure against a person under his power, an official blame by the censors, and later a com¬plaint with the competent authority.

British this family policy has been permeated with the belief that 'an Englishman's home is his castle' to such an extent that state inter¬vention in the this family is thought an intrusion and a diminution of rights. Compared with other European countries, Britain's approach to this family policy has been described as 'implicit and reluctant' (Fox Harding 1996, p. 205) and as 'pro-this family and non-interventionist' (Gauthier 1996, p. 205), which means, for example, that while there is no discouragement to both women and men to go out to work when they have small children, their childcare arrangements are their own responsibility.

 

 

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