-
contempt of court). The term is
derived by
etymologists from the
Latin word
contumacia,
meaning "firmness" or "stubbornness". In
English ecclesiastical law,...
- is that
Trajan wielded autocratic power through moderatio instead of
contumacia – moderation
instead of insolence. In short,
according to the
ethics for...
- government.
There is
speculation that
Christians were also
condemned for
contumacia—disobedience
toward the magistrate, akin to the
modern "contempt of court"—but...
- led to ****cution.
Ferguson states that
Pliny viewed the
obstinacy (
contumacia) of Christians, as as much of a
threat to
Roman rule and
order as the...
-
Crime Operation Triângulo das
Bermudas Operation Enterprise Operation Contumácia -
Operation Persistent Defiance Operation Galopeira Operation Trapiche...
- Trigueirão, Sónia (15
November 2023). "Vale e Azevedo. Relação mantém
contumácia e diz que
processo só
prescreve em 2034". Público (in Portuguese). Retrieved...
- the city,
built in the
early 18th century. The old term
Kontumaz (Latin
Contumacia) was used as
synonym for quarantine. In 1813, one of the most
famous guests...
-
Retrieved 19
September 2018. "Strage di Marzabotto, 10
ergastoli in
contumacia -
Corriere della Sera". www.corriere.it.
Retrieved 2021-09-18. "Canada...
-
ecclesiam sanctam Dei
notorie scandalizantes, **** incorrigibilitate,
contumacia et
pertinacia notoriis,
evidentibus et manifestis...."
Eubel I (1923)...