-
continued to
evolve to
denote the more specific,
contemporary meaning of
munificence, open-handedness, and
liberality in the
giving of
money and possessions...
- and
inscriptions attest to
senators who were
active in
politics and
munificence in
their homeland (patria).
Senators were the
traditional governing class...
- ISBN 978-0-06-430158-9.
William H.
Byrnes IV (Spring 2005) "Ancient
Roman Munificence: The
Development of the
Practice and Law of Charity".
Rutgers Law Review...
- and one a
refectory for the poor, both of
which he
endowed with
royal munificence.
Mehmed I had
three known consorts:
Emine Hatun.
Daughter of Nasireddin...
- give,
grant and bestow; or toirbhearl,
meaning efficiency,
bounty or
munificence. By the 1640s, the term was used in the
English language to
refer to...
-
allegorical representations of Generosity, by
Eugenio Maccagnani, and
Munificence, by
Arnaldo Zocchi. The
royal tombs are
maintained by the
National Institute...
- rivers. In 10.65, she is
invoked together with "holy thoughts" (dhī) and "
munificence" (puraṃdhi),
consistent with her role as a
goddess of both knowledge...
- as in "with an open hand,"
since the
taking of the
jizya is a form of
munificence that
averted a
state of conflict. al-Ṭabarī
gives only one explanation:...
- Its
hundred and
three shlokas (verses)
praise the beauty,
grace and
munificence of
Tripura Sundari as a form of Parvati. W.
Norman Brown translated it...
- by the hand of Liberty, and
possessed of all the
Glory that heroism,
munificence, and
humanity can bestow,
descends to the
ungrateful task of forging...