-
according to the 1871
Penal Code (§ 361 des
Strafgesetzbuches von 1871),
vagabondage was
among the
grounds to
confine a
person to a
labor house. In the Weimar...
- to
place without a
permanent home or
regular work. (The)
Vagabond or
Vagabondage may also
refer to:
Vagabond (novel),
second book in The
Grail Quest series...
-
prolific Tsuji gave up his
writing career, and he
returned to his
custom of
vagabondage in the
fashion of a Komusō monk,
apparently as a sort of Nekkhamma. For...
- Tout Feu Tout Flamme... C'est Pour De Rire (1987) Sève Qui Peut (1989)
Vagabondages (Compilation) (1989) Les
Larmes Du Dalaï Lama (1992) Mémo (Compilation)...
- 51°30′55.12″N 00°07′43.08″W / 51.5153111°N 0.1286333°W / 51.5153111; -0.1286333 St
Giles in the
Fields is the
Anglican parish church of the St Giles...
-
Practical Medical Dictionary included an
entry for drapetomania,
defined as "
vagabondage, dromomania; an
uncontrollable or
insane impulsion to wander." Cartwright...
- of
prison through a
series of
arrests for theft, use of
false papers,
vagabondage, lewd acts, and
other offences. In
prison Genet wrote his
first poem...
-
Interview with
Amanda Palmer". The
Battered Suitcase Summer 2009. 2 (1).
Vagabondage Press LLC: 46. ISBN 978-1-4524-6181-6. ISSN 1942-0846.
Retrieved August...
-
these people." The
Gonin Gumi were
primarily aimed at
combating the
vagabondage and
brigandage of the time,
including mutual defence against the rōnin...
- (who
wrote the book
Flying gypsies: the
chronicle of a 10,000-mile air
vagabondage and
married first Vicomte Jacques Jean de
Sibour and
second Frederick...