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The Manufacture of Heraclianus' Usurpation (413 C.E.)

PHOENIX Workshops, 2022
:The comes Africae Heraclianus’ revolt (413 C.E.) has usually been interpreted as an attempt to usurp imperial power. This article will argue that Heraclianus was not a usurper, but that he had simply wished to secure his influence over the emperor ...
Jeroen W. P. Wijnendaele
semanticscholar   +1 more source

The Usurped Powers of the Senate

American Political Science Review, 1906
A century of constitutional government in the United States has served to emphasize the wisdom of Hamilton's warning of “the tendency of the legislative authority to absorb every other.” He clearly foresaw and attempted to guard against, dangers that today are only too apparent.
openaire   +1 more source

Usurpation, Legitimacy, and the Roman Empire

Oxford Scholarship Online, 2018
This chapter examines Roman imperial power, from its inception under Augustus until the crisis of the third century. The chapter examines the contradictions of the imperial office—where the emperor was at once Republican magistrate subject to the laws ...
Adrastos Omissi
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Culture usurpation between self-existence and coexistence (literature as a Case Study)

Humanities journal
This study examines cultural usurpation as a pivotal negotiation between self-existence and cohabitation, using literature as the primary case study.
Amer Ali Dahham Wateefi
semanticscholar   +2 more sources

Battle Over Power Usurpation: Mapping the Sudan Civil War Through the Conflict Wheel Model

Asian Review of Social Sciences
The two long years of brutal war have severely decimated Sudan. With no sign of a ceasefire or peace talks in action yet, Sudan currently presents the largest humanitarian crisis in the world ever recorded.
Trapa Sarker
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Obstetric Violence vs. The Insubordination of Eve’s Daughters: Embers of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein in Elizabeth Baines’s The Birth Machine

Jordan Journal of Modern Languages and Literatures
Frankenstein can be understood as Mary Shelley’s accusation of the usurpation of women’s reproductive capacity by a scientific father and has become a myth nurturing a ‘hideous progeny’ of multifarious literary expressions.

semanticscholar   +1 more source

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