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"patrimony" Definitions
  1. property that is given to somebody when their father dies synonym inheritance
  2. the works of art and treasures of a nation, church, etc. synonym heritage

185 Sentences With "patrimony"

How to use patrimony in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "patrimony" and check conjugation/comparative form for "patrimony". Mastering all the usages of "patrimony" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Jagdeo has said Granger "sold our patrimony" to Exxon Mobil.
It's an accepted political tool, a part of the patrimony.
Antiquities are particularly fraught, given patrimony laws that protect artifacts.
It is a cultural and ecological gem; a global patrimony.
The divisions of the present are part of the nation's patrimony.
Film and sound recordings are vital parts of America's cultural patrimony.
"This is a patrimony that should be universally available," he said.
"It's a loss of historic culture and Tunisian culinary patrimony," he laments.
But more important, the task fits perfectly the progressive movement's ethical patrimony.
I have been thinking about "Patrimony" quite a bit since Roth died.
" By "patrimony" and "culture," Tosi evidently means something akin to "pasta" and "cheese.
The Amazon is the Earth's patrimony and its destruction will impact us all.
There are environmental issues, aesthetic issues, cultural issues, patrimony issues and financial issues.
For them, it's a part of their patrimony, and needs to be preserved.
"It is piece of cultural patrimony in a public space," she told Hyperallergic.
From patrimony to debris, a last gallery positions assemblage amidst global trade and conflict.
Recorded music is arguably America's great artistic patrimony, our supreme gift to world culture.
Eisenberg recommends Patrimony, by Philip Roth, which is about the death of Roth's father.
Hammer estimates that the intellectual patrimony of Timbuktu now amounts to a staggering 377,000 manuscripts.
They can send some of the African patrimony abroad, and receive other pieces in return.
In the second scene of "Prodigal Son," the title character spends his patrimony on debauchery.
"Much of our patrimony is damaged, but there are no victims," Mayor Nicola Alemanno told RaiNews24.
Kitchen citizenship means being able to reproduce the country's pastry patrimony and recognize its formal requirements.
"Important public works and the safeguard of our patrimony" can go hand in hand, he said.
This patrimony is one reason directors like Sofia Coppola and performers like Ms. Chastain are here.
Although France has strict laws to protect national patrimony, few local officials make use of them.
Of course, you don't have to look abroad to see the significance of protected cultural patrimony.
Throughout American history, Republicans have been at the forefront of protecting our shared patrimony in nature.
Christie's strictly adheres to bilateral treaties and international laws with respect to cultural property and patrimony.
"I will be the greatest jobs president that God ever created," he decreed, emphasizing a divine patrimony.
The French state owns most of the country's cultural patrimony, including Notre Dame and other major cathedrals.
"The tensions between these two churches are related to the patrimony: the buildings, churches," said the Rev.
The Amazon is a natural wonder enshrined in the Brazilian Constitution as part of the national patrimony.
Why, then, does this central and beloved bit of cultural patrimony seem to be going out of style?
The grant of this warrant powerfully demonstrates the commitment of the United States to protecting tribal cultural patrimony.
And to this day, Quebec politicians who are not especially religious can be protective of the Catholic patrimony.
"It's a big challenge to relaunch a brand like this, because of the huge patrimony," Mr. Vaillant said.
Rather, they are part of our nation's natural patrimony, to be enjoyed by everyone, regardless of political persuasion.
"Jimmy Corrigan," Ware's 2000 breakthrough, was an Oedipal saga of patrimony as failure, with Chicago as gorgeous palimpsest.
This horrific attack on an important and beautiful example of the patrimony of central Asia shocked the world.
"I obviously support contemporary art, but I also support cultural patrimony in public spaces," said Alicia Inez Guzman.
A large slice of what the yellow vests call their patrimony derives from Turks, Jordanians and others selling theirs.
As far as Farmer could tell, they were being accused of attempting to steal the cultural patrimony of Peru.
This is the behavior of a country cousin squandering an unforeseen inheritance, not the steward of a city's patrimony.
"Our project is more global than restitution and also aims to valorize different types of patrimony," Bouli told Hyperallergic.
The annual meeting of Unesco has become unusually contentious, underscoring how debates on cultural patrimony can assume political significance.
It has been keen to showcase contemporary art and explore unexpected or difficult parts of the artistic patrimony of Italy.
If either side believes the other is using symbols of the other, 'corrective action' will be taken to respect patrimony.
As emergency operations were winding down, trained experts began inspecting buildings to assess the damage to the area's cultural patrimony.
"All that peered out from the shroud was the displeasure in his dead face," Roth wrote in his memoir Patrimony.
This financial incongruity has fuelled a sentiment among many Italians that the French are buying up the country's economic patrimony.
About 18 months ago, Mr. Louboutin was recounting this story to France's head of patrimony, the television personality Stéphane Bern.
His patrimony would not protect him—even a former army chief who stood for the presidency last year wound up in jail.
In recent years, the Patriarchates of Constantinople and Moscow have had some hard legal arguments over the Russian spiritual patrimony in France.
It would help insure that a full portfolio of sustainable and renewable energy sources and healthy, absorptive forests becomes our national patrimony.
His son Felix's rapid ascent within the UDPS ranks has led to criticism that the party had become a private family patrimony.
Their modern art would revive their "folk spirit," displaying a vigorous continuity with their African patrimony and an embrace of American verve.
Certainly, picturesque churches and other jewels of France's historical patrimony can be found outside central Paris, though they're fewer and farther between.
They have been blessed with a unique planetary patrimony, whose value is intrinsic and life-sustaining as much as it is commercial.
It stands, roofless but intact, thanks to the 600 lionhearted firefighters and engineers who risked their lives for the world's cultural patrimony.
In the next five years, I want the conditions to be created for the temporary or permanent restitution of African patrimony to Africa.
AS THE would-be guardian of the world's most precious places and patrimony, UNESCO can hardly avoid entering into the field of religion.
Toward the end of the book, he commits a bizarre act of violence against Dina—a dark, unsubtle reminder of his emotional patrimony.
We didn't want to risk the patrimony of the club, a club of 150,000 members which needs to be managed coherently and responsibly.
The upshot is that today every American inherits a stunning patrimony, a piece of some of the most beautiful terrain in the world.
Perhaps for this reason, my favorite book of Roth's isn't fiction but "Patrimony," a memoir of understated prose, tender, yet unyielding; elegiac, numinous.
The lawsuit also cites property rights, cultural patrimony laws, statutes of limitations and jurisdictional issues as grounds for the sculpture's return to them.
By talking about it, perhaps more people will understand that the images in that postcard box were icons of art history and human patrimony.
In an editorial published on February 4th, O Globo, a liberal newspaper, lamented that "to police this Rio patrimony is to leave samba behind".
Mr Bergamo's counter-proposal is for a joint body including both the government and the city council to administer all of Rome's cultural patrimony.
The dispute highlights pressures facing Brazil to protect its unique environmental patrimony as its tries to foment jobs and economic growth for its citizens.
Senate Bill 2165: Safeguard Tribal Objects of Patrimony Act (STOP Act) has bipartisan support and is awaiting a hearing in the Indian Affairs Committee.
But street styles have rarely made it onto the Paris Opera's stage, still seen by many as the heart of the French choreographic patrimony.
In a speech in Burkina Faso, Emmanuel Macron bemoaned the fact that so much of Africa's cultural patrimony is held by European collectors and museums.
Jaguar Land Rover has a rich heritage of building cool cars, and lately, it's started up a new tradition of turning that patrimony into patrimoney.
Two 800-year-old stencil paintings in Tasmania's Nirmena Nala Cave were destroyed by vandals, prompting Aboriginal leaders to demand tougher laws protecting Aboriginal patrimony.
Erpenbeck beautifully orchestrates a counterpoint, a thread that weaves its way between Richard's established European patrimony and its disruption in the face of the Other.
"The operations found by the audit show that CONMEBOL's patrimony was greatly affected by an ongoing, unfair and fraudulent management scheme," according to the complaint.
The two countries' latest struggle is over which one will be able to formally tie the ancient practice of Tibetan medicine to its national patrimony.
As late as the early 1990s, there was no discernible competition between China and India to claim Tibetan medicine as cultural patrimony, Western scholars say.
"When you claim something like this, and even when you've got great science behind you, the Egyptians still have control over their national patrimony," she said.
Andrew Kovacs, curator of Archive of Affinities, uses clippings and artifacts from his curio cabinet of built patrimony to create towers, hotels, and a dog park.
"You're deaf to the reality of a revolution with 20 years of democratic patrimony; you only follow the script written by the extreme right," he said.
At the time of sale, the Italian government had determined the statue was not found in Italian territorial waters and thus was excluded from Italian patrimony.
This is our collective patrimony, a tribute to the wisdom of Theodore Roosevelt, Gifford Pinchot and other visionaries who preserved our wild places for the future.
Roth wrote more than 30 books, including the 1991 memoir "Patrimony," which examined his complex relationship with his father and won the National Book Critics Circle Award.
The restoration project started in January of 2016 with the goal of painting a total of 6,000 houses around the city that were designated as cultural patrimony.
Nina's patrimony includes the rights to a failing franchise in the all but defunct Indoor Football League, in the similarly dormant-seeming metropolis of Paterson, New Jersey.
Roth wrote more than 19403 books, including the 1991 memoir "Patrimony," which examined his complex relationship with his father and won the National Book Critics Circle Award.
The Administration of the Patrimony of the Apostolic See (APSA) acts as the sovereign-wealth fund of the Holy See, the central administration of the Catholic church.
Early reports indicated that museums in the affected area escaped largely unscathed, though details are slowly emerging about the extent of the damage to patrimony and cultural institutions.
GRÉGORY GARDINETTI, 34, culture and patrimony manager, Fondation de la Haute Horlogerie, in Meyrin, Switzerland A watch truly represents your personality and character without any form of communication.
Rather than an apartheid state exercising hegemony over the totality of their patrimony, Palestinians will insist on an alternative one-state reality based on the premise of equality.
One that uses a name embedded in French patrimony but wrested into the 21st century by the designer Nicolas Ghesquière to communicate a mix of history and modernity.
Mr. Sokurov bitterly contrasts the relative normalcy of France under German rule with the siege of Leningrad, whose citizens starved and froze and whose cultural patrimony was not spared.
"The French are very sensitive to any intersection between patrimony and commerce," said Ms. Flay, a New Zealand-born Parisian, now in her sixth year as the FIAC director.
Then he feels bad about disrespecting his country's cultural patrimony, and begins to have nightmares about the ghost of K'inich Janaab' Pakal, a Mayan king whose mask he stole.
Once news of the agreement broke, the country's social media entered a collective frenzy over the government having "sold" part of its putative patrimony in exchange for Gulf petrodollars.
Now all that remains of his patrimony is enough hefty wood and tatty brocade to churn the stomachs of every Design Within Reach customer in the first three rows.
Mr. Merino of the Royal Spanish Academy said the broadcaster should have done more because it had "a moral and cultural obligation" to spread Spanish and the country's cultural patrimony.
"We are the inheritors of patrimony, it doesn't belong to us, and it's important therefore that we hand it on in the way that we received it," he told Reuters.
Without this information, she said "the importance of the painting for national patrimony as a rare and significant document of the Napoleonic era in Italy" was not recognized until later.
The result of Lane's research is "Hitler's Last Hostages," a scrupulous account of Hitler's abiding obsession with art and Germany's cultural patrimony that set the stage for the Gurlitt gambit.
All point to a "myopic vision that treats our national patrimony as if it were simply a perfume shop", says Valeria Piccoli, chief curator of the Pinacoteca Museum in São Paulo.
The verdict was hailed as an important legal milestone: the first time such a prestigious court had so explicitly recognised the destruction of religious and cultural patrimony as a war crime.
He acknowledged that half of the United States was not Anglo-Saxon as a matter of ethnicity, but that the sentiments the Declaration of Independence provided a gateway to America's patrimony.
But something had changed, he believed, and Americans were becoming indifferent to their great cultural patrimony—an indifference that was linked, Puttnam maintained, to how movies were being made and distributed.
In the absence of motion detectors or effective security cameras, all that's required is a modicum of stealth and coordination, and a priceless bundle of cultural patrimony vanishes into the night.
These days, restitution of so-called "African patrimony" exhausts me, because it is yet another ruse the West has devised in order to distract Africans from the real problems facing them.
But the Vatican source said there had been a "clash of operational styles" between Milone and the departments his office audited, especially the Administration of the Patrimony of the Holy See (APSA).
"The USR's qualities stem from ... the lack of image problems, its association with anti-corruption and protecting patrimony," said Sergiu Miscoiu, associate professor of political science at Babes-Bolyai University in Cluj.
It's an invaluable opportunity to bring in "top-level people" and prospective new clients, said Emmanuel Breguet, the company's head of patrimony and seventh-generation descendant of its founder, Abraham-Louis Breguet.
That is classically Jewish, but my sense of self, of what it might mean to inherit some trace of that lineage, was not the kind of patrimony the soldier was asking after.
And Genet could easily unpack Trump's fixations — about President Obama's Kenyan patrimony, about the appeal of a Russian autocrat, and even about Trump's self-mythologizing link between small hands and large genitalia.
Moreover, if Colombia really is to benefit from its genetic patrimony, it will need to build up its scientific base and get rid of red tape that stands in the way of research.
His survey of Indian homelands and their destruction is dry but necessary, since many Americans of European descent are unacquainted with the facts (some seem to regard the country as their patrimony alone).
One reason Kahlo works are so valued in the international market is that Mexico for several decades has barred their export to conserve the country's cultural heritage under national patrimony laws, Stein said.
While many Swiss brands are introducing more accessibly priced models to woo younger buyers, Mr. Torres insists that Vacheron will never produce a quartz-regulated or steel Patrimony while he's at the helm.
Artists famous for activism around masters, like Prince, have construed the issue strictly as a labor-versus-management struggle, a matter of individual artists' rights, not as a question of collective cultural patrimony.
For its part, One Tree Hill has a 7.7 IMDb rating, spanned nine seasons, and was described as a "very likable drama about basketball and patrimony," by The New York Times in 2003.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads An auction of African artifacts in Nantes, France last year was partially canceled following an intervention by Pan-African activists protesting the sale of their cultural patrimony.
At the same time, like several other great art institutions in the city (the Museum of Modern Art and Guggenheim come to mind) the Cooper Hewitt transmutes questionable inherited wealth into public patrimony.
Of course, there will always be a small minority of Trumpkins who will bitterly nurse conspiracy theories about their patrimony being stolen from them, but far fewer than if there is a convention coup.
Furthermore, Russians universally perceive Crimea as an inextricable part of their patrimony; every square inch of Sevastopol's land is soaked with Russian blood spilled in numerous wars for this vitally strategic gem of Russia.
Sadly, the Republican Party, nodding to the far right, has been trying to erode protection and funding for some of those lands, as Nick Kristof noted in a recent column celebrating this environmental patrimony:
Among these fragile painted scrolls and screens, calligraphic works, wood sculptures, and decorative-art items, more than two dozen have been designated by Japanese government authorities as important works of their country's cultural patrimony.
She has made something of a signature out of being unbranded, abandoning her Dior sunglasses along with the couture trappings of the patrimony that have long been embraced by the French female political establishment.
But he said that a warmer tone of light was being used in the city center, after consultation with the cultural authorities, which normally painstakingly monitor even the slightest changes to the country's patrimony.
The reforms included the opening of the traditionally closed energy sector to foreign investment, an exceptional political accomplishment given the Mexican public's view of the oil industry as a bedrock of the national patrimony.
And because the country has patrimony laws dating as far back as the 19th century, it's virtually impossible to legally export ancient objects unearthed in the 1970s from Egypt without the government's stamp of approval.
The court voted 8 to 3 against the Catalan ban, finding that lawmakers from the region could not prohibit a practice that the justices said was enshrined in the cultural patrimony of the Spanish state.
However — beyond the oft-cited influence of African sculpture on Parisian Cubists and Surrealists — comparatively little attention has been given to the ways that plundered patrimony has shaped the aesthetics and legacies of modern art.
Here, this space void of divisions considers the origins and composition of the museum's patrimony — you'll note, for instance, that replicas of Egyptian art are more prevalent than those of Native American and Asian art.
But more than that, he needs to convince North Korea's elites that he has not traded away the only form of security in his sole control — the nuclear patrimony of his father and his grandfather.
It spends roughly $250 million a year on these historic monuments, known in France as the patrimony, or patrimoine, barely a 21990th of the Culture Ministry budget, and down 15 percent between 2010 and 2018.
His loving portrayal of his parents, most notably in his memoir Patrimony (1991), gave lie to the canard that he was a disloyal son of the Jewish people or a narcissist who cared only for himself.
When: March 6, 6:30–8:30pm Where: New York University (NYU) Einstein Auditorium, 34 Stuyvesant St., East Village, Manhattan How can cultural institutions can engage meaningfully with issues of Indigenous repatriation, displacement, and cultural patrimony?
Meanwhile Trump has taken to Twitter to threaten war crimes against the Iranians in the form of strikes aimed at Iran's cultural patrimony; a form of warfare that we associate with ISIS, not the US military.
He described the Brazilian planemaker, which is a private company, as part of the national "patrimony" and said he did not want to see it "pass to the other side," in a reference to full Boeing ownership.
According to French newspapers Le Monde and Liberation, which obtained copies of the report, Sarr and Savoy proposed amending the part of the patrimony law governing culture and heritage that forbids national collections from ceding these artefacts.
"The situation is extremely clear...It is out of the question to see big French companies disappear... If to protect our national patrimony, we have to resort to nationalisation, we are prepared to that far," he added.
Peer (Matt Park, who composed the songs with his castmate Paul Lieber) is a Scandinavian lad with an overactive imagination, an underwhelming patrimony and a habit of snarling, "Norway's gonna know my name" into his standing mike.
Nearby, Gqunta's "Divider," (2016) a snaking curtain of beer bottles hanging from knotted fabric, is a ghostly allusion to the sordid colonial patrimony of alcoholism, but also the homemade petrol bombs used in the armed struggle against apartheid.
Credit...Dmitry Kostyukov for The New York Times In France, where fashion is considered part of the patrimony and first ladies have been front-row regulars (and supermodels), the government has long treated the industry with kid gloves.
The first album was bought by the French government under the country's cultural patrimony law on behalf of the Musée du Quai Branly in Paris; the other was bought by Mr. Blau for 5,875 euros, or about $5.53,260.
Manuel, the son, struggles to eliminate the stigmatic patrimony of his father, the notorious eliminator who was sentenced to over 22016 years in prison for his crimes as the director of Chile's secret police DINA [Dirección de Inteligencia Nacional].
Hindered by frequent illnesses and a tumultuous personal life, she was not prolific, and since the 1980s, her works have appeared infrequently on the market outside of Mexico, which uses cultural patrimony laws to impose export restrictions on them.
Caravans of Gold also seeks to put Islam at this reconstructed world's fulcrum and regard it as a force which impelled cultural advance, rather than to associate it with iconoclastic destruction of historical patrimony — stories we know too well.
The implication seems to be that the Italian Ministry of Culture was quite nonchalant about pursuing the return of this piece of patrimony, which the Met acquired for $90,000 at a Sotheby's sale in 1989, according to the Times.
"There's the growing idea that the only way to connect with our historical patrimony is to bring it into the contemporary world through events with mass appeal," said Tomaso Montanari, an art historian and leading cultural critic in Italy.
On the day of the sale, a group of protesters approached the auctioneer and proceeded to carry out an unprecedented, hour-long public debate in the salesroom to discuss the reasons for restituting, rather than selling, pillaged cultural patrimony.
Last week, French 3D digitization agency Iconem launched Syrian Heritage, a project organized with the Syrian Directorate-General of Antiquities and Museums (DGAM) to preserve a patrimony increasingly threatened by warfare and violence, namely at the hands of ISIS.
It has the feel of a thrilling caper but, more impressively, it captures the socio-political dimensions of the crime in a country where pride in cultural patrimony and the pre-Columbian past has often served as a unifying force.
He did it with the language he inherited from the colonizer, within the Western tradition that was foisted upon him, claiming all its literature as his patrimony even as he infused it with his own motley identity, thereby changing it forever.
Estates are "no longer family-transferred like before" and maintained lovingly with a deference to history and patrimony, but sold to new owners who have a different take on how things should be, and a garden's lifespan is growing shorter.
In between there are two slim, (relatively) straightforward memoirs about Philip Roth (The Facts and Patrimony), and two novels about a fictionalized "Philip Roth," one of which, Operation Shylock, features a Roth imposter running around Israel evangelizing for a reverse exodus.
When, at the age of about twelve, Barnum was finally taken to visit—or, really, wade out to—his patrimony, he realized he'd been the victim of an elaborate prank: instead of fertile fields, he'd been deeded a hornet-infested swamp.
"Abraham-Louis Breguet did not invent the guillochage but was the first to apply it to watch dials and exploit its full potential," said Emmanuel Breguet, the company's vice president, head of patrimony and marketing, and a seventh-generation descendant.
"It is unacceptable that someone uses them to go swimming or clean themselves, it's a historic patrimony that we must safeguard," Ms. Raggi said on Monday during what she called a surprise "inspection" of the situation at the Trevi Fountain.
As one of the most adventurous reporters of his generation, Mr. Meyer covered Fidel Castro's revolution in Cuba, the disastrous Bay of Pigs invasion there, the Soviet Union's invasion of Czechoslovakia, the plundering of the world's cultural patrimony and much more.
The Alaska for America idea was really intriguing to me because in effect it was to argue that our natural patrimony really does belong to every American — to try to break mindset that the extraction of resources is a totally private sector effort.
MADRID — Portugal's government has decided to keep a collection of works by the artist Joan Miró, more than two years after the pieces set off a national debate over whether such cultural patrimony could be sold to help improve the country's finances.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads To better protect sacred indigenous objects from being sold in international markets, Senator Martin Heinrich has introduced the Safeguard Tribal Objects of Patrimony (STOP) Act with support from politicians of both parties as well as tribal leaders.
It is, in a more abstract sense, part of their own patrimony, an example and embodiment of the values they hold dear and that define their work at its best: beauty, artisanship, handwork, heritage, the emotion that can be evoked by creativity.
But I much prefer the three books that came before these and propose them as his finest and truest work: "Patrimony" — a heartbreaking memoir of his father; "Operation Shylock" — witty, brilliant, complex and political; "Sabbath's Theater" — brimming with ribaldry, fury and tenderness.
Unfortunately, this is very much typical of the story and treatment of inherited wealth in the United States: it is appropriated at severe cost to those whose own stories are often ignored, and that capital is converted into patrimony for a grateful public.
"Knowing that it is a controversial proposal to move the murals to the new airport what we tried to do was not only focus on this proposal, but really complicate or problematize the question of how you preserve modern cultural patrimony," said Ballesteros.
In July, Senator Martin Heinrich of New Mexico introduced the Safeguard Tribal Objects of Patrimony (STOP) Act aimed at curtailing the export of objects that violate the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA), the Archaeological Resources Protection Act, or the Antiquities Act.
French authorities allege in court documents that aside from smaller parts of the estate owned in France and London, the "whole patrimony of Daniel Wildenstein was held in trusts" in tax havens like the Bahamas, Guernsey, or the Cayman Islands, according to the Associated Press.
But the inquiry also underscored the fragility of Italy's ecclesiastical patrimony, scattered among the country's more than 60,1003 churches, a treasure trove that includes masterpieces by Titian, Michelangelo and Caravaggio as well as statues and precious artifacts like chalices, candelabra and countless illuminated manuscripts.
Here are the books mentioned in this week's "What We're Reading": "Patrimony" by Philip Roth "Conundrum" by Jan Morris "Destiny of the Republic" by Candice Millard We would love to hear your thoughts about this episode, and about the Book Review's podcast in general.
It is so far removed from what they think a family should be — an institution where the mother and father are "equal," where the children are acknowledged by the father and receive his attention and patrimony — that it makes no sense to think of them as such.
"Defendant used a laundering process that included restoration services to hide damage from illegal excavations, straw purchases at auction houses to create sham ownership histories, and the creation of false provenance to predate international laws of patrimony prohibiting the exportation of looted antiquities," according to the complaint.
When the Louvre museum opened in 1793, having nationalized treasures previously been owned by the church, aristocracy or crown, it essentially broadcast the idea that a general public, by virtue of being citizens of the nation, should have access to what had now become the nation's patrimony.
Once the museum officially begins its role as the caretaker of the house, the plan is "to make it regularly accessible to the public, also for scholars who want to visit," said Mr. Govan, noting that "so much of L.A.'s cultural patrimony is tucked away on private land."
NORTH CHARLESTON, S.C. — In his early days as a presidential candidate, Jeb Bush appeared to campaign in a defensive stance: Sensitive about his political patrimony, he insisted he was his "own man" and struggled to address the conduct of the Iraq war under his brother, President George W. Bush.
By no means all Leavers are racist, but I ended up with the impression that for many, casual racism is regarded as a lost patrimony; that as much as Leavers might oppose immigration, they are no less resentful of the "elites" rendering it awkward to categorize people along racial lines.
" With his patrimony frittered away by the previous generation, however, he must take a dull clerk's job in Geneva, which he silently revolts against by "strolling to work as if his office were a pastime and his real life a secret so splendid he could share it with no one except himself.
He let air into his work during the 1990s through his book "Patrimony" — a rich portrait of his father — and especially through the novel "American Pastoral," which depicts an American family falling to pieces during the 1960s after a teenage daughter joins the antiwar movement and plants a bomb that kills someone.
In the interview, she also asked Francis about the case of an Argentine bishop, Gustavo Zanchetta, who was accused of sexual misconduct but was returned by Francis to the Vatican, where he was given a position at the Administration of the Patrimony of the Apostolic See, a powerful agency that controls the church's real estate.
Castro adds that his administration would further support tribal sovereignty and protect indigenous cultures, calling for the passage of congressional bills like the Safeguard Tribal Objects of Patrimony Act and the Esther Martinez Native American Languages Programs Reauthorization Act, which are aimed at protecting tribal objects and cultural property, and promoting the education and preservation of Native languages, respectively.
There are novels to read and re-read (I'm going bleak with The Ghostwriter, Patrimony, and Exit Ghost), pieces of criticism to revisit (Elizabeth Hardwick's "Paradise Lost," Claudia Roth Pierpont's Roth Unbound, maybe Katie Roiphe's "The Naked and the Conflicted" just to cause trouble), and a major biography by (past VICE contributor) Blake Bailey on the way.
When asked in a 2011 interview about how many items in Paris' Château de Fontainebleau collections were plundered from Beijing's Summer Palace, the then-director of patrimony and collections at the French museum, Xavier Salmon, immediately and bluntly answered, "We think between 600 and 800," according to a long-form article on the subject published in Hong Kong's South China Morning Post.
In other words, we would have proposed something much like the management regime established in the Obama proclamation that would include a Bears Ears Commission made up of representatives formally appointed pursuant to tribal law from our five Indian nations that would work alongside the federal agencies as partners in ensuring that management decisions reflect, enhance, and protect our traditional knowledge and our historic, religious, and cultural patrimony.
Still, after it was all over, after we had finished the trek from one cultural monument to the other — from the Musée Rodin, Invalides, the Centre Pompidou, the Palais de Chaillot, the Cirque D'Hiver (in case, you know, anyone was in any doubt about whether the French consider this particular discipline part of their patrimony) — it was clear that behind the tulle and chiffon, the crystals and crepe, efforts were being made to bridge the gap between escapism and the contemporary.

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