Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
In 1731, he was finally recognized by the Aulic council.
He became president of the Aulic council in 1831, but died a few months later at Vienna.
The scene is aulic in its presentation, with gestures and style conveying tones of late International Gothic.
In recognition of his work, the Bavarian Academy of Sciences made him a member and aulic councillor.
The eponymous square, former site of a bastion of the historic city fortification, was named after the Prussian aulic court and prison.
In February 1793 he entered the service of Emperor Francis II as an imperial aulic councillor.
On leaving college, he entered the royal aulic chancellery, and in 1832 was appointed secretary of the royal stadtholder at Buda.
In 1746 he became a full professor of jurisprudence in Halle, and a royal Prussian privy aulic councillor.
In 1816, he was made vice-president of the aulic tribunal of Dillenburg; and shortly afterwards, he was named counsellor of state.
They were administrated by the financial aulic chamber at Vienna, represented by the salt chamber (Salzamt) in Gmunden.
Notably in Ptolemaic Egypt, it was reported as the lowest aulic rank, under Philos, during the reign of Ptolemy V Epiphanes.
His accomplishments in Dresden led him to be noticed by the court of the Kingdom of Saxony, and he was the Aulic councilor of the kings of Saxony.
Aulic titulature is a term, derived from the Greek Aulè and Latin Aula (in the meaning palace) for hierarchic systems of titles specifically in use for court protocol.
He was educated at the classical school in Jönköpings, where his father, a judge of the aulic court for the south of Sweden, resided, and in 1810 he entered the Swedish military navy.
To show his support for Augustus, Mithridates dropped the title Philhellen ("friend of the Greeks") from his Aulic titulature and adopted the title Philorhomaios ("friend of the Romans") instead.
The term hetairos became an aulic title in the Diadochi period, and the hetairoi were divided into squadrons called ilai (singular: ilē), each 200 men strong, except for the Royal Squadron, which numbered 300.
Further important reforms included the Lutheran Church Order, adopted in 1564, which practically completed the Reformation in Lüneburg, as well as the aulic court and administrative ordinances (the Hofgerichtsordnung and Polizeiordnung).
The use of this dye was extended to various dignitaries, such as members of the Roman senate who wore stripes of Tyrian purple on their white togas, for whom the term purpuratus was coined as a high aulic distinction.
Somehow intuiting the youth's potential and talent, Trissino took charge of his future formation, introduced him into the Vicentine aristocracy and, in the space of a few short years, transformed him into the architect who bore the aulic name of Palladio.