Valentias were also fitted with loudspeakers for experiments with sky-shouting (i.e. using the loudspeakers to address people, in this case potentially rebellious tribes during air policing duties, while in flight).
The laws levelled at Sheppard and similar working class criminals were a means of disciplining a potentially rebellious multitude into accepting increasingly harsh property laws.
Sure, Kotite makes the decisions, but the point is he has a potentially rebellious team on his hands, and the players, particularly Cunningham, need constant stroking.
In addition to voluntary migrations, the Ottoman authorities used mass deportations (sürgün) as a method of control over potentially rebellious elements in the Balkans and in Anatolia.
In the Despenser War of 1321, Edward II undertook a campaign against the Mortimers, by then a potentially rebellious Marcher Lord family.
The idea was to assimilate, to turn a defeated and potentially rebellious enemy (or his sons) into a Roman citizen.
In addition to voluntary migrations, throughout the fourteenth, fifteenth, and sixteenth centuries, the Ottoman authorities also used mass deportations ("sürgün") as a method of control over potentially rebellious individuals.
This centralised system might not have been sufficient for the control of a potentially rebellious populace and it's believed that some administration was spread to outlying towns which would have included Durocornovium.
We rapidly grew skilled at this, developing a good eye for the rebellious, or potentially rebellious.
Carlo, now . . . the presence of a grown and potentially rebellious son ... it was hard to discover any positive value at all in that.