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A foreign noble, after indygenat, received all privileges of a Polish szlachcic.
Grants of indygenat were limited in the history of Poland to just over 400 foreign nobles.
From 1673 only Catholics could be granted nobility or indygenat, a recognition (transfer) of foreign nobility status.
He was later granted an indygenat, which meant he held by law all the privileges granted to Polish nobles.
He was elevated to the rank of nobility (through Indygenat) by the Repnin Sejm.
Indygenat or 'naturalization' in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth was the grant of nobility to foreign nobles.
Karol Mauricy Lelewel was a Royal Polish captain, reached the indygenat, the naturalisation as a Polish noble, and became am member of the general sejm.
It was Rzewuski who pronounced a recognition of de Witte family's indygenat (the recognition of foreign status as a noble) in 1764, four years later positively approved by the Polish Sejm.
In 1589 Paweł (Paul) Pernus, vogt of the Royal Court received indygenat (grant), of the Kingdom of Poland and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.
To grant indygenat, a foreign noble had to submit proof of their service to the Republic, together with proof of nobility issued by a foreign court, swear an oath of allegiance, and buy land.
Included in the treaty was the Privilegium Sigismundi Augusti by which Sigismund guaranteed the Livonian estates privileges including religious freedom with respect to the Augsburg Confession, the Indygenat, and continuation of the traditional German administration.
The Alemani coat of arms was a family crest brought to Poland from Italy by Dominik Allemani who received an Indygenat (recognition of foreign status as a noble) from King of Poland Zygmunt August on 19 April 1566.
Instead, they would be armed with the rights of citizenship.
Health insurance will be less a right of citizenship and more a personal responsibility.
But without both there cannot be full equality rights of citizenship.
And if the full rights of citizenship for journalists are the issue, where should the line be drawn?
Therefore, the suit says, mosquitoes have the right of citizenship in the state.
This move to create social rights of citizenship marked a major change in thinking about public finances.
They briefly touch on the rights of citizenship and to move freely within the country.
"One of the rights of citizenship is that you get to live with your close family," he said.
The flier said that only white people were entitled to the full rights of citizenship.
What care should be publicly funded and accessible to all as a right of citizenship?
Basic income - where we all are given a payment from the state as a right of citizenship - should be introduced.
At the same time, the government also extended, once again, the right to vote and all rights of citizenship to the Inuit.
It is the fundamental right of citizenship to belong to a political party."
The right of citizenship was offered him by the Athenians, but he refused it.
My rights of citizenship ran only as far as the nearest white man said they did.
In a democracy, free choice of elected officials is a right of citizenship.
It has become tantamount to a right of citizenship.
My understanding of your culture is that criminals lose their rights of citizenship.
Pakeha had the full rights of citizenship - voting and representation.
"A secure income is fundamental to the ability to enjoy the rights of citizenship.
Three amendments passed between 1865 and 1870 bestowed the rights of citizenship upon the former slave population.
Any future children of a freedman would be born free, with full rights of citizenship.
They are full and equal citizens and deserve the rights of citizenship.
In the North, both state and federal laws denied blacks many of the rights of citizenship.
Americans take pride in their freedom of movement, considering it a right of citizenship.