hegemonial การใช้
- He was on his way back to Switzerland when the landgrave of Joseph II's hegemonial politics.
- The disparity between the small population of the former colonies and the greater population of Denmark proper has helped to enforce the hegemonial position that Denmark proper holds in the Realm.
- Over-extending their power, they supported a movement to overthrow King Ottokar of Syldavia, and establish themselves as a hegemonial power in the Balkans and create a unified Slavic kingdom.
- In their situation as a people living in a Diaspora, the Jews were forced to rely on the protection of the hegemonial powers and this seemed, as before, to emanate from Vienna ."
- In this case an " omniscient narrator seemed almost impossible as trying to describe the cultural'other'from an assumedly objective point of view always comes with the peril of producing exoticisms or hegemonial projections ".
- The historian Roger Collins suggests that " the intermittent use of the title " imperator ", " emperor ", by the rulers of Asturias and Le髇 from the tenth century onward seems to have indicated their hegemonial pretentions ."
- The hegemonial king Xiang Yu of Western Chu made Zhang Er King of Changshan ( 8 ^ q \ 媠 ), but Zhang Er changed his loyalty to Liu Bang, the eventual founder of the Han dynasty ( 206 BCE-220 CE ) and was titled as King of Zhao.
- In the field of diplomacy, Iran realised and maintained friendly relations with Western and East European countries as well as the state of Israel and China and became, especially through the close friendship with the United States, more and more a hegemonial power in the Persian Gulf region and the Middle East.
- Z黵ich was also part of an alliance of cities around Lake Constance which also included Konstanz, Lindau and Schaffhausen and for some time included cities as far away as Rottweil or Ulm, and Bern followed its own hegemonial politics, participating successively in various alliances with other cities including Fribourg, Murten, Biel or Solothurn.
- According to historians Michael John and Albert Lichtblau : " Since [ . . . ] there was no traditionally established, non-German elite to speak of in Bukovina and the hegemonial powers of German-Austrian domination in the areas of education and administration still played a leading role, the Jews of Bukovina oriented themselves in this direction.