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Warlike god
Warlike god










No Party is liable for any failure to perform its obligations under this Order if such performance has been delayed, interfered with or prevented by an event of Force Majeure. The due date of any performance affected by such an event will be extended by the period of time that Seller is actually delayed.Įxcusable Delay (Force Majeure.

WARLIKE GOD LICENSE

However, Seller will not be liable to Buyer for any failure to meet its obligations due to any cause beyond its reasonable control including, but not limited to, government embargoes or any other government acts that interfere with performance blockades seizure or freeze of assets delays or refusals to grant an export license or the suspension or revocation thereof fires, floods, severe weather conditions any other acts of God, quarantines or regional medical crisis labor strikes or lockouts riots, strife, insurrection, civil disobedience, armed conflict, terrorism or war ( declared or not) or impending threat of any of the foregoing, if reasonably expected to cause injury to people or property and shortages or inability to obtain materials or components. Seller will make every reasonable effort to ship ordered products in a timely manner. In the event that performance of this Order is hindered, delayed, threatened to be delayed, or adversely affected by causes of the type described above: (i) the Party whose performance is so affected shall immediately notify the other Party’s authorized representative in writing, including all relevant information with respect thereof, and shall likewise notify promptly of any subsequent change in the circumstances, (ii) SELLER shall use all commercially reasonably efforts to avoid or minimize all such instances, and ( iii) at BUYER’s sole option, this Order shall be completed with such adjustments to delivery schedule as are reasonably required by the existence of such cause or this Order may be terminated for convenience.Įxcusable Delay (Force Majeure. Such causes include but are not limited to: (1) acts of God or of the public enemy (2) acts or failure of any government in either its sovereign or contractual capacity (3) fires, floods, epidemics, terrorism, quarantine restrictions, strikes, freight embargoes, nuclear incident, or any other act or event beyond reasonable control and without the fault of either Party or its suppliers or subcontractors. Neither BUYER nor SELLER shall be liable for any failure to perform due to any cause beyond its reasonable control and without its fault or negligence. See also : Greek Mythology.Excusable Delay (Force Majeure. Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology. This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Schmitz, Leonhard (1870). Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities.

warlike god

Handbooks of archaeology and antiquities, Making of modern law: Foreign, comparative and international law, 1600-1926. A Handbook of Greek Constitutional History.

warlike god warlike god

Hellenistic Lives: including Alexander the Great. There exists an inscription on a column in Galilee which indicates the column was a gift from persons unknown to the priests of Zeus Areius, which would seem to indicate a significant priesthood in this city at least. If the king failed to live up to this oath, the people would be relieved of their obligations here, and so throughout history we would sometimes see kings removed for this failure. In reality, ancient Greek kings of the Molossians would sacrifice to Areius at the city of Passaron, and exchange oaths with the people over which they ruled: the king swore to uphold the laws, and the people swore to defend the kingdom from threats. In the myth of Oenomaus, this mythological king sacrificed to Zeus Areius whenever he entered upon a contest with the suitors of his daughter, whom he put to death as soon as they had been beaten. Areius (Ancient Greek: Ἀρεῖος) was a cultic epithet of the Greek god Zeus, which may mean either "the warlike god" (in the sense of "like Ares") or "the propitiating and atoning god" (as Areia in the case of Athena).










Warlike god