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The motto was "Malo mori quam foedari" ("I would rather die than be dishonored"). Recipients. Federico da Montefeltro, Duke of Urbino;
Malo mori quam foedari: Death rather than dishonour: Motto of the inactive 34th Battalion (Australia), the Drimnagh Castle Secondary School: Malo periculosam libertatem quam quietam servitutem: I prefer dangerous liberty to peaceful slavery: Attributed to the Count Palatine of Posen before the Polish Diet, cited in The Social Contract by Jean ...
Arms: Ermine a Bordure engrailed Gules; Crest: From a Plume of five Ostrich Feathers Or Gules Azure Vert and Argent a Falcon rising of the last; Motto: Malo mori quam foedari (I prefer to die than be dishonoured) [1] The Barnewall Baronetcy, of Crickstown Castle in the County of Meath, is a title in the Baronetage of Ireland. It was created on ...
Looz-Corswarem coat of arms. The House of Looz-Corswarem is an old ducal family that mostly occupied territories in what was once Austrian Netherlands.As reigning Princes of the Principality of Rheina-Wolbeck, a Sovereign State with an area of 556 square Kilometers and capital city Rheine, they also belonged to the German nobility.
Malo Mori Quam Foedari (Death rather than dishonour) [1] Sir William Hutcheson Poë, 1st Baronet (20 September 1848 – 30 November 1934) was an Irish soldier and politician. [ 2 ]
The traditional motto of the former Dukes of Brittany is Kentoc'h mervel eget bezañ saotret in Breton, or Potius mori quam fœdari in Latin. The "national day" is observed on 1 August, [28] the Feast of Saint Erwann (Saint Yves).
ex dolo malo: from fraud "From harmful deceit"; dolus malus is the Latin legal term denoting "fraud". The full legal phrase is ex dolo malo non oritur actio ("an action does not arise from fraud"). When an action has its origin in fraud or deceit, it cannot be supported; thus, a court of law will not assist a man who bases his course of action ...
nunquam minus solus quam cum solus: never less alone than when alone: nunquam non paratus: never unprepared, ever ready, always ready: frequently used as motto, e.g. for the Scottish Clan Johnstone, where it is anglicized as "Ready, Aye, Ready" [16] nunquam obliviscar: never forget: Nusquam est qui ubique est: He who is everywhere is nowhere