proprietor$64603$ - traduzione in greco
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proprietor$64603$ - traduzione in greco

LAST GOVERNOR OF COLONIAL PENNSYLVANIA
John Penn (Governor); John Penn (proprietor)
  • ''Anne Allen'' (1763), by [[Benjamin West]], Cincinnati Art Museum.

proprietor      
n. ιδιοκτήτης
landed property         
PROPERTY THAT GENERATES INCOME FOR THE OWNER WITHOUT THE OWNER HAVING TO DO THE ACTUAL WORK OF THE ESTATE
Landed proprietor; Landed citizen; Landed estate; Landed class; Landed possession; Landed noble class; Landed tribe; Landed pesantry; Landed elite; Landed artistocracy; Landed upper class; Landed peasantry; Land estate; Landholding; Landed elites
ακίνητο

Definizione

Own
·adj To hold as property; to have a legal or rightful title to; to be the proprietor or possessor of; to Possess; as, to own a house.
II. Own ·vt To Grant; to Acknowledge; to admit to be true; to Confess; to recognize in a particular character; as, we own that we have forfeited your love.
III. Own ·adj Belonging to; belonging exclusively or especially to; peculiar;
- most frequently following a possessive pronoun, as my, our, thy, your, his, her, its, their, in order to emphasize or intensify the idea of property, peculiar interest, or exclusive ownership; as, my own father; my own composition; my own idea; at my own price.

Wikipedia

John Penn (governor)

John Penn (14 July 1729 – 9 February 1795) was an English-born colonial administrator who served as the last governor of colonial Pennsylvania, serving in that office from 1763 to 1771 and from 1773 to 1776. Educated in Britain and Switzerland, he was also one of the Penn family proprietors of the Province of Pennsylvania from 1771 until 1776, holding a one-fourth share, when the creation of the independent Commonwealth of Pennsylvania during the American Revolution removed the Penn family from power.

Held in exile in New Jersey after the British occupation of Philadelphia, Penn and his wife returned to the city in July 1778, following the British evacuation. After the war, the unsold lands of the proprietorship were confiscated by the new state government, but it provided Penn and his cousin, John Penn "of Stoke", who held three-fourths of the proprietorship, with compensation. They both appealed as well to Parliament, which granted them more compensation.