¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Manifestoes
1. manifesto [n] - See also: manifesto
Lexicographical Neighbors of Manifestoes
Literary usage of Manifestoes
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The History of England: From the Earliest Period to 1839 by Thomas Keightley (1843)
"Many of the peers also now came to him from London; and, in the paper war of
declarations, etc., carried on between him and the parliament, his manifestoes, ..."
2. Principles of the Law of Nations: With Practical Notes and Supplementary by Archer Polson, Thomas Hartwell Horne (1848)
"Such are manifestoes, Procla- compositions mations, Exposes of motives, which
emanate from a ... In short, manifestoes usually contain all those details, ..."
3. History of England from the Accession of James I to the Outbreak of the by Samuel Rawson Gardiner (1904)
"... pressing orders were sent to Conway to fortify Newcastle by the forced labour
of the townsmen.4 The coming of the Scots was preceded by two manifestoes ..."
4. The Law of Nations Considered as Independent Political Communities by Travers Twiss (1875)
"For this purpose manifestoes are usually manifestoes •, i- •, iii n. T, i to
Neutral published by the belligerent Powers at the corn- Powers, mencement of ..."
5. Cyclopedia of Law by Charles Erehart Chadman (1912)
"manifestoes AT OUTBREAK OF WAR.—Another source of international law is the ...
These manifestoes or proclamations are statements of their ideas and ..."
6. Sixteen Years in Siberia: Some Experiences of a Russian Revolutionist by Lev Grigorʹevich Deĭch, Helen Chisholm (1903)
"In November, 1894, came tidings of the Tsar's death ; and soon afterwards two
manifestoes were announced—one for the marriage of Nicholas II., ..."