11 examples of governing from in sentences

Dead though they be, these govern from their graves: The tyrants fall, nor can their laws remain; While Paul and Peter rise o'er Rome to reign.

These nerves are governed from a center in the medulla oblongata, a part of the brain (sec. 270).

The effect of Great Britain's self-defence was to facilitate the self-defence of other nations, and thus to preserve to Europe its character of a community of independent States as opposed to that which it might have acquired, if there had been no England, of a single Empire, governed from a single capital.

It was, he alleged, an age in which mankind were governed from the pulpit: whence it became an object

To denote that he governs from a principle of wisdom, proceeding from love.

To denote that he is powerful, and that he governs from a principle of truth.

The route of the seven thousand lay through the canton of Vaud, then a portion of the Duke's dominions, governed from the Castle of Chillon.

Lord Wellesley had lofty ideas, and when the merchants of the East India Company expressed their disapproval of this expenditure he told them that India "should be governed from a palace and not from a counting-house, with the ideas of a prince and not those of a retail dealer in muslin and indigo.

It was held as a new British province, not as an extension of any of the old colonies; and finally in 1774, by the famous Quebec Act, it was rendered an appanage of Canada, governed from the latter.

The greatness of the France of Napoleon I. was unpleasingly associated with the idea of the degradation of neighboring countries, which implied the ultimate fall of the Empire, as it could not be expected that Russians and Germans would be governed from Paris.

For the next few months indeed Germany was to be governed from the soil of France, and it was necessary for the Minister to be constantly with the King.

11 examples of  governing from  in sentences