Title, Chapter
1 I | social customs of these new countries. They also facilitated the
2 I | Halls housed visitors from countries north of the Alps who had
3 I | in 1215: "We find in most countries, cities and dioceses in
4 I | others took refuge in other countries.~We are happy to mention
5 I | had emigrated to various countries of Europe."~It is well also
6 I | settlement in their adopted countries.~As to Italy itself, most
7 I | they had left their native countries, give up the Christian customs
8 I | who emigrated to foreign countries might not become the prey
9 I | people in many over-populated countries were oppressed by want and
10 I | ward; the thickly inhabited countries will he relieved and their
11 I | acquire new friends in foreign countries; and the States which receive
12 I | revolutions in their own countries, or by unemployment or hunger
13 I | families, their homes and their countries.~In that address to the
14 I | life, to emigrate to other countries.~In our allocution to the
15 I | people from over-crowded countries. Of the latter, as is well
16 I | migration of families into those countries able to provide them with
17 I | return to their own beloved countries as soon as possible."~We
18 II, I | if their migration is to countries under the jurisdiction of
19 II, I | many European and American countries for the spiritual aid of
20 II, V | Italians emigrating to foreign countries, and warmly commend those
21 II, VI| Finally, in other regions and countries outside Italy to which migration
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