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Is not justice noble, which has been the civilizer of humanity?
Thus the barbarian always spoke to the civilizer.
Every time the cannibals were beaten back, Man the Civilizer gained another foot of ground.
It was Achilles who was the civilizer, doing the work of Christ.
Did it, in fact, make them cling more stubbornly to conventional notions of woman as domestic goddess and civilizer?
For better and worse, Tchaikovsky was a dedicated civilizer of Russia's more savage cultural tendencies.
He praises Attila as "a genius civilizer," with "open-mindedness and richness of views."
The first Papiamento newspaper was published in 1871 and titled "Civilisado" (The Civilizer).
Richard Barrett, whose Nationalist Movement oath declares "the white race is the superlative civilizer," said he chose Morristown because of its history.
Theology may come off as myth on it, and bigotry and self-righteousness as broadly terrible, but religion here is also a decent sweetener and civilizer.
Each "civilizing" project defined the aborigines based on the "civilizer"'s cultural understandings of difference and similarity, behavior, location, appearance and prior contact with other groups of people .
He started writing for Action, a newspaper owned by the British fascist, Sir Oswald Mosley, arguing that the Third Reich was the "natural civilizer of Russia."
Depending on your point of view, Napoleon Bonaparte was a great civilizer who brought order and justice to Europe or a power-mad imperialist willing to spare no suffering to achieve his ends.
Thus the great civilizer sends out its emissaries, sooner or later, to every sandy cape and light-house of the New World which the census-taker visits, and summons the savage there to surrender.
Whether we regard him as a warrior or as a legislator, as a patron of learning or as the civilizer of a barbarous nation, he is entitled to our warmest admiration.
Although she travelled partly to establish WCT Unions around the world, the journeys were also to undertake work as "a civilizer, feminist, and reporter of the conditions of women and the disadvantaged throughout the world".
By attempting to document how America's Wild West experience has left it with a need to play savior and civilizer of "savage" lands, the author "may have bitten off a bit much," our reviewer, Roger D. McGrath, said in 1985.