A Manual of the English Constitution: With a Review of Its Rise, Growth, and Present StateJohn Murray, 1859 - 588 Seiten |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 90
Seite
... civil and ecclesiastical , so far as the latter is exhibited in laws having reference to the civil or reli- gious liberty of the people . The arrangement of my book has enabled me to com- prise within it more ample details of the ...
... civil and ecclesiastical , so far as the latter is exhibited in laws having reference to the civil or reli- gious liberty of the people . The arrangement of my book has enabled me to com- prise within it more ample details of the ...
Seite 3
... civil government , we shall find that in all nations the supreme authority is vested either in the people , the nobles , or a single ruler . A constitution compounded of these three simple forms may in theory be beautiful , but can ...
... civil government , we shall find that in all nations the supreme authority is vested either in the people , the nobles , or a single ruler . A constitution compounded of these three simple forms may in theory be beautiful , but can ...
Seite 11
... civil and religious , which have some analogy to our own ; or which have been carried down , modified by time and circum- stances , to the present day . Even these cannot be described with more than conjectural accuracy , so complicated ...
... civil and religious , which have some analogy to our own ; or which have been carried down , modified by time and circum- stances , to the present day . Even these cannot be described with more than conjectural accuracy , so complicated ...
Seite 17
... civil cases ; " restrained ( but probably at a much later period ) to cases under forty shillings , arising within the county.1 The proceedings of the Anglo - Saxon courts were oral ; legal records did not exist . At the Shire - court ...
... civil cases ; " restrained ( but probably at a much later period ) to cases under forty shillings , arising within the county.1 The proceedings of the Anglo - Saxon courts were oral ; legal records did not exist . At the Shire - court ...
Seite 35
... civil laws point out , when they declare ' Quod principi placuit , legis habet vigorem . " " 1 1 Fortescue , De Laudibus Legum Angliæ ; Lord Chief - Justice of the King's Bench , temp . Henry VI . See Hallam's Middle Ages , vol . ii . p ...
... civil laws point out , when they declare ' Quod principi placuit , legis habet vigorem . " " 1 1 Fortescue , De Laudibus Legum Angliæ ; Lord Chief - Justice of the King's Bench , temp . Henry VI . See Hallam's Middle Ages , vol . ii . p ...
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
ancient appointed Archbishop assembled assent authority barons bill bishops burgesses called chancellor Charles charter Church of England cities and boroughs civil clergy committed consent constitution court crown declared Earl ecclesiastical Edward Edward III election enacted exchequer executive freeholders granted habeas corpus Henry VIII holy orders house of commons house of lords Idem impeachment imprisonment judges jury justice king king's kingdom knights lands legislation liament liberties Long Parliament Magna Charta majesty ment ministers oath offence Parl parlia Parliamentary History passed peace peers person petition Petition of Right pope prelates prerogative principles prison privileges proceedings protestant punishment Queen realm reign religion remonstrance repealed revenue Richard II Rome royal royal assent Saxon Scotland session sheriff sovereign Speaker speech spiritual statute subjects subsidies summoned supply tallage temporal tion tonnage and poundage treason Vict vote writ