A Manual of the English Constitution: With a Review of Its Rise, Growth, and Present StateJohn Murray, 1859 - 588 Seiten |
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Seite 66
... ministers which had , under the king , the laws of the land to guide , should allow the charters to be pleaded before them in judgment , in all their points ; the Great Charter as the common law , and the Charter of the Forest according ...
... ministers which had , under the king , the laws of the land to guide , should allow the charters to be pleaded before them in judgment , in all their points ; the Great Charter as the common law , and the Charter of the Forest according ...
Seite 91
... ministers consulting the parliament on peace or war ( matters which belong to the executive power ) might be given in every successive reign , from Edward I. to Henry VIII . These will be found collected in a treatise on the Antiquity ...
... ministers consulting the parliament on peace or war ( matters which belong to the executive power ) might be given in every successive reign , from Edward I. to Henry VIII . These will be found collected in a treatise on the Antiquity ...
Seite 111
... ministers of the Exchequer . ' The Exchequer , however , in process of time , recovered its legal jurisdiction in civil cases , by the fiction of supposing the suitor to be a debtor to the crown , and unable to pay his taxes or duties ...
... ministers of the Exchequer . ' The Exchequer , however , in process of time , recovered its legal jurisdiction in civil cases , by the fiction of supposing the suitor to be a debtor to the crown , and unable to pay his taxes or duties ...
Seite 114
... ministerial offi- cers of the superior courts . They executed the writs for the summoning of the parties and of the juries , and the orders and decrees for the enforcement of the sentences of the courts in criminal , and of their ...
... ministerial offi- cers of the superior courts . They executed the writs for the summoning of the parties and of the juries , and the orders and decrees for the enforcement of the sentences of the courts in criminal , and of their ...
Seite 132
... ministers , if they be not mainpernable by law ; but they should be tried by the justices assigned to deliver the gaols . * The next step was to give the justices judicial power over felonies and misdemeanours . " Two or three of the ...
... ministers , if they be not mainpernable by law ; but they should be tried by the justices assigned to deliver the gaols . * The next step was to give the justices judicial power over felonies and misdemeanours . " Two or three of the ...
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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