| John Reeves - 1814 - 580 páginas
...most of them had. For this reason, the students of the law were generally sons of persons of quality. Knights, barons, and the greatest nobility of the kingdom, often placed their children here, not so much to make the laws, their study, as to form their manners, and preserve them from the... | |
| Sir John Fortescue, Andrew Amos - 1825 - 304 páginas
...discouraged and banished. So that knights, barons, and the greatest nobility of the kingdom, often place their children in those Inns of Court; not so much...laws their study, much less to live by the profession (having large patrimonies of their own) but to form their manners and to preserve them from the contagion... | |
| Jared Sparks, James Russell Lowell, Edward Everett, Henry Cabot Lodge - 1836 - 588 páginas
...every thing good and virtuous was to be learned, and all vice was discouraged and banished ; so that knights, barons and the greatest nobility of the kingdom,...children in those Inns of Court, not so much to make the law their study, much less to live by the profession, (having large patrimonies of their own,) as to... | |
| Sir Daniel Keyte Sandford - 1841 - 558 páginas
...every thing good and virtuous was to be learned, and all vice was discouraged and banished ; so that knights, barons and the greatest nobility of the kingdom,...children in those Inns of Court, not so much to make the law their study, much less to live by the profession, (having large patrimonies of their own,) as to... | |
| George Lillie Craik - 1839 - 932 páginas
...most of them hud. For this reason, the students of the law were generally sons of persons of quality. Knights, barons, and the greatest nobility of the kingdom, often placed their children here, not so much to make the laws their study, as to form their manners, and to preserve them from... | |
| 1840 - 130 páginas
...that " the Knights, Barons, and greatest nobility in the kingdom often placed their children in the Inns of Court, not so much to make the Laws their study, much less to live by their profession (having! large patrimonies of their own) but to form their manners, and preserve them... | |
| George Lillie Craik - 1841 - 524 páginas
...most of them had. For this reason, the students of the law were generally sons of persons of quality. Knights, barons, and the greatest nobility of the kingdom, often placed their children here, not so much to make the laws their study, as to form their manners, and to preserve them from... | |
| 1844 - 288 páginas
...that knights, barons, and the greatest nobility of the kingdom often place their children in these inns of court, not so much to make the laws their study, much less to live by the profession, (having large patrimonies of their own,) but to form their manners, and to preserve them from the contagion... | |
| Edward Foss - 1851 - 518 páginas
...remarks that " knights, barons, and the greatest nobility of the kingdom often place their children iu those Inns of Court ; not so much to make the laws their study, but to form their manners, and to preserve them from the contagion of vice ; " and his statement of... | |
| Edward Foss - 1851 - 556 páginas
...Fortescue then remarks that " knights, barons, and the greatest nobility of the kingdom often place their children in those Inns of Court ; not so much to make the laws their study, but to form their manners, and to preserve them from the contagion of vice ; " and his statement of... | |
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