English Constitutional History from the Teutonic Conquest to the Present TimeStevens and Haynes, 1881 - 803 páginas |
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Resultados 1-5 de 85
Página xiv
... attend Parlia- ment in the 14th century - but preserve the power of self - taxation till 1664 - Clergy though still in theory not now practically a separate Estate of the Realm - Government by King , Lords and Commons established under ...
... attend Parlia- ment in the 14th century - but preserve the power of self - taxation till 1664 - Clergy though still in theory not now practically a separate Estate of the Realm - Government by King , Lords and Commons established under ...
Página 6
... attended by bands of retainers ( comites ) , who protected the person of their lord in war and quisque domum spatio circumdat , c . 16 ] pouvant leur servir de défense . Or Î'usage de la Marche est le signe d'une transition entre l'état ...
... attended by bands of retainers ( comites ) , who protected the person of their lord in war and quisque domum spatio circumdat , c . 16 ] pouvant leur servir de défense . Or Î'usage de la Marche est le signe d'une transition entre l'état ...
Página 7
... attended by all the freemen of the tribe . Questions of minor importance were settled by the principes , meeting as a separate body , and this body also appears to have taken the initiative in bringing matters before the larger assembly ...
... attended by all the freemen of the tribe . Questions of minor importance were settled by the principes , meeting as a separate body , and this body also appears to have taken the initiative in bringing matters before the larger assembly ...
Página 17
... attended by the thegns of the hundred and by the representative town- reve and four men from each township . The chief execu- tive officer was the hundred - man or hundreds - caldor , who convened the hundred - gemot . He was generally ...
... attended by the thegns of the hundred and by the representative town- reve and four men from each township . The chief execu- tive officer was the hundred - man or hundreds - caldor , who convened the hundred - gemot . He was generally ...
Página 30
... attend . In the gemot of his own mark or township - whose modern representative is the parish vestry — every Teutonic freeman was entitled to a voice . So every freeman , whether corl or ceorl , had a voice in the folkmoot of the shire ...
... attend . In the gemot of his own mark or township - whose modern representative is the parish vestry — every Teutonic freeman was entitled to a voice . So every freeman , whether corl or ceorl , had a voice in the folkmoot of the shire ...
Términos y frases comunes
ancient appear appointed Archbishop assent authority barons bill bishops boroughs Chancellor Charles Charter Church clergy common law consent Const constitution court Crown Curia Regis declared Duke Earl ecclesiastical Edward Edward III election Elizabeth enacted England English established exercise favour feudal granted Hallam heirs Henry VI Henry VIII Hist House of Commons House of Lords impeachment imprisoned James John judges jurisdiction jury justice King King's kingdom knights land levy liament liberty Majesty ment ministers nation oath offence Parl Parlia Parliament parliamentary passed peers persons petition Petition of Right political Pope praemunire prerogative Prince prison privilege proceedings punishment Queen quod realm reform refused Regis reign Richard Richard II royal Select Chart session sheriff shire sovereign Star Chamber statute Stubbs subjects summoned Supra thegns throne tion tonnage and poundage trial Vict villeins voted William Witan writ
Pasajes populares
Página 711 - Pollock, Land Laws, p. 142. 4 Ibid., p. 150. of the sovereign have again become folkland. 1 The sovereign has again been invested with the right of acquiring and disposing of private property as any other individual. 2 While the landlord was becoming the land owner he was also getting power to dispose of his land. " It is not at all likely that before the Norman conquest custom had anywhere reached the point of letting the owner sell land without the consent of his family.