The Parliament and Councils of England, Chronologically Arranged: From the Reign of William I. to the Revolution in 1688 ... |
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Page 10
... appointed to superintend the Publication . It com- menced in the year 1816 , and was , by them , continued to the year 1821 , and from Vol . II . , P. II . , by Mr. Holbrooke and John Caley , Esq . , to the year 1830. Conjointly , these ...
... appointed to superintend the Publication . It com- menced in the year 1816 , and was , by them , continued to the year 1821 , and from Vol . II . , P. II . , by Mr. Holbrooke and John Caley , Esq . , to the year 1830. Conjointly , these ...
Page 15
... appointed to register the most considerable Events , and after the death of every King , these Memoirs were laid before a Chapter of the Order , to be re- duced to a body of History , which was preserved PREFACE . 15.
... appointed to register the most considerable Events , and after the death of every King , these Memoirs were laid before a Chapter of the Order , to be re- duced to a body of History , which was preserved PREFACE . 15.
Page v
... appointed two general Shire - gemotes , or County Courts every year , which have been mis- taken for Parliamentary Conventions . ( n ) These strictures are , however , scarcely applicable to the expressions of the Author before quoted ...
... appointed two general Shire - gemotes , or County Courts every year , which have been mis- taken for Parliamentary Conventions . ( n ) These strictures are , however , scarcely applicable to the expressions of the Author before quoted ...
Page 23
... appointed , ac- cording to the advice of those who shall be present , though all those who had been summoned may not be present . Article 39. No Freeman shall be seised or imprisoned , or disseised or outlawed , or any way destroyed ...
... appointed , ac- cording to the advice of those who shall be present , though all those who had been summoned may not be present . Article 39. No Freeman shall be seised or imprisoned , or disseised or outlawed , or any way destroyed ...
Page 29
... appointed Chan- cellor for life ) and the Poitevins from his Court . ( m ) August 1. A fresh summons for a " Colloquium having been issued , commanding the Barons to bring pledges for their good behaviour , the Earls and Barons appear ...
... appointed Chan- cellor for life ) and the Poitevins from his Court . ( m ) August 1. A fresh summons for a " Colloquium having been issued , commanding the Barons to bring pledges for their good behaviour , the Earls and Barons appear ...
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Common terms and phrases
Abbots adjourned answer appointed April April 28 Archb Archbishop of Canterbury Archbishop of York Assembly assent attend Bill Bishops Boroughs Charter Chivalers Citizens and Burgesses Clause Clergy Clerk Colloquium et Tractatus commanded Committee Commons Order Commons Resolve Conference Convocation Council is held County Court Declaration disabled Ditto Dugdale Duke Eadmer Edward Edward III Election England grant hath held at Westminster Henry Hody House of Commons House of Peers John July June Justice King King's Kingdom Knights liament Liberties London Lord Chancellor Lord Keeper Lords Order Majesty Majesty's March March 12 March 23 Members ment Monday Oath Ordinance Parl Parlia Peers Persons Petition Prelates present Priors Proceedings prorogued regni Report returned Rolls sent Sept Serjeant at Arms Session Sheriffs Shire Speaker Statute Subsidy Tenants Viscount vote Westminster Writ of Summons Writs are issued York
Popular passages
Page 377 - May it please your majesty, I have neither eyes to see, nor tongue to speak in this place, but as the House is pleased to direct me...
Page 87 - Crown, shall be void and of no avail or force whatever ; but the matters which are to be established for the estate of our lord the King and of his heirs, and for the estate of the realm and of the people, shall be treated, accorded, and established in Parliaments, by our lord the King, and by the assent of the prelates, earls, and barons, and the commonalty of the realm ; according as it hath been heretofore accustomed.
Page 565 - Resolved, &c., iiemine contradicente, that in all aids given to the king by the Commons the rate or tax ought not to be altered by the Lords.
Page 237 - ... my estate is nothing correspondent for the maintenance of this dignity ; for my father dying left me a younger brother, and nothing to me but my bare annuity. Then growing to man's estate, and some small practice of the law, I took a wife, by whom I have had many children, the keeping of us all being a great impoverishment to my estate, and the daily living of us all nothing but my daily industry.
Page l - ... against the estate of the crown, shall be void and of no avail or force whatever; but the matters which are to be established for the estate of our lord the king and of his heirs, and for the estate of the realm and of the people, shall be treated, accorded and established in parliaments, by our lord the king, and by the assent of the prelates, earls, and barons, and the commonalty of the realm; according as it hath been heretofore accustomed.
Page 367 - An Act for disenabling all persons in Holy Orders to exercise any temporal jurisdiction or authority, nor such as are public ministers or public preachers of the Gospel.
Page 512 - I have sought the Lord night and day, that He would rather slay me than put me upon the doing of this work.
Page 231 - Whether it be not against the orders of this council to make any secret or matter of weight, which is here in hand, known to the prince or any other, concerning the high service of God, prince, or state without the consent of the house? Whether the speaker or any other may interrupt any member of this council in his speech used in this house tending to any of the forenamed services?
Page 526 - I think it high time that an end be put to your sitting. And I DO DISSOLVE THIS PARLIAMENT ! And let God be judge between you and me...