The Constitutional History of the University of Dublin: With Some Account of Its Present Condition, and Suggestions for Improvement

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J. McGlashan, 1847 - 256 strani
 

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Stran 14 - Elizabeth by the Grace of God Queen of England France and Ireland Defender of the Faith &c.
Stran 90 - June, one thousand seven hundred and ninety-three, it shall not be necessary for any person upon taking any of the degrees usually conferred by the said university, to make or subscribe any declaration, or to take any oath save the oaths of allegiance and abjuration...
Stran 157 - Britain and Ireland: the humble petition of the undersigned resident Members of the Senate of the University of Cambridge, "Sheweth, " That your petitioners are honestly attached to the doctrines and discipline of the Church of England, as by law established, and are well persuaded of the great benefits it has conferred and is conferring upon the kingdom at large.
Stran 90 - ... to hold or take degrees, or any professorship in, or be masters or fellows of, any college to be hereafter founded in this kingdom, provided that such college shall be a member of the University of Dublin...
Stran 159 - ... of the civil and ecclesiastical establishments of this realm. " The University is a body recognized by the law of England as a lay corporation, invested with important civil privileges, and on that account resting on no secure foundation which is not in harmony with the social system of the state. Your petitioners therefore humbly beg leave to suggest, that, as the legislative bodies of the United Kingdom have repealed the Test Act, and admitted Christians of all denominations to seats in Parliament...
Stran 158 - Christians, that no civil or ecclesiastical polity was ever so devised by the wisdom of man as not to require, from time to time, some modification from the change of external circumstances or the progress of opinion.
Stran 252 - That it be the fourth article of Union, that four lords spiritual of Ireland, by rotation of sessions, and twenty-eight lords temporal of Ireland, elected for life by the peers of Ireland...
Stran 159 - Academic education might be extended to many excellent men who are now for conscience sake debarred from a full participation in them, though the true friends to the institutions of the country. And your Petitioners are convinced that this is the best way at once to promote the public good and to strengthen the foundations of the civil and ecclesiastical establishments of this realm. The university is a body recognized by the Law of England as a Lay Corporation invested with important civil privileges,...
Stran 254 - Ireland ; and to amend an Act of the Second and Third Years of his present Majesty, for transferring the Powers and Duties of the Commissioners of Public Accounts in Ireland to the Commissioners for auditing the Public Accounts of Great Britain.
Stran 252 - Trinity college, and one for each of the thirty-one most considerable cities, towns, and boroughs) be the number to sit and vote on the part of Ireland in the house of commons of the parliament of the united kingdom.

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