Lincoln's Inn; Its Ancient and Modern Buildings: With an Account of the LibraryReeves and Turner, 1873 - 251 strani |
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Zadetki 1–5 od 31
Stran 4
... person of Edward the Confessor the crown was restored to the line of Cerdic , the “ Anglo - Saxon monarch was required by the clergy and nobility of the nation to engage that the laws of the Danish king should be inviolably observed ...
... person of Edward the Confessor the crown was restored to the line of Cerdic , the “ Anglo - Saxon monarch was required by the clergy and nobility of the nation to engage that the laws of the Danish king should be inviolably observed ...
Stran 5
... persons of the realm , held about the year 1070. On this occasion the English , with one accord , demanded the restoration of the laws and customs which had prevailed in the days of the Confessor- " not re- ferring , as was afterwards ...
... persons of the realm , held about the year 1070. On this occasion the English , with one accord , demanded the restoration of the laws and customs which had prevailed in the days of the Confessor- " not re- ferring , as was afterwards ...
Stran 16
... person of the sovereign in whatever part of his dominions he might happen to be resident ; and it was then ordained by an article of the charter that common pleas should no longer follow the king's court , but be held in some certain ...
... person of the sovereign in whatever part of his dominions he might happen to be resident ; and it was then ordained by an article of the charter that common pleas should no longer follow the king's court , but be held in some certain ...
Stran 18
... persons , that " none be from thenceforth admitted into the society of any House of Court that is not a gentle- man by descent . " In the reign of Henry VI . there were from eighteen hundred to two thousand students in the Inns of Court ...
... persons , that " none be from thenceforth admitted into the society of any House of Court that is not a gentle- man by descent . " In the reign of Henry VI . there were from eighteen hundred to two thousand students in the Inns of Court ...
Stran 19
... person holding it the privilege of pleading at the bar of the supreme courts of law . Persons under the degree of utter barrister were called " No Utter Barrister ; " but that designation seems to have been discontinued before the year ...
... person holding it the privilege of pleading at the bar of the supreme courts of law . Persons under the degree of utter barrister were called " No Utter Barrister ; " but that designation seems to have been discontinued before the year ...
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185 Fleet Street Abridgment Acts afterwards ancient appointed arched arms barristers Bench Benchers Bishop of Chichester Bracton building century Chancery chapel Charles Chief Justice collection Commentaries compiled containing copies Council Earl of Lincoln edifice edition Edward III eminent English Law erection extant feet folio French garden George Glanville Hall Henry VII House Inner Temple Inns of Chancery Inns of Court inscription James John Rastell Justinian King King's large paper Latin Laws of England lawyer learned lectures Library of Lincoln's London Majesty manuscript oriel original Pandects Parliament pedestals Preacher present Prince printed professor published Pynson Queen Queen's Counsel Rastell Reeves & Turner reign of Edward reign of Henry Reports reprinted Richard Serjeant side Sir Matthew Hale Society of Lincoln's Statutes stone Street and 196 Temple Thomas tion tracery translation Treasurer treatise vols volumes William William Rastell window Year-Books
Priljubljeni odlomki
Stran 34 - Whatever withdraws us from the power of our senses, whatever makes the past, the distant, or the future predominate over the present, advances us in the dignity of thinking beings.
Stran 12 - Newtons, with all the truth which they have revealed, and all the generous virtue which they have inspired, are of inferior value when compared with the subjection of men and their rulers to the principles of justice ; if, indeed, it be not more true that these mighty spirits could not have been formed except •under equal laws, nor roused to full activity without the influence of that spirit which the Great Charter breathed over their forefathers.
Stran 43 - ... alone. The vegetables cultivated in this garden were beans, onions, garlic, leeks and some others, which are not specifically named. Hemp was also grown there, and some description of plant which yielded verjuice, possibly, sorrel. Cuttings of the vines were sold, from which it may be inferred that the earl's trees were held in some estimation. The stock purchased for this garden comprised cuttings or sets of the following varieties of pear-trees ; viz.
Stran 89 - January 1770 — upon trust, for the purpose of founding a lecture, in the form of a sermon, ' to prove the truth of revealed religion in general, and of the Christian in particular, from the completion of the prophecies in the Old and New Testaments which relate to the Christian Church, especially to the apostasy of Papal Rome.
Stran 209 - England by juries much better than that of the civil law, where so much was trusted to the judge, yet he often said, that the true grounds and reasons of law were so well delivered in the Digests, that a man could never understand law as a science so well as by seeking it there, and therefore lamented much that it was so little studied in England.
Stran 97 - Masons and bricklayers can boast of Ben Jonson, who worked at the building of Lincoln's Inn, with a trowel in his hand and a book in his pocket...
Stran 57 - Nor were these exercises of dancing merely permitted, but thought very necessary, as it seems, and much conducing to the making of gentlemen more fit for their books at other times ; for by an order made 6th Feb.