Sir Matthew Hale and the English LawUniversity of Wisconsin--Madison, 1959 - 588 Seiten |
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Seite 61
... believed the monarchy was declining , and that the people would pluck it up by the roots . Hale is there- fore accused of favoring the rabble -- probably the only judge of the period so accused . " It is most certain , " he writes ...
... believed the monarchy was declining , and that the people would pluck it up by the roots . Hale is there- fore accused of favoring the rabble -- probably the only judge of the period so accused . " It is most certain , " he writes ...
Seite 139
... believed , for ex- cessive legal fees and the constant delays which had so alienated the general public . He also thought the court should be opened to barristers as well as serjeants . Oliver Cromwell was a man of property and his lack ...
... believed , for ex- cessive legal fees and the constant delays which had so alienated the general public . He also thought the court should be opened to barristers as well as serjeants . Oliver Cromwell was a man of property and his lack ...
Seite 241
... believed law to be nothing more than the answer to the current desires of the community , or a command by an un- limited law - giving authority , history could have little or no meaning . If men such as Coke and Hale in the seventeenth ...
... believed law to be nothing more than the answer to the current desires of the community , or a command by an un- limited law - giving authority , history could have little or no meaning . If men such as Coke and Hale in the seventeenth ...
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
accused appear authority Baxter bench Burnet Cambridge Chancery charges Charles Chief Justice civil Coke committee common law Common Pleas Commonwealth concerning Continued Convention Parliament counsel crime criminal law Cromwell crown custom discussion Edward English Law English Legal equity Francis Hargrave Hale felt Hale wrote Hale's History Hargrave's Law Tracts historian History of England History of English Hobbes Ibid important Inderwick insisted interest Interregnum John John Bickerton judge judicature judicial jurisdiction jury king King's later Laud law reform Laws of England lawyers legal history legal order legislation Lincoln's Lincoln's Inn London Long Parliament Lords House ment nature Oxford parlia person political prerogative Presbyterian problem Protectorate Prynne puritan reason regicides reign religion religious Restoration Richard Baxter Roger North royal royalist Runnington says Selden Serjeant seventeenth century showed Sir Matthew Hale Sir William Holdsworth society statute Stuarts things Thomas Hobbes tion Treatise trial vols whole William Holdsworth William Prynne