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Historical Account of Newcastle-upon-Tyne
… Anwick Smith." The custom to levy tolls has not been, as Blackstone expresses it, "peaceable and acquiesced in." In …
Historical Account of Newcastle-upon-Tyne
Historical Account of Newcastle-upon-Tyne
Diary of Thomas Burton esq
… imprisonment without bail or mainprize." Ibid. p. 97. Blackstone justly censures this cruel legislative …
Diary of Thomas Burton esq
… also, have been since frequently employed to preserve Blackstone's "kind of democracy," among his "three distinct …
Diary of Thomas Burton esq
… government. See vol. ii. p. 460 note. This balance Blackstone professed to have discovered, in "three distinct …
Diary of Thomas Burton esq
… his head and his quarters to be at the King's disposal." Blackstone. See vol. iii. p. 111, iv. 121, 380, 432, notes. …
Diary of Thomas Burton esq
… year once, and more often, if need be. But Sir William Blackstone supposes that the King never was obliged by these … of civil government. For his exposure of Sir William Blackstone's courtly theory, especially by arguments drawn … the Declaration, "as having shown the arguments of Judge Blackstone to be without the shadow of a foundation." See …
The records of St. Bartholomew's priory & St. Bartholomew the Great, West Smithfield
… Crown. Hamesucken (Hamsocn). Ancient name for burglary (Blackstone). Attack on a man's house. Fine for such a breach …
A History of the County of Cambridge and the Isle of Ely
… the full vigour of his incapacity', he was an editor of Blackstone and Professor of the Laws of England in the … though rather grudgingly he admits that the edition of Blackstone 'was very creditable to him'. Foss, Biographia …
Displaying 391 - 400 of 447