176 results filtered with: Law - Great Britain
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Jurisprudentia philologica, sive elementa juris civilis, secundum methodum et seriem Institutionum Justiniani, in brevem & facilem ordinem redacta, Notis Classicis, & Historicis, Nec Non Parallelis Juris Anglicani locis, illustrata. Quibus accessit Prooemium De Jure Civili Romanorum ante Justinianum, et de libris juris civilis Romanorum per Justinianum compositis. In Usum Juventutis Academicae. Per Robertum Eden, S.T.B. Archidiaconum Wintoniensem, & non ita pridem, Coll. Univ. Oxon. Socium.
Eden, Robert, 1701-1759.Date: MDCCXLIV. [1744]- Books
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A new institute of the imperial or civil law. With notes, shewing in some principal cases, amongst other Observations, how the Canon law, the laws of England, and the laws and customs of other nations differ from it. In four books. Composed for the Use of some Persons of Quality.
Wood, Thomas, 1661-1722.Date: 1704- Books
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An institute of the laws of England: or, the laws of England in their natural order, according to Common Use. Published For the Direction of Young Beginners, or Students in the Law; and of Others that desire to have a General Knowledge in our Common and Statute Laws. In four books. By Thomas Wood, L. L. D. and Barrister at Law. The tenth edition, revised, corrected, and enlarged by considerable Additions from the New Reports and Manuscript Cases, as also from the Statutes, which are brought down to the present Time, and by upwards of one thousand additional References: By a Serjeant at Law.
Wood, Thomas, 1661-1722.Date: M.DCC.LXXII. [1772]- Books
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The statutes at large, from Magna Charta to the seventh year of King George the Second, inclusive. In six volumes. By William Hawkins, Esq; serjeant at law.
Great Britain.Date: 1735- Books
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An institute of the laws of Scotland in civil rights: with observations upon the agreement or diversity between them and the laws of England. In four books. After the General Method of the Viscount of Stair's Institutions. ...
Bankton, Andrew MacDowall, Lord, 1685-1760.Date: M.DCC.LI. [1751]-53- Books
Children and young people in trouble / by Veronica Gillespie ; with a section on juvenile courts by Barbara Bullivant ; illustrated by Ruth Bartlett ; general editor, John Allard.
Gillespie, VeronicaDate: 1981- Books
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A new abridgment of the law, alphabetically digested under proper titles. In five volumes. By Matthew Bacon, ... The sixth edition, revised and corrected; with additional notes and references. Also a supplement, ... By T. Cunningham, ... Appendix to Bacon's New Abridgement of the Law, Alphabetically digested under proper titles. By Henry Gwillim, of the Middle Temple, esq. Barrister at Law. ...
Bacon, Matthew, active 1730.Date: 1793- Books
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A new pandect of Roman civil law, as anciently established in that empire; and now received and practised in most European nations: with Many useful Observations thereon; shewing, Wherein that Law differs from the Municipal Laws of Great-Britain, from the Canon Law in general, and from that Part of it now in Use here with us in England. Whereunto is prefix'd, By Way of Introduction, A Preliminary Discourse, touching the Rise and Progress of the Civil Law, from the most early Times of the Roman Empire: Wherein is also comprized a particular Account of the Books themselves containing this Law, the Names of the Authors and Compilers of them, the several Editions, and the best Commentators thereon. By John Ayliffe, LL. D. late Fellow of New College, Oxon.
Ayliffe, John, 1676-1732.Date: M.DCC.XXXIV. [1734]- Books
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An introduction to the knowledge of the laws and constitution of England. By a gentleman of the Middle-Temple.
Gentleman of the Middle Temple.Date: MDCCLXIII. [1763]- Books
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The grounds and rudiments of law and equity, alphabetically digested: containing a collection of rules or maxims, ... With three tables. ... By a gentleman of the Middle Temple.
Gentleman of the Middle Temple.Date: 1749- Books
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Commentaries on the laws of England. In four books. By William Blackstone, Esq. Solicitor General to Her Majesty.
Blackstone, William, Sir, 1723-1780.Date: [1775]- Books
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The statutes at large, from the eleventh year of King George the Third, to the thirteenth year of King George the Third, inclusive. To which is prefixed, A Table of the Titles of all the Publick and Private Statutes during that Time. With a copious index. Volume the ninth.
Great Britain.Date: MDCCLXXIII. [1773]- Books
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Every man his own lawyer: or, a summary of the laws of England in a new and instructive method, under the following Heads, Viz. I. Of Actions and Remedies, Writs, Process, Arrests, and Bail. II. Of Courts, Attornies and Solicitors therein, Juries, Witnesses, Trials, Executions, &c. III. Of Estates and Property in Lands and Goods, and how acquired; Ancestors, Heirs, Executors and Administrators. IV. Of the Laws relating to Marriage, Bastardy, Infants, Ideots, Lunaticks. V. Of the Liberty of the Subject, Magna Charta, the Habeas Corpus Act, and other Statutes. VI. Of the King and his Prerogative, the Queen and Prince, Peers, Judges, Sheriffs, Coroners, Justices of Peace, Constables, &c. Vii. Of Publick Offences, Treason, Murder, Felony, Burglary, Robbery, Rape, Sodomy, Forgery, Perjury, &c. And their Punishment. All of them so plainly treated of, that all Manner of Persons may be particularly acquainted with our Laws and Statutes, concerning Civil and Criminal Affairs, and know how to defend Themselves and their Estates and Fortunes; In all Cases whatsoever.
Jacob, Giles, 1686-1744.Date: 1740- Books
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Doctor and student: or dialogues between a doctor of divinity, and a student in the laws of England, containing the grounds of those laws, together with questions and cases ...
Saint German, Christopher, 1460?-1540.Date: 1751- Books
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Every man his own lawyer: or, a summary of the laws of England in a new and instructive method, under the following Heads, viz. I. Of Actions and Remedies, Writs, Process, Arrests, and Bail. II. Of Courts, Attornies and Solicitors therein, Juries, Witnesses, Trials, Executions, &c. III. Of Estates and Property in Lands and Goods, and how acquired, Ancestors, Heirs, Executors and Administrators. IV. Of the Laws relating to Marriage, Bastardy, Infants, Ideots, Lunaticks. V. Of the Liberty of the Subject, Magna Charta, the Habeas Corpus Act, and other Statutes. VI. Of the King and his Prerogative, the Queen, Peers, Judges, Sheriffs, Coroners, Justices of Peace, Constables, &c. Vii. Of Publick Offences, Treason, Murder, Felony, Burglary, Robbery, Rape, Sodomy, Forgery, Perjury, &c. And their Punishment. All of them so plainly treated of, that all Manner of Persons may be particularly acquainted with our Laws and Statutes, concerning Civil and Criminal Affairs, and know how to defend Themselves and their Estates and Fortunes; In all Cases whatsoever.
Jacob, Giles, 1686-1744.Date: MDCCXXXVII. [1737]- Books
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An Interesting appendix to Sir William Blackstone's Commentaries on the laws of England. Containing, I. Priestley's Remarks on some paragraphs in the fourth volume of Blackstone's Commentaries, relating to the dissenters. II. Blackstone's Reply to Priestley's Remarks. III. Priestley's Answer to Blackstone's Reply. IV. The case of the late election of the county of Middlesex considered on the principles of the Constitution and the authorities of law. V. Furneaux's Letters to the Hon. Mr. Justice Blackstone concerning his Exposition of the Act of Toleration, and some positions relative to religious liberty, in his celebrated Commentaries on the laws of England. VI. Authentic copies of the argument of the late Hon. Mr. Justice Foster in the Court of Judges Delegates, and of the speech of the Right Hon. Lord Mansfield in the House of Lords, in the cause between the city of London and the dissenters.
Date: MDCCLXXII. [1772-1773]- Books
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Doctor and student: or dialogues between a doctor of divinity, and a student in the laws of England, containing the grounds of those laws, together with questions and cases concerning the Equity and Conscience thereof; also comparing the civil, canon, common and statute laws, and shewing wherein they vary from one another. To which is added an account of th author, and a general table of the principal matters.
Saint German, Christopher, 1460?-1540.Date: MDCCXLVI. [1746]- Books
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A new institute of the imperial or civil law. With notes, shewing in some principal cases amongst other observations, how the canon law, the laws of England, and the laws and customs of other nations differ from it. In four books. Composed for the Use of some Persons of Quality. The fourth edition corrected. By Tho Wood, LL.D. late Rector of Hardwick, Bucks, Commissary and Official of that Archdeaconry. To which is prefix'd, as an Introduction, a treatise of the first Principles of Laws in General; of their Nature and Design, and of the Interpretation of them.
Wood, Thomas, 1661-1722.Date: MDCCXXX. [1730]- Books
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The statutes at large, from the twenty-sixth year of the reign of King George the third, to the twenty-ninth year of the reign of King George the third, inclusive. To which is prefixed, A table of the titles of all the Publick and Private Statutes during that Time. With a copious index. Being an eleventh volume to Mr. Runnington's edition, and a fifteenth to Mr. Ruffhead's.
Great Britain.Date: MDCCLXXXIX. [1789]- Books
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A systematical view of the laws of England; as treated of in a course of Vinerian lectures, read at Oxford, during a series of years, commencing in Michaelmas term, 1777. By Richard Wooddeson, D. C. L. Vinerian Professor, and Fellow of Magdalen College, Oxford, And Counsel to that University. Vol. I.
Wooddeson, Richard, 1745-1822.Date: M.DCC.XCII. [1792]-93- Books
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The grounds and rudiments of law and equity, alphabetically digested: containing a collection of rules or maxims, with the Doctrine upon them, illustrated by various Cases extracted from the Books and Records, to evince that these Principles have been the Foundation upon which the Judges and Sages of the Law have built their solemn Resolutions and Determinations. The whole Designed to reduce the Knowledge of the Laws of England to a more regular Science, and to form them into a proper Digest, for the Service of the Nobility, Clergy, Gentlemen in the Commission of the Peace, and private Gentlemen, as well as the Professors and Students of the Law. with three tables. First, Of the Rudiments and Grounds. Second, Of the New Cases. Third, Of Principal Matters. The second edition. By a gentleman of the Middle Temple.
Gentleman of the Middle Temple.Date: MDCCLI. [1751]- Books
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A general abridgment of the Common Law, alphabetically digested under proper titles: with notes and references to the whole. ... By Knightley D'Anvers, ...
D'Anvers, Knightley, -1740.Date: 1722-25- Books
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Commentaries on the laws of England. In four books. By Sir William Blackstone, Knt. one of the justices of His Majesty's court of common pleas.
Blackstone, William, Sir, 1723-1780.Date: 1791- Books
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An analysis of the laws of England. To which is perfixed [sic] an introductory discourse on the study of the law. By William Blackstone, Esq. D.C.L. Barrister at Law, Vinerian Professor of the Laws of England in the University of Oxford, and Solicitor General to Her Majesty.
Blackstone, William, Sir, 1723-1780.Date: MDCCLXVI. [1766]- Books
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The second part of the Institutes of the laws of England. Containing the exposition of many ancient and other statutes. Authore Edwardo Coke, Milite, J. C. Haec ego grandaevus posui tibi, candide lector.
Coke, Edward, Sir, 1552-1634.Date: M.DCC.XCVII. [1797]