| Edward Shepherd Creasy - Constitutional history - 1848 - 82 pages
...and continuance of that court do now cease : and the proceedings, censures, and decrees of that court have by experience been found to be an intolerable burden to the subjects, and the means to introduce an arbitrary power and government ; and forasmuch as the council-table... | |
| Ralph Gardiner - 1849 - 280 pages
...pressures, conceiving them to be the greatest of evils. The proceedings, censures, and decrease of those courts, have, by experience, been found to be an intolerable...of the land, &c. all which courts and proceedings shall cease after the first of August, 1641, beuijr absolutely dissolved and taken away, &c. Be it... | |
| James Fitzjames Stephen - Criminal law - 1883 - 606 pages
...statutes bearing on the subject, declares that the proceedings, censures, and " decrees of the court have by experience been " found to be an intolerable burden to the subjects, and the " means to introduce an arbitrary power and government," and enacts that the Court... | |
| Great Britain. Parliament - Constitutional history - 1889 - 460 pages
...and continuance of that Court do now cease, and the proceedings, censures and decrees of that Court have by experience been found to be an intolerable burden to the subjects, and the means to introduce an arbitrary power and government: and forasmuch as the Council... | |
| Great Britain. Parliament - Constitutional history - 1889 - 456 pages
...and continuance of that Court do now cease, and the proceedings, censures and decrees of that Court have by experience been found to be an intolerable burden to the subjects, and the means to introduce an arbitrary power and government: and forasmuch as the Council... | |
| Samuel Rawson Gardiner - Constitutional history - 1899 - 620 pages
...and continuance of that Court do now cease, and the proceedings, censures and decrees of that Court have by experience been found to be an ^ intolerable burden to the subjects, and the means to introduce an arbitrary power and government : and forasmuch as the Council... | |
| George Burton Adams, Henry Morse Stephens - Constitutional history - 1901 - 592 pages
...and continuance of that Court do now cease; and the proceedings, censures and decrees of that Court have by experience been found to be an intolerable burden to the subjects, and the means to introduce an arbitrary power and government; and forasmuch as the Council... | |
| Samuel Rawson Gardiner - Constitutional history - 1906 - 570 pages
...and continuance of that Court do now cease, and the proceedings, censures and decrees of that Court have by experience been found to be an intolerable burden to the subjects, and the means to introduce an arbitrary power and government: and forasmuch as the Council... | |
| J. P. Kenyon - History - 1986 - 504 pages
...erection and continuance of the court do now cease, and the proceedings, censure and decrees of that court have by experience been found to be an intolerable burden to the subjects, and the means to introduce an arbitrary power and government; and forasmuch as the Council... | |
| Andrew Sharp - History - 1998 - 266 pages
...Star Chamber) it is there declared that 'the proceedings, censures, and decrees' of the Star Chamber 'have by experience been found to be an intolerable burden to the subject and the means to introduce an arbitrary power and government', and that the Council Table 'have... | |
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