| James Harvey Robinson - Europe - 1916 - 950 pages
...messenger from the king and solemnly resolved that, "according to the ancient and fundamental laws of this kingdom, the government is, and ought to be, by king, lords, and commons." Thus the Puritan revolution and the short-lived republic was followed by the Restoration of the Stuarts.... | |
| Carlton Joseph Huntley Hayes - Europe - 1916 - 678 pages
...experiment in Puritan republicanism had resulted only in convincing the majority of the people that "the government is, and ought to be, by King, Lords, and Commons." i66o-*68s' The people merely asked for some assurances against despotism, — and when a throne was... | |
| Ramsay Muir - Great Britain - 1920 - 920 pages
...Charles to Parliament embodying these terms. He was received with deference, and on May ist both houses resolved that, ' according to the ancient and fundamental...government is and ought to be by King, Lords, and Commons. On May 8th Charles n. was proclaimed king with all the ancient ceremonial. Thus, easily and suddenly,... | |
| James Henry Breasted, James Harvey Robinson - Europe - 1920 - 824 pages
...messenger from the king and solemnly resolved that, "according to the ancient and fundamental laws of this kingdom, the government is, and ought to be, by king, lords, and commons." Thus the Puritan revolution and the short-lived republic were followed by the Restoration of the Stuarts.... | |
| James Harvey Robinson, James Henry Breasted, Emma Peters Smith - Europe - 1921 - 936 pages
...messenger from the king and solemnly resolved that "according to the ancient and fundamental laws of this kingdom, the government is, and ought to be, by king, lords, and commons." Thus the Puritan revolution and the short-lived republic were followed by the Restoration of the Stuarts.... | |
| Randolph Greenfield Adams - Great Britain - 1922 - 234 pages
...forget that when Charles II was welcomed back to England it was with the express understanding that the "government is and ought to be by King, Lords, and Commons." If King, Lords, and Commons constitute Parliament and also constitute the government, drawing a distinction... | |
| Kate Rosenberg - Constitutional history - 1926 - 104 pages
...II. to the throne, this time declaring " that according to the ancient and fundamental laws of this Kingdom, the Government is, and ought to be, by King, Lords and Commons." Again it was Parliament which supported the invitation to William of Orange to come over to defend... | |
| Philip Van Ness Myers - World history - 1927 - 914 pages
...reassembled, and by resolution declared that "according to the ancient and fundamental laws of this kingdom the government is and ought to be by king, Lords, and Commons." An invitation was sent to Prince Charles to return to his people and take his place upon the throne... | |
| Walter Elliot Elliot - Great Britain - 1927 - 156 pages
...free Parliament. This voted forthwith that ' according to the ancient and fundamental laws of this Kingdom the Government is, and ought to be, by King, Lords and Commons.' Charles II was summoned to England, and the first Parliament of his reign was so overwhelmingly Tory... | |
| Edward Raymond Turner - Political Science - 1927 - 494 pages
...with the Lords ; and do Own and Declare, That, according to the antient and fundamental Laws of this Kingdom, the Government is, and ought to be, by King, Lords, and Commons." " Preparations were now being made to receive the king. The commons ordered that the lord president... | |
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