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Pagina 6
... Elizabeth and James I. , are , indeed , meagre and imperfect , though they are capable of being rendered much more intelligible by a reference to state papers and other original documents ; but the reports of Trials in the reign of ...
... Elizabeth and James I. , are , indeed , meagre and imperfect , though they are capable of being rendered much more intelligible by a reference to state papers and other original documents ; but the reports of Trials in the reign of ...
Pagina 8
... Elizabeth , the practice was to arrest the suspected person , and to keep him in strict imprisonment till it suited the purposes of the Crown to try him . During this interval , ( which was quite without limit in practice , however ...
... Elizabeth , the practice was to arrest the suspected person , and to keep him in strict imprisonment till it suited the purposes of the Crown to try him . During this interval , ( which was quite without limit in practice , however ...
Pagina 10
... Elizabeth ; let us now look at the law and practice in the time of George III . In modern times , a person imprisoned on a charge of treason is entitled immediately to a copy of the warrant of commitment , which the gaoler is bound to ...
... Elizabeth ; let us now look at the law and practice in the time of George III . In modern times , a person imprisoned on a charge of treason is entitled immediately to a copy of the warrant of commitment , which the gaoler is bound to ...
Pagina 11
... Elizabeth an Englishman not in a state of villeinage had , by the constitutional law of the land , an unquestionable right to personal liberty ; but the means he possessed of vindicating his freedom and escaping from the grasp of a ...
... Elizabeth an Englishman not in a state of villeinage had , by the constitutional law of the land , an unquestionable right to personal liberty ; but the means he possessed of vindicating his freedom and escaping from the grasp of a ...
Pagina 13
... Elizabeth's reign , says , " It is against the law of England to torture , for the purpose of eliciting a confession of guilt ; the practice savours too much of slavery for a free people . It is natural to an Englishman to despise death ...
... Elizabeth's reign , says , " It is against the law of England to torture , for the purpose of eliciting a confession of guilt ; the practice savours too much of slavery for a free people . It is natural to an Englishman to despise death ...
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Criminal Trials, Volume 1 David Jardine,Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge (Great Britain) Volledige weergave - 1832 |
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
accusation afterwards answer arraignment Attorney Attorney-General Barker beseech Bishop of Rosse Catholic charge confess Counsel Count Aremberg Court Crown death declared delivered desire doth Duke of Alva Duke of Norfolk Duke's Earl of Essex Elizabeth enemies England Essex-house evidence Examinate execution favour friends guilty hand hath Henry high treason honour indictment intended Judges jury King of Spain King's knew Ledington letter London Lord Burleigh Lord Cecil Lord Chief Justice Lord Cobham Lord High Steward Lord of Essex Lordships Majesty's marriage matter Murdin never offence Parry person Peter Carew Pope pray Prince prisoner proceedings procure protest prove Queen of Scots Queen's Counsel Queen's Majesty realm rebellion reign Rudolphi saith Scotland Scottish Queen sent Serjeant Sir N. T. Sir Nicholas Sir Thomas Sir Walter Raleigh Southampton speak State-Paper Office statute taken thereof things thou Throckmorton tion told Tower traitor trial unto witnesses words Wyatt