A History of English Law, Volume 4Methuen, 1924 - Law |
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Page 11
... says Dicey , 1 " at any given time a body of beliefs , convictions , sentiments , accepted principles or firmly rooted prejudices , which , taken together make up the public opinion of a particular era , or what we may call the reigning ...
... says Dicey , 1 " at any given time a body of beliefs , convictions , sentiments , accepted principles or firmly rooted prejudices , which , taken together make up the public opinion of a particular era , or what we may call the reigning ...
Page 16
... says , " What others are striving to wrest from the Pope by hostile measures , they con- tinued to retain with his concurrence ; see F. Seebohm , The Oxford Reformers 422 , 423 for the way in which the money raised by indulgences was ...
... says , " What others are striving to wrest from the Pope by hostile measures , they con- tinued to retain with his concurrence ; see F. Seebohm , The Oxford Reformers 422 , 423 for the way in which the money raised by indulgences was ...
Page 19
... says Ranke , 5 " and the Inquisition alone that com- pletely shut out all extraneous interference with the state ... say that the Reforma- tion has powerfully assisted in the creation of the autonomous state , its immediate results were ...
... says Ranke , 5 " and the Inquisition alone that com- pletely shut out all extraneous interference with the state ... say that the Reforma- tion has powerfully assisted in the creation of the autonomous state , its immediate results were ...
Page 28
... says , Lectures on Medieval and Modern History 386 , it was the age of the discovery of printing and of the use of paper instead of parchment . " Men began to write freely and to destroy freely ; " and when the age of de- struction ...
... says , Lectures on Medieval and Modern History 386 , it was the age of the discovery of printing and of the use of paper instead of parchment . " Men began to write freely and to destroy freely ; " and when the age of de- struction ...
Page 31
... says ( Camb . Mod . Hist . ii 464 ) , " Henry was considered an enemy of Christianity much as was the Turk , but the prospect of a crusade against him , though at times it looked fairly probable , always vanished in the end . Foreign ...
... says ( Camb . Mod . Hist . ii 464 ) , " Henry was considered an enemy of Christianity much as was the Turk , but the prospect of a crusade against him , though at times it looked fairly probable , always vanished in the end . Foreign ...
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