The Irish Parliament: What it Was, and what it Did |
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Page vi
... charters of kings . The freehold franchise was the same in both , and the royal charters had exactly the same effect , * " Irish Debates , " vol . i . p . 422 . and were construed and tried by the same rules of vi THE IRISH PARLIAMENT .
... charters of kings . The freehold franchise was the same in both , and the royal charters had exactly the same effect , * " Irish Debates , " vol . i . p . 422 . and were construed and tried by the same rules of vi THE IRISH PARLIAMENT .
Page 43
... royal assent in the same form which is observed in Great Britain . In all these stages in England and Ireland it is to be remembered that any bill was liable to be rejected , amended , or altered , but that when they had passed the ...
... royal assent in the same form which is observed in Great Britain . In all these stages in England and Ireland it is to be remembered that any bill was liable to be rejected , amended , or altered , but that when they had passed the ...
Page 44
... royal assent to laws that might be injurious to the King . That during the civil wars of York and Lancaster this had frequently happened . That the adherents of the York family were nu- merous in Ireland , having been planted here ...
... royal assent to laws that might be injurious to the King . That during the civil wars of York and Lancaster this had frequently happened . That the adherents of the York family were nu- merous in Ireland , having been planted here ...
Page 45
... royal assent to laws till they had been notified to the King himself in England under the sanction of the Great Seal of Ireland ; but that this was con- sidered only as a restraint on the governor , not on the Parliament of Ireland ...
... royal assent to laws till they had been notified to the King himself in England under the sanction of the Great Seal of Ireland ; but that this was con- sidered only as a restraint on the governor , not on the Parliament of Ireland ...
Page 53
... Royal license to the Viceroy a condition precedent to the convening of a Parliament in Ireland was expressly retained . * The provisions of Yelverton's Act were framed in accordance with the terms of the Address to the Throne moved by ...
... Royal license to the Viceroy a condition precedent to the convening of a Parliament in Ireland was expressly retained . * The provisions of Yelverton's Act were framed in accordance with the terms of the Address to the Throne moved by ...
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Common terms and phrases
400 Illustrations alter Bishops boroughs Britain British Constitution British House Cassell & Company's Catholics certified CHAPTER Cheap Edition cloth gilt Company's Publications corruption Crown of England Crown of Ireland Edmund Burke Eighteenth Century enacted English Constitution English House English in Ireland English Parliament English Privy Council Four Vols Froude's English George gilt edges Grattan GUSTAVE DORÉ half-morocco Hallam House of Commons House of Lords Houses of Parliament Illus Illustrated throughout Imperial Crown Irish Constitution Irish Debates Irish House Irish judges Irish Privy Council kingdom of Ireland Lecky's England legislation liament LITTLE FOLKS Lord-Lieutenant ment Money Bills morocco Mountmorres's Irish Parliament Mutiny Act Original Illustrations Painting Parlia Parliament of Ireland passed peerages peers pensions POPULAR EDITION Poynings prerogative Prof provisions repeal Revolution royal assent says Seal of England Seal of Ireland Selections from Cassell Sir Laurence Parsons statute Three Vols tion Viceroy Volume
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Page 35 - Britain ; and that the King's Majesty, by and with the Advice and Consent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal, and Commons of Great Britain, in Parliament assembled, had, hath, and of right ought to have, full Power and Authority to make Laws and Statutes of sufficient Force and Validity to bind the Colonies and People of America, Subjects of the Crown of Great Britain, in all cases whatsoever.
Page 82 - Taxation is no part of the governing or legislative power. The taxes are a voluntary gift and grant of the Commons alone. In legislation, the three estates of the realm are alike concerned; but the concurrence of the Peers and the Crown to a tax, is only necessary to close with the form of a law. The gift and grant is of the Commons alone.
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