The Crown and Its Advisers: Or, Queen, Ministers, Lords, & Commons |
From inside the book
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Page 16
... foreign commerce , that is commerce . left to the law of merchants . The Queen , being the representative of her people , has the sole power of sending ambassadors to foreign states , and of receiving ambassadors at home . And in her ...
... foreign commerce , that is commerce . left to the law of merchants . The Queen , being the representative of her people , has the sole power of sending ambassadors to foreign states , and of receiving ambassadors at home . And in her ...
Page 25
... Foreign Affairs on account of having written and sent to its destination an important despatch without first having submitted it to her Majesty . In minor matters , the ministers have a separate discretion in their several departments ...
... Foreign Affairs on account of having written and sent to its destination an important despatch without first having submitted it to her Majesty . In minor matters , the ministers have a separate discretion in their several departments ...
Page 31
... the Queen in Council ) shall be enforced . When the Sovereign declares war * A Royal Proclamation cannot make a law , but it can add force to a law already made . against a foreign Power , proclamations are usually issued ,
... the Queen in Council ) shall be enforced . When the Sovereign declares war * A Royal Proclamation cannot make a law , but it can add force to a law already made . against a foreign Power , proclamations are usually issued ,
Page 32
... foreign Power , proclamations are usually issued , materially altering the ordinary laws relating to trade , and imposing rules for the conduct of trade with neutrals or belligerents . Proclamations are also issued to fix the mode ...
... foreign Power , proclamations are usually issued , materially altering the ordinary laws relating to trade , and imposing rules for the conduct of trade with neutrals or belligerents . Proclamations are also issued to fix the mode ...
Page 35
... foreign powers , corpora- tions , or individuals , without the consent of Parlia- ment , though the conduct of the Crown in this re- spect has been occasionally irregular . When a sum of money to which the Crown is entitled is surren ...
... foreign powers , corpora- tions , or individuals , without the consent of Parlia- ment , though the conduct of the Crown in this re- spect has been occasionally irregular . When a sum of money to which the Crown is entitled is surren ...
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Common terms and phrases
Act of Parliament administration Admiralty advice advisers affairs appointed army assent attendance authority Baron bill Board of Trade boroughs breach of privilege British Cabinet Council Cabinet Ministers called chief colonies Commander-in-Chief committee conduct constitutional court Crown debate declared Duke duties Earl England English Exchequer executive Executive Government exercise foreign Gentlemen grant Henry VIII Home Secretary honour House of Commons House of Lords Houses of Parliament impeached important India intrusted Ireland judges judicial King King's kingdom lecture legislative liament Lord Chancellor Lord High Lord Privy Seal Lord Speaker Lords spiritual Majesty Majesty's Marquess matters ment military Ministry monarch Parlia parliamentary government peer Peerage persons political Poor-Law Board prerogative present Prime Minister Privy Council Privy Councillors Queen question realm reign representative responsible royal royal assent Scotland seat Serjeant-at-Arms Sovereign Speaker speech taxes tion Treasury vote Woolsack