| Thomas Erskine May - 1844 - 514 pages
...Elizabeth, who did not suffer the royal prerogative to be impaired in her time, Sir Thomas Smyth affirmed that " the most high and absolute power of the realm of England consisteth in the Parliament ;" 3 and then proceeded to assign to the Crown, exactly the same place in Parliament as that acknowledged,... | |
| Eliot Warburton - 1849 - 522 pages
...Reprinted out of the Commonwealth of England by a Friend to old Bookes, and an enimy to new Opinions." " The most high and absolute power of the realm of England consisteth in the Parliament. For, as in war, where the King himself in person, the nobility, the rest of the gentility and the yeomanry... | |
| Bartholomew Elliott G. Warburton - 1849 - 506 pages
...Reprinted out of the Commonwealth of England by a Friend to old Bookes, and an enimy to new Opinions." " The most high and absolute power of the realm of England consisteth in the Parliament. For, as in war, where the King himself in person, the nobility, the rest of the gentility and the yeomanry... | |
| Thomas Erskine May (baron Farnborough.) - 1851 - 688 pages
...1G89, p. 195. ' Bracton, lib. 1, c. 8. * De Landibus, Leg. Ang. c. 9. time, Sir Thomas Smyth affirmed that " the most high and absolute power of the realm of England consisteth in the Parliament;"1 and then proceeded to assign to the Crown, exactly the same place in Parliament as that... | |
| Thomas Erskine May - 1883 - 994 pages
...Elizabeth, who did not suffer the royal prerogative to be impaired in her time, Sir Thomas Smyth affirmed that "the most high and absolute power of the realm of England consisteth in the Parliament ;"5 and then 1 2 Hot. Parl. 290. » Bracton, lib. 1, o. 8. 2 See also coronation oath of * De Laudibus... | |
| George Walter Prothero - 1894 - 604 pages
...Bk. III. chap. 10. (2) Parliament and tl\e Sovereign. Of the Parliament and the authority thereof. The most high and absolute power of the realm of England consisteth in the Parliament . . . The Parliament abrogateth old laws, maketh new, giveth order for things past and for things hereafter... | |
| william stubbs - 1896 - 684 pages
...and will supply all that is wanted here in respect of the procedure of the two houses : — 443. ' The most high and absolute power of the realm of England consisteth in the parliament : for as in war where the king himself in person, the nobility, the rest of the gentility and the yeomanry... | |
| Georg Jellinek - 1901 - 132 pages
...Rights it was ordained that everything therein contained should "remain the law of this realm for1 " The most high and absolute power of the realm of England consisteth in the Parliament . ... all that ever the people of Rome might do, either in centuriatis comitiis or tributis, the same... | |
| Georg Jellinek - 1902 - 136 pages
...est statué par le « bill of rights » que tout ce qu'il contient doit rester, pour toujours, (1) « The most high and absolute power of the realm of England consisteth in the Parliament.... ail that ever the people of Rome might do, either in centuriatiscomitiis or tributis, the same may... | |
| 1903 - 1238 pages
...Smith in his Commonwealth of England (Book II.. c. 2) published a century Iwfore the Revolution : " The most high and absolute power of the realm of England consisteth in the Parliament. . . . All that ever the people of Eome might do, either Centuriatis, Comitiis, or Tributis, the same... | |
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