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The tryal of John Hampden, esq; (of Stoke-Mandeville in the county of Bucks) in the great case of ship-money between his Majesty K. Charles I. and that gentleman. Wherein are inserted, the whole record in Latin and English: the several arguments of council learned in the law, on both sides, in that most remarkable case at the Bar; with the opinions of all the judges on the bench in the Exchequer-Chamber, &c. As also Mr. St. John's speech in the House of Lords, Jan. 7. 1640. concerning ship money. With Mr Waller's speech to the House of Commons, April 22, 1640. on the same subject: and, his famous speech in Parliament, at a conference of both houses, in the Painted-Chamber, July 6, 1641. .... To which is added, the tryal of Thomas Harrison, clerk, for words spoken against Mr. Justice Hutton ...

By: Hampden, John, 1594-1643.Contributor(s): Waller, Edmund, 1606-1687 | St. John, Oliver, 1598?-1673 | Hutton, Richard, Sir, 1561?-1639 | Crawley, Francis, Sir, 1584-1649 | Harrison, Thomas, fl. 1638 | Great Britain. Court of Exchequer Chamber | Great Britain. Court of King's Bench.Publisher: London : Printed for D. Browne, W. Mears, F. Clay, ...; J. Sackfield, ...; B. Creake, ...; and J. Peele, ..., 1719Description: [6], 56, [57]-[64], 57-238p. ; 2.°.Subject(s): Ship-money
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Reference material House of Lords Library - Palace Upper (Harcourt) Corridor, Second Floor 2 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Not for loan 33675-1001
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2 Biographical memoir of Luke Hansard, esq. many years printer to the House of Commons. 2 A new and complete law-dictionary, or, general abridgment of the law: on a more extensive plan than any law-dictionary hitherto published: containing not only the explanation of the terms, but also the law itself, both with regard to theory and practice. Very useful to barristers, justices of the peace, attornies, solicitors, &c. By T. Cunningham, esq. In two volumes ... 2 The interpreter of words and terms, used either in the common or statute laws of this realm, and in tenures and jocular customs: with an appendix, containing the antient names of places in England, very necessary for the use of all young students, that converse with antient deeds, charters, &c. First publish'd by the learn'd Dr. Cowel, in the year 1607. and continu'd by Tho. Manley of the Middle Temple, esq; to the year 1684. Now further augmented and improv'd, by the addition of many thousand words, as are found in our histories, antiquities, cartularies, rolls, registers, and other manuscript records, not hitherto explain'd in any dictionary. 2 The tryal of John Hampden, esq; (of Stoke-Mandeville in the county of Bucks) in the great case of ship-money between his Majesty K. Charles I. and that gentleman. Wherein are inserted, the whole record in Latin and English: the several arguments of council learned in the law, on both sides, in that most remarkable case at the Bar; with the opinions of all the judges on the bench in the Exchequer-Chamber, &c. As also Mr. St. John's speech in the House of Lords, Jan. 7. 1640. concerning ship money. With Mr Waller's speech to the House of Commons, April 22, 1640. on the same subject: and, his famous speech in Parliament, at a conference of both houses, in the Painted-Chamber, July 6, 1641. .... To which is added, the tryal of Thomas Harrison, clerk, for words spoken against Mr. Justice Hutton ... 2 Doctrina placitandi, ou l'art & science de bon pleading: monstrant lou, & en queux cases, & per queux persons, pleas, cy bien real, come personal ou mixt, poient estre properment pleades; & è converso. Opus accuratè compositum. Elucubratione S.E. servientis regis and legem. Alphabeticalment digest desouth lour proper titles, ove un perfect table. 2 Reports of cases argued and adjudged in the Court of King's Bench, in the seventh, eighth, ninth, and tenth years of his late majesty King George the Second. During which time the Right Honourable the Earl of Hardwicke was Lord Chief Justice of that court. With tables of the names of the cases and principal matters. To which is prefixed, a proposal for rendering the laws of England clear and certain. Humbly offered to the consideration of both houses of Parliament. By T. Cunningham, Esq. 2 The reports of that reverend and learned judge, the right honourable Sr. Henry Hobart Knight and Baronet, Lord Chief Justice of His Majesty's Court of Common Pleas, and Chancellor to both their highnesses Henry and Charles Princes of Wales.

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