View of the State of Europe During the Middle Ages, Volume 2J. Murray, 1837 - Europe |
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Page 18
... called the infants of la Cerda , by the protection of France , to whose royal family they were closely allied , and of Aragon , always prompt to interfere in the dis- putes of a rival people , continued to assert their pretensions for ...
... called the infants of la Cerda , by the protection of France , to whose royal family they were closely allied , and of Aragon , always prompt to interfere in the dis- putes of a rival people , continued to assert their pretensions for ...
Page 36
... called moneda forera . Beyond this sum nothing could be demanded without the consent of the cortes . Alfonso VIII . in 1177 , applied for a subsidy towards carrying on the siege of Cuenca . Demands of money do not however seem to have ...
... called moneda forera . Beyond this sum nothing could be demanded without the consent of the cortes . Alfonso VIII . in 1177 , applied for a subsidy towards carrying on the siege of Cuenca . Demands of money do not however seem to have ...
Page 38
... accordado con los perlados è grandes de sus reynos , e con los otros que a la sazon residieren en su consejo , e seyendo para ello llamados los procuradores de las IV . SPAIN . they are eminently called , Ferdinand 38 STATE OF EUROPE.
... accordado con los perlados è grandes de sus reynos , e con los otros que a la sazon residieren en su consejo , e seyendo para ello llamados los procuradores de las IV . SPAIN . they are eminently called , Ferdinand 38 STATE OF EUROPE.
Page 39
Henry Hallam. IV . SPAIN . they are eminently called , Ferdinand and Isabella , CHAP . never violated this part of the constitution ; nor did even Charles I. , although sometimes refused money by the cortes , attempt to exact it without ...
Henry Hallam. IV . SPAIN . they are eminently called , Ferdinand and Isabella , CHAP . never violated this part of the constitution ; nor did even Charles I. , although sometimes refused money by the cortes , attempt to exact it without ...
Page 43
... called in Spain the Fuero Jusgo , was enacted in public councils , as were also the laws of the early kings of Leon , which appears by the reciting words of their preambles . * Marina , t . i . p . 301 . † p . 288-304 . This consent t ...
... called in Spain the Fuero Jusgo , was enacted in public councils , as were also the laws of the early kings of Leon , which appears by the reciting words of their preambles . * Marina , t . i . p . 301 . † p . 288-304 . This consent t ...
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Common terms and phrases
afterwards Alfonso Alfonso X ancient Anglo-Saxon appear Aragon authority barons became benefices bishops Boniface canon law canons Castile century CHAP Charlemagne charter church civil clergy conquest consent Constantinople constitution controul cortes council council of Basle count of Urgel court crown decretals Domesday Book dominion Du Cange duke ECCLES ecclesiastical Edward election electors emperor empire England ENGLISH CONST established estates excommunicated favour Ferdinand feudal fiefs Fleury France Frederic Fueros Gallican church Germany granted GREEKS Henry Henry III Henry the Lion Hist imperial Innocent John jurisdiction justice justiciary king king's kingdom lands Leges liberty Lothaire Louis Marca ment monarchy nobility Otho papal perhaps persons Pfeffel pontiffs pope possessed POWER prerogative princes principles privileges province RACENS reign Roman Rome royal Saxon Schmidt seems sovereign SPAIN spiritual statute Struvius succession successors tallage temporal thanes throne tion towns tribunal usurpation vassals VIII Zurita
Popular passages
Page 447 - No Freeman shall be taken, or imprisoned, or be disseised of his Freehold, or Liberties, or free Customs, or be outlawed, or exiled, or any otherwise destroyed; nor will we pass upon him, nor condemn him, but by lawful Judgment of his Peers, or by the Law of the Land. We will sell to no man, we will not deny or defer to any man either Justice or Right.
Page 372 - No unbiassed observer, who derives pleasure from the welfare of his species, can fail to consider the long and uninterruptedly increasing prosperity of England as the most beautiful phenomenon in the history of mankind. Climates more propitious may impart more largely the mere enjoyments of existence ; but in no other region have the benefits that political institutions can confer been diffused over so extended a population ; nor have any people so well reconciled the discordant elements of wealth,...
Page 445 - The institutions of positive law, the far more important changes which time has wrought in the order of society, during six hundred years subsequent to the great charter, have undoubtedly lessened its direct application to our present circumstances. But it is still the key-stone of English liberty. All that has since been obtained is little more than as a confirmation or commentary; and if every subsequent law were to be swept away, there would still remain the bold features that distinguish a free...
Page 434 - ... reigns we must have recourse to historians ; whose language, though vague, and perhaps exaggerated, is too uniform and impressive to leave a doubt of the tyrannical character of the government. The intolerable exactions of tribute, the rapine of purveyance, the iniquity of royal courts, are continually in their mouths. " God sees the wretched people," says the Saxon Chronicler, "most unjustly oppressed ; first they are despoiled of their possessions, then butchered.
Page 164 - O prophet, I am the man : whosoever rises against thee, I will dash out his teeth, tear out his eyes, break his legs, rip up his belly. O prophet, I will be thy vizir over them.
Page 371 - ... revive institutions which can be no longer operative, or principles that have died away, their defensive efforts will not be unnatural, nor ought to excite either indignation or alarm. A calm, comprehensive study of ecclesiastical history, not in such scraps and fragments as the ordinary partisans of our ephemeral literature obtrude upon us, is perhaps the best antidote to extravagant apprehensions. Those who know what Rome has once been are best able to appreciate what she is; those who have...
Page 449 - From this sera a new soul was infused into the people of England. Her liberties, at the best long in abeyance, became a tangible possession, and those indefinite aspirations for the laws of Edward the Confessor were changed into a steady regard for the Great Charter.
Page 436 - Men fined for the king's good- will ; or that he would remit his anger ; or to have his mediation with their adversaries. Many fines seem as it were imposed in sport, if we look to the cause ; though their extent, and the solemnity with which they were recorded, prove the humour to have been differently relished by the two parties.
Page 166 - Syria, though defended by numerous armies and fortified cities (AD 632639) ; and the khalif Omar had scarcely returned thanks for the accomplishment of this conquest, when Amrou, his lieutenant, announced to him the entire reduction of Egypt, After some interval the Saracens won their way along the coast of Africa as far as the Pillars of Hercules, and a third province was irretrievably torn from the Greek empire (AD 647-698).