Publications of the Southampton Record Society, Volume 20

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Page 145 - Januarye, 1599, and in the two and fortyth yeare of the reigne of our fovereigne ladie Elizabeth, by the grace of God Queene of England, Fraunce and Ireland, defender of the fayth, &c.
Page 93 - Henry, by the grace of God, King of England and France, and Lord of Ireland, To all to whom these...
Page x - But nothing can restore or purify the blood when once corrupted, if the pardon be not allowed till after attainder, but the high and transcendent power of parliament. Yet if a person attainted receives the king's pardon, and afterwards hath a son. that son may be heir to his father, because the father, being made a new man, might transmit new inheritable blood ; though had he been born before the pardon he could never have inherited at all.
Page 19 - Eliz. c. 2, to be punished by six months' imprisonment, and treble damages to the party injured. Maintenance. 12. Maintenance is an offence that bears a near relation to the former, being an officious intermeddling in a suit that no way belongs to one, by maintaining or assisting either party, with money or otherwise to prosecute or defend it; a practice that was greatly encouraged by the first introduction of uses.
Page 35 - In testimony whereof we have caused these our letters to be made patent. Witness myself at Westminster, on the eighth day of April, in the first year of our reign.
Page 141 - W. that at certain days and places, which you or any such two or more of you as is aforesaid shall make known to him, he cause to come before you or such two or more of you as...
Page 12 - , whatever was the cause of a man's death, by falling upon him, was exterminated or cast out of the dominions of the republic.
Page 155 - September 1467], at Nottingham, in the county of the town of Nottingham, played at an unlawful and prohibited game called "quoiting", unlawfully, against the form of the Statute1 thereupon issued, etc.
Page 53 - Thanks louing friends and my kind country-men, and here I vow in presence of you all, to root abuses from this common welth, which now flowes faster then the furious tyde that ouerflowes beyond the bankes of Nile.
Page 131 - ... be had under the King's Great Seal, directed to the Admiral or Admirals, or to his or their Lieutenant, Deputy, and Deputies, and to three or four...

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