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inns of chancery การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • They were both Inns of Chancery.
  • It was both the first Inn of Chancery to be founded and the last to be demolished.
  • It was the first recorded Inn of Chancery, although its official date of incorporation is not known.
  • Clifford's Inn was the oldest of the Inns of Chancery, and was first mentioned in 1344.
  • The Inn of Chancery was not that of the benefactor of St Andrew's but its near neighbour.
  • Initially he was at the Strand Inn, one of the Inns of Chancery attached to the Middle Temple.
  • For several centuries, education at one of the Inns of Chancery was the first step towards becoming a barrister.
  • He studied law at the New Inn, one of the minor Inns of Chancery attached to the Middle Temple.
  • By the 17th century, qualified attorneys were allowed to practise from Inns of Chancery as well as Inns of Court.
  • The Inns of Court and Inns of Chancery had not been under the control of any local authority prior to 1900.
  • Inns of Chancery developed around the Inns of Court, establishing their name and ultimate purpose from the moots and rote learning.
  • In 1591 Donne was accepted as a student at the Thavies Inn legal school, one of the Inns of Chancery in London.
  • The other Inns ( none of which continues to function ), including the Inns of Chancery, were not Inns of Court.
  • (A tenth Inn of Chancery, the Outer Temple, was proven to exist by the legal historian John Baker in 2008 .)
  • A student would first join one of the Inns of Chancery, where he would be taught in the form of moots and rote learning.
  • At the same time, the Inns of Chancery was used as accommodation and offices by solicitors, the other branch of the English legal profession.
  • There is, however, considerable confusion as to just how the names of both the Inn of Chancery and the Inn of Court are derived.
  • A student would first study at either Oxford or Cambridge University, or at one of the Inns of Chancery, which were dedicated legal training institutions.
  • The practice of training barristers at the Inns of Chancery had died out by 1642, and the Inns instead became dedicated associations and offices for solicitors.
  • By the seventeenth century, the Inns of Chancery began to turn into societies for attorneys and solicitors; they became residences, offices and dining clubs.
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