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palatine courts การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • She served as a lady in waiting at the Palatine court.
  • On her marriage to contemporary Palatine court the reputation of an important music centre.
  • Until their abolition in 1971 the Palatine courts were a part of the " County Palatine of Durham and Sadberge ".
  • But see section 7 of that Act as to the Lancaster Palatine Court and the inferior civil courts ( now abolished ).
  • The origins of the Palatine Court of Appeal are closely linked to the administrative reorganisation of the area west of the river Rhine following the fall of Napoleon.
  • Although the position of judge of the Palatine Court was widely regarded as a sinecure, it is interesting that several holders of the office were judges of high repute.
  • The "'Palatine Court of Durham Act 1889 "'( 52 & 53 Vict c 47 ) was an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom.
  • For a period at least ( 1682-4 ) there was a second justice attached to the Palatine court, which suggests that the Court's workload may have been heavier than generally believed.
  • He was given a pension, and the office of judge of the Palatine Court of Tipperary, although that office was largely a sinecure and has been described contemptuously as " the judicial scrapheap ".
  • Elector Frederick s own compromised confessional position, as an advocate of the theoretically illegal Reformed faith, created the context in which the Palatine court felt it had no other choice than to execute Sylvan and thus demonstrate the state s theological orthodoxy.
  • He became Attorney General to the Duke of York ( the future King James II of England ), and justice of the Palatine court of Tipperary : the latter office was generally seen as a sinecure ( although in the early 1680s it was felt necessary to appoint a second justice to the Palatine Court, which suggests that the workload was heavy enough ).
  • He became Attorney General to the Duke of York ( the future King James II of England ), and justice of the Palatine court of Tipperary : the latter office was generally seen as a sinecure ( although in the early 1680s it was felt necessary to appoint a second justice to the Palatine Court, which suggests that the workload was heavy enough ).
  • Palatine Court Halls are named after prominent individuals associated with the historic Lancashire County Palatine : Carrington ( artist Leonora Carrington ), Glazebrook ( physicist Richard Glazebrook ), Pankhurst ( campaigner for women's suffrage Emmeline Pankhurst ), Roscoe ( abolitionist and historian William Roscoe ), Lowry ( artist L . S . Lowry ), Peel ( Prime Minister and architect of the modern police force Robert Peel ) and Wilkinson ( politician, sometime Minister for Education Ellen Wilkinson ).