Читать книгу Magna Carta: A Commentary on the Great Charter of King John. With an Historical Introduction онлайн

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ssss1. The relation of “recognition” to trial by jury is fully discussed, infra, Part III., section 7.

ssss1. E.g. 34 and 39.

ssss1. See infra, under chapters 24 and 45.

ssss1. See infra, under chapter 54.

ssss1. See infra, under chapter 36.

ssss1. See infra, under chapters 17 and 24.

ssss1. See infra, under chapter 18.

ssss1. See infra, under chapters 21 and 39.

ssss1. See infra, under chapter 34.

ssss1. c. ssss1

ssss1. c. ssss1.

ssss1. c. ssss1.

ssss1. c. ssss1.

PART III.

MAGNA CARTA: ITS FORM AND CONTENTS.

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I. Its Prototypes: Earlier Charters.

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However wide and scattered were the sources from which the substance of the Great Charter was derived, its descent, on its formal side, can readily be traced, through an unbroken line of antecedents, back to a very early date. Magna Carta is directly descended from the Charter of Liberties of Henry I., and that, again, was a written supplement to the vows taken by that monarch at his coronation, couched in similar terms to those invariably sworn at their anointing by the Anglo-Saxon kings of England, from Edgar to Edward Confessor.

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