The Annual RegisterRivingtons, 1870 - History |
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Results 1-5 of 83
Page 41
... fact , involved disendowment or re - endowment , for if the property remained , it would be on entirely different conditions . To say that such property must not be disturbed if its holders had done nothing to forfeit it , was to ...
... fact , involved disendowment or re - endowment , for if the property remained , it would be on entirely different conditions . To say that such property must not be disturbed if its holders had done nothing to forfeit it , was to ...
Page 49
... fact , taken , and which , too , a Sovereign was absolutely obliged to take , being to that precise effect . Lord Granville reluctantly accepted the invitation of Lord Redes- dale , now for the third time repeated within a twelvemonth ...
... fact , taken , and which , too , a Sovereign was absolutely obliged to take , being to that precise effect . Lord Granville reluctantly accepted the invitation of Lord Redes- dale , now for the third time repeated within a twelvemonth ...
Page 52
... fact has ever been made a subject of complaint by our Roman Catholic fellow - country- men . I think they feel that the respect which is due to the majority of British subjects , and to their convictions , would stop their mouths ...
... fact has ever been made a subject of complaint by our Roman Catholic fellow - country- men . I think they feel that the respect which is due to the majority of British subjects , and to their convictions , would stop their mouths ...
Page 53
... fact , of advancing the French conquest of the Netherlands , under the favour of that hopeless devotion in Ireland , which gave work enough to 40,000 of the best troops of the great alliance of Utrecht . He longed to find . himself at ...
... fact , of advancing the French conquest of the Netherlands , under the favour of that hopeless devotion in Ireland , which gave work enough to 40,000 of the best troops of the great alliance of Utrecht . He longed to find . himself at ...
Page 67
... fact , that if the Church fell , it would be from no fault of her own , but from the pressure of external necessity . ness . Mr. Butler Johnstone , speaking from the Conservative benches , welcomed the Bill as a new mode of dealing with ...
... fact , that if the Church fell , it would be from no fault of her own , but from the pressure of external necessity . ness . Mr. Butler Johnstone , speaking from the Conservative benches , welcomed the Bill as a new mode of dealing with ...
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agst amendment Archbishop Archbishop of Canterbury arrived Attorney-General for Ireland believe Bill Bishop boat Captain carriages cause Chamber clause Colonel Committee Constitution Council crew declared defenders disestablishment Duke Duke of Cambridge duty Earl election Emperor endowment England English establishment favour fire France Gladstone Government hand honour House of Commons House of Lords increase interest Ireland Irish Church justice King Legislative Body liberty London London Rowing Club Lord Cairns Lord Carrington Lord Mayor Majesty measure ment Messrs Minister nation o'clock object officers opinion Oxford Parliament party passed peace persons present President Prince and Princess Princess of Wales principle proceeded proposed Protestant Queen question railway received reforms Roman Catholic Royal Highness Senate Senatus Consultum session Shadwan ship side Sir John Thwaites Spain speech taken tion took United vessel volunteers vote Wales