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" This they did by purchasing at various times certain houses (now called the inns of court and of chancery) between the city of Westminster, the place of holding the king's courts, and the city of London ; for advantage of ready access to the one, and... "
The Order of the Coif - Page 128
by Alexander Pulling - 1884 - 288 pages
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Annual Register, Volume 1

Edmund Burke - History - 1759 - 516 pages
...times certain houies (now called the inns of court and of chancery) between the city of Weftminfter, the place of holding the King's courts, and the city of London ; for advantage of ready accefs to the one, and plenty of provi/ions in the other. Here exercifes were performed, leftures read,...
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Annual Register of World Events, Volume 1

History - 1764 - 524 pages
...times certain houles (now called the inns of court and of chancery) between the city of Weftminfter, the place of holding the king's courts, and the city of London ; for advantage of ready acccls to the one, and plenty of provifions in the other. Here exercifcs were preformed, tenures read,...
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Commentaries on the Laws of England: In Four Books, Volume 1

Sir William Blackstone - Law - 1791 - 518 pages
...times certain houfes (now called the inns of court and of chancery) between the city of Weftminfter, the place of holding the king's courts, and the city of London ; for advantage of ready accefs to the one, and plenty of provisions in the otherr. Here exercifes were performed, lectures...
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Commentaries on the Laws of England,: In Four Books, Volume 1

William Blackstone - Law - 1793 - 686 pages
...times certain houfes (now called the inns of court and of chancery) between the city of Weftminfter, the place of holding the king's courts, and the city of London ; for ad-. vantage of ready accefs to the one, and plenty of provifions in the other r . Here exercifcs were...
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The Annual Register, Or, A View of the History, Politics, and Literature for ...

History - 1795 - 532 pages
...This they did by purchas. ing at various times certain house's (now called the inns of court and of chancery) between the city of Westminster, the place...and degrees were at length conferred in the common laws, as at other universities in the canon anrl civil. The degrees were those of barristers (first...
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Commentaries on the Laws of England,: In Four Books, Volume 1

William Blackstone - Law - 1800 - 678 pages
...times certain houfes (now called the inns of court and of chancery) between the city of Weftmjnfter, the place of holding the king's courts, and the city of London ; for advantage of ready ncccfs to the one, and plenty of provifionj in the other r . Here txercifes were performed, le&urej...
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Commentaries on the Laws of England,: In Four Books, Volume 1

William Blackstone - Law - 1800 - 678 pages
...(now called the inns of court and of chancery) between the city of Weftminfter, the place of hoKling the king's courts, and the city of London ; for advantage of ready accefs to the one, and plenty of provifions in the other f. Here exercifes were performed, lectures...
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The History and Survey of London and Its Environs from the ..., Volume 4

B. Lambert - London (England) - 1806 - 624 pages
...being excluded from Oxford and Cambridge, established a new university of their own, by purchasing certain houses (now called the Inns of Court and Chancery)...to the one, and plenty of provisions in the other. In this juridical university (for such it is insisted to have been by Fortescue and Sir Edward Coke)...
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Commentaries on the Laws of England: In Four Books, Volume 1

Sir William Blackstone - Law - 1807 - 686 pages
...own. This they did by purchasing at various times certain houses (now called the inns of court and of chancery) between the city of Westminster, the place...to the one, and plenty of provisions in the other r. Here exercises were performed, lectures read, and degrees were at length conferred in the common...
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Jus ecclesiasticum Anglicanum; or, The government of the Church of England ...

Nathaniel Highmore - Ecclesiastical law - 1810 - 228 pages
...was formerly styled, of an Apprentice. Sir W. Blackstone, when speaking of the Inns of Court, says, " Here exercises were performed, lectures read, and...degrees were at length conferred in the Common Law, as in the Universities in the Civil Law. The degrees were those of Barristers, (first styled Apprentices,...
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