Normandy - Law Dictionary Search Results
Normandy
Matched in: Term Normandy
Bayeux tapestry
representing the incidents of William the Conquerors expedition to England preserved in the town museum of Bayeux in Normandy It is probably of the 11th century and is attributed by tradition to Matilda the Conquerors wife
Blancard
A kind of linen cloth made in Normandy the thread of which is partly blanches before it is woven
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Channel Islands
Channel Islands. Jersey, Guernsey, Alderney, and Sark, part of the ancient Duchy of Normandy, annexed to the kingdom of England by William the Conqueror: by the (English) Interpretation Act, 1889 (52 &
Directors
Dover Coalfield Ltd., (1908) 1 Ch 65], nor can a pension be granted to a retiring managing director, Normandy v. Ind, Coope & Co., (1908) 1 Ch 84; but they were under no personal liability except for
Pleading
of the parties. 2. Any part of these proceedings. The science of pleading was no doubt derived from Normandy. The use of stated forms of pleading is not to be traced among the Anglo-Saxons. Pleading was cultivated
Resident
his lord's land, and not to depart from the same; called also homme levant et couchant, and in Normandy, resseant du fief, Leg. H. I. A person who has a residence in a particular place, Black's Law
Stabilia
Stabilia, a writ called by that name, founded on a custom in Normandy that where a man in power claimed lands in the possession of an inferior, he petitioned the prince
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Normandy - Law Dictionary Search Results
Normandy
Matched in: Term Normandy
Bayeux tapestry
representing the incidents of William the Conquerors expedition to England preserved in the town museum of Bayeux in Normandy It is probably of the 11th century and is attributed by tradition to Matilda the Conquerors wife
Blancard
A kind of linen cloth made in Normandy the thread of which is partly blanches before it is woven
Keep your definitions linked to case research
Channel Islands
Channel Islands. Jersey, Guernsey, Alderney, and Sark, part of the ancient Duchy of Normandy, annexed to the kingdom of England by William the Conqueror: by the (English) Interpretation Act, 1889 (52 &
Directors
Dover Coalfield Ltd., (1908) 1 Ch 65], nor can a pension be granted to a retiring managing director, Normandy v. Ind, Coope & Co., (1908) 1 Ch 84; but they were under no personal liability except for
Pleading
of the parties. 2. Any part of these proceedings. The science of pleading was no doubt derived from Normandy. The use of stated forms of pleading is not to be traced among the Anglo-Saxons. Pleading was cultivated
Resident
his lord's land, and not to depart from the same; called also homme levant et couchant, and in Normandy, resseant du fief, Leg. H. I. A person who has a residence in a particular place, Black's Law
Stabilia
Stabilia, a writ called by that name, founded on a custom in Normandy that where a man in power claimed lands in the possession of an inferior, he petitioned the prince
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Try the research workspace - 7 days free