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A letter to the new Parliament
with hints of some regulations which the nation hopes and expects from them -
Two dialogues in English, between a doctour of divinity, and a student in the laws of England
of the grounds of the said laws, and of conscience. Newly revised and re-printed -
The ethic elements in the character and laws of nations
an oration, delivered April 2, 1855, before the Alumni Association of the Law Department of the University of Louisiana -
The fyrste [-secunde] dyalogue in Englysshe
wyth new addycyons -
A faithful monitor
Offering, an abstract of the lawes in the province of the Massachusetts-Bay, New-England, against those disorders, the suppression whereof is desired and pursued by them that wish well to the worthy designs of reformation. -
Freedom and force
essays on Kant's Legal Philosophy -
Bibliography of Jurists of the Northern Netherlands active outside the Dutch universities to the year 1811
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Kant's cosmopolitan theory of law and peace
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Natural law and laws of nature in early modern Europe
jurisprudence, theology, moral and natural philosophy -
Law and love
the trials of King Lear -
The innocency and conscientiousness of the Quakers asserted and cleared from the evil surmises, false aspersions, and unrighteous suggestions of Judge Keeling
expressed in his speech made the seventh of the seventh month at the sessions-house in the Old-Baily, being the day appointed for the tryal of some of the said people by the late Act made to prevent and suppress seditious conventicles. Wherein also is shewed that this law doth not concern them, they being no seditious sectaries, nor contrivers of insurrections, nor evil-doers; therefore no just law is against them -
The innocency and conscientiousness of the Quakers asserted and cleared from the evil surmises, false aspersions, and unrighteous suggestions of Judge Keeling
expressed in his speech made the seventh of the seventh month at the sessions-house in the Old-Baily, being the day appointed for the tryal of some of the said people by the late Act made to prevent and suppress seditious conventicles. Wherein also is shewed that this law doth not concern them, they being no seditious sectaries, nor contrivers of insurrections, nor evil-doers; therefore no just law is against them -
The secu[n]de dyaloge in Englysshe bytwene a doctour of dyuynytye and a student in the lawes of Englande
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The secunde dyalogue i[n] englysshe wyth new addycyons
Here after foloweth the secu[n]de dyalogue in Englyssh bytwene a doctour of dyuynytye and a student in the lawes of England -
Here after foloweth a dialogue in Englisshe, bytwyxte a doctour of dyuynyte, and a student in the lawes of Englande: of the grou[n]des of the sayd lawes and of conseyence
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Hereafter foloweth a dyaloge in Englysshe, bytwyxt a Doctour of Dyuynyte, and a student in the lawes of Englande
of the groundes of the sayd lawes and of conscyence -
Moral law and civil law
parts of the same thing -
Vice unmasked
an essay -
The legal profession
its moral nature, and practical connection with civil society -
Duty
an address delivered at the University of Pennsylvania before the Society of the Alumni, at their 119th annual celebrations, December 13, 1869 -
Rights and duties of lawyers
address of F. Carroll Brewster, Esq. before the Law Academy of Philadelphia -
The dialogue in English, betweene a Doctor of Diuinitie, and a student in the lawes of England
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Ideologie und Weltanschauung im Recht
Ergebnisse der 33. Tagung der Gesellschaft für Rechtsvergleichung vom 15. bis 17. September 2011 in Trier -
An essay upon the execution of the laws against immorality and prophaneness
By John Disney, Esq; With a preface address'd to Her Majesty's Justices of the Peace -
A view of ancient laws, against immorality and profaneness
Under the following Heads; Lewdness; Profane Swearing, Cursing, and Blasphemy; Perjury; Prophanation of Days devoted to Religion; Contempt or Neglect of Divine Service; Drunkenness; Gaming; Idleness, Vagrancy, and Begging; Stage-Plays and Players; and Duelling. Collected from the Jewish, Roman, Greek, Gothic, Lombard, and other laws, down to the middle of the eleventh century. By John Disney, M. A. Vicar of St. Mary's in Nottingham