| Sir John Thomas Gilbert - 1896 - 214 頁
...purified the elective franchise; she repealed the perpetual Mutiny Bill, and placed on record the resolve, that a standing army in time of peace, without the consent of Parliament, was contrary to law All these acquisitions she obtained in 1782 by means of her Parliament, freed from... | |
| Sir John Thomas Gilbert - 1896 - 214 頁
...the elective franchise ; she repealed the perpetual Mutiny Bill, and placed on record the resolve, that a standing army in time of peace, without the consent of Parliament, was contrary to law All these acquisitions she obtained in 1782 by means of her Parliament, freed from... | |
| Marjory G. J. Kinloch - 1898 - 368 頁
...monarch head of the church ; the imposition of customs or imposts by royal authority ; the levying a standing army in time of peace without the consent of Parliament ; the marriage of a sovereign with a Papist. At the close of the sederunt one of the bishops, according... | |
| Daniel Coit Gilman, Harry Thurston Peck, Frank Moore Colby - 1902 - 984 頁
...occurred than the passing by Parliament of the Bill of Rights in 1689, which forbade the existence of a standing army in time of peace without the consent of Parliament. This gave to the people the permanent control of a factor which might easily have been used for their... | |
| Benjamin Terry - 1903 - 708 頁
...military powers of the crown. By the Declaration of Rights it was declared to be unlawful to keep up a standing army in time of peace without the consent of parliament. It was also declared unlawful to suspend the ordinary civil courts in order to enforce military discipline.... | |
| Alexander Wood Renton, Maxwell Alexander Robertson - 1906 - 736 頁
...Bill of Rights (1 Will. & Mary, sess. 2, c. 2) the principle that the Crown could not raise or keep a standing army, in time of peace, without the consent of Parliament, was definitely established. From the War of the Spanish Succession in 1702, England became constantly more... | |
| Daniel Coit Gilman, Harry Thurston Peck, Frank Moore Colby - 1906 - 960 頁
...occurred than the passing by Parliament of the Bill of Rights in 1089, which forbade the existence of a standing army in time of peace without the consent of Parliament. This gave to the people the permanent control of a factor which might easily have been used for their... | |
| Abbott Lawrence Lowell - 1908 - 600 頁
...Rights, for example, declared illegal the suspending or dispensing with laws, and the maintenance of a standing army in time of peace without the consent of Parliament. Some powers have, from long disuse, become obsolete and have been lost ; such as the right to confer... | |
| Samuel Burnett Howe - 1912 - 472 頁
...those forbidding the king to dispense with laws passed by parliament, stating that the maintenance of a standing army in time of peace without the consent of parliament is illegal, and asserting as rights of Englishmen those of free speech, petition, and free elections... | |
| John Howard Bertram Masterman - 1912 - 324 頁
...fifth declares that all subjects have the right to petition the king; the sixth condemns the keeping of a standing army in time of peace without the consent of Parliament; the seventh claims the right of Protestants to carry arms ; the eighth claims freedom of election to... | |
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