Montague peerage. Case of Henry Browne ... on his claim to the title and dignity of viscount MontagueMacintosh, 1851 - 144 pages |
Other editions - View all
Montague Peerage: Case of Henry Browne, On His Claim to the Title and ... Émile Edmond Saisset,Henry Browne No preview available - 2023 |
Montague Peerage: Case of Henry Browne, On His Claim to the Title and ... Émile Edmond Saisset,Henry Browne No preview available - 2023 |
Common terms and phrases
afterwards Anne Wheeler Anthony Joseph Anthony Maria appears baptized bearing date brother of Stanislaus Browne of Steyning Browne's buried Burrell Butler Charles Browne Christopher Banks Claimant county of Sussex Court of Canterbury cousin Cowdray Cuckfield died Earl Easebourne eldest Elizabeth Browne Elizabeth Chatfield Elizabeth Langford entry evidence examined copy family Bible father February Fishmonger-alley Fourth Appendix fourth Viscount Francis George Browne Henry Browne Heralds John Browne John Chatfield June Lady Montague letter of Stanislaus living London Lord Montague manor Mark Anthony Browne Mark Browne marriage married Mary Mary Dennett mentioned Midhurst Monsieur Montacute Montague family Newham November parish Parliament parochial register pedigree Peerage Petitioner porter Prerogative Court produced proof proved Purbright Ripley Royalist Composition Papers Saviour's second Viscount seventh Viscount Sir Anthony Browne Sir John Copley sixth Viscount Montague Southwark Stanislaus Browne Steyning Storrington suprà Sussex tague third Viscountess Montague Tregonwell Warminghurst widow wife William
Popular passages
Page 138 - An Act to repeal an Act of the present Session of Parliament, intituled ' An Act for the more effectual Abolition of Oaths and Affirmations taken and made in various Departments of the State, and to Substitute Declarations in lieu thereof, and for the more entire suppression of voluntary and extra-judicial Oaths and Affidavits; and to make other Provisions for the Abolition of unnecessary Oaths.
Page 136 - an Act to repeal an Act of the present Session of Parliament, intituled an Act for the more effectual abolition of Oaths and Affirmations taken and made in various Departments of the State, and to substitute Declarations in lieu thereof, and for the more entire suppression of voluntary and extrajudicial Oaths and Affidavits...
Page 31 - The whole goes upon that: declarations in the family, descriptions in wills, descriptions upon monuments, descriptions in Bibles, and registry books, all are admitted upon the principle, that they are the natural effusions of a party, who must know the truth; and who speaks upon an occasion, when his mind stands in an even position, without any temptation to exceed or fall short of the truth.
Page 136 - An Act to repeal an Act of the present session of Parliament, intituled ' An Act for the more effectual abolition of oaths and affirmations taken and made in various departments of the State, and to substitute declarations in lieu thereof,' and for the more entire suppression of voluntary and extra judicial oaths and affidavits, and to make other provisions for the abolition of unnecessary oaths.
Page 75 - The porters further desired, that justice might be done upon offenders, as the atrociousness of their crimes had deserved. And they added, "That if such remedies were any longer suspended, they should be forced to extremities not fit to be named, and make good the saying, that 'Necessity has no law...
Page 138 - And we make this solemn declaration, conscientiously believing the same to be true, and by virtue of the provisions of an Act made and passed in the fifth and sixth years of the reign of his late Majesty King William the Fourth, intituled " An Act to repeal an Act of the present Session of Parliament, intituled an Act for the more effectual Abolition of Oaths and Affirmations taken and made in various Departments of the State, and to substitute Declarations in lieu thereof...
Page 27 - So, Lord Mansfield, in Rowe v. Hasland, 1 W. Black. 404, declared that "in establishing a title upon a pedigree, where it may be necessary to lay a branch of the family out of the case, it is sufficient to show that the person has not been heard of for many years, to put the opposite party upon proof that he still exists.
Page 30 - ... kept in England and Wales, other than the parochial registers, and the copies thereof deposited with the diocesan registrars...
Page 113 - Charles Lennox, who was created Duke of Richmond in 1675. Her beauty, which was not of the most delicate kind, seemed to be very little impaired at seventy years of age.
Page 21 - Charles 1. he employed his poetical vein in severe pasquils on the court and clergy, and was occasionally a sufferer for the freedom of his pen. In the civil war that ensued, he exerted himself in the service of the Parliament, and became a considerable sharer in the spoils...