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17761225London: Printed by Charles Eyre and William Strahan. 1776. First edition. Folio 32 x 20cm. Unbound. 2 839-854. Woodcut coat of arms to the title page decorative woodcut initial to the first text page text in black letter. A very good copy with a small ink splash to the first page some minor toning and a little wear to the left-hand margin where once bound within a larger volume. London: Printed by Charles Eyre and William Strahan. unknown
1390334023.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1396217924.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
1391131967.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1804157362London: R. Wilks 1804. First edition. This Act published at the outset of the Napoleonic Wars and intended as a temporary measure permitting the enlistment of non-British officers and retrospectively formalized the commissions of any who had been serving until its passing. We have located only four institutional copies on WorldCat at the Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Bibliothek King's College London the British Library and ULB Darmstadt. The text of the act is followed by Rules and Articles for the Better Government of such of our Forces as Shall Consist of Natives of Foreign States who now are or may at any Future Period be Enlisted into our Service. This outlines the regulations all serving British officers and henceforth all foreigners in the army would be subject to. The act was repealed by the Statute Law Revision Act of 1872. Octavo pp. xxxvii iii 292 lacking pp. 112-21. Text in English and German. Original grey boards white paper backstrip printed paper labels on both boards. Nineteenth-century ink shelf mark on spine. Binding worn spine cords exposed inner hinges cracked front inner hinge stablized contents lightly toned rear endpaper stained: a good copy. hardcover
1436903319.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
107603London George E. Eyre and William Spottiswoode 1847. . Folio 30 x 19 cm; woodcut royal coat of arms single leaf; a few small tears to upper margin not affecting text unbound.<br /> An act of Parliament confirming the validity of 'Marriages amongst the People called Quakers and amongst Persons professing the Jewish Religion'.<br /><br />The statute was drafted in response to the notorious 1844 case of R vs. Millis in which the House of Lords held that all marriages conducted without the presence of a member of clergy in holy orders were invalid in English common law. The effect was to throw doubt on the legitimacy of the marriages of all Jews and Quakers. William Christie 1816-874 the Liberal MP for Weymouth brought in a motion to dispel these concerns which was duly codified into law as 10 & 11 Vic. c.58.<br /> London, George E. Eyre and William Spottiswoode, 1847. unknown
107594London Charles Bill 1702. . Folio 27.5 x 17.5 cm; woodcut headpiece and initial black letter; single leaf from 'Anno Regni Annæ Reginæ Angliæ Scotiæ Franciæ & Hiberniæ primo. At the Parliament begun at Westminster the thirtieth day of December. 1701' acts of Parliament for the last year of the reign of William III and the first year of Anne; unbound; 453-454pp.<br /> An act of Parliament 'To the end that sufficient maintenance be provided and allowed for the children of Jewish parents who shall turn Protestants' p.453. <br /><br />The law arose from the curious case of Mary de Mendez Berta an eighteen-year-old who was disowned and expelled from the family home following her conversion to Protestantism. A petition was brought before Parliament in an attempt to make Mary's father Jacob de Mendez Berta pay for his daughter's upkeep after which it was resolved that a bill be produced to address her case. <br /><br />The resultant act had some effect in the eighteenth century and was considered by the Lord Chancellor Thomas Parker in the 1718 case of Vincent vs. Fernandez. Here it was found that the law could apply equally to the adult child of a Jewish parent in this instance a 44-year-old married woman who had been cut-out of her father's will. The law remained in effect until 1846 when it was repealed by the Religious Disabilities Act.<br /> ESTC N53589; Roth Magna Bibliotheca Anglo-Judaica p.246 no.1; Henriques The Jews and the English Law Oxford 1908. [London], [Charles Bill], [1702]. unknown
17451071London: Printed by Thomas Baskett. 1745. First edition. Folio 32 x 20cm. Unbound. 2 639-643. Woodcut coat of arms to the title page decorative woodcut initial to the first text page text in black letter. A very good copy with just a little toning and slight wear to the left-hand margin where once bound within a larger volume. An Act published in Public General Acts 1744-1745 enacting an amnesty for those who have engaged in the activity of smuggling and laying out punishments for those who continue to partake in the crime transportation or death. The statutes of 1745 are considered to be the leading statutes for smuggling law in eighteenth-century England as they made the greatest effort to convict offenders and to sentence those convicted to death. These statutes part of the 'Bloody Code' further extended the means by which a person could be convicted for smuggling and put to death without benefit of clergy although other lesser penalties most notably transportation remained the more common outcome. London: Printed by Thomas Baskett. unknown
17531394689London: Thomas Baskett 1753. First Edition. Loose folio. Quarto 2 399-403 1 pages. In Good plus condition. Disbound with light age toning and light scattered foxing. Light creasing at gutter. BB Consignment. Shelved in Room A Oversized Ephemera. In 1714 the British Parliament made an act which established a £2000 reward for the individual who developed an accurate method of calculating longitude at sea. This 1753 act was one of several revisions or replacements of that original. 1394689. Special Collections. Thomas Baskett unknown
0366744445.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
1822107424London: Printed by George Eyre and Andrew Strahan Printers to the Kings Most Excel 1822. Undetermined. very good. 2pp. Quarto sheet disbound printed on both sides. very good At head: Anno Tertio. Georgii IV. Regis. 1822 Printed by George Eyre and Andrew Strahan, Printers to the Kings Most Excel unknown
16973465Printed by Charles Bill and the Executirix of Thomas Newcomb deceas'd Printers to the Kings most Excellent Majesty 1697. 6 leaves folio BLACK-LETTER with fine woodblock arms of William III on upper cover; disbound sewed as issued a remarkably crisp clean copy ideal for framing and display. The Act deals in detail with the provisions to be made for 'such registered Mariners or Seamen Watermen Fishermen Lightermen Bargemen Keelmen or Sefaring Men'. Towards the end of the Act particular provision is made for the Cinque Ports 'Whereas in the whole Jurisdiction of the Cinque-Ports and their Towns and Members on the Coasts of Kent and Sussex there are not any Justices of the Peace nor Divisions.Such Certificate as aforesaid shall be sufficient where no Justice of the Peace shall be residing or inhabiting within Three Miles of such Port or Town'. The nature and condition of this Act makes it very suitable for framing and display. VERY SCARCE. Printed by Charles Bill, and the Executirix of Thomas Newcomb deceas'd, Printers to the Kings most Excellent Majesty, unknown
16967122Printed by Charles Bill and the Executrix of Thomas Newcomb deceas'd Printers to the King's most Excellent Majesty 1696. Sm. folio 3 leaves BLACK-LETTER throughout with fine woodblock arms of William III on front cover and woodblock illuminated capital on first page of text; disbound uncut a remarkably crisp clean copy. 8 Gulielmi III.The death of Queen Mary in 1695 isolated William as an object of Jacobite hatred; the motive for his assassination being the stronger since his death would no longer leave her in occupation of the throne. In February James II moved to Calais and the Jacobite conspirators moved to action. As William drove home to Kensington Palace from his weekly outing in Richmond Park he had to pass along a narrow and muddy lane near Turnham Green. Here he was to be surrounded and murdered. This was the most serious of the several plots against him but the plotters' security was lax and on 24 February William announced in parliament knowledge both of the plan and of the proposed invasion from France.This act arraigns Sir George Barclay and a number of lesser Jacobites including Johnson alias Harrison Durant alias Durance Michael Hare Major George Holmes Philip Hanford alias Browne Richard Richardson John Maxwell Bryerly Plowden and Hungate.Conspirators already languishing in Newgate are named as Counter Major John Bernardi Robert Cassells Robert Meldrum James Chambers and Robert Blackbourne. Printed by Charles Bill, and the Executrix of Thomas Newcomb deceas'd, Printers to the King's most Excellent Majesty, unknown
18638788George Edward Eyre and William Spottiswoode Printers to the Queen's most Excellent Majesty 1863. Sm. folio single leaf fine woodblock arms of Victoria at head; a very good crisp clrean copy ideal for framing and display. 26 Victoriae Cap. 23 granted Royal Assent 8 June 1863. [George Edward Eyre and William Spottiswoode, Printers to the Queen's most Excellent Majesty, unknown
37216n.p. n.d. 1803. 1p. 4to. 26.5cm broadside. printed page is 21x 15cm caption-title uncut matted fine condition. cgc.bx Fleming 22. Lande S2254. This act amends 36 George 3. chapter 12 regarding the regulation of liquor licenses and introduces a fine of 20 pounds for violation of the laws and changes the procedure for applications for licenses from annually to quarterly. NOTE: On 19 March 1803 two hundred copies of each of six acts were ordered printed. Four have been located Fleming numbers 21 22 23 24 and can on the basis of physical evidence be matched to this documentation and recorded as 1803 imprints rather than 1794 1796 and 1797. n.p. n.d. [1803] unknown
Sm. folio, single leaf, fine woodblock arms of Victoria at head; a very good, crisp, clrean copy ideal for framing and display. 26 Victoriae, Cap. 23, granted Royal Assent 8 June 1863.
Sm. folio, 20pp, with fine woodblock arms of George IV at head; disbound, a crisp, clean copy ideal for framing and display. 10 Georgii IV, Cap. 59; granted Royal Assent 19 June 1829.
Sm. folio, single leaf, with fine woodblock arms of William IV at head; disbound, a crisp, clean copy ideal for framing and display. 4 & 5 Gulielmi IV, Cap. 81; granted Royal Assent 15 August 1834.
48pp (two blank), folio, with fine woodcut arms of George IV on front page and two pages of tables in the text; disbound, a remarkably crisp, clean copy ideal for framing and display. 11 Georgii IV cap. 20; granted royal assent, 29 May 1830
Sm. folio, single leaf, with fine woodblock arms of William IV at head; disbound, a crisp, clean copy ideal for framing and display. 1 & 2 Gulielmi IV, Cap. XXV; granted Royal Assent 22 September 1831
Sm. folio, 8pp, with fine woodblock arms of William IV at head; sewed as issued, a crisp, clean copy ideal for framing and display. 3 & 4 Gulielmi IV, Cap. 33; granted Royal Assent 24 July 1833
Sm. folio, 3 leaves, BLACK-LETTER throughout, with fine woodblock arms of William III on front cover and woodblock illuminated capital on first page of text; disbound, uncut, a remarkably crisp, clean copy. 8 Gulielmi III.The death of Queen Mary in 1695 isolated William as an object of Jacobite hatred; the motive for his assassination being the stronger since his death would no longer leave her in occupation of the throne. In February James II moved to Calais and the Jacobite conspirators moved to action. As William drove home to Kensington Palace from his weekly outing in Richmond Park he had to pass along a narrow and muddy lane near Turnham Green. Here he was to be surrounded and murdered. This was the most serious of the several plots against him, but the plotters' security was lax and on 24 February William announced in parliament knowledge both of the plan and of the proposed invasion from France.This act arraigns Sir George Barclay and a number of lesser Jacobites including Johnson alias Harrison, Durant alias Durance, Michael Hare, Major George Holmes, Philip Hanford alias Browne, Richard Richardson, John Maxwell, Bryerly, Plowden and Hungate.Conspirators already languishing in Newgate are named as Counter, [Major ] John Bernardi, Robert Cassells, Robert Meldrum, James Chambers and Robert Blackbourne.
4 leaves, folio, with fine woodcut arms of Victoria on first leaf; disbound, a remarkably crisp, clean copy. 26 & 27 Victoriae, Cap. 30, receiving royal assent on 22 June 1863.
182836527London: George Eyre and Andrew Strahan 1828. Folio pp. 945-947 1 blank. Disbound else Very Good. George Eyre and Andrew Strahan unknown books