He set himself much to the study of the Roman law, and though he liked the way of judicature in England by juries, much better than that of the civil law, where so much was trusted to the judge, yet he often said, that the true grounds and reasons of... The Lives of the Chief Justices of England - Halaman 175oleh John Campbell Baron Campbell - 1881Tampilan utuh - Tentang buku ini
| 1805 - 506 halaman
...beyond the strict limits of his profession. Uc soon became well skilled in the Roman iaw ; and remarked, that a man could never understand law as a science so well as by seeking it there. He made great progress in arithmetic, algebra, and other mathematical sciences.... | |
| Francis Wrangham - 1816 - 536 halaman
...yet he often said, that ' the true ground and reasons of law were so well delivered in the Digests, that a man could never understand law as a science so well as by seeking it there,' and therefore he lamented much that it was so little studied in England. He looked... | |
| Francis Wrangham - 1816 - 532 halaman
...yet he often said, that ' the true ground and reasons of law were so well delivered in the s Digests, that a man could never understand law as a science so well as by seeking it there,' and therefore he lamented much that it was so little studied in England. He looked... | |
| 1818 - 606 halaman
...yet he often said, that the true grounds and reasons of law were so well delivered in the digests, that a man could never understand law as a science so well as by seeking it there ; and therefore lamented much that it was so little studied in England. He looked... | |
| Gilbert Burnet (bp. of Salisbury.) - 1820 - 296 halaman
...yet he often said, that the true grounds and reasons of law were so well delivered in the Digests, that a man could never understand law as a science so well as by seeking it there, and therefore lamented much that it was so little studied in England. He looked... | |
| Gilbert Burnet - 1823 - 170 halaman
...yet he often said, that the true grounds and reasons of law were so well delivered in the Digest* *, that a man could never understand law as a science so well as by seeking it there, and therefore lamented much that it was so little studied in England. He looked... | |
| Gilbert Burnet - 1824 - 330 halaman
...yet he often said, that the true grounds and reasons of law were so well delivered in the Digests, that a man could never understand law as a science so well as by seeking it there, and therefore lamented much that it was so little studied in England. He looked... | |
| 1827 - 514 halaman
...yet he often said, that the true grounds and reasons of law were so well delivered in the digests, that a man could never understand law as a science so well as by seeking it there, and, therefore, lamented much that it was so little studied in England."—Blackstone,... | |
| 1827 - 530 halaman
...judge, yet he often said that the true grounds and reasons of law were so well delivered in the Digest that a man could never understand law as a science so well as by seeking it there, and therefore lamented much that it was so little studied in England." [Burnet's... | |
| 1831 - 494 halaman
...yet he often said, that the true grounds and reasons of law were so well delivered in the Digests, that a man could never understand law as a science so well as by seeking it there, and therefore lamented much that it was so little studied in England." ' Legal... | |
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