Arts and Sciences: Or, Fourth Division of "The English Encyclopedia", 3. köideCharles Knight Bradbury, Evans & Company, 1867 |
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Page 3
... considered older than the time of Alexander the Great , and are chiefly referred to the cities of Tyre and Sidon . The Numidian coins are those of Juba I. and II . The Punic and Carthaginian coins are believed to have been struck by ...
... considered older than the time of Alexander the Great , and are chiefly referred to the cities of Tyre and Sidon . The Numidian coins are those of Juba I. and II . The Punic and Carthaginian coins are believed to have been struck by ...
Page 37
... considered as colonies , though they are de- pendencies ; they contain a population of 180,367,148 persons . Gibraltar , Malta , and Heligoland , military stations , have a population of 146,591 persons . France has the islands of ...
... considered as colonies , though they are de- pendencies ; they contain a population of 180,367,148 persons . Gibraltar , Malta , and Heligoland , military stations , have a population of 146,591 persons . France has the islands of ...
Page 51
... considered the best system of setting them off round the bell , although the Temple of Vesta at Rome has the leaves projecting beyond the shaft , and Inigo Jones has adopted this system in the Banqueting - house at Whitehall . The ...
... considered the best system of setting them off round the bell , although the Temple of Vesta at Rome has the leaves projecting beyond the shaft , and Inigo Jones has adopted this system in the Banqueting - house at Whitehall . The ...
Page 55
... considered by their generals , to whom success , however dearly purchased , was the only obligation . From these victories and those of the first Napoleon , who also employed very dense columns in attack , it resulted that close columns ...
... considered by their generals , to whom success , however dearly purchased , was the only obligation . From these victories and those of the first Napoleon , who also employed very dense columns in attack , it resulted that close columns ...
Page 57
... considered a primary or idiopathic disease ; it is rather symptomatic of that condition of the brain which , when in sufficient intensity , produces apoplexy . If it be regarded as a positive disease , it must be considered as a milder ...
... considered a primary or idiopathic disease ; it is rather symptomatic of that condition of the brain which , when in sufficient intensity , produces apoplexy . If it be regarded as a positive disease , it must be considered as a milder ...
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Page 19 - In taking two stations having the same value, the one to the north and the other to the south of...
Page 9 - ... utter, or put off any false or counterfeit coin resembling or apparently intended to resemble or pass for any of the Queen's current gold or silver coin, knowing the same to be false or counterfeit...
Page 193 - ... by virtue of such will shall be entitled to be admitted, except upon payment of all such stamp duties, fees, and sums of money as would have been lawfully due and payable in respect of the surrendering of...
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Page 167 - October, 1845, all corporeal tenements and hereditaments shall, as regards the conveyance of the immediate freehold thereof, be deemed to lie in grant as well as in livery...
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Page 193 - That when any real estate of the nature of customary freehold or tenant right, or customary or copyhold, shall be disposed of by will, the lord of the manor or reputed manor of which such real estate is holden, or his steward, or the deputy of such steward, shall cause the will by which such disposition shall be made, or so much thereof as shall contain the disposition of such real estate, to be entered on the court rolls of such manor or reputed manor; and when any trusts are declared...
Page 193 - ... the testator may not have surrendered the same to the use of his will, or notwithstanding that, being entitled as heir...