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7 Sentences With "justiciaries"

How to use justiciaries in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "justiciaries" and check conjugation/comparative form for "justiciaries". Mastering all the usages of "justiciaries" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Other justiciaries also have claimed the government to increase salaries.
The judges who sat in this court were distinguished by the name of justices, or justiciaries.
What people are those who claim to be voyers, justiciaries, lords and masters in our domains?
Though they are valued as warriors and justiciaries, they have a difficult time with more social activities.
Calendar of the Patent Rolls, Edward I, 1281 to 1292. (London: Public Record Office, 1893). Volume 2, page 274 On 14 October 1290 William Devereux was sentenced to major excommunication by Richard Swinefield, Bishop of Hereford for detention of the tithes of the manor of Lyonshall, but William ignored it. The Bishop wrote to the king's justiciaries not to admit him to appear as plaintiff till he had made satisfaction to God and Church for his offence.
71: Robert de Bosco, accused of the death of John Buche, before M. de Patushill and his associate Justiciaries last Itinerant, withdrew himself; and Henry de Anestun (de Deneston), then Sheriff and Coroner, was commanded to put him in the exigenda and to outlaw him, because it was testified that he was guilty; and Henry de Verdun, Sheriff and Coroner, states he was not outlawed, but that they took sureties for him. They, i.e., the Sheriffs, are therefore in misericordiâ, and Robert is taken into custody.
It was the opinion of John Selden that the book derived its title from Henry de Bracton, the last of the chief justiciaries, whose name is sometimes spelled in the fine rolls "Bratton" and "Bretton", and that it was a royal abridgment of Bracton's great work on the customs and laws of England, with the addition of certain subsequent statutes. The arrangement, however, of the two works is different, and but a small proportion of Bracton's work is incorporated in Britton. The work is entitled in an early manuscript of the 14th century, which was once in the possession of Selden, and is now in the Cambridge University Library, Summa de legibus Anglie que vocatur Bretone; and it is described as "a book called Bretoun" in the will of Andrew Horn, the learned chamberlain of the City of London, who bequeathed it to the chamber of the Guildhall in 1329, together with another book called Mirroir des Justices. Britton was first printed in London by Robert Redman, without a date, probably about the year 1530.

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