Showing 4 items
matching common law -- history
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RMIT GSBL Justice Smith Collection
Book, Plucknett, Theodore Frank Thomas, A concise history of the common law, 1956
... A concise history of the common law...common law -- history.... Smith common law -- history law -- great britain -- history ...Previous owners: T. H. Smith, T. W. SmithFifth editioncommon law -- history, law -- great britain -- history -
Federation University Historical Collection
Document, Ballarat's Irish Lawyers
This is the esaerch of Fianne Campbell, who was a doctoral canditate at Federation University (unfulfilled)Folder of research notes on early Ballarat Lawyers, including Dickens and his Lawyers, Provision of Lawyer Services, The Common Law Commissioners on the Inns of Court, The Four Courts, Ballarat Circuit Court Library, Ballaraat and District Freemasonry, Australia Felix, History of the Count Court of Victoria, Anglo-Irish Lawyers in Early Ballarat, Joseph H. Dunne, Ballarat East Petty Sessionsanglo-irish lawyers in early ballarat, ballarat east petty sessions, dianne campbell goldfields lawyers collection, irish, ireland, law, lawyers -
Port Melbourne Historical & Preservation Society
Book - Flannery Family History, Pros & Cons and Cops & Robbers, 2003
Pros & Cons and Cops & Robbers. Book of the Flannery Family history. Sepia and gold cover which is a map of "New Holland". Gold section has the name above words "Common men and women for an uncommon country". "A study through my ancestry by Robin Flannery with Frank Alcorta" Book inscribed on inside first page with names of the three Flannery girls and signed by the author. Latter part of book talks of family in Port Melbourne, including waterside workers, SP bookmaking and police.law, families, police, robin flannery, noelle kinsella, denise o'connor, rita may -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Slide - DIGGERS & MINING. THE GOLD LICENCE, 1850s
Diggers & Mining. The gold licence. The Government Camp. Many of the goldfields police were men of poor character, who carried out their duties with blustering arrogance, demanding the production of the licence with threatening language, and sometimes open violence; and hauling off as common criminals men who, by some mischance, did not have their licences on their persons, when, given a few minutes, they could have shown they had complied with the law. Markings: 35 994.LIF. 4. Used as a teaching aid.hanimounteducation, tertiary, goldfields