Showing 1 - 4 results of 4 for search 'Chancellor of the High Court', query time: 0.21s Refine Results
  1. 1

    KANCELARIA NA DWORZE KSIĘCIA SZCZECIŃSKIEGO JANA FRYDERYKA, PERSONEL I FUNKCJONOWANIE ZARYS PROBLEMATYKI by Monika Ogiewa-Sejnota

    Published 2014-01-01
    “…In the reign of John Frederick, Duke of Pomerania (1569–1600) one of the most important central clerks was the chancellor who had not only a high position in the hierarchy of the court but also was in charge to control the court’s chancery – a very important place at a court where the inner and foreign policy was focused in, where documentation for different affairs was created, where income and outgoings registers were managed and till 1575 – where judicial decisions were elaborated. …”
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  2. 2

    Charles V’s ‘Encomium Mori’ as Reported By Ambassador Elyot by Eugenio Manuel Olivares Merino

    Published 2020-12-01
    “…As stated in this source, shortly after More’s execution for high treason at the Tower of London (1535), the Emperor Charles V met Thomas Elyot then serving as ambassador at the imperial court. …”
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  3. 3

    Ecclesiastical Household of Anna Yaroslavna, Queen of the Franks (1051–1075) by Vladimir V. Shishkin

    Published 2020-11-01
    “…The Royal acts attest to Anna’s high level of involvement in the ecclesiastical affairs of France, her regular support for the church persons of Curia regis, the Chancellor-Bishop and his servants, as well as the state of curial priests. …”
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  4. 4

    Fiduciary principles in English common law by Getzler, J

    Published 2019
    “…The prohibition of unauthorized profit-taking by fiduciaries or others in positions of influence or good faith and the use of an array of personal and proprietary remedies thus precedes the rise of the Court of Chancery by some three centuries. It is then shown how Chancery came to dominate fiduciary accounting procedures in modern times, building on an expansion of jurisdiction in the eighteenth century as the Chancellors struggled to repress managerial fraud in the private and public spheres. …”
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