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The King’s Peace

Author : Lisa Ford
Publisher : Harvard University Press
Page : 337 pages
File Size : 26,83 MB
Release : 2021-08-10
Category : Law
ISBN : 0674269519

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How the imposition of Crown rule across the British Empire during the Age of Revolution corroded the rights of British subjects and laid the foundations of the modern police state. During the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, the British Empire responded to numerous crises in its colonies, from North America to Jamaica, Bengal to New South Wales. This was the Age of Revolution, and the Crown, through colonial governors, tested an array of coercive peacekeeping methods in a desperate effort to maintain control. In the process these leaders transformed what it meant to be a British subject. In the decades after the American Revolution, colonial legal regimes were transformed as the king’s representatives ruled new colonies with an increasingly heavy hand. These new autocratic regimes blurred the lines between the rule of law and the rule of the sword. Safeguards of liberty and justice, developed in the wake of the Glorious Revolution, were eroded while exacting obedience and imposing order became the focus of colonial governance. In the process, many constitutional principles of empire were subordinated to a single, overarching rule: where necessary, colonial law could diverge from metropolitan law. Within decades of the American Revolution, Lisa Ford shows, the rights claimed by American rebels became unthinkable in the British Empire. Some colonial subjects fought back but, in the empire, the real winner of the American Revolution was the king. In tracing the dramatic growth of colonial executive power and the increasing deployment of arbitrary policing and military violence to maintain order, The King’s Peace provides important lessons on the relationship between peacekeeping, sovereignty, and political subjectivity—lessons that illuminate contemporary debates over the imbalance between liberty and security.

The King's Peace

Author : Jo Walton
Publisher : Macmillan
Page : 422 pages
File Size : 13,18 MB
Release : 2002-08-19
Category : Fiction
ISBN : 0765343274

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Sulian ap Gwien was only 17 when the Jarnish raiders came. Had she been armed, she could have defeated them. It took six to subdue her--and she will never forgive them. Thus begins the tale of a woman who rises to become the strong right hand to the great king who will reunite his people. (August)

King's Peace

Author : CICELY VERONICA. WEDGWOOD
Publisher :
Page : pages
File Size : 50,85 MB
Release : 1999
Category :
ISBN :

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Spear-Won Land

Author : Andrea M. Berlin
Publisher : Wisconsin Studies in Classics
Page : 346 pages
File Size : 27,55 MB
Release : 2019
Category : Art
ISBN : 0299321304

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More than a dozen prominent scholars offer comprehensive assessments of Hellenistic Sardis, a critical site in western Asia Minor that was one of the most important political centers of both the Aegean and Near Eastern worlds before it was governed as part of the Roman Empire.

Kings of Peace Pawns of War

Author : Harriet Martin
Publisher : A&C Black
Page : 216 pages
File Size : 37,91 MB
Release : 2006-08-15
Category : Political Science
ISBN : 9780826490575

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In the complex process of turning war into peace, international conflict mediators play an increasingly pivotal role. Yet almost nothing is known about these influential individuals. In Kings of Peace, Pawns of War, six of the world's leading mediators talk in detail for the first time about their efforts to secure peace in Iraq, South Sudan, Afghanistan, Sri Lanka, Cyprus, Iraq and Aceh. Former war correspondent Harriet Martin draws on unparalleled access to top-level mediators at work on the international scene today. Thus she is able to provide for the first time important insights into a profession rarely subjected to public scrutiny. She investigates the tactics they use to keep the two sides talking, and their drive to complete what is often a thankless task. She exposes how the warring parties, and also the international backers of a mediation, will manipulate a peace effort - and the mediator himself - in order to retain the upper hand.

God's Peace and King's Peace

Author : Bruce R. O'Brien
Publisher : University of Pennsylvania Press
Page : 322 pages
File Size : 50,21 MB
Release : 2015-08-12
Category : History
ISBN : 151280522X

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Sometime before the middle of the twelfth century, an anonymous English writer composed the Leges Edwardi, a treatise purporting to contain the laws that had been in force under the Anglo-Saxon King Edward the Confessor (1042-1066), cousin of William the Conqueror. The laws were said to have been spoken to William shortly after the Conquest by "English nobles who were wise men and learned in their law," recounting "the rules of their laws and customs" for the invading Norman king. When they had finished, the king wondered whether it might not be better for all of them to live under the law of his Viking ancestors; the English, however, protested that they preferred to live by their own preconquest laws. The king acquiesced, and thus, goes the story, were the laws of King Edward the Confessor authorized. Looking through the lens of this important—if spurious—treatise, God's Peace and King's Peace offers the first ground-level view of English law during the century in which the common law was born. Bruce R. O'Brien compares the Leges Edwardi to other memorials of legal policy and practice from before and after 1066, in both Normandy and England, and advances conclusions about the treatises' reliability on specific points of law. He also shows how the Laws of Edward the Confessor, taken as a record of English law at the conquest, came to be used as authoritative evidence behind the Magna Carta that the king was under the law, and how it was eventually declared a notorious forgery by seventeenth-century antiquaries and Enlightenment historians.

The King's Peace, 1637-1641

Author : Cicely Veronica Wedgwood
Publisher :
Page : 478 pages
File Size : 29,10 MB
Release : 1966
Category : Great Britain
ISBN :

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The King's peace

Author : C. V. Wedgwood
Publisher : Penguin UK
Page : 510 pages
File Size : 40,33 MB
Release : 1993-08
Category : Great Britain
ISBN : 9780140171570

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Peaceful Kings

Author : Paul Kershaw
Publisher : OUP Oxford
Page : 332 pages
File Size : 15,37 MB
Release : 2011-01-27
Category : History
ISBN : 0198208707

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The first full scholarly exploration of the relationship between the idea of peace and rulership through Europe's formative centuries, Peaceful Kings asks what peace meant to early medieval people, and to what extent royal intentions endeavoured to meet collective expectations.

The Economic Consequences of the Peace

Author : John Maynard Keynes
Publisher : Simon Publications LLC
Page : 312 pages
File Size : 16,93 MB
Release : 1920
Category : Business & Economics
ISBN : 9781931541138

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John Maynard Keynes, then a rising young economist, participated in the Paris Peace Conference in 1919 as chief representative of the British Treasury and advisor to Prime Minister David Lloyd George. He resigned after desperately trying and failing to reduce the huge demands for reparations being made on Germany. The Economic Consequences of the Peace is Keynes' brilliant and prophetic analysis of the effects that the peace treaty would have both on Germany and, even more fatefully, the world.