George iii Sentence Examples

george iii
  • In ecclesiastical law, the contempt of the authority of an ecclesiastical court is dealt with by the issue of a writ de contumace capiendo from the court of chancery at the instance of the judge of the ecclesiastical court; this writ took the place of that de excommunicato capiendo in 1813, by an act of George III.

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  • The third provincial congress, which met on the 21st of August 1775, still required its members to sign an oath of allegiance to King George III.

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  • On the 12th of October both potentates addressed an appeal to George III.

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  • When he was presented to his former sovereign, George III.

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  • The town is described as "but little" in 1733, but a few years afterwards it gained a reputation as a watering-place, and the duke of Gloucester built a house here; George III.

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  • This observance was maintained from James II.'s coronation to that of George III.

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  • Regent's Park, mainly in the borough of Marylebone, owes its preservation to the intention of George III.

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  • Buckingham House was built in 1705 for the duke of Buckinghamshire, and purchased by George III.

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  • In 1774, upon the appointment of General Thomas Gage as military governor he went to England, and acted as an adviser to George III.

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  • But Fox's character was incompatible with ministerial service under King George III.

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  • Nor ought any critical admirer of Fox to deny that George III.

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  • The formation of a ministry was entrusted by the king to Lord Grenville, but when he named Fox as his proposed secretary of state for foreign affairs George III.

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  • He recommended the tutor for Prince George, afterwards George III.

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  • Till the days of George III.

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  • He was unwilling to excite the prejudices of modern politics which seemed to him to run back through the whole period of the reign of George III.

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  • It began to be enclosed towards the end of the reign of George III.

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  • His passion for the stage completely engrossed him; he tried his hand both at dramatic criticism and at dramatic authorship. His first dramatic piece, Lethe, or Aesop in the Shades, which he was thirty-seven years later to read from a splendidly bound transcript to King George III.

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  • He resigned accordingly the office of privy purse, and took leave of George III.

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  • This privilege was enforced by George III.

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  • His own caprices interposed some delay in the conferring of a pension which George III.

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  • A daily market was obtained in 1784 by grant from George III.

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  • But the old jealously arose in the reign of George I., and in the reign of George III.

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  • It was also supposed that George III.

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  • The original companionship had consisted of the sovereign and 25 knights, and no change was made in this respect until 1786, when the sons of George III.

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  • The " most illustrious " Order of St Patrick was instituted by George III.

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  • The scheme hung fire, owing, it was alleged, to the personal hostility of George III.

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  • In her first speech to parliament, like George III.

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  • Dutch House, close to Kew House, was sold by Robert Dudley, earl of Leicester, to Sir Hugh Portman, a Dutch merchant, late in the 16th century, and in 1781 was purchased by George III.

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  • The town was founded in 1750 by the French under the name of Port la Joie, but under British rule changed its name in honour of the queen of George III.

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  • He sighted the Australian coast at Gippsland, Victoria, near Cape Everard, which he named Point Hicks, and sailed along the east coast of Australia as far north as Botany Bay, where he landed, and claimed possession of the continent on behalf of King George III.

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  • A year later Governor Simcoe transferred the seat of government of the new province of Upper Canada from the town of Newark at the mouth of the Niagara River to Toronto, giving the new capital the name of York, in honour of the second son of George III.

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  • A century later, in 1767, the authorization was extended over the whole kingdom by an act of George III.

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  • He shared in all the passions of his party, then excluded from power by the resolute will of George III.

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  • In choosing Pitt, the young son of Chatham, or his prime minister, as soon as he had dismissed the coalition, George III.

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  • As we have already said, dread of the peril to the constitution from the new aims of George III.

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  • He was not less liberally inclined in religious matters, but George III.

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  • In 1753 he was elected moderator of the General Assembly; in 1771 he was appointed a dean of the Chapel Royal and chaplain to George III.

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  • He was bred by William, duke of Cumberland, uncle of King George III.

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  • In February 1801 he resigned office with Pitt because George III.

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  • Portland's ministry was an uneasy alliance, disliked by George III.

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  • Even our old friend George III did not have the chutzpah to pull that.

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  • It was George III who introduced silk hangings to Windsor in the late 18th century.

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  • Our hotel is a delightfully hospitable establishment that was built in the late 18th century, in the reign of King George III.

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  • Used by His Majesty King George III to observe the 1769 transit of Venus.

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  • On her head, Princess Elizabeth wore a veil of diaphanous white silk tulle held by the King George III diamond fringe tiara.

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  • Encouraged by the growing unpopularity of his ministers, George III.

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  • He gave as an example the valuation of a pair of George III satinwood card tables.

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  • Variegate porphyria (VP) is also known as porphyria variegata, protocoproporphyria, South African genetic porphyria, and Royal malady (supposedly King George III of England and Mary, Queen of Scots, suffered from VP).

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  • It received its charter of incorporation from George III.

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