Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 10British Academy - Humanities |
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Page 491
... king and his court , and stood in the way of its becoming a political capital . The king often wished to be near the great city , but he claimed the same power to control his own court that the citizens demanded to govern their own city ...
... king and his court , and stood in the way of its becoming a political capital . The king often wished to be near the great city , but he claimed the same power to control his own court that the citizens demanded to govern their own city ...
Page 493
... king's chamber , the primitive court treasury , originally kept in the king's bedroom , which had been the source of the exchequer , but was now still surviving as a house- hold office of the king's personal finances . There was a new ...
... king's chamber , the primitive court treasury , originally kept in the king's bedroom , which had been the source of the exchequer , but was now still surviving as a house- hold office of the king's personal finances . There was a new ...
Page 494
... king was , there was also the chancery , the king's bench and the household with its administrative elements of the wardrobe and the chamber . The bad relations between the king and the Londoners tended to a still further emphasizing of ...
... king was , there was also the chancery , the king's bench and the household with its administrative elements of the wardrobe and the chamber . The bad relations between the king and the Londoners tended to a still further emphasizing of ...
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