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Chancery and Standard
The Middle English period ended at about 1470, when the Chancery Standard, a form of London-based English, began to become widespread, a process aided by the introduction of the printing press to England by William Caxton in the late 1470s.
In its early stages of development, the clerks who used Chancery Standard would have been familiar with French and Latin, which must have influenced the forms they chose.
Chancery Standard was not the only influence on later forms of English — its level of influence is disputed and a variety of spoken dialects continued to exist — but it provided a core around which Early Modern English could crystallise.
By the mid-15th century, Chancery Standard was used for most official purposes except by the Church ( which used Latin ) and for some legal purposes ( for which Law French and some Latin were used ).
The early printer Richard Pynson in the late 1490s and early 16th century favoured Chancery Standard in his published works, and consequently pushed the English spelling further toward standardisation.
* 1491 or 1492 – Richard Pynson starts printing in London ; his style tends to prefer Chancery Standard, the form of English used by government.
The term Middle English literature refers to the literature written in the form of the English language known as Middle English, from the 12th century until the 1470s, when the Chancery Standard, a form of London-based English, became widespread and the printing press regularized the language.
However, Richard Pynson, a Frenchman who started printing in London in 1491 or 1492 and who favoured Chancery Standard, was a more accomplished stylist and consequently pushed the English language further toward standardisation.

Chancery and was
In 1903, he was named vice-chancellor of the Catholic Church, and became the Chancellor of the Apostolic Chancery in the Secretariat of State in 1908.
Up to the twelfth or thirteenth century, the duty of the Apostolic-or Roman Chancery was to prepare and expedite the pontifical letters and writs for collation of church dignities and other matters of grave importance which were discussed and decided in Consistory.
The problem which confounded Chancery was the shift from representation based on the consent of a group to representation based on a common interest, such as holding shares of a corporation.
However, this rule did not allow such suits to bind similarly situated absent parties, which rendered the rule almost entirely useless and was a direct reflection of Story's inability to understand the old English Chancery precedents.
A recipient of the Ordre National du Mérite recently requested from the order's Chancery the permission to call herself " chevalière ," and the request was granted ( AFP dispatch, Jan 28, 2000 ).
They brought with them the Old Church Slavonic liturgy of the Eastern Orthodox Christian religion, written Slavic language, the version of which known as Chancery Slavonic was to serve the Lithuanian court's document-producing needs for a few centuries, and developed laws, turning Vilnius into a major center of their civilization.
He was Secretary to the Second Chancery of the Republic of Florence from 1498 to 1512, when the Medici were out of power.
They first tried going to the Court of Chancery and applying for injunctions prohibiting other publishers from printing their works, and this was initially successful.
Whilst Edward mobilised his own faction and placed Leeds castle under siege, Isabella was given the Great Seal and assumed control of the royal Chancery from the Tower of London.
The estate was much reduced by the suit in Chancery, and the grand plans failed.
In 1901, the financial situation had changed and after a " long legal fight ," he was free to sell the Hope Diamond by an " order of the Master in Chancery " to " pay off debts ," But May Yohe ran off with a rival named Putnam Strong, who was the son of the former New York City mayor William L. Strong.
By the 15th century, the judicial power of Chancery was recognized.
One area in which the Court of Chancery assumed a vital role was the enforcement of uses, a role which the rigid framework of land law could not accommodate.
It was reduced in various stages, starting with the extension of 16th Street through the former Mission grounds in 1889, and later by the construction of the Mission Dolores Basilica Center and the Chancery Building of the Archdiocese of San Francisco in the 1950s.
The exact border was determined by the Chancery Court in 1735.
Before 1 February 1833, in common with the admiralty and ecclesiastical courts, appeal from the Court was to the Crown in Chancery, with appeals being heard by Commissioners appointed by letters patent under the Great Seal in each case.
One case was from the Court of Chancery, and the other from the equity branch of the Court of the Exchequer.
A dedicated-use Chancery courthouse was recently constructed in Georgetown, Sussex County, which has hosted high-profile complex corporate trials such as the Disney shareholder litigation.
A new Chancery Court building was completed in 2009 to make room for county offices and added court room space.
In response, a local advocacy group known as Citizens for Safety and Clean Air filed a lawsuit on behalf of several Bethel residents in Anderson County Chancery Court contending that the council's rezoning was unconstitutional and seeking an injunction preventing the council from rezoning the property as an industrial zone.
He was born in Chancery Lane, London, 8 May 1698, the son of William Baker, a clerk in chancery.

Chancery and largely
: The Chancery Master agreed that these two routes were largely mutually exclusive ; if Crowley's copyrights were not an asset in his undischarged bankruptcy, then O. T. O.
By an order dated 4 December 1871, Lord Chancellor Hatherley appointed Henry Pemberton to be the Official Solicitor to the High Court of Chancery in England and directed him to perform the duties formerly carried out by the Solicitor to the Suitors ' Fund, although by 1875 the original duties of the office of Solicitor to the Suitors ' Fund had largely disappeared.
In parliament Taylor showed himself anxious to curtail the delays in the Court of Chancery, and to improve the lighting and paving of the London streets ; and he was largely instrumental in bringing about the abolition of the pillory.

Chancery and based
The court of first instance, to be known as the High Court of Justice, would be subdivided into several divisions based on the old superior courts, one of which, the Chancery Division, would deal with equity cases.
The Davidson County Chancery Court dismissed the lawsuit in 2003, but the Tennessee Court of Appeals ruled in May 2005 that the university must pay damages based on the present value of the United Daughters of the Confederacy's contribution if the inscription bearing the name " Confederate Memorial Hall " was removed from the building or altered.
As a judge of the Court of Chancery he was required to deal with cases of equity ; though he was almost entirely unfamiliar with the Roman law it was based on, he had previously practised in the Chancery.
In the United Kingdom, the Judicature Acts merged the courts of equity ( historically based in England's Court of Chancery ) with the courts of common law, and as a result the concept of fiduciary duty also became available in common law courts.
The Chancery has attaches based in each of the ten regional consulates.

Chancery and on
Chancery cases on group litigation after 1700 were a totally incoherent mess, which Yeazell has explained by pointing to the trends towards fragmentation and individualism in English society during that period ; the resulting societal pressures ultimately led to the Reform Act 1832.
Thomas Jefferson explained in 1785 that there are three main limitations on the power of a court of equity: " If the legislature means to enact an injustice, however palpable, the court of Chancery is not the body with whom a correcting power is lodged.
A Central line train derailed at Chancery Lane on 25 January 2003, injuring 32 passengers, after a traction motor fell onto the track.
The superior courts system consisted of 12 different courts, with appeal on common law matters to the Court of Exchequer Chamber, chancery matters to the Court of Appeal in Chancery and other matters to the Privy Council.
The other stations, located on the fringes of Bloomsbury, are Euston, Goodge Street, Warren Street, Tottenham Court Road, Holborn, Chancery Lane and King's Cross St. Pancras.
Delaware chartered corporations rely on the state's Court of Chancery to decide legal disputes, which places legal decisions with a judge instead of a jury.
A Davidson County Chancery Court Judge settled the litigation by ordering a new election be held March 15, 2011, on which date residents in Lakewood voted 458 to 447 to surrender their charter and merge services with Metro-Nashville
Work started on a new clubhouse on 22 March 1984, on an area of land off Chancery Road, situated on the edge of the freshly constructed Astley Village Estate.
Aaron Ogden filed a complaint in the Court of Chancery of New York asking the court to restrain Thomas Gibbons from operating on these waters.
He did so and, on 19 November 1963, the case of McClory v Fleming was heard at the Chancery Division of the High Court.
Horowitz writes that despite these changes, one of the academic certainties is that the problems which had dogged the court for the last two centuries persisted ; Observations on the Dilatory and Expensive Proceedings in the Court of Chancery, written in 1701, listed 25 different procedures, areas and situations which contributed to the problems of high fees and slow processes.
He heard cases on recognizances, the execution of Acts of Parliament and any case in which an officer of the Court of Chancery was involved.
By 1727 he had written the notes he contributed to Lewis Theobald's edition of Shakespeare, and had contributed anonymously to a pamphlet on the jurisdiction of the Court of Chancery, The Legal Judicature in Chancery stated ( 1727 ).
A few months later on August 2nd, The Davidson County Chancery Court approval a Final Agreed Order that establish joint ownership between the University and Crystal Bridges through the newly established Stieglitz Art Collection, LLC.
The Inn is situated on Chancery Lane, north of Inner and Middle Temples and south of Gray's Inn.

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