「burgesses」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
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ony of Virginia as a gathering place for the | Burgesses after several Royal Governors officially dis |
March 7, 1737) was a Speaker of the House of | Burgesses, an Attorney General for the Colony of Virgi |
establishment in 1676 it had a sovereign, 12 | burgesses and freemen. |
It was enfranchised in 1673, a sovereign, 12 | burgesses and freemen. |
eter Beverley, was a Speaker of the House of | Burgesses and Treasurer of Virginia. |
The right of election was vested in the | burgesses and freemen. |
poration, and the electorate consisted of 13 | burgesses and 50 freemen. |
establishment in 1611 it had a sovereign, 12 | burgesses and freemen. |
orated by charter in 1641 with a Provost, 12 | Burgesses and freemen. |
Byrd III (1728-1777), member of the House of | Burgesses, and military officer |
ugh was formally known as "The Provost, Free | Burgesses, and Commonalty of the Borough of Bandon-Bri |
s Bernard and the electorate consisted of 13 | burgesses and 50 freemen. |
te to him with the news of the 1774 House of | Burgesses, and Lexington and Concord. |
He was elected to the House of | Burgesses and the Governor's Council, and as a Justice |
eynolds was a member of the Virgnia House of | Burgesses and progenitor of R. J. Reynolds. |
1625 - 1710) was a member of the House of | Burgesses and an early plantation owner in Virginia. |
ncy, by a charter in 1639 with a Provost, 12 | Burgesses and freemen. |
aptain and a member of the Virginia House of | Burgesses, and Mildred Warner. |
Lynch served in the Virginia House of | Burgesses and the Convention from 1769 until 1778, whe |
Stith was a member of the Virginia House of | Burgesses and the progenitor of the Stith family, one |
He was afterward a member of the House of | Burgesses, and served on the commission appointed to d |
Tuckahoe, a member of the Virginia House of | Burgesses, and the second child of William Randolph an |
This was the first House of | Burgesses appointed by Governor Sir George Yeardley. |
April 2, 1692 he was elected to the House of | Burgesses as one of two representatives from New Kent |
dates from the establishment of the House of | Burgesses at Jamestown in 1619. |
estoration, Matthews died in office, and the | Burgesses at that point simply reinstated the former R |
was elected Speaker of the Virginia House of | Burgesses at the July 1653 session, but the governor f |
a community leader, a member of the House of | Burgesses at Jamestown, and was granted a headright of |
m Ireland in 1741 and served in the House of | Burgesses before the American Revolutionary War. |
p Johnson, a member of the Virginia House of | Burgesses, between 1753 and 1766. |
ny be taken from the Speaker of the House of | Burgesses, but he disobeyed these instructions and gai |
their displeasure with Oliver Cromwell, the | Burgesses ceremonially dismissed him and reelected him |
It is probable that Henry I granted the | burgesses certain privileges, for Henry II confirmed t |
County and a member of the Virginia House of | Burgesses during the 1654/1655 session. |
A separate trust, the Church | Burgesses Educational Foundation, administers its educ |
1738 and he nominated the provost from three | burgesses elected by the Corporation and freemen. |
In honor of the original House of | Burgesses, every other year, the Virginia General Asse |
rliament in 1300, but after 1308, elected no | burgesses for more than 300 years. |
ted to the Long Parliament as one of the two | burgesses for Lichfield city. |
l West was a member of the Virginia House of | Burgesses for King William County, Virginia 1703-1705. |
representatives from Henrico in the House of | Burgesses for the 1720 to 1722 session. |
Virginia who served in the Virginia House of | Burgesses for more than a decade, working with John Ro |
ttrom, first member of the Virginia House of | Burgesses for Northumberland County, had a son John Mo |
The Church | Burgesses, formerly known officially as the Twelve Cap |
The | burgesses from various locales, initially larger plant |
ounty courts, he was elected to the House of | Burgesses from Charlotte County several times. |
Robinson served as Speaker of the House of | Burgesses from 1738 until his death, the longest tenur |
Ballard was returned to the House of | Burgesses from James City County, and the House chose |
am and Mary and later served in the House of | Burgesses from 1769 to 1775. |
rginia proudly as a delegate to the House of | Burgesses from Albemarle County, a trustee to the newl |
the militia and was a member of the House of | Burgesses from Charles City County in 1702. |
y, Virginia and later served in the House of | Burgesses from 1822 to 1824 and from 1830 to 1831. |
ry War and a member of the Virginia House of | Burgesses from 1790 to 1805. |
right of election in Hedon was vested in the | burgesses generally, meaning that a high proportion of |
The House of | Burgesses had been created in Virginia in 1619. |
The reason was that the Virginia House of | Burgesses had been requesting the coinage for several |
At the urging of the House of | Burgesses, he became a founder and the first president |
ion, an extralegal convening of the House of | Burgesses headed by his brother Peyton. |
Tazewell served as a member of the House of | Burgesses in 1775. |
2 and was chosen as governor by the House of | Burgesses in 1656. |
Henry's "Treason" speech before the House of | Burgesses in an 1851 painting by Peter F. Rothermel |
nuary 11, 1797) was a member of the House of | Burgesses in the Colony of Virginia. |
e served as Speaker of the Virginia House of | Burgesses in 1656, and was on Governor Sir William Ber |
e served as Speaker of the Virginia House of | Burgesses in the 1653 session, following the one-day s |
e times as a member of the Virginia House of | Burgesses, in 1639, 1642, 1644, and twice in 1652 in A |
during campaigning for the Virginia House of | Burgesses in July 1758. |
nated the County of Nansimum by the House of | Burgesses in March 1646; by the October session, this |
arter of Incorporation to the town and of 18 | burgesses listed, six were Kealy's. |
secured their interests by obtaining for the | burgesses lucrative appointments in the customs-house |
Churchmen and | burgesses made repeated complaints about the attacks o |
tes back to colonial times when the House of | Burgesses mandated that an annual Fair be held to prom |
As a member of the House of | Burgesses, Matthews was viewed as an "honest, energeti |
Dissolved by Dunmore, the | Burgesses met again in the Apollo Room in May 1774. |
The | Burgesses met there in two consecutive Capitol buildin |
In fact, the | burgesses of Newcastle formed a cartel, and were known |
army except to guard their township, as the | burgesses of Kymarden do. |
He is said to have paid the | burgesses of Stafford five guineas apiece for the hono |
property had already been transferred to the | Burgesses of Warwick by Thomas Oken, Master of the Gui |
It was not clear if the | burgesses of the contributing boroughs could take part |
river to challenge the trading rights of the | burgesses of the town of Neath. |
d placed himself under the protection of the | burgesses of Viborg. |
y and London townspeople (not to mention the | burgesses of Cambridge) were involved. |
sented by the Royal Governor to the House of | Burgesses of the Colony of Virginia in 1700. |
benefactor, William Holmes, gave £400 to the | burgesses of Wisbech to be invested in land, and the r |
We have conceded to our beloved | burgesses of our town of Bristol and to their heirs an |
p by the eighty-nine members of the House of | Burgesses on May 27, 1774, recommending a general Cong |
ious times served as Speaker of the House of | Burgesses, on the Governor's Council, county sheriff, |
original shires of Virginia by the House of | Burgesses, one of which was Henrico County, which incl |
vote rested with the portreeve and "resident | burgesses or free tenants", making it essentially a sc |
he borough franchise rightly belonged to all | burgesses or resident householders paying scot and lot |
When the Virginia House of | Burgesses passed a resolution stating that Parliament |
There were also grants from Perth | burgesses, perhaps under the same pressure. |
other-in-law was the Speaker of the House of | Burgesses, Peyton Randolph, who was the first cousin o |
n 1826, when the election was contested, 331 | burgesses recorded their votes. |
r obligation to maintenance in the town, the | Burgesses refocussed on a range of charitable works. |
riff of King and Queen County and a House of | Burgesses representative for King William County, all |
Fleming later held his seat in the House of | Burgesses, representing Cumberland County. |
ted Charles City County in the 1660 House of | Burgesses session, serving as Speaker. |
He was elected to the House of | Burgesses several times between 1652 and 1656, succeed |
er and a Lower Chamber, with the knights and | burgesses sitting in the latter. |
ter conferred upon the elected portreeve and | burgesses the right to return two Members to Parliamen |
apmaker, soldier, and member of the House of | Burgesses, the legislature of the colony of Virginia. |
ns represented when what became the House of | Burgesses, the first representative legislative body i |
acted upon by the Virginia Colony's House of | Burgesses, the Nanzatico attacked on of the settlers a |
Point, was a member of the Virginia House of | Burgesses, the father of Richard Bland, the son of The |
He was Speaker of the Virginia House of | Burgesses three different times (1644-45, 1654-55, and |
Martin and George Washington were elected as | burgesses to the House of Burgesses for Frederick Coun |
56, extended the town's rights, enabling the | burgesses to choose coroners and to farm the fees paya |
rch 1657, he took a letter from the House of | Burgesses to Oliver Cromwell, who had been ruling Engl |
ember 1688, when the new Mayor, Aldermen and | Burgesses took their oaths. |
It was represented by two | burgesses until 1868, when it was reduced to one membe |
The House of | Burgesses was the first assembly of elected representa |
In 1699, the seat of the House of | Burgesses was moved to Middle Plantation, soon renamed |
When the House of | Burgesses was dissolved at the outset of the American |
The | burgesses were chosen from the common council, on vaca |
In order to pay for their works, the | Burgesses were endowed with land in the parish. |
Each county returned two knights, two | burgesses were elected from each borough, and each cit |
In 1765, however, he dissolved the House of | Burgesses when it passed a resolution against the Stam |
appears on a monument to the first House of | Burgesses which stands at Jamestown today. |
nstableship and the castle was leased to the | burgesses who in 1704 were authorised by the Crown to |
Parliamentarians as did most of Liverpool's | burgesses, who were largely of Puritan stock. |
Any show of independence by | burgesses would thus be likely to lead to the exclusio |
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