England and Wales. Court of Oyer and Terminer and Gaol Delivery (London and Middlesex)
VIAF ID: 241908441 ( Corporate )
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/241908441
Preferred Forms
- 110 2 _ ‡a England and Wales ‡b Court of Oyer and Terminer and Gaol Delivery (London and Middlesex)
- 110 1 0 ‡a England and Wales. ‡b Court of Oyer and Terminer and Gaol Delivery (London and Middlesex)
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4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (10)
5xx's: Related Names (2)
Works
Title | Sources |
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Accompt of the indictment, arraignment, trial, and judgment (according to law) of twenty nine regicides | |
An account of the arguments of counsel with the opinions at large of the Honourable Mr. Justice Gould, Mr. Justice Ashhurst, and Mr. Baron Hotham, upon the question at the session at the Old-Bailey, on Saturday the 16th of September, 1775, whether Margaret Caroline Rudd ought to be tried | |
An account of the proceedings on the King's Commissions of the Peace, and Oyer and Terminer, and Goal-delivery of Newgate, held for the city of London, and county of Middlesex, at Justice-Hall, in the Old-Bayley : the 2d and 3d days of July, 1684 : and in the 35th year of His Majesties reign. | |
An account of the tryal of Charles Bateman, chirurgeon, for high treason in conspiring the death of the late king and the subversion of the government &c. : who was tryed and found guilty at Justice-Hall in the Old-Bayly on the 9th of December, 1685. The tryals of John Holland and William Davis for conspiring against, violently assaulting, and without any warrantable cause imprisoning William Chancey ... who were tryed and found guilty ... December, 1685 : as also the tryals of John Holland, William Davis, and Agnes Wearing for a notorious burglary and felony ... who were tryed and found guilty ... on the 11th of December, 1685. | |
The arraignment, tryal, conviction, and condemnation of Henry Harrison ... 1692: | |
Collection of tryals | |
The cry of the innocent for justice : being a relation of the tryal of John Crook and others, at the General Sessions held in the Old Bayley, London : beginning the 25th day of the 4th month, called June, in the year, 1662 : before the Lord Mayor of the city of London and recorder of the same, Chief Justice Forster, and divers other judges and justices of the peace, so called | |
The exceptions of John Lilburne, Gent., prisoner at the barre, to a bill of indictment preferred against him, grounded upon a pretended act, intituled, An act for the execution of a judgement given in Parliament against Lieutenant Collonel John Lilburn : which judgement is by the said act supposed to be given the 15 day of January 1651. | |
A hellish murder committed by a French midwife, on the body of her husband, Jan. 27, 1687/8 [i.e. 1688] : for which she was arraigned at the Old-Baily, Feb. 22, 1687/8 [i.e. 1688], and pleaded guilty : and the day following received sentence to be burnt. | |
The Oxford companion to law, 1980: | |
Peoples antient and just liberties asserted in the tryal of William Penn and William Mead | |
The proceedings at the Sessions house in the Old-Baily, London, on Thursday, the 24th day of November, 1681, before His Majesties commissioners of oyer and terminer, upon the bill of indictment for high-treason against Anthony, Earl of Shaftsbury. | |
Report of the trial of John Barkley, one of the shop-men of Richard Carlile : prosecuted by the Constitutional Association for publishing a seditious and blasphemous libel. | |
Trial and condemnation of Sir John Friend, Knight, for conspiring to raise rebellion in these kingdoms in order to a French invasion | |
Trial of Elizabeth Cellier, the popish midwife, at the Old Baily, Septemb. 11, 1680, for printing and publishing the late notorious libel, intituled, Malice defeated, &c. | |
Trial of Francis Francia for high treason | |
Trial of John Foster, for stealing a magpie | |
The trial of Robert Feilding, Esq., on Wednesday, December 4, 1706, in the fifth year of the reign of Queen Anne, for felony in marrying Her Grace the Duchess of Cleveland, his first wife being then alive : with the proceedings after the trial in the Prerogative Court : to which is added an appendix relating to the indictment instituted against Elizabeth, Duchess of Kingston, pointing to circumstances somewhat similar. | |
The trial of William Baker, sugar baker : for forging an East-India warrant for the delivery of goods, purporting to lie in the East-India warehouse, and publishing the same, knowing it to be such : at Justice-Hall in the Old-Bailey, on Saturday the ninth of December 1750, being the first sessions in the mayoralty of the Right Hon. Francis Cokanye ... | |
The triall of Lieut. Collonell John Lilburne : by an extraordinary or special commission of Oyear and Terminer at the Guild-Hall of London, the 24, 25, 26 of Octob. 1649 : being as exactly pen'd and taken in short hand, as it was possible to be done in such a croud and noise, and transcribed with an indifferent and even hand, both in reference to the court and the prisoner, that so matter of fact, as it was there declared, might truly come to publick view : in which is contained all the judges names, and the names of the grand inquest, and the names of the honest jury of life and death : unto which is annexed a necessary and essential appendix, very well worth the readers carefull perusal, if he desire rightly to understand the whole body of the discourse and know the worth of that ner'e enough to be prised bulwork of English freedom, viz., to be tried by a jury of legal and good men of the neighbour-hood | |
The triall of Mr. John Lilburn, prisoner in Newgate, at the Sessions of Peace held for the City of London at Justice-Hall in the Old-Baily : sitting upon Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday, the 13, 14, 15, and 16 of July 1653. | |
Trials and condemnation of Thomas White | |
The trials of Charles the First, and of some of the regicides : with biographies of Bradshaw, Ireton, Harrison, and others : and with notes. | |
Trials of Sir George Wakeman, Barronet, William Marshall, William Rumley, and James Corker, Benedictine monks, for high treason, for conspiring the death of the King, ubversion of the government, and Protestant religion | |
Trials of William Ireland, Thomas Pickering, and John Grove, for conspiring to murder the King | |
A true and impartial account of the arraignment, tryal, examination, confession, and condemnation of Col. Iames Turner : for breaking open the house of Francis Tryon, merchant in Limestreet, London : with the several tryals and examinations of John Turner, William Turner, Mary Turner, and Ely Turner, confederates : at Justice-Hall in the Old-Bailey, Lond., the 15, 16, and 19 of January, 1663. | |
The tryal and condemnation of George Borosky alias Boratzi, Christopher Vratz, and John Stern : for the barbarous murder of Thomas Thynn, Esq. : together with the tryal of Charles John, Count Coningsmark, as accessary before the fact to the same murder, who was acquitted of the said offence : at the Sessions in the Old Bailey, Tuesday February 28, 1681. | |
The tryal of Henry Cornish ... 1707: | |
The tryal of John Giles at the Sessions-House in the Old Bayly : held by adjournment from the 7th day of July 1680 until the 14th day of the same month : the adjournment being appointed on purpose for the said Giles, his trial for a barbarous and inhumane attempt to assasinate and murther John Arnold Esq., one of the justices of peace for the county of Monmouth and now a member of the honourable House of Commons : made publick by vertue of an order of the Lords, spiritual and temporal, in Parliament assembled. | |
The tryal of William Penn & William Mead for causing a tumult, at the sessions held at the Old Bailey in London the 1st, 3d, 4th, and 5th of September 1670 | |
The tryall and condemnation of Mr. John Cooke, sollicitor to the late High-court of injustice, and Mr. Hugh Peters, that carnall prophet, for their several high-treasons, &c. : at the Sessions-house in the Old-baily, on Saturday the 13. of October, 1660 : together with, their several pleas, and the answers thereunto. | |
The tryall of Richard Langhorn Esq., counsellor at law : for conspiring the death of the King, subversion of the government and Protestant religion : who upon full evidence was found guilty of high treason, and received sentence accordingly, at the sessions in the Old-Bayley holden for London and Middlesex on Saturday, being the 14th of June 1679. | |
The tryals of Henry Cornish, Esq., for conspiring the death of the King, and raising a rebellion in this kingdom, and John Fernley, William Ring, and Elizabeth Gaunt, for harbouring and maintaining rebels : at the Sessions-House in the Old-Baily, London, on a commission of Oyer and Terminer held there for the city of London and county of Middlesex, on Monday, Octob. 19., 1685. |