Mackenzie, George, 1636-1691
Mackenzie, George, Sir, 1636-1691
Mackenzie, Georgius
George Mackenzie Scottish lawyer, Lord Advocate, essayist and legal writer (1636 – 1691)
VIAF ID: 62606175 ( Personal )
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/62606175
Preferred Forms
- 100 0 _ ‡a George Mackenzie ‡c Scottish lawyer, Lord Advocate, essayist and legal writer (1636 – 1691)
-
-
- 100 1 _ ‡a Mackenzie, George ‡d 1636-1691
- 100 1 _ ‡a Mackenzie, George ‡d 1636-1691
-
-
-
- 100 1 _ ‡a Mackenzie, George, ‡c Sir, ‡d 1636-1691
-
- 100 1 _ ‡a Mackenzie, George, ‡d 1636-1691
-
-
-
- 100 1 _ ‡a Mackenzie, George, ‡d 1636-1691
- 100 1 _ ‡a Mackenzie, Georgius
4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (22)
Works
Title | Sources |
---|---|
An annotated edition of Sir George Makenzie's Religio stoici, 1663. | |
Antiquity of the royal line of Scotland farther cleared | |
Catalogus librorum bibliothecæ juris utriusque | |
Defensio antiquitatis regalis Scotorum prosapiæ. | |
Essays upon several moral subjects ... By Sir George Mackenzie, Kt. To which is prefix'd, some account of his life and writings. | |
Essays upon several moral subjects, viz. The religious stoic. Solitude preferr'd to publick employment. Moral gallantry. The moral history of frugality: with its opposite vices. An essay on reason | |
De humanae ratiocinationis imbecillitate, ea unde proveniat, et illi quomodo possimus mederi | |
Idea eloquentiae forensis hodiernae : unà cum actione forensi ex unaquaque juris parte | |
An idea of the modern eloquence of the bar. Together with a pleading out of every part of law. Written by Sir George Mackenzie ... Translated into English | |
The institutions of the law of Scotland. | |
Jus regium | |
Jus regium, or, The just and solid foundations of monarchy in general, and more especially of the monarchy of Scotland : maintain'd against Buchannan, Naphtali, Dolman, Milton, &c. | |
The laws and customs of Scotland in matters criminal, 2012: | |
A Letter from the nobility, barons, and commons of Scotland in the year 1320, yet extant under all the seals of nobility, directed to Pope John : wherein they declare their firm resolutions to adhere to their king, Robert the Bruce, as the restorer of the safety, and liberties of the people, and as having the true right of succession, but withall, they notwithstanding declare, that if the king should offer to subvert their civil liberties, they will disown him as an enemy, and choose another to be king, for their own defense | |
The Lives and characters of most eminent writers of the Scots nation with an abstract and catalogue of their works ; Their various editions ; and The judgment of the Learn'd concerning Them. by George Mackenzie, M. D. Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians in Edinburgh. vol. I-[vol. III]. | |
Memoirs of the affairs of Scotland from the restoration of King Charles II. A.D. M.DC.LX. | |
A memorial for His Highness the Prince of Orange in relation to the affairs of Scotland, together with the Address of the Presbyterian Party in that Kingdom to His Highness, and some observations on that address. | |
A moral essay, preferring solitude to publick employment, and all it's appanages : such as fame, command, riches, pleasures, conversation, etc. | |
Moral gallantry: a discourse : addressed to the nobility and gentry of Great Britain. With other essays, intimately connected with the subject | |
Moral gallantry : a discourse, wherin the author endeavours to prove that point of honour (abstracting from all other ryes) obliges men to be vertuous ... | |
Observations on the acts of Parliament, made by King James the First, King James the Second, King James the Third, King James the Fourth, King James the Fifth, Queen Mary, King James the Sixth, King Charles the First, King Charles the Second : wherein 1. It is observ'd if they be in desuetude, abrogated, limited, or enlarged, 2 The decisions relating to these acts are mention'd, 3. Some new doubts not yet decided, are hinted at, 4. Parallel citations from the civil, canon, feudal and municipal laws, and the laws of other nations are adduc'd, for clearing these statutes | |
Observations upon the 18. act 23. Parl. K. James VI. against dispositions made in defraud of creditors, &c. | |
Observations upon the laws and customs of nations, as to precedency. | |
Pleadings, in some remarkable cases, before the supreme courts of Scotland, since the year, 1661. To which, the decisions are subjoyn'd | |
Prefaces to four seventeenth-century romances | |
Public and private life in the seventeenth century : the Mackenzie-Evelyn debate | |
Publick employment and an active life | |
Ravillac redivivus | |
The science of herauldry, treated as a part of the civil law, and law of nations : wherein reasons are given for its principles, and etymologies for its harder terms | |
Scotland's herauldrie | |
The spirit of fanaticism : exemplify'd in the tryals of Mr. James Mitchel, a Presbyterian minister, who was hang'd at Edinburgh, for an attempt made upon the Archbishop of St. Andrews, and Major Thomas Weir, a gifted brother at the knack of extempore prayer, who was burnt between Edinburgh and Leith, April the 11th, 1670, for adultery, beastiality with a mare and a cow, and incest with his own sister, who was likewise hang'd the next day after him : to which is added, an account of the original of Presbytery in Scotland, and their behaviour towards the Episcopal clergy, wherein is demonstrated that rebellion has ever been the principal article of their faith | |
Terrors of the law, 1985: | |
That the lawful successor cannot be debarr'd from succeeding to the Crown | |
A true and plain account of the discoveries made in Scotland, of the late conspiracies against His Majesty and the government : extracted from the proofs lying in the records of His Majesties Privy Council, and the High Justice Court of the nation : together with an authentick extract of the criminal process and sentence against Mr. Robert Baillie of Jerviswood. | |
A vindication of the government in Scotland during the reign of King Charles II. Against mis-representations made in several scandalous pamphlets. ... By Sir George Mackenzie ... | |
Works | |
The works of that eminent and learned lawyer, Sir George Mackenzie of Rosehaugh, advocate to King Charles II and King James VII, with many learned treatises of his, never before printed ... |