So much, therefore, of the legem terrae of Magna Carta, we know with reasonable certainty.
2
The 'terrae filius' was sometimes expelled the university on account of the licence of his speech.
3
The Romans, with their flair for flamboyant overstatement, dubbed the westernmost tip of mainland Europe finis terrae.
4
Thus, he says: Nisi per legem terrae.
5
The common law is sometimes called, by way of eminence, lex terrae,as in the statute of Magna Carta,chap.
6
What lex terrae did authorize.
7
One other phrase remains to be explained, viz., "per legem terrae," "by the law of the land."
8
The question here arises, whether legem terrae did not allow of some other mode of trial than that by jury.
9
The identity of clinical isolates believed to be G. terrae should be confirmed by molecular methods until better species-specific phenotypic markers become available.
10
The foregoing interpretation of the words nisi per legem terrae that is, by due process of law including indictment, &c;., has been adopted.
11
The trial by jury was a part of legem terrae, and we have the means of knowing what the trial by jury was.
12
The foregoing interpretations of the words nisi per legem terrae are corroborated by the following statutes, enacted in the next century after Magna Carta.
13
Such seem to be the opinions of Coke, who says that the phrase nisi per legem terrae means unless by due process of law.
14
The oleum terrae, or earth oil, used chiefly as a preservative against the destructive ravages of the white-ants, is collected at Ipu and elsewhere.
15
Terrae of course goes with fastidiosus, not with dominus.