Search Results - Westminster Hall~

  • Showing 1 - 6 results of 6
Refine Results
  1. 1

    'Dayes of Gall and Wormwood': public religious disputation in England, 1558-1626 by Rodda, Joshua

    Published 2012
    “…The chapters following this move chronologically from the accession of Elizabeth I and the 1559 Westminster conference to the aftermath of the death of James and the 1626 debate at York House. …”
    Get full text
  2. 2
  3. 3

    Working-class diet and health in Nottingham, 1850-1939 by Amos, Denise M.

    Published 2000
    “…The Public Health Act 1848 was the first serious attempt by Westminster to tackle the problems of urban health which had been identified in several reports published in the 1840s. …”
    Get full text
  4. 4

    Non-stipendiary ministry in the Church of England: a history of the development of an idea by Vaughan, Patrick H.

    Published 1987
    “…The method adopted is to analyse relevant debates in Convocation, Church Assembly and General Synod, together with relevant published material; new unpublished material from archives in Brisbane Diocese, Church House, Westminster, Lambeth Palace, and Selly Oak Library, as well as from the private papers of Roland Allen, is presented and analysed; the influence of developments in Anglican Churches overseas, of the World Council of Churches and of the French Worker-Priest Movement is assessed; the influence of certain key figures is examined, including that of Thomas Arnold, Walter Hook, William Hale, William Bright, Herbert Kelly, Roland Allen, F. …”
    Get full text
  5. 5
  6. 6

    Constitutional role and powers of the modern monarchy in democratic government: the Malaysian experience by Mokhtar, Khairil Azmin

    Published 2009
    “…The so-called figurehead monarch of Westminster-type constitutions, where the positions of head of state and the head of the government are held by different persons, needs to be appreciated in light of the substantive and discretionary powers exercised by such heads of state in the maintenance of a just and democratic system of government. …”
    Get full text
    Get full text