Essays in history and political theory : in honor of Charles Howard McIlwain /
Edited by Carl Wittke]
- New York : Russell & Russell , c1936 [Reprinted 1967]
- x, 371 p. ; 22 cm.
Bibliographical footnotes.
God and the secular power, by S. Baldwin.--"Non obstante"--a study of the dispensing of power of English kings, by P. Birdsall.--The attitude of the English clergy in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries towards the obligation of attendance on convocations and parliaments, by D. B. Weske.--The struggle for the autonomy of the Church of England, by E. P. Chase.--Henry Parker and the theory of parliamentary sovereignty, by M. A. Judson.--The idea of majesty in Roman political thought, by F. S. Lear.--Attack of the common lawyers on the oath ex officio as administered in the ecclesiastical courts in England, by M. H. Maguire.--The concept of public opinion in political theory, by P. A. Palmer.--The trial of treason in Tudor England, by S. Rezneck.--The political and constitutional theory of Sir John Fortescue, by M. A. Shephard.--Parliamentary privilege in the empire, by Carl Wittke.--The early history of written constitutions in America, by B. F. Wright, Jr.