As the source of our knowledge regarding the earliest form of the " curia regis ", and for the information it affords regarding ancient customs and laws, it is of great value to the student of English history.
32.
The first mention of a court of the king's bench ( " curia regis " ) being termed " Parliament " was in 1236 during the Michaelmas term ( of the great " curia regis " ).
33.
The first mention of a court of the king's bench ( " curia regis " ) being termed " Parliament " was in 1236 during the Michaelmas term ( of the great " curia regis " ).
34.
In 1178 Bendings was a royal justice in Yorkshire . that the expression,'sex justiti?in curia regis constituti ad audiendum clamores populi', applied to the six judges of the northern circuit, imports any jurisdiction peculiar to them.
35.
Academics estimate that the Court of Chancery formally split from and became independent of the " curia regis " in the mid-14th century, at which time it consisted of the Lord Chancellor and his personal staff, the Chancery.
36.
His presence in the " curia regis " of King Bermudo III was infrequent from 1029 until 1035 and this absence could be attributed to his involvement active or behind the scenes in the assassination of Ferdinand I of Le�n.
37.
When the Court was a part of the " curia regis ", the Officers were fluid; they could include Doctors of Civil Law, members of the " curia " and " those who ought to be summoned ".
38.
The name of the building " curia regis Artus " ( The Court of King Artus ), which was built in the years 1348-1350, appeared for the first time in 1357 in the municipal note about the land rental from 1350.
39.
In addition to functioning as the second chamber of Parliament, the House of Lords was also the final court of appeal for much of the law of the United Kingdom a combination of judicial and legislative function that recalls its origin in the Curia Regis.
40.
The Curia Regis ( known in English as the Council or Court ) was composed of prominent church leaders ( Archbishops, Bishops and some Abbots ) and the King's feudal tenants-in-chief ( in effect the landowning aristocracy, the Earls and Barons ).