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" Constitution is placed, namely, the Church of England being the established one, and that those who hold employments in the State must be members of it, and consequently obliged not only to take Oaths against Popery, but to receive the Holy Communion... "
Blackwood's Magazine - Page 15
1828
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The Edinburgh Review: Or Critical Journal, Volume 46

1827 - 698 pages
...which our constitution is placed, namely, the Church of England being the established one, and that those who hold employments in the state, must be members...Communion agreeably to the rites of the Church of England. " This principle of duty must, therefore, prevent me from discussing any proposition tending...
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Miscellanea historica et critica, Volume 7

1818 - 420 pages
...which our constitution is placed, namely, the Church of England being the established one, and that those who hold employments in the state must be members...communion agreeably to the rites of the Church of England. ' This principle of duty must, therefore, prevent me from discussing any proposition tending...
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Monthly Review; Or Literary Journal Enlarged

1827 - 640 pages
...which our Constitution is placed, namely, the Church of England being the established one, and that those who hold employments in the State, must be members...communion agreeably to the. rites of the Church of England. ' This principle of duty must, therefore, prevent me from discussing any proposition tending...
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The Quarterly Review, Volume 36

William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray (IV), Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) - 1827 - 624 pages
...which our constitution is placed, namely, the Church of England being the established one, and that those who hold employments in the state must be members...communion agreeably to the rites of the Church of England. ' This principle of duty must, therefore, prevent me from discussing any proposition tending...
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Letters from His Late Majesty to ...: Lord Henyon, on the Coronation Oath ...

George III (King of Great Britain) - 1827 - 70 pages
...which our Constitution is placed, namely, the Church of England being the established one, and that those who hold employments in the State must be members...Communion agreeably to the rites of the Church of England. This principle of duty must, therefore, prevent me from discussing any proposition tending...
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The Monthly Review

1827 - 636 pages
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The Gentleman's Magazine, and Historical Chronicle, for the Year ..., Volume 97

1827 - 728 pages
...placed, namely, the Church of England being the established one, and that tbosa who hold employment in the State must be members of it, and consequently...but to receive the Holy Communion agreeably to the rights of the Church of England. This principle of duty, must, therefore, prevent me from discussing...
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Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 24

1828 - 1538 pages
...that he considered the Coronation Oath as a religious obligation on him to maintain the fundamental maxims of the Constitution, namely, that the Church...years. The Reviewer, says Dr Phillpotts, "with the follyj as well as the malice, of a Thersites, is pleased to charge his Majesty, in very plain terms,...
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A letter to an English layman on the coronation oath and his late majesty's ...

Henry Phillpotts (bp. of Exeter.) - 1828 - 358 pages
...fundamental maxim of the Constitution, namely, that " the " Church of England being the established " Church, those who hold employments in the " State must be members of it, and, conse" quently, must be obliged not only to take " Oaths against Popery, but also to receive the "...
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Lives of eminent and illustrious Englishmen, ed. by G. G. Cunningham, Volume 11

Englishmen - 1836 - 258 pages
...which our constitution is placed, namely, the church of England being the established one, and that those who hold employments in the state must be members...communion agreeably to the rites of the church of England. " This principle of duty must, therefore, prevent me from discussing any proposition tending...
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