Get Me A Solicitor ! |
UK Solicitors. Law Advice. No Win No Fee Lawyers |
|
|
| Administrative
and public law Alternative dispute resolution Banking law Business affairs Charity law Children law Civil justice reform - Civil litigation Civil liberties and human rights Civil litigation Clinical negligence Commercial law Commercial property Company law Competition law Computer and IT law Construction and civil engineering Consumer law Contract law Conveyancing residential Corporate finance Costs Courts and tribunals Criminal law Debt and money advice Disability Discrimination law EU law Ecommerce Employment law Environmental law Family law Financial and investment services Health and safety Immigration law Insolvency and bankruptcy Insurance law Intellectual property law International law (non EU) Judiciary Landlord and tenant - residential Legal aid - civil Legal aid - criminal Legal aid - family Mediation - civil and commercial Mediation - family Mental health and incapacity law Older people Partnership law Pensions law Personal injury Planning law Practice management Professional negligence Professional regulation Shipping law Tax law Trust law Welfare benefits Wills and probate |
Strange English Laws"The law is an ass, an idiot." Charles Dickens The Law Commission is about
40 years old and is responsible for sifting through the aged and irrelevant
laws of England to bring them up-to-date. A law introduced in 1307 ensures
that the head of any dead whale found on the British coast becomes the
property of the king and the tail belongs to the queen - should she need
the bones for her corset. Here are a few strange English
laws. All English Men over 14 are
meant to carry out 2 hours of longbow practice each weekand supervised
by the local clergy. This law dates from the middle ages when there was
no regular British army and local gentry were ordered to train a quota
of knights, archers, infantry, etc.
It is still illegal for cab drivers to carry rabid dogs or indeed corpses and by law they must ask each and every passenger if they have small pox or 'The Plague'.
By 1800 in England some two hundred crimes that were punishable by death. They included forgery, horse-stealing, sheep-stealing, picking pockets, stealing five shillings (25p) from a shop, damaging Westminster Bridge, and impersonating a Chelsea Pensioner not to mention treason, murder, and attempted murder.
IN 1647, the English parliament passed a law that made Christmas illegal. Christmas festivities were banned by Puritan leader Oliver Cromwell, who considered feasting and revelry on what was supposed to be a holy day immoral. Anybody caught celebrating Christmas was arrested. The ban was lifted only when the Puritans lost power in 1660. John Hetherington, a London haberdasher in 1797 proudly showed off his latest creation and attraxcted a great crowd unfortunately a small boy received a broken arm whilst several women fainted among the sound of boos and hisses. Hetherington was arrested and charged with breaching the King's peace and "appearing on the public highway wearing upon his head a tall structure having a shining lustre and calculated to frighten timid people". He was fined £50 and found guilty.
Care Homes UK,
a directory of nursing homes in Britain. Advice on
|
|
[Home]
Site Promoted By Peter Yexley www.ukhq.com mail@ukhq.com Copyright 2008 Peter Yexley
Nothing in this website constitutes legal advice. The information and opinions expressed on this website should not be relied on or used as a substitute for legal advice.
This website
contains links to other websites and to material contained on other websites.
Neither Peter Yexley nor WebWide Corporation Limited are responsible for the
content of such websites and disclaims all liability in respect of such content.
Other than advertisements and commercial messages or unless otherwise stated, Peter Yexley owns the copyright in this website and its contents. You may print information contained in this website for your personal use only. No part of this website may be published, transmitted, reproduced or stored on another website or in any other electronic form without obtaining prior permission from Peter Yexley. Peter Yexley should be acknowledged as the source of the material in all cases.