- The law of majestas, or lex
maiestatis, encomp****es
several ancient Roman laws (leges
maiestatis)
throughout the
Republican and
Imperial periods dealing...
- The
royal we,
majestic plural (pluralis majestatis), or
royal plural, is the use of a
plural pronoun (or
corresponding plural-inflected verb forms) used...
- Lèse-majesté or lese-majesty (UK: /ˌliːz ˈmædʒɪsti/ leez MAJ-ist-ee, US: /ˌleɪz -/ layz -) is an
offence or
defamation against the
dignity of a ruling...
-
terra maiestatis gloriæ tuæ. In the
Mozarabic Rite: Sanctus, Sanctus, Sanctus,
Dominus Deus Sabaoth:
Pleni sunt cæli et
terra gloria maiestatis tuæ, Hosanna...
-
pluralis maiestatis or "royal plural".
However the idea of
excellence is not
necessarily present: "Of (c): the
pluralis excellentiae or
maiestatis, as has...
-
against a
custom or
institution held
sacred (from the
Latin crimen laesae maiestatis: the
crime of
injured majesty).
liaison a
close relationship or connection;...
- entreat, when [even] the just may [only]
hardly be sure? VIII Rex tremendæ
maiestatis, Qui
salvandos salvas gratis,
Salva me, fons pietatis. King of Majesty...
- ambo Bolizavones,
Polianicus vide
licet ac Boemicus, a rege
infideliter maiestatis rei deficient." In English: Henry, son of Berthold, and Bruno, brother...
-
permitted to
testify against his
master unless the
charge was
treason (crimen
maiestatis). When a
slave committed a crime, the
punishment exacted was
likely to...
-
prevalent reasons for
punishment are
treason crimes, also
known as lex
maiestatis.
Treason crimes consisted of a very
broad and
large number of regulations...