Upon the dissolution of the Aula Regia many petitions, which parliament or the council could not conveniently dispose of, were referred to the chancellor, sometimes with and sometimes without assessors.
Such a jurisdiction had belonged to the Aula Regia, and was long exercised by parliament; and, when parliament was not sitting, by the king's ordinary council.
The battles of theAula were fought over again, with anecdote, epigram, and fiction.
Nor did Bayeux suffer any diminution of its honors, under the Norman Dukes: they regarded it as the second town of the duchy, and had a palace here, and frequently made it the seat of their Aula Regio.
But the distribution of authority above described as having been originally made to the different courts of Westminster Hall, into which the Aula Regis was divided, did not long remain undisturbed.
Wherever the king went, the Aula Regis followed, occasioning thereby great inconvenience and delay to suitors.
The boundaries of jurisdiction between the Parliament, the Aula Regis, and the rising tribunal afterwards called the Court of King's Bench, seem to have been then very much undefined.
Of these new courts, that which more immediately represented the Aula Regis was the Court of King's Bench, which still continued to follow the king and to be held in his presence.
It was in this provision of Magna Charta that originated the English Court of Common Pleas, which became fixed at Westminster Hall, the place of session of the Aula Regis when the king was in the vicinity of London.
The aula regis of early England was composed of the great officers of state.
The ancient aula regis, in which the king dispensed justice at first hand, had survived in another form in the tribunal known as the King in Council.
The other departments of theAula Regia, naturally beginning to decline, soon after this separation, King Edward I.
But the general staff in the aula of Georgia Augusta proved to good General von Arentschildt that, according to all existing rules, the army was not yet ready to march.
But the new Hanoverian generals decided otherwise in the aulaof Georgia Augusta.
The newly-organized general staff was installed in the aula of the university, and worked unceasingly at the mobilization of the army, and the preparations for its march.
The new general staff worked all night long; much was debated and written in the great aula of Georgia Augusta, and at last it was decided that the army must remain four days longer in Goettingen, in order to prepare for the march.
So at Cambridge we have a domus collegii, and domus vel aula scholarium sancti Michaelis or Clarae.
As hospitia or diversoria literarum signified the unendowed house, so domus or aula scholarium signified the endowed house.
It was called by the founder the hall of Valencemarie, and in Latin documents aula Pembrochiana.
The aula seu domus scholarium had moreover as its starting point--like the earliest domus ecclesiae--a hall in a house; the hall is the nucleus of the college.
Pass we the welcome and the feast, and come we to the councils and deliberations in the Aula Magna of the house.
They all bear the name of Eugenius Philalethes, except the Aula Lucis (1652), which was issued as by S.
Aula Regis, he became the president of a separate court, a Court of Equity.
A brilliant festival was to take place to-night in the large aula of the Vienna University.
Thousands had vainly applied for admission at the ticket-office; there was room only for fifteen hundred persons in the aula and the adjoining rooms, and perhaps as many thousands had come to hear the concert.
It is to be regretted that the earliest Rule given to the College, or to the Aula seu Domus de Valence Marie, the Hall of Valence Marie, as it was at first called, is not extant.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "aula" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.