Queen's peace - translation to russian
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Queen's peace - translation to russian

COMMON LAW CONCEPT OF PUBLIC ORDER
Queen's Peace; Queen's peace; King's peace (law)
  • alt=An image of Henry I on a throne at his coronation.

Queen's peace         
общественный порядок
peace treaty         
  • The "Peace Memorial" about the [[Treaty of Nöteborg]] at the [[Orekhovy Island]]
  • Croato-Hungarian Kingdom]] and the [[Republic of Venice]], forcing the latter to withdraw from Croatian coast
AGREEMENT BETWEEN TWO OR MORE HOSTILE PARTIES WHICH FORMALLY ENDS A STATE OF WAR
Peace agreement; Peace Treaty; Peace treaties; Terms of peace; Treaty of Peace; Peace negotiation; Peace negotiations; Peace accord; Peace deal; Peace settlement

['pi:stri:ti]

общая лексика

мирный договор

договор о мире

at peace         
NEW ZEALAND MUSICAL GROUP
@peace; @Peace
в мире

Definition

ГРИНПИС
(англ. Greenpeace - "Зеленый мир"), независимая международная общественная организация, ставящая целью предотвращение деградации окружающей среды. Основана в 1971 активистами из Канады и США, имеет отделения в 25 странах (с 1990 в Москве и Киеве). Главный источник финансирования - добровольные частные пожертвования. "Гринпис" борется против ядерных испытаний и радиационной угрозы, против загрязнения среды промышленными отходами, выступает в защиту животного мира морей и др. Воздействуя на общественное мнение, проводя ненасильственные акции протеста, "Гринпис" добивается от правительств и промышленных компаний принятия решений по конкретным экологическим проблемам.

Wikipedia

Peace (law)

The legal term peace, sometimes king's peace (Latin pax regis) or queen's peace, is the common-law concept of the maintenance of public order.

The concept of the king's peace originated in Anglo-Saxon law, where it initially applied the special protections accorded to the households of the English kings and their retainers. A breach of the king's peace, which could be either a crime or a tort, was a serious matter. The concept of the king's peace expanded in the 10th and 11th centuries to accord the king's protection to particular times (such as holidays), places (such as highways and churches), and individuals (such as legates). By the time of the Norman Conquest, the notion of the king's peace became more general, referring to the safeguarding of public order more broadly. In subsequent centuries, those responsible for enforcing the king's peace (besides the king himself) included the King's Bench and various local officials, including the sheriff, coroner, justice of the peace, and constable.

In modern Britain, the police services are responsible for keeping the peace, a duty distinct from their duty of law enforcement. The concept has remained relevant in English law; in R v Secretary of State for the Home Department, ex parte Northumbria Police Authority (1989), the Court of Appeal for England and Wales held that the government could exercise prerogative powers to maintain the peace of the realm.

What is the Russian for Queen's peace? Translation of &#39Queen's peace&#39 to Russian