| 单词 | husting | 
| 释义 | hustingn. I.  In form husting.  1.  An assembly for deliberative purposes, esp. one summoned by a king or other leader; a council. rare (in general sense). Obsolete exc. Historical. ΘΚΠ society > authority > rule or government > ruler or governor > deliberative, legislative, or administrative assembly > types of deliberative or legislative assembly > 			[noun]		 hustinga1030 prime1389 citizens' assembly1836 kgotla?1900 society > authority > rule or government > ruler or governor > deliberative, legislative, or administrative assembly > council of state > 			[noun]		 hustinga1030 Great Councilc1275 council1297 parliamentc1300 privy councilc1390 divan1586 Council of State1611 legislative council1651 society > authority > rule or government > ruler or governor > deliberative, legislative, or administrative assembly > types of deliberative or legislative assembly > 			[noun]		 > assembly held by sovereign hustinga1030 court1154 kine-mootc1225 a1030    Anglo-Saxon Chron. 		(MS. C)	 anno 1012  				Hi [the Danes] genamon þa ðone biscop [Ælfeah], læddon hine to hiora hustinge [Laud MS. heora hustinga]. c1275						 (?a1200)						    Laȝamon Brut 		(Calig.)	 		(1963)	 l. 6482  				Þa comen to Lundenne. al þis leodisce folc to heore hustinge [c1300 Otho to one speking]. c1275						 (?a1200)						    Laȝamon Brut 		(Calig.)	 		(1963)	 l. 5759  				Octaues ure king. i Lundene heold his husting þat hustinge wes god hit wes witene-imot. c1275						 (?a1200)						    Laȝamon Brut 		(Calig.)	 		(1963)	 l. 2379  				Belin in Euerewic huld eorlene husting. 1861    C. H. Pearson Early & Middle Ages Eng. 149  				Ælfeg..proceeded to preach to the hus-ting. 1864    C. Kingsley Roman & Teuton viii. 224  				They might drag him out into their husting, and threaten him with torture.  II.  In form husting, plural hustings.  2.   a.  A court held in the Guildhall of London by the Lord Mayor, Recorder, and Sheriffs (or Aldermen), long the supreme court of the city.The early history of this is in many points obscure. The mention of ‘husting's weight’ in the charter of Cnut (see  Compounds 1) suggests that the husting had already then become a permanent institution for the transaction of civic business.The  Hustings or  Court of Hustings was formerly a court of common pleas, of probate, of appeal against decisions of the sheriffs, a court of record for the formal conveyance of property, etc.; but it is now convoked only for the purpose of considering and registering gifts made to the City. In the Calendar for 1898 ‘Hustings’ were set down for 31 Tuesdays during the year, although there had been only one meeting since 1885.  (a) singular husting. Obsolete exc. Historical. ΚΠ c1100    Carta civibus London. §9 in  Schmid Gesetze 435  				Et amplius non sit miskenninga in hustenge, neque in folkes~mote..Et husting sedeat semel in ebdomada, videlicet die lunæ. ?c1140    Docmt. of Sale in  Spelman Gloss. (at cited word)  				Wlfnothus de Walebroc de London vendidit..quandam suam terram..coram omni Hustingo de London, in domo Alfwini. ?12..    Lois de la cite de Lond. 		(BL Add. 14252) (Godef.)	  				En la cort le rei, ço est a saveir el husteng. 1237    in  A. Thierry Mon. inéd. du Tiers Etat I. 805 (Godef.)  				Donné en pleyn hustenge de Londres, devant Andreu Bekerel, adonk meyre de Londres. 1289–90    in  Madox Hist. Exch. xx. 553  				Rex..vult quod Scaccarium suum usque Hustengum Londoniæ transferatur. 1368    Charter in  T. Madox Formulare Anglicanum 		(1702)	 200  				In pleno Hustengo Londoniæ de Communibus placitis. 1866    C. Kingsley Hereward the Wake II. i. 2  				We will give you your lands in full husting. 1888    Athenæum 27 Oct.  				Session of the Court of Husting.]			  (b) plural hustings in same sense as the singular. ΚΠ c1462    in  T. Stapleton Plumpton Corr. 		(1839)	 5  				He haith taken his exigi facias de novo & is with us called in the hustings. 1494    Act 11 Hen. VII c. 21 §2  				The Hustynges of London holden for Comen Plees before the Maire and Aldermen. a1535    T. More Hist. Richard III in  Wks. 		(1557)	 61/2  				In the east ende of the hall where the maire kepeth the hustinges [1568 Grafton, where the hoystinges be kept]. 1613    H. Finch Law 		(1636)	 349  				In London, where their hustings are as the Countie Courts. 1704    J. Harris Lexicon Technicum I. at Inrolment  				Entring of any Lawful Act in the Rolls of the Chancery..or in the Hustings of London, or by the Clerk of the Peace in any County. 1707    J. Chamberlayne Angliæ Notitia 		(ed. 22)	  iii. xi. 355  				The highest and most ancient Court, is that called the Hustings..which doth preserve the Laws, Rights, Franchises, and Customs of the City. 1768    W. Blackstone Comm. Laws Eng. 		(1809)	 III. vi. 89 		(note)	  				The sheriffs' courts..from which a writ of error lies to the court of hustings, before the mayor, recorder, and sheriffs. 1818    W. Cruise Digest Laws Eng. Real Prop. 		(ed. 2)	 I. 206  				Enrolled in the court of hustings. 1863    H. Cox Inst. Eng. Govt.  ii. xi. 585  				The Hustings is the supreme Court of London. 1890    C. Gross Gild Merchant I. 125  				An alien was to be admitted to the freedom only at the Hustings. ΚΠ 1607    J. Cowell Interpreter sig. Nn2v/1  				Hustings,..Other Cities and townes also haue had a court of the same name, as Winchester, Lincolne, Yorke, and Sheppey, and others [ Fleta ii. lv, Habet etiam Rex curiam suam in civitatibus..et locis..sicut in Hustengis Londoñ Wintoñ Lincolñ Ebor' & apud Shepey & alibi] where the Barons or Citizens haue a record of such things as are determinable before them.  III.  In form hustings, now usually construed as singular. ΚΠ 1682    London Gaz. No. 1738/3  				The Common-Hall met..where the Lord Mayor and Aldermen being come down to the Hustings, etc.]			 a1734    R. North Examen 		(1740)	  iii. viii. §22 598  				When..the Lord-Mayor and Court of Aldermen are come upon the Suggestum, called the Hustings [etc.]. 1761    Brit. Mag. 2 603  				The royal family returned into the hall, and were conducted to the upper end of it, called the Hustings; where a table was provided for them.  4.  The temporary platform from which, previous to the Ballot Act of 1872, the nomination of candidates for Parliament was made, and on which these stood while addressing the electors. Hence, contextually, the proceedings at a parliamentary election. ΘΚΠ society > authority > office > appointment to office > choosing or fact of being chosen for office > election of representative body by vote > proceedings at election > 			[noun]		 > platform from which electors addressed husting1719 society > authority > office > appointment to office > choosing or fact of being chosen for office > election of representative body by vote > proceedings at election > 			[noun]		 husting1850 1719    T. D'Urfey Wit & Mirth II. 242  				What Tricks on the Hustings Fanaticks would play. 1774    E. Burke Speech Electors Bristol in  Wks. III. 14  				I stood on the hustings..less like a candidate, than an unconcerned spectator of a publick proceeding. 1796    S. T. Coleridge Lett. 		(1895)	 164  				In the market place stands the hustings. 1850    T. Carlyle Latter-day Pamphlets  vi. 32  				One thing the stupidest multitude at a hustings can do. 1850    H. Martineau Introd. Hist. Peace II.  v. ii. 231  				The Church question was the leading one on the hustings. 1883    S. C. Hall Retrospect Long Life I. 23  				An unpopular candidate had frequently to beat a hasty retreat from the hustings. Compounds C1.   General attributive.  a.     husting-court  n. ΚΠ 1889    Academy 1 June 374/3  				A husting court was held in 1885, and again in 1888 [for the enrolment of deeds relating to benefactions to the City of London School].   husting-day  n. ΚΠ 1671    F. Philipps Regale Necessarium 281  				Some Courts or Husting dayes.  b.     hustings-cry  n. ΚΠ 1844    B. Disraeli Coningsby I.  ii. i. 139  				The hustings-cry at the end of 1832.   hustings-movement  n.   hustings-orator  n. ΚΠ 1837    B. Disraeli Let. 21 Nov. in  Corr. with Sister 		(1886)	 75  				A second-rate hustings orator.   hustings-topic  n.  C2.     hustings-weight  n. 		(in Old English hustinges gewiht)	 a standard weight for precious metals in the 11th cent. (cf. hustinum pondus in Du Cange). ΚΠ c1000    in  Thorpe Dipl. Angl. Ævi Sax. 		(1865)	 533  				Duos cyphos argenteos de xij marcis ad pondus Hustingie Londonensis.]			 1032    Charter of Cnut in  Kemble Cod. Dipl. IV. 37  				Mid hundeahtigum marcan hwites seolfres be hustinges gewihte. 1720    J. Strype Stow's Surv. of London 		(rev. ed.)	 II.  v. xxviii. 369/2  				Troy-Weight, was in the Time of the Saxons called, the Hustings Weight of London.   hustings court  n. = sense  2; also, a court of local jurisdiction in Richmond and other cities of Virginia, U.S. ΚΠ 1675    J. Ogilby Britannia Introd. 4  				The High and Antient Hustings-Court for Preservation of the Laws. 1898    E. W. James Let. to Editor 		(O.E.D. Archive)	  				In Richmond and other cities the Corporation Courts, frequently called Hustings Courts, exercise both civil and criminal jurisdiction. The Hustings Court of Richmond has appellate jurisdiction in small civil matters coming from the police courts or justices' courts. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1899; most recently modified version published online June 2022). <  | 
	
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