The Lords Appellant were a group of nobles in the reign of King Richard II who sought to impeach some five of the King's favourites in order to restrain what was seen as tyrannical and capricious rule. The word appellant simply means ' appealing '. It is the older (Norman) French form of the present participle of the verb appeller, the equivalent of the English 'to appeal'. The group was called the Lords Appellant because its members invoked a procedure under law to start prosecution of the king's unpopular favourites known as 'an appeal': the favourites were charged in a document called an appeal of treason, a device borrowed from civil law which led to some procedural complications.
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Famous quotes containing the word lords:
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The captains, merchant bankers, eminent men of letters,
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—T.S. (Thomas Stearns)