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BRAUN: What s in a name? Negative associations, if it s Henry Dundas

BRAUN: What s in a name? Negative associations, if it s Henry Dundas
torontosun.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from torontosun.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Fixing T O s lousy history would mean tearing down half the city

Fixing T O s lousy history would mean tearing down half the city
torontosun.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from torontosun.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Is Impeachment Still Really a Thing? Part I

Is Impeachment Still Really a Thing? Part I Posted on: May 12, 2021 Written by Cal Jillson, Author of  The English Roots of Impeachment The early roots of impeachment run to the century after the Norman Conquest (1066 a.d.), but the first recognizable impeachment trial was that of Lord William Latimer in 1376. Latimer’s many crimes included corruption bordering on treason. When the aged King Edward III refused to restrain Latimer, the House of Commons impeached him and he was convicted in the House of Lords. He spent a year in jail and lost his high offices. Few subsequent impeachments proceeded so smoothly. A decade later, King Richard II’s Chancellor, Michael de le Pole, the Earl of Suffolk, was charged with “high crimes and misdemeanors,” the first use of this famous phrase in an impeachment context, and eventually with treason, whereupon he fled to France. So, by the late-14th century, the outlines of the impeachment process and charges were recognizable.

Lourdes Secondary and Toronto pupils debate legacy of Henry Dundas in Glasgow

Lourdes pupils with Peter Milne PUPILS in Glasgow have gone head to head with their peers in Toronto to debate the legacy of the slave trade represented in Scotland s statues and street names. Teenagers from Lourdes Secondary School and North Toronto Collegiate Institute held a discussion about Henry Dundas, a Lord Advocate and MP whose actions deferred the abolition of the slave trade. In Glasgow, the city has a Dundas Street while Toronto is home to Dundas Street and Dundas Square, honouring the legacy of Lord Melville, who died in 1811. Youngsters argued the question of whether he helped or hindered the slave trade in a project run by Parallel Histories, an educational charity promoting new ways to study conflict.

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