You don't say which revolution you are talking about. Should you mean the French Revolution of 1789, the answer is no. The revolutionary courts in force until 1793 were 'kangaroo courts' , mostly manned by people without any legal qualifications who were habitually uninterested in the subject of solid proof. Hearsay and wild accusations were usually enough to get you convicted to the Guillotine.
False
Vice-admiralty courts were run by officers and did not have juries.
The American War for Independence is often called a "revolution" (or, said to be "revolutionary") precisely because it was, by definition, just that. As an overthrow by diplomatic and military means of the established government, the American cause, though deemed to be just and necessary by those supporting it, was undeniably a revolution against the British ruling authority.
The outcome of the American Revolutionary War was peace of Paris and American Independence. P.S. i am sum1 else and i just wanted to say that the outcome of the american revolutionary war was to have peace and being not controled by the british.
Pie
tribunal
Revolutionary Tribunals
In smuggling courts there was no juries just a judge.
anything from there shoes to cat
they just do
In smuggling courts there was no juries just a judge.
False
Vice-admiralty courts were run by officers and did not have juries.
The name of the courts that sentenced people accused of being anti-revolutionaries were called the revolutionary tribunals. The tribunal sentenced 1,220 people to death over 13 months.
He didn't do anything...? Umm... the Declaration of Independence, Statesmen, Founding Father, the Pen of the Revolutionary generation, just to name a few... Yeah, he sure didn't do anything for America..
Dah! The courts can and do order anything.
Yes there are many tennis courts in England.