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  1. ジョン・マーシャル(John Marshall、1941年 8月28日 - 2023年 9月16日 )は、イングランド出身のドラマー。 主に、 ジャズ・ロック ・バンド「 ニュークリアス 」や「 ソフト・マシーン 」のメンバーとして活動した。

  2. John Marshall, by Cephas Thompson, 1809-1810. National Portrait Gallery NPG.2010.48 A towering figure in American legal history, John Marshall served as chief justice of the United States Supreme Court for more than three decades, during which time he helped increase the power and prestige of the Federal court system. By the end of his tenure, the precedent of judicial review was firmly ...

  3. As chief justice of the United States from 1801 until his death in 1835, John Marshall of Virginia played a formative role in establishing American federalism as it existed prior to the ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment in 1868. His was a balanced federalism that conceded sufficient power to the federal government that it could adequately perform its national and international functions ...

  4. JOHN MARSHALL was born on September 24, 1755, in Germantown, Virginia. Following service in the Revolutionary War, he attended a course of law lectures conducted by George Wythe at the College of William and Mary and continued the private study of law until his admission to practice in 1780.

  5. www.encyclopedia.com › supreme-court-biographies › john-marshallJohn Marshall | Encyclopedia.com

    John Marshall. As the fourth chief justice of the United States, John Marshall (1755-1835) was the principal architect in consolidating and defining the powers of the Supreme Court.Perhaps more than any other man he set the prevailing tone of American constitutional law. The eldest of Thomas and Mary Marshall's 15 children, John Marshall was born on Sept. 24, 1755, near Germantown, Va ...

  6. Marshall and 51 other witnesses testified. Amid “a vast concourse of people . . . and great solemnity,” the Senators acquitted Chase on March 1. Jefferson called impeachment of Justices “a farce which will not be tried again,” and he was right. For all his differences with the Republicans, John Marshall was no son of discord.

  7. There is only one judge in American history for whom the epithet “the Great” has been commonly used: John Marshall (1755–1835), the fourth chief justice of the United States. Yet in a strange way, his outsized reputation, built on the brilliant eloquence of his groundbreaking interpretations of the Constitution, has obscured as much as it has revealed about his true greatness.

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