Search Images Maps Play YouTube News Gmail Drive More »
Sign in
Books Books
" Concerning appeals, if any shall arise, they ought to proceed from the archdeacon to the bishop, and from the bishop to the archbishop : and, if the archbishop... "
The Edinburgh Review: Or Critical Journal - Page 164
1865
Full view - About this book

Annual Register, Volume 92

Edmund Burke - History - 1851 - 886 pages
...tithes and oblations. Respecting these three classes of causes, it is enacted that the appeal should be from the Archdeacon to the Bishop, and from the Bishop to the Archbishop, whose judgment was to be final, cutting off the appeal to Rome, which otherwise would have lain. The...
Full view - About this book

An Ecclesiastical History, Ancient and Modern, from the Birth of ..., Volume 3

Johann Lorenz Mosheim - Church history - 1803 - 484 pages
...that jurisdiction. VIII. In case of appeals in ecclesiastical causes, the first step is to be made from the archdeacon to the bishop : and from the bishop to the archbishop : and, if the archbishop fail to do jusdee, a farther recourse may be had to the king, by whose order...
Full view - About this book

An Ecclesiastical History, Antient and Modern, from the Birth of ..., Volume 3

Johann Lorenz Mosheim - Church history - 1803 - 484 pages
...that jurisdiction. VIII. In case of appeals in ecclesiastical causes, the first step is to be made from the archdeacon to the bishop : and from the bishop to the archbishop : and, if the archbishop fail to do justice, a farther recourse may be had to the king, by whose order...
Full view - About this book

History of the English Law: From the Time of the Saxons, to the ..., Volume 1

John Reeves - Constitutional history - 1814 - 528 pages
...thither to be there determined. 8th, Concerning ap-. peals, if any shull,arise, they ought to proceed from the archdeacon to the bishop, and from the bishop to the archbishop: and if the archbishop shall fail in doing justice, the cause shall at last be brought to our lord the...
Full view - About this book

The History of the Common Law of England: And An Analysis of the Civil Part ...

Matthew Hale - Law - 1820 - 580 pages
...may be there determined. £ Sixthly, concerning appeals, if any shall arise, they ought to proceed from the archdeacon to the bishop, and from the bishop to the archbishop. And, if the archbishop shall fail in doing justice, the cause shall at last be brought to our lord...
Full view - About this book

The Book of the Church, Volume 1

Robert Southey - Church of England - 1824 - 458 pages
...interdict, unless the King or his justiciary had been apprized of the proceedings. Appeals were to proceed from the Archdeacon to the Bishop, and from the Bishop to the Archbishop ; if he failed in doing justice, the cause was to be brought to the King, and by his precept determined...
Full view - About this book

A History of England from the First Invasion by the Romans, Volume 2

John Lingard - Great Britain - 1825 - 528 pages
...papal court, to the prejudice of the sovereign. V. It was enacted that appeals should proceed regularly from the archdeacon to the bishop, and from the bishop to the archbishop. If the archbishop failed to do justice, the cause ought to be carried before the king, that by his...
Full view - About this book

An ecclesiastical history, ancient and modern, tr. by A. Maclaine, Volume 3

Johann Lorenz von Mosheim - 1826 - 432 pages
...that jurisdiction. VIII. In case of appeals in ecclesiastical causes, the first step is to be made from the archdeacon to the bishop, and from the bishop to the archbishop; and, if the archbishop fails to do justice, recourse may be had to the king, by whose order the controversy...
Full view - About this book

The History of the Reformation of the Church of England: Reigns of the ...

Henry Soames - 1828 - 786 pages
...255.) Const. Clar. viii. " In case of appeals in ecclesiastical causes, the first step is to be made from the archdeacon to the bishop ; and from the bishop to the archbishop ; and if the archbishop fails to do justice a farther recourse may be had to the king: by declaratory...
Full view - About this book

Institutes of Ecclesiastical History: Ancient and Modern ...

Johann Lorenz Mosheim, James Murdock - Church history - 1832 - 580 pages
...court, may be remitted to it for decision. Condemned. 8. Appeals, should they be innde, ought to be from the archdeacon to the bishop, and from the bishop to the archbishop ; and if the archbishop should fail to do justice, recurrence should be had, lastly, to our lord the...
Full view - About this book




  1. My library
  2. Help
  3. Advanced Book Search
  4. Download EPUB
  5. Download PDF