| 1883 - 492 Seiten
...matrimonial, testamentary, and tithe matters no appeal to Rome should be allowed. All such cases were to go from the Archdeacon to the Bishop, and from the Bishop to the Archbishop, " there to be definitively and finally ordered, decreed, and adjudged according to justice, without... | |
| Walter Farquhar Hook - 1884 - 792 Seiten
...the same on the other hand of the ecclesiastical court. VIII. Appeals, if they arise, must be made from the archdeacon to the bishop, and from the bishop to the archbishop ; and if the archbishop shall fail in administering justice, the parties shall come before our lord... | |
| Thomas Pitt Taswell-Langmead, Charles Henry Edward Carmichael - 1886 - 870 Seiten
...any foreign process, should incur the penalties of praemunire ; that the course of appeal should be from the archdeacon to the bishop, and from the bishop to the archbishop of his province ; and that in any case touching the King or his successors, the appeal should be to... | |
| Roundell Palmer Earl of Selborne - 1887 - 416 Seiten
...Church of England.' In one of them (Art. 8) it was declared that ' appeals, when necessary, ought to be from the archdeacon to the bishop, and from the bishop to the archbishop ; and, if justice were not done by the archbishop, the last resort must be to the king, according to... | |
| Hannis Taylor - 1898 - 714 Seiten
...courts, temporal or spiritual, and not elsewhere ; and furthermore that the course of appeal should be from the archdeacon to the bishop, and from the bishop to the archbishop of his province ; and in any cause touching the king or his successors, the appeal should be to the... | |
| Alexander Hugh Hore - 1891 - 578 Seiten
...the reigns of Edward 1., Richard II., Henry 1V.? and other Kings. It was now enacted that appeals lay from the Archdeacon to the Bishop, and from the Bishop to the Archbishop, whose decision should be final, except in cases affecting the Crown, when a further appeal was allowed... | |
| Thomas Dunbar Ingram - 1892 - 486 Seiten
...of justice. * In 1164 it was enacted that appeals in ecclesiastical causes should proceed regularly from the archdeacon to the bishop, and from the bishop to the archbishop ; if the archbishop failed to do justice, the final resort should be to the 1 In Anglia numque appellationes... | |
| 1893 - 816 Seiten
...the same on the other hand of the ecclesiastical court. VIII. Appeals, if they arise, must be made from the archdeacon to the bishop, and from the bishop to the archbishop ; and if the archbishop shall fail in administering justice, the parties shall come before our lord... | |
| John Henry Overton - 1897 - 518 Seiten
...of England.' In one of them (Article 8) it was declared that ' appeals, when necessary, ought to be from the Archdeacon to the Bishop, and ' from the Bishop to the Archbishop ; and if justice were not done by the Archbishop, the last resort must be to the King, according to... | |
| Henry Offley Wakeman - 1897 - 536 Seiten
...further protected by the Church after conviction in the ecclesiastical court. VIII. Appeals were to go from the archdeacon to the bishop, and from the bishop to the archbishop. If the archbishop failed to do justice, the cause was to be settled in the archbishop's court by the... | |
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