Becket, Archbishop of Canterbury: A BiographyJ. Murray, 1859 - 360 pages |
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Page xi
... Giles is named , the refer- ences are to the reprint in Migne's Patrologia . ] Johnson's English Canons , ed . Baron , in Anglo - Cath . Library . Lyttelton's Life of Henry II . , 2nd edition , 4to . Martineau , Church Hist . in England ...
... Giles is named , the refer- ences are to the reprint in Migne's Patrologia . ] Johnson's English Canons , ed . Baron , in Anglo - Cath . Library . Lyttelton's Life of Henry II . , 2nd edition , 4to . Martineau , Church Hist . in England ...
Page 3
... Giles , and in some degree by Mr. Warter ; and on this as on other subjects the cautious tone which had d b which he was engaged almost to the time of his death ; but I am not aware that this work has yet ap- peared . a ' Remains of the ...
... Giles , and in some degree by Mr. Warter ; and on this as on other subjects the cautious tone which had d b which he was engaged almost to the time of his death ; but I am not aware that this work has yet ap- peared . a ' Remains of the ...
Page 4
... Giles's Sanctus Thomas Cantuariensis . The value of the additions contained in this work is , indeed , but in- differently proportioned to their bulk : for the new letters a Epistolć et Vita Divi Thomć | pontificate of Gregory XI ...
... Giles's Sanctus Thomas Cantuariensis . The value of the additions contained in this work is , indeed , but in- differently proportioned to their bulk : for the new letters a Epistolć et Vita Divi Thomć | pontificate of Gregory XI ...
Page 5
... Giles appears painfully to feel ) hardly readable even by an editor , and is utterly un- readable by any one else ; while much of the other new matter is merely a repetition of the old , and in some cases Dr. Giles has printed , as new ...
... Giles appears painfully to feel ) hardly readable even by an editor , and is utterly un- readable by any one else ; while much of the other new matter is merely a repetition of the old , and in some cases Dr. Giles has printed , as new ...
Page 7
... in the Quadrilogus ex- ist . The Miracula ' are a se- parate publication , by Dr. Giles , Lond . 1850 . d See S. T. C. vii . 3 , 82 . and contains much irrelevant matter , is very valuable . CHAP . I. 7 INTRODUCTORY .
... in the Quadrilogus ex- ist . The Miracula ' are a se- parate publication , by Dr. Giles , Lond . 1850 . d See S. T. C. vii . 3 , 82 . and contains much irrelevant matter , is very valuable . CHAP . I. 7 INTRODUCTORY .
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Common terms and phrases
abbey abbot Alan Alexander Anon Anselm answer appear Arch Archbishop of Rouen Archbishop of York Archdeacon Arnulf Becket biographers Bishop of London Brial Broc canons Cant Canterbury cardinals Chancellor Chancellorship charge Church Cistercian claim clergy clerks Constitutions of Clarendon court declared Diceto Eadmer Earl ecclesiastical endeavoured England English envoys excommunication exile favour Fitzst Fitzstephen Fitzurse Foliot Foss France Froude Garnier Gervase Gilbert Giles Gratian Grim Henry Henry's Herb Herbert of Bosham Hist Hoveden John of Salisbury King King's knights late legates letter Lingard Lond Lord matter monastery monks murder oath papal Patrol Pauli person Pontigny Pope Pope's prelates Primate proceedings quod Ranulf de Broc received resignation Ridel Roger Rome royal saint Sarisb Saxon says secular seems Sens story supposed Theobald Thierry Thom Thomas tion told Vézelay violent William William of Newburgh words writers
Popular passages
Page 189 - God, who feeds the fowls of the air and clothes the lilies of the field, would provide for him and the companions of his exile.
Page 96 - Concerning appeals, if they should occur, they ought to proceed from the archdeacon to the bishop, from the bishop to the archbishop. And if the archbishop should fail to...
Page 87 - Erat, ut memini, genus hominum qui in ecclesia Dei archidiaconorum censentur nomine, quibus vestra discretio omnem salutis viam querebatur esse prseclusam.
Page 341 - Lastly, on our requesting that his holiness would send your lordship a summons to appear before him, he answered with much apparent distress, ' God forbid ! rather may I end my days than see him leave England on such terms, and bereave his church at such a crisis.
Page 254 - Here we have no continuing city, but we seek one to come." In truth his mind was filled with forebodings of evil. His official conductor to England had been John of Oxford, Dean of Salisbury, one of his principal opponents, and at Canterbury some officials of the king demanded in his name the absolution of the suspended and excommunicated bishops.
Page 279 - Strike! strike !" cried Fitzurse to his companions, and with the point of his sword he dashed off the Achbishop's cap. Tracy then raised his sword, and Grim, wrapping his arm in a cloak, lifted it up to ward off the stroke ; but the weapon almost severed the monk's arm, and descending on the Archbishop's head, cut off the tonsured part of his crown, which remained hanging only by the skin to the scalp.
Page 279 - Benedict within the chapel. It is a proof of the confusion of the scene, that Grim, the receiver of the blow, as well as most of the narrators, believed it to have been dealt by Fitzurse, while Tracy, who is known to have been the man from his subsequent boast, believed that the monk whom he had wounded was John of Salisbury.
Page i - TEMPTATION. i6mo. 2s. 6d. Boultbee.— A COMMENTARY ON THE THIRTY-NINE ARTICLES OF THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND. By the Rev. TP BOULTBEE, formerly Principal of the London College of Divinity, St. John's Hall, Highbury. Crown 8vo. 6s. IN THEOLOGICAL LITERATURE. Bright.— Works by WILLIAM BRIGHT, DD, Regius Professor of Ecclesiastical History in the University of Oxford, Canon of Christ Church, Oxford. THE ROMAN SEE IN THE EARLY CHURCH : And other Studies in Church History. Crown 8vo.
Page 88 - Henry, provoked by their appearance of unanimity, asked them one by one whether they would obey the customs of his ancestors? The Archbishop replied that they would, " saving their order," and the bishops severally made the same declaration, with the single exception of Hilary of Chichester, who, alarmed by the King's evident anger, thought to escape the difficulty by substituting the words bond, fide for salvo ordine. This change, however, instead of appeasing Henry, added to his exasperation. He...
Page 154 - It was forbidden to mention the Primate in the public prayers. The sheriffs were charged to arrest and imprison all persons who should appeal to the Pope ; and any one who should be caught in bringing letters from the Pope or the Archbishop was either to be hanged, or to be put into a crazy boat and turned adrift to the mercy of the waves.