| Francis Stoughton Sullivan, Gilbert Stuart - Constitutional history - 1805 - 336 pages
...be excommunicated without the king's licence ; that appeals in ecclesiastical causes should be made from the arch-deacon to the bishop, from the bishop to the archbishop, from the archbishop to the king. This indeed was striking at the root of the Pope's supremacy, and... | |
| David Hume - Great Britain - 1810 - 540 pages
...put under an interdict, except with the king's consent: That all appeals in spiritual causes should be carried from the archdeacon to the bishop, from the bishop to the primate, from him to the king; and should be carried no farther without the king's consent: That if... | |
| John Britton - 1816 - 396 pages
...shall be excommunicated without first acquainting the King : that appeals in spiritual causes should be carried from the Archdeacon to the Bishop, from the Bishop to the Archbishop, and lastly to the King, as highest, and no farther. In all suits between the clergy and laity concerning... | |
| Charles Butler - Church and state - 1821 - 538 pages
...licence of the king : but an article followed, which directed that appeals should proceed regularly, from the archdeacon to the bishop ; from the bishop to the archbishop ; and that, if the archbishop was defective in doing justice, recourse should be had to the king ; by whose... | |
| Charles Butler - Church and state - 1822 - 600 pages
...licence of the king : but an article followed, which directed that appeals should proceed regularly, from the archdeacon to the bishop ; from the bishop to the archbishop ; and that, if the archbishop was defective in doing justice, recourse should be had to the king ; by whose... | |
| David Hume, Tobias Smollett - England - 1825 - 480 pages
...put under an interdict, except with the king's consent ; that all appeals in spiritual causes should be carried from the archdeacon to the bishop, from the bishop to the primate, from him to the king ; and should be carried no farther without the king's consent: that if... | |
| Johann Lorenz Mosheim, James Murdock - Church history - 1832 - 580 pages
...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 king, that eo the controversy may be terminated in... | |
| Johann Lorenz von Mosheim - 1841 - 810 pages
...decision. Coiidaitiifd. 8. Appeals, should they be made, 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 king, that so the controversy may be terminated in... | |
| Johann Lorenz Mosheim - Church history - 1841 - 502 pages
...— Condemned. 8. Appeals, should they be made, 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 king, that so the controversy may be terminated in... | |
| William Beveridge - Sermons, English - 1842 - 534 pages
...unjustly dealt with, or but think himself to be so, he may appeal from the lower to the higher Courts, from the Archdeacon to the Bishop; from the Bishop to the Archbishop, and from him to the Queen : who, being in all her dominions supreme governor over all persons, in all causes,... | |
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