| John Johnson - Canon law, Anglican - 1851 - 624 pages
...be there determined, and what belongs to the ecclesiastical court be there determined. 8. If appeals arise, they ought to proceed from the archdeacon to...bishop, from the bishop to the archbishop, and lastly, to the king, (if the archbishop fail in doing justice,) so that the controversy be ended in the d archbishop's... | |
| William Henry Pinnock - England - 1851 - 480 pages
...and criminal causes the clergy should be arraigned in the King's courts — that appeals should lie from the archdeacon to the bishop — from the bishop to the Archbishop, and from the Archbishop to the King — that no appeals should be carried to the Pope without the King's... | |
| Richard Field - Church - 1852 - 622 pages
...ecclesiastical. For MatthewParis ' sheweth that the ancient laws of England provided that in appeals men should proceed from the archdeacon to the bishop, from the bishop to the archbishop, and that, if the archbishop should fail in doing justice, the matter should be made known to the king ;... | |
| Henry Hart Milman - Papacy - 1854 - 578 pages
...determine in each case the respective rights of the civil and ecclesiastical courts.' V. Appeals lay from the archdeacon to the bishop, from the bishop to the Archbishop. On failure of justice by the Archbishop, in the last resort to the King, who was to take care that... | |
| 1855 - 528 pages
...within the realm. 2. That appeals to any foreign potentate are forbidden. 3. That appeals should lie from the Archdeacon to the Bishop, from the Bishop to the Archbishop, 'there to be definitively and ' finally ordered, decreed, and adjusted according to justice, with'... | |
| Frederick Meyrick - 1857 - 378 pages
...settled within the realm. 2. Appeals to any foreign potentate are forbidden. 3. That appeals should lie from the Archdeacon to the Bishop, from the Bishop to the Archbishop, ' there to be definitively and ' finally ordered, decreed, and adjusted according to justice, with'... | |
| James Craigie Robertson - 1859 - 414 pages
...previously ascertaining whether justice might not be obtained at home.c Appeals were to be carried from the archdeacon to the bishop, from the bishop to the archbishop ; and, if the archbishop should fail to do justice, resort was to be had to the King, " that by his precept... | |
| James Craigie Robertson - 1859 - 396 pages
...previously ascertaining whether justice might not be obtained at home. c Appeals were to be carried from the archdeacon to the bishop, from the bishop to the archbishop; and, if the archbishop should fail to do justice, resort was to be had to the King, " that by his precept... | |
| Henry Hart Milman - 1860 - 264 pages
...Constitutions i. and ii. 58 Constitution vii., somewhat limited and explained by x. V. Appeals lay from the archdeacon to the bishop, from the bishop to the Archbishop. On failure of justice by the Archbishop, in the last resort to the King, who was to take care that... | |
| Arthur Martineau - 1862 - 564 pages
...to the king if he were in the kingdom, or, in his absence, to his justice; and that appeals should proceed from the archdeacon to the bishop, from the bishop to the archbishop, and lastly to the king, so that the controversy should be ended in the archbishop's court by a precept from the... | |
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