 | ...conveying, on the Council's part, any thsory of the suggested independence. t Art. 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 Archbishop's... | |
 | 1865
...much delay in granting to widows their dower or their jointure, in consequence of the appeals made from the archdeacon to the bishop, from the bishop to the archbishop, and from the archbishop to the Pope, it has been established by an ordinance of the Holy Church, that these... | |
 | Church congress - 1866
...directed that the course of appeals should be the same as that laid down by 25 Hen. VIII. c. 19, viz., from the Archdeacon to the Bishop, from the Bishop to the Archbishop, and from the Archbishop to the King's Majesty. " Quo (ie ad nostram majestatem) cum fuerit causa devoluta,... | |
 | Anglicans - 1866
...directed that the course of appeals should be the same as that laid down by 25 Hen. VIII. c. 19, viz., from the Archdeacon to the Bishop, from the Bishop to the Archbishop, and from the Archbishop to the King's Majesty. " Quo (ie ad nostram majestatem) cum fuerit causa devoluta,... | |
 | John McClintock, James Strong - Bible - 1867
...Canons, subann. 1143). But by art. 8 of the Constitutions of Clarendon it was declared that, " 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 archbishop's... | |
 | James Anthony Froude - 1883
...in tho country, be first consulted, or, in the king's absence, the lord justice. 6. Appeal shall be from the archdeacon to the bishop, from the bishop to the archbishop. If the archbishop shall fail to do justice, the case shall be brought before the king in such manner... | |
 | David Mountfield - Church and state in Great Britain - 1869 - 252 pages
...the archbishop's courts should appeal to the King ; so that henceforward there should be an appeal from the archdeacon to the bishop, from the bishop to the archbishop, from the archbishop to the Sovereign.2 This statute, giving to the Sovereign the final determination... | |
 | Elizabeth Missing Sewell - 1870
...ecclesiastic was to leave the realm without the Sovereign's licence. . . . 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. . . . The King's tenants-in-chief,... | |
 | Elizabeth Missing Sewell - 1870 - 415 pages
...ecclesiastic was to leave the realm without the Sovereign's licence. . . . 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. ... The King's tenants-in-chief,... | |
 | Thomas John Bailey - Bishops - 1871 - 90 pages
...notably in the Constitutions of Clarendon, AD 1164, by the 8th of which it was declared that appeals lay from the " Archdeacon to the Bishop ; from the Bishop to the Archbishop ; and thirdly, if the Archbishop failed to do justice, recourse may be had to the king, by whose order the... | |
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