 | Frederick Pollock, Frederic William Maitland - Law - 1895
...canon law Englishmen became familiar with appeals (appellationes) of a quite other kind ; they appealed from the archdeacon to the bishop, from the bishop to the archbishop, from the archbishop to the pope 8. The graduated hierarchy of ecclesiastical courts became an attractive... | |
 | Oswald Joseph Reichel - Canon law - 1896
...Concil. Lugdun. AD 1245, in Sext. Lib. n. Tit. xv. c. 3. (204). Const. 8 Clarendon, AD 1164 : 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... | |
 | John McClintock, James Strong - Bible - 1896
...Eccl.Ctiiwns, 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... | |
 | Henry Offley Wakeman - 1897 - 505 pages
...in such a cause to a foreign power shall be subject to a praemunire. Appeals in England were to go from the archdeacon to the bishop, from the bishop to the archbishop, and questions touching the king to the upper house of Convocation in the last resort. By the statute the... | |
 | Henry Offley Wakeman - Great Britain - 1898 - 505 pages
...in such a cause to a foreign power shall be subject to a praemunire. Appeals in England were to go from the archdeacon to the bishop, from the bishop to the archbishop, and questions touching the king to the upper house of Convocation in the last resort. By the statute the... | |
 | Goldwin Smith - Great Britain - 1899
...enactment the object of which was evidently to restrict resort to Rome. Appeals were to be carried from the archdeacon to the bishop, from the bishop to the archbishop, and in the last resort to the king in the archbishop's court, but never to the pope without the consent... | |
 | Guy Carleton Lee - Great Britain - 1900 - 607 pages
...it may be sent to the same to be considered there. § 8. 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 show justice, it must come to the lord king last, in order that by... | |
 | Guy Carleton Lee - Great Britain - 1900 - 609 pages
...it may be sent to the same to be considered there. § 8. 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 show justice, it must come to the lord king last, in order that by... | |
 | William Holden Hutton - Great Britain - 1900 - 300 pages
...they were as yet unknown in those of the State. He H accepted the system. Appeals, he said, should go from the archdeacon to the bishop, from the bishop to the archbishop. Then if the archbishop failed to do justice, the king himself should command the rehearing of the case,... | |
 | Edward Potts Cheyney - Great Britain - 1902 - 20 pages
...it may be sent to the same to be considered there. § 8. 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 show justice, it must come to the lord king last, in order that by... | |
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