| Edmund Burke - 1851 - 886 pages
...tithes and oblations. Respecting these three classes of causes, it is enacted that the appeal should be from the Archdeacon to the Bishop, and from the Bishop to the Archbishop, whose judgment was to be final, cutting off the appeal to Rome, which otherwise would have lain. The... | |
| Johann Lorenz Mosheim - 1803 - 484 pages
...barons, shall be excommunicated, or any of their estates put under an interdict, before application made to the king, provided he is in the kingdom; and,...bishop to the archbishop : and, if the archbishop fail to do justice, a farther recourse may be had to the king, by whose order the controversy is to... | |
| Johann Lorenz Mosheim - 1803 - 484 pages
...justiciary must be acquainted with the dispute in order to make satisfaction : and thus what belongs t» the cognizance of the king's court, must be tried...bishop to the archbishop : and, if the archbishop fail to do jusdee, a farther recourse may be had to the king, by whose order the controversy is to... | |
| 1865 - 632 pages
...tithes and oblations. Respecting these three classes of causes, it is enacted that the appeal should be from the Archdeacon to the Bishop, and from the Bishop to the Archbishop, whose judgment was to be final ; cutting off" the appeal to Rome, which otherwise would have lain.... | |
| Johann Lorenz Mosheim - 1811 - 464 pages
...acquainted with the dispute, in order to make satisfaction ; and thus what belongs to the cognisance of the King's Court, must be tried there ; and that...step is to be made from the archdeacon to the bishop j and from the bishop to the archbishop ; and if the archbishop fails to do justice, a farther recourse... | |
| John Reeves - 1814 - 528 pages
...thither to be there determined. 8th, Concerning ap-. peals, if any shull,arise, they ought to proceed from the archdeacon to the bishop, and from the bishop to the archbishop: and if the archbishop shall fail in doing justice, the cause shall at last be brought to our lord the king, that, by his... | |
| Matthew Hale - 1820 - 580 pages
...may be there determined. £ Sixthly, concerning appeals, if any shall arise, they ought to proceed from the archdeacon to the bishop, and from the bishop to the archbishop. And, if the archbishop shall fail in doing justice, the cause shall at last be brought to our lord the king, that by his precept... | |
| Robert Southey - 1824 - 458 pages
...interdict, unless the King or his justiciary had been apprized of the proceedings. Appeals were to proceed from the Archdeacon to the Bishop, and from the Bishop to the Archbishop ; if he failed in doing justice, the cause was to be brought to the King, and by his precept determined... | |
| John Lingard - 1825 - 528 pages
...papal court, to the prejudice of the sovereign. V. It was enacted that appeals should proceed regularly from the archdeacon to the bishop, and from the bishop to the archbishop. If the archbishop failed to do justice, the cause ought to be carried before the king, that by his... | |
| Johann Lorenz Mosheim, James Murdock - 1832 - 580 pages
...court, may be remitted to it for 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... | |
| |