| Elizabeth Missing Sewell - 1870 - 486 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 - 1871 - 122 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... | |
| George Elwes Corrie - 1874 - 168 pages
...The Article is as follows (Johnson, np 52, Oxf. 1551) : — If appeals arise they ought to proceed from the archdeacon to the bishop, from the bishop to the archbishop, and lastly to the King (if the archbishop fail to do justice), so that the controversy be ended in the... | |
| James Davies (of Southport.) - 1874 - 294 pages
...without application to the King, or to his Justiciary. 8. That appeals in spiritual matters proceed from the Archdeacon to the Bishop, from the Bishop to the Archbishop, and then to the King ; but be carried no further without the King's consent. 9. Disputes between ecclesiastics... | |
| 1875 - 648 pages
...dignified clergy should not go out of the realm without the king's licence ; that appeal* should proceed from the archdeacon to the bishop, from the bishop to the archbishop and then to the king; that the kin^ should hold vacant bishoprics or abbeys and receive all the rents thereof.... | |
| 240 pages
...Eighth of the Constitutions of Clarendon, AD 1164: "Of Appeals ; If they arise, they ought to proceed from the Archdeacon to the Bishop, from the Bishop to the Archbishop, and lastly, (if the Archbishop fail in doing justice.) to the King, that by his precept the controversy... | |
| 1898 - 554 pages
...above it, without the omission of any, unless there be a custom to the contrary. Thus an appeal goes regularly from the archdeacon to the bishop, from the bishop to the metropolitan, from the metropolitan to the exarch of the greater administrative district, or primate... | |
| Sabine Baring-Gould - 1877 - 446 pages
...guilty were not to be screened by the Church from suffering condign punishment. Appeals were to lie from the archdeacon to the bishop, from the bishop to the archbishop ; and, on failure of justice, in the last resort to the king, who would see to the case being fairly reheard... | |
| Sabine Baring Gould - 1877 - 486 pages
...guilty were not to be screened by the Church from suffering condign punishment. Appeals were to lie from the archdeacon to the bishop, from the bishop to the archbishop ; and, on failure of justice, in the last resort to the king, who would see to the case being fairly reheard... | |
| 1877 - 826 pages
...great persons were forbidden to leave the realm without the king's permission. 6. Appeals were to be from the archdeacon to the bishop, from the bishop to the archbishop, from the archbishop to the king, and no further ; that, by the king's mandate, the case might be ended... | |
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