
1 THE INFLUENCE OF THE COMMON LAW ON THE DECLINE OF
... (who may himself sit if he so wishes), although the Lord Chancellor must be consulted before any appointment is made. Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction Measure, 1963, § 2(1)-(2) (Eng.). The Dean of the Arches is appointed by the archbishops of Canterbury and York acting jointly, with the Queen’s approval ...
... (who may himself sit if he so wishes), although the Lord Chancellor must be consulted before any appointment is made. Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction Measure, 1963, § 2(1)-(2) (Eng.). The Dean of the Arches is appointed by the archbishops of Canterbury and York acting jointly, with the Queen’s approval ...
The Learned Laws in `Pollock and Maitland`
... Church, although there were others where the learned laws came to be applied in some measure. The courts of the ancient universities are of course a prominent example. At least from what we know so far, it appears that they were governed by the ius commune, although it is hard to speak with assuranc ...
... Church, although there were others where the learned laws came to be applied in some measure. The courts of the ancient universities are of course a prominent example. At least from what we know so far, it appears that they were governed by the ius commune, although it is hard to speak with assuranc ...
auricular confession and the council of trent
... drowned out but rather continued in the ecumenical councils dealing with confession, their teaching can hardly be considered irrelevant when trying to establish what current pastoral needs really are. The Church not only can but shall use historical investigation of her past experience as a co-deter ...
... drowned out but rather continued in the ecumenical councils dealing with confession, their teaching can hardly be considered irrelevant when trying to establish what current pastoral needs really are. The Church not only can but shall use historical investigation of her past experience as a co-deter ...
trusts, trust-like concepts and ius commune
... designated as legatee. Fideicommissum shows many parallels to the concept of the trust. Firstly, trust terminology fits fideicommissum very well: one can consider the testator a ‘settlor’, the third party a ‘trustee’, and the person who eventually acquires the property a ‘beneficiary’. Secondly, the ...
... designated as legatee. Fideicommissum shows many parallels to the concept of the trust. Firstly, trust terminology fits fideicommissum very well: one can consider the testator a ‘settlor’, the third party a ‘trustee’, and the person who eventually acquires the property a ‘beneficiary’. Secondly, the ...
Bastardy Litigation in Medieval England
... dispute between regnum and sacerdotium in the Middle Ages existed in a vacuum, dependent on rhetoric or theory alone, and this dispute was, if anything, more concrete than most. It turned around a precise legal issue, namely inheritance of real property. Whatever ideological problems bastardy litiga ...
... dispute between regnum and sacerdotium in the Middle Ages existed in a vacuum, dependent on rhetoric or theory alone, and this dispute was, if anything, more concrete than most. It turned around a precise legal issue, namely inheritance of real property. Whatever ideological problems bastardy litiga ...
The Canonical Prohibition of Freemasonry in History and the
... of Catholic membership of a Masonic Lodge in an effort to explain how and why the two changed, or did not change, over time. Given the enduring questions concerning the differences between Masonry in different historical and social contexts, a parenthetical study will be conducted of the history of ...
... of Catholic membership of a Masonic Lodge in an effort to explain how and why the two changed, or did not change, over time. Given the enduring questions concerning the differences between Masonry in different historical and social contexts, a parenthetical study will be conducted of the history of ...
How Did It All Begin - Yale Law School Legal Scholarship Repository
... the sacred may have helped to unleash the rationalist forces that many scholars have found crucial to the emergence of characteristically Western legal, political, and social institutions as of the late eleventh century. If God's existence could be rationally understood, so could all the cosmos He h ...
... the sacred may have helped to unleash the rationalist forces that many scholars have found crucial to the emergence of characteristically Western legal, political, and social institutions as of the late eleventh century. If God's existence could be rationally understood, so could all the cosmos He h ...
Inquiring into Adultery and Other Wicked Deeds
... another; and this should be examined solicitously throughout our whole kingdom, so that, anyone found to have done such things, should be placed under public penance or, if they do not wish this, they should be separated from the church, until they are corrected (corrigantur) from their shameful dee ...
... another; and this should be examined solicitously throughout our whole kingdom, so that, anyone found to have done such things, should be placed under public penance or, if they do not wish this, they should be separated from the church, until they are corrected (corrigantur) from their shameful dee ...
Frequently Asked Questions Regarding The Role of a
... The ministry of a bishop is to represent Christ and his Church, particularly as apostle, chief priest, and pastor of a diocese; to guard the faith, unity, and discipline of the whole Church; to proclaim the Word of God; to act in Christ’s name for the reconciliation of the world and the building up ...
... The ministry of a bishop is to represent Christ and his Church, particularly as apostle, chief priest, and pastor of a diocese; to guard the faith, unity, and discipline of the whole Church; to proclaim the Word of God; to act in Christ’s name for the reconciliation of the world and the building up ...
The Religious Foundations of Western Law
... the written text as a whole-the "body of civil law" (corpus juris civilis), as it then came to be called-was accepted as a sacred embodiment of human reason, but the techniques of reconciliation of contradictions gave the medieval jurists considerable freedom to limit or expand the scope of the conc ...
... the written text as a whole-the "body of civil law" (corpus juris civilis), as it then came to be called-was accepted as a sacred embodiment of human reason, but the techniques of reconciliation of contradictions gave the medieval jurists considerable freedom to limit or expand the scope of the conc ...
Money and Judges in the Law of the Medieval Church
... to point to the practical difficulties of putting the canonical rules into effect. As James Brundage stated in his fundamental work on the medieval legal profession inthe ecclesiastical courts, "The problem was not a want of standards, but a lack of effective means" by which offenders could be detec ...
... to point to the practical difficulties of putting the canonical rules into effect. As James Brundage stated in his fundamental work on the medieval legal profession inthe ecclesiastical courts, "The problem was not a want of standards, but a lack of effective means" by which offenders could be detec ...
Religion and the Emergence of the Rule of Law
... creators and interpreters of the Church’s own canon law, and ecclesiastical courts were able to protect the Church and its holdings from appropriation by political rulers. Many canon law doctrines that shielded the Church from an arbitrary state ultimately made their way into modern Western law, pro ...
... creators and interpreters of the Church’s own canon law, and ecclesiastical courts were able to protect the Church and its holdings from appropriation by political rulers. Many canon law doctrines that shielded the Church from an arbitrary state ultimately made their way into modern Western law, pro ...
full text pdf
... the legal acts of the pope and other church officials could not be in contradiction to the natural law. According to him, ius is genus, whereas lex is a specie of it. By studying the natural law, Gratian came to the conclusion that kings have to obey the laws that they themselves have enacted and th ...
... the legal acts of the pope and other church officials could not be in contradiction to the natural law. According to him, ius is genus, whereas lex is a specie of it. By studying the natural law, Gratian came to the conclusion that kings have to obey the laws that they themselves have enacted and th ...
Church Prohibition of Books - St. John`s Law Scholarship Repository
... All persons not expressly exempt by the law must obtain permission before they may legitimately read a forbidden book. Permission to read, keep or in any way use books forbidden either by the general laws of the Church or by the Index, can be granted only by the Holy See and by those to whom the Hol ...
... All persons not expressly exempt by the law must obtain permission before they may legitimately read a forbidden book. Permission to read, keep or in any way use books forbidden either by the general laws of the Church or by the Index, can be granted only by the Holy See and by those to whom the Hol ...
byzantine influence in medieval hungarian law and in canon law in
... sources of law, including secular law and law-books, canonical sources of law and their collections describing their reception outside of Byzantium as well. This led be to better define the scope of primary Byzantine sources of law to be examined more closely. Finally I found it important to review ...
... sources of law, including secular law and law-books, canonical sources of law and their collections describing their reception outside of Byzantium as well. This led be to better define the scope of primary Byzantine sources of law to be examined more closely. Finally I found it important to review ...
Faculties Granted to Priests
... 1) to the extent that impediments derive from divine law, they bind all persons, whether baptized or not, whether they marry Catholics or not; ecclesiastical law impediments bind only Catholics and non-Catholics who marry them. 2) In principle, ecclesiastical law impediments are subject to dispensat ...
... 1) to the extent that impediments derive from divine law, they bind all persons, whether baptized or not, whether they marry Catholics or not; ecclesiastical law impediments bind only Catholics and non-Catholics who marry them. 2) In principle, ecclesiastical law impediments are subject to dispensat ...
Agenda for Legislative Business
... Resolution under paragraph 17 of the Schedule to the Church Funds Investment Measure 1958 Mr Michael Chamberlain (ex officio) to move: 510 ‘That this Synod confirm the instrument in writing dated 27th November 2006 of the Central Board of Finance of the Church of England (‘the Central Board’) appoin ...
... Resolution under paragraph 17 of the Schedule to the Church Funds Investment Measure 1958 Mr Michael Chamberlain (ex officio) to move: 510 ‘That this Synod confirm the instrument in writing dated 27th November 2006 of the Central Board of Finance of the Church of England (‘the Central Board’) appoin ...
- CUA Law Scholarship Repository
... grounds not covered explicitly by the canon for imposing a ban of excommunication on violators of all sorts: If a person could have defended a cleric and did not. The person who ordered attack. People who kicked, poured water, or tore the clothing of clerics. If someone locked a cleric in their home ...
... grounds not covered explicitly by the canon for imposing a ban of excommunication on violators of all sorts: If a person could have defended a cleric and did not. The person who ordered attack. People who kicked, poured water, or tore the clothing of clerics. If someone locked a cleric in their home ...
The Evolution of Latin Canon Law on the Clergy and Armsbearing to
... outset abstained from violence. What had been previously been an important moral option for all Christians was now becoming a legal requirement for the clergy and monks, who from now on were to be among the “real Christians” in the sense that in shunning violence they had made a conscious choice to ...
... outset abstained from violence. What had been previously been an important moral option for all Christians was now becoming a legal requirement for the clergy and monks, who from now on were to be among the “real Christians” in the sense that in shunning violence they had made a conscious choice to ...
The East-West Schism - Loganville High School
... The opinion of the Bishop of Rome was often sought, especially when the patriarchs of the Eastern Mediterranean were locked in dispute. The bishops of Rome never obviously belonged to either the Antiochian or the Alexandrian schools of theology, and usually managed to steer a middle course between w ...
... The opinion of the Bishop of Rome was often sought, especially when the patriarchs of the Eastern Mediterranean were locked in dispute. The bishops of Rome never obviously belonged to either the Antiochian or the Alexandrian schools of theology, and usually managed to steer a middle course between w ...
First Lateran Council 1123 AD
... part. The council began on 18 March 1123, with the pope presiding. There were at least two sessions. The council ended before 6 April, probably on 27 March. This council is often called "general" in the letters and decrees of Pope Callistus II. It is reasonable, however, to doubt its ecumenicity. In ...
... part. The council began on 18 March 1123, with the pope presiding. There were at least two sessions. The council ended before 6 April, probably on 27 March. This council is often called "general" in the letters and decrees of Pope Callistus II. It is reasonable, however, to doubt its ecumenicity. In ...
Cannon Law
... The body of laws and constitutional principles of the Roman Catholic Church constitutes the canon law of that church. While the term “canon law” can encompass the laws of the many regional jurisdictions within the church, it is commonly applied to the universal laws of the church, especially those c ...
... The body of laws and constitutional principles of the Roman Catholic Church constitutes the canon law of that church. While the term “canon law” can encompass the laws of the many regional jurisdictions within the church, it is commonly applied to the universal laws of the church, especially those c ...