Establishment in England: Being Essays on Church and StateMacmillan, 1932 - 185 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 57
Página 39
... Supremacy Act . The chief purpose of the Act was to exclude foreign jurisdiction and to assert the Supremacy of the Crown in all causes as well ecclesiastical as temporal . The Royal Supremacy was mainly exercised by Visitations ...
... Supremacy Act . The chief purpose of the Act was to exclude foreign jurisdiction and to assert the Supremacy of the Crown in all causes as well ecclesiastical as temporal . The Royal Supremacy was mainly exercised by Visitations ...
Página 79
... Supremacy depends now , and since 1558 has depended , on this statute . The second point is of much greater importance . It is said that the supremacy conceded to the Chris- tian Prince in the sixteenth century was a personal authority ...
... Supremacy depends now , and since 1558 has depended , on this statute . The second point is of much greater importance . It is said that the supremacy conceded to the Chris- tian Prince in the sixteenth century was a personal authority ...
Página 130
... Supremacy was a personal rather than an official authority , and that therefore the constitutional changes , which have so greatly limited the power of the Crown , have ren- dered the Supremacy really incapable of being exer- cised ...
... Supremacy was a personal rather than an official authority , and that therefore the constitutional changes , which have so greatly limited the power of the Crown , have ren- dered the Supremacy really incapable of being exer- cised ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Establishment in England: Being Essays on Church and State Sir Lewis Tonna Dibdin Vista de fragmentos - 1932 |
Establishment in England: Being Essays on Church and State Sir Lewis Tonna Dibdin Vista de fragmentos - 1932 |
Establishment in England: Being Essays on Church and State Sir Lewis Tonna Dibdin Sin vista previa disponible - 1932 |
Términos y frases comunes
according action affect allowed appeal appointed Archbishop Archbishop Tait Assembly authority belong Bishops body called Canon cause century Chapter Christian Church Courts Church of England civil claimed Clergy Commission Committee concerned consent consider constitution Convocation Council Crown deal Delegates discipline doctrine ecclesiastical Courts Edward elected Enabling enacted English established exercised existing fact Final give given Government Head Henry VIII House of Commons important judges Judicial jurisdiction King King's Laity land legislation less Lord marriages matters means Measure ment never Papal Parliament passed persons Pope possible practice Prayer Book present Prince question realm received reference Reformation regard relations of Church religious Report represent result Rome Royal Supremacy rule seems sixteenth sometimes Sovereign spiritual spiritual jurisdiction statute Stubbs Supremacy taken things tion true whole