The article deals with two documents of canon law from the beginning of XVIth century: annotated synopsis of the Statutes of London St. Paul Cathedral (1506) and the addition to the Statutes regarding canons regular (1518) composed by John Colet, the Dean. On the basis of comparative analysis of these texts and after comparing the texts with the Statutes of other English church hierarchs the authors concluded that the Catholic Church in England tried to implement clerical reforms for the spiritual and moral renewal of the clergy long before the Reformation
This paper was originally delivered, at the invitation of the Archbishop of Canterbury, at the Meeti...
John Colet, dean of St. Paul\u27s Cathedral in London, died in 1519. Two years later Henry VIII wrot...
This chapter explores Maitland’s essays collected as ‘Roman Canon Law in the Church of England’. It ...
During the times of the Reformation in England the teaching of canon law was officially prohibited. ...
In 1529, Parliament passed the first in a series of statutes denouncing pa-pal authority as a usurpa...
By the twelfth century canon and civil law formed part of an international legal system and culture ...
Chapter I pages 1- 24 Consequent upon the separation of the temporal and ecclesiastical courts by th...
Includes index.Facsimile. Originally published: Oxford : Clarendon Press 1761. 2d ed., rev. and impr...
Contains reproductions of the origenal t.p.'s : A collection of all the ecclesiastical laws, canons,...
This is the first of two volumes which reproduce manuscript and printed documents for the years 1603...
There is no recognized corpus of binding law globally applicable to all Churches in the Anglican Com...
The authors analyze the historical account that was little-known to the national historical and peda...
The article entitled Law action for the right of patronage of the Lvov Cathedral in the years 1761-1...
This study examines the marriage canons contained in the present canonical legislation of the Church...
The original work was compiled under the direction of Archbishop Cranmer, assisted chiefly by Walter...
This paper was originally delivered, at the invitation of the Archbishop of Canterbury, at the Meeti...
John Colet, dean of St. Paul\u27s Cathedral in London, died in 1519. Two years later Henry VIII wrot...
This chapter explores Maitland’s essays collected as ‘Roman Canon Law in the Church of England’. It ...
During the times of the Reformation in England the teaching of canon law was officially prohibited. ...
In 1529, Parliament passed the first in a series of statutes denouncing pa-pal authority as a usurpa...
By the twelfth century canon and civil law formed part of an international legal system and culture ...
Chapter I pages 1- 24 Consequent upon the separation of the temporal and ecclesiastical courts by th...
Includes index.Facsimile. Originally published: Oxford : Clarendon Press 1761. 2d ed., rev. and impr...
Contains reproductions of the origenal t.p.'s : A collection of all the ecclesiastical laws, canons,...
This is the first of two volumes which reproduce manuscript and printed documents for the years 1603...
There is no recognized corpus of binding law globally applicable to all Churches in the Anglican Com...
The authors analyze the historical account that was little-known to the national historical and peda...
The article entitled Law action for the right of patronage of the Lvov Cathedral in the years 1761-1...
This study examines the marriage canons contained in the present canonical legislation of the Church...
The original work was compiled under the direction of Archbishop Cranmer, assisted chiefly by Walter...
This paper was originally delivered, at the invitation of the Archbishop of Canterbury, at the Meeti...
John Colet, dean of St. Paul\u27s Cathedral in London, died in 1519. Two years later Henry VIII wrot...
This chapter explores Maitland’s essays collected as ‘Roman Canon Law in the Church of England’. It ...