This article argues that the church's strenuous efforts to publicize Magna Carta can only be fully understood when viewed in the context of canon law and pastoral care. The automatic sentence of excommunication that fell on anyone who infringed Magna Carta meant that every Christian in medieval England needed to know not just the general principles of the charter, but the contents of every clause. Clergymen had a duty to ensure that their parishioners did not unwittingly incur the sanction, thereby endangering their souls. Thus the threat of excommunication had a profound effect on the political awareness of English society, as a result of the church's obligation to look out for the spiritual welfare of its members
The English Magna Carta (1215) has long stood as a symbol of human liberty and the rule of law. This...
This thesis focuses on the use of maledictory sanction clauses to protect charters, whether written ...
English law has long held the principle that religions should be free from interference by the state...
This article argues that the church's strenuous efforts to publicize Magna Carta can only be fully u...
Though the role of the Church in the creation of Magna Carta remains disputed, it is clear that it w...
Excommunication was the medieval churchs most severe sanction, used against people at all levels of ...
Recent studies suggest that Magna Carta could have been published mainly by the Church, which had a ...
Excommunication, the medieval church’s severest penalty, played a significant role in thirteenth-ce...
Even after, eight centuries, this provision of Magna Carta is one of the few that remains in effect....
This Article explores the surprising use of medieval Catholic canon law in the new Protestant civil ...
This paper considers how the English episcopate's complaints (gravamina) of 1253 demonstrate one vie...
This article identifies the liberties of the Church and the City of London which were intended to be...
This article explores how secular and Canon Law on exorcism have evolved in tandem in England, each ...
The English Magna Carta (1215) has long stood as a symbol of human liberty and the rule of law. This...
In 1258, the English barons famously issued the Provisions of Oxford: their protests against King He...
The English Magna Carta (1215) has long stood as a symbol of human liberty and the rule of law. This...
This thesis focuses on the use of maledictory sanction clauses to protect charters, whether written ...
English law has long held the principle that religions should be free from interference by the state...
This article argues that the church's strenuous efforts to publicize Magna Carta can only be fully u...
Though the role of the Church in the creation of Magna Carta remains disputed, it is clear that it w...
Excommunication was the medieval churchs most severe sanction, used against people at all levels of ...
Recent studies suggest that Magna Carta could have been published mainly by the Church, which had a ...
Excommunication, the medieval church’s severest penalty, played a significant role in thirteenth-ce...
Even after, eight centuries, this provision of Magna Carta is one of the few that remains in effect....
This Article explores the surprising use of medieval Catholic canon law in the new Protestant civil ...
This paper considers how the English episcopate's complaints (gravamina) of 1253 demonstrate one vie...
This article identifies the liberties of the Church and the City of London which were intended to be...
This article explores how secular and Canon Law on exorcism have evolved in tandem in England, each ...
The English Magna Carta (1215) has long stood as a symbol of human liberty and the rule of law. This...
In 1258, the English barons famously issued the Provisions of Oxford: their protests against King He...
The English Magna Carta (1215) has long stood as a symbol of human liberty and the rule of law. This...
This thesis focuses on the use of maledictory sanction clauses to protect charters, whether written ...
English law has long held the principle that religions should be free from interference by the state...