Traces the concept of libertas ecclesiae and libertas ecclesiastica from the early Church to the 17th century. The focus of the essay is how the Fifth Lateran Council from 1512-1517 used the concept of ecclesiastical liberty to defend and establish the freedom of prelates and clergy from lay power and lay violence
This thesis explores the growing secularization in English government policies between the years 157...
The article provides a brief overview of the history of concordats, and explores the teaching of Vat...
The sixteenth-century Protestant Reformation revolutionized not only theology and the church, but al...
Traces the concept of libertas ecclesiae and libertas ecclesiastica from the early Church to the...
International audienceThe concept of libertas ecclesiae, which was at the heart of the Gregorian ref...
There is an ongoing debate about whether the U.S. Constitution includes -- or should be interpreted ...
Protestants almost never called their ecclesiastical norms ‘canons.’ When Protestant jurists or the...
The Lutheran Reformation revolutionized both church and state, theology and law. This brief essay sk...
This article will examine the role the first four ecumenical councils played in the controversial en...
This article was presented at a conference, and is part of a symposium, on The Freedom of the Churc...
The notion of Christian liberty is essential for the understanding of the Reformed concept of the la...
This article investigates the early medieval secular through the lens of clerical immunity – that is...
This dissertation examines how lawyers wrote about the Church as a legal and political actor intheir...
A long-term and significant effect of the English Reformation of the 1530s has been the marginalisat...
This paper argues that questions about religious freedom must be subordinated to the fundamental p...
This thesis explores the growing secularization in English government policies between the years 157...
The article provides a brief overview of the history of concordats, and explores the teaching of Vat...
The sixteenth-century Protestant Reformation revolutionized not only theology and the church, but al...
Traces the concept of libertas ecclesiae and libertas ecclesiastica from the early Church to the...
International audienceThe concept of libertas ecclesiae, which was at the heart of the Gregorian ref...
There is an ongoing debate about whether the U.S. Constitution includes -- or should be interpreted ...
Protestants almost never called their ecclesiastical norms ‘canons.’ When Protestant jurists or the...
The Lutheran Reformation revolutionized both church and state, theology and law. This brief essay sk...
This article will examine the role the first four ecumenical councils played in the controversial en...
This article was presented at a conference, and is part of a symposium, on The Freedom of the Churc...
The notion of Christian liberty is essential for the understanding of the Reformed concept of the la...
This article investigates the early medieval secular through the lens of clerical immunity – that is...
This dissertation examines how lawyers wrote about the Church as a legal and political actor intheir...
A long-term and significant effect of the English Reformation of the 1530s has been the marginalisat...
This paper argues that questions about religious freedom must be subordinated to the fundamental p...
This thesis explores the growing secularization in English government policies between the years 157...
The article provides a brief overview of the history of concordats, and explores the teaching of Vat...
The sixteenth-century Protestant Reformation revolutionized not only theology and the church, but al...