In 1536 Wales (Cymru) and England were formally united by an Act of Union of the English Parliament. At the English Reformation, the established Church of England possessed four dioceses in Wales, part of the Canterbury Province. In 1920 Parliament disestablished the Church of England in Wales. The Welsh Church Act 1914 terminated the royal supremacy and appointment of bishops, the coercive jurisdiction of the church courts, and pre-1920 ecclesiastical law, applicable to the Church of England, ceased to exist as part of public law in Wales. The statute freed the Church in Wales (Yr Eglwys yng Nghymru) to establish its own domestic system of government and law, the latter located in its Constitution, pre-1920 ecclesiastical law (which still ...
This article compares and contrasts the 1580 texts A briefe discours contayning certayne reasons why...
This Cardiff University study of religious courts and tribunals across the UK has been funded by the...
This paper deals, in an introductory way, with the role which the canon law of individual Anglican c...
In 1536 Wales (Cymru) and England were formally united by an Act of Union of the English Parliament....
Like other major social institutions, the Church in Wales is regulated by a complicated body of rule...
In the 1530s, the Church of England was separated from Roman Catholic Christendom by religious legis...
Religion meant far more in early modern England than church on Sundays, a baptism, a funeral or a we...
In 1919, a parliamentary act reconstructed the relations between the British state and the Church of...
The Introduction defines 'Welsh Clergy' for the purposes of this study, i. e. those in the dioceses ...
Religion meant far more in early modern England than church on Sundays, a baptism, a funeral or a we...
In 1920 that part of the Church of England located in Wales was disestablished and became an autonom...
This journal has published two distinguished series on the lives and careers of individual jurists i...
As from the date of disestablishment ecclesiastical courts and persons in Wales and Monmouthshire sh...
In a year when the Church in Wales is commemorating the centenary of Dises...
Chapters 1 and 2 deal with the relationship between the Church in Wales and its clergy; the way in...
This article compares and contrasts the 1580 texts A briefe discours contayning certayne reasons why...
This Cardiff University study of religious courts and tribunals across the UK has been funded by the...
This paper deals, in an introductory way, with the role which the canon law of individual Anglican c...
In 1536 Wales (Cymru) and England were formally united by an Act of Union of the English Parliament....
Like other major social institutions, the Church in Wales is regulated by a complicated body of rule...
In the 1530s, the Church of England was separated from Roman Catholic Christendom by religious legis...
Religion meant far more in early modern England than church on Sundays, a baptism, a funeral or a we...
In 1919, a parliamentary act reconstructed the relations between the British state and the Church of...
The Introduction defines 'Welsh Clergy' for the purposes of this study, i. e. those in the dioceses ...
Religion meant far more in early modern England than church on Sundays, a baptism, a funeral or a we...
In 1920 that part of the Church of England located in Wales was disestablished and became an autonom...
This journal has published two distinguished series on the lives and careers of individual jurists i...
As from the date of disestablishment ecclesiastical courts and persons in Wales and Monmouthshire sh...
In a year when the Church in Wales is commemorating the centenary of Dises...
Chapters 1 and 2 deal with the relationship between the Church in Wales and its clergy; the way in...
This article compares and contrasts the 1580 texts A briefe discours contayning certayne reasons why...
This Cardiff University study of religious courts and tribunals across the UK has been funded by the...
This paper deals, in an introductory way, with the role which the canon law of individual Anglican c...