Horae decanicae rurales; an attempt to illustrate by a series of notes and extracts the name and title, the origin, appointment, and functions, personal and capitular of rural deans, with a few incidental remarks on the rise and decay of rural bishops, and on the incardination of parochial clergy, to which is added, an appendix of documents, ancient and . Pontefracto, J^^. fol. 49. for inquifiiion of title to bene-fices &c. in rural rj^apter^. #lg. ^UD. Paroch. Antiq. Vol. ii. p. 348. S. II. C. IX.] 9l^ugin^00 of Mural ©Japtet^.—^^cneficiarg i^attet^. 95 offenders againft the canons a
Horae decanicae rurales; an attempt to illustrate by a series of notes and extracts the name and title, the origin, appointment, and functions, personal and capitular of rural deans, with a few incidental remarks on the rise and decay of rural bishops, and on the incardination of parochial clergy, to which is added, an appendix of documents, ancient and . Pontefracto, J^^. fol. 49. for inquifiiion of title to bene-fices &c. in rural rj^apter^. #lg. ^UD. Paroch. Antiq. Vol. ii. p. 348. S. II. C. IX.] 9l^ugin^00 of Mural ©Japtet^.—^^cneficiarg i^attet^. 95 offenders againft the canons and conftitutions of thechurch in this refpect. Dr. Kennett fnggefts to Biihop Gardiner of Lincoln [ <m§. ^it^tnta,( MDcxcix.) ^^to have commiffions de jure ]patronatus,\ quuies, &c., executed by the rural bean andy^me ^ajjijtantsy And the Convocational Proceedings under Anne { mdccx.) propofe it ^^as worthy of °*^^pconfideration, whether rural treans ihould not be the firftnominated in all writs of inquiry de jure paironatus &;Kural cj&apters had been long extinct at the dates re-ferred to. They expired at the Reformation. 96 ©apitular iFunction?{, [Part V. See WhartonsDefence of Plu-ralities, pp. 103,feqq. Kennetts Cafeof hn/iropria-tions,^pA8 feqq. CHAPTER X. Valores HE judicial proceffes we have been conlider-ing were not the only ones carried forwardin our rural courts-ecclesiastic, under the au-thority and fanction of the hierarchy. Be-neficiary inquifitions of another kind, and with anotherobject, formed alfo a part of their fubject matter. Thebalorcs of appropriate benefices were there worked out,preparatory to the ordination of vicarages; and thegeneral balorcs of all church property, by which papaland roi/al taxes were affefTed, were there perfected. The reader is of courfe aware, that our parochialchurches were, at firft, rectories, pofTefTed of tithes,glebe, and offerings; and that vicarages, ch
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