An history of the original parish of Whalley, and honor of Clitheroe : in the counties of Lancaster and York, to which is subjoined, an account of the parish of Cartmell . t their owne proper costs andcharges, to allow and paye manie of their ministers wages serving at ye chapells in ye saidepshes. With respect to the operation of the Statute 1st George I. on the rights of MotherChurches over the augmented Chapels which are declared benefices, and those of whichthe patronage is alienated, the following clause will prove that they remain what they were:— That no rector or vicar of the Mother Ch


An history of the original parish of Whalley, and honor of Clitheroe : in the counties of Lancaster and York, to which is subjoined, an account of the parish of Cartmell . t their owne proper costs andcharges, to allow and paye manie of their ministers wages serving at ye chapells in ye saidepshes. With respect to the operation of the Statute 1st George I. on the rights of MotherChurches over the augmented Chapels which are declared benefices, and those of whichthe patronage is alienated, the following clause will prove that they remain what they were:— That no rector or vicar of the Mother Church, having cure of souls within the parish or place where such augmented church or chapel shall be situate, shall thereby be divested or dis- charged from the same : but the cure of souls, with all other parochial rights and duties, shall hereafter remain in the same state, plight, and manner, as before the making of this act, and as if this act had not been made.— 1 Geo. I. ex. «^ 4. So groundless is the doubt of Dr. Burn, whether, in such augmented cures, the duty ofcanonical obedience, heretofore owing by the curate to the rector or vicar, does not iQorqiii CHAPTER Book III.—Chap. I.] HISTORY OK VVHALLliY. I6i BOOK III. CHAPTER I, ORIGIN, PROGRESS, AND RAMIFICATIONS OF PROPERTY. In that obscure period which intervened between the final retreat of the Romans, and theorigin of the Northumbrian kingdom, this wild and remote tract appears to have been oncemore reduced almost to a state of nature; for, though not absolutely depopulated, it must havebeen thinly sprinkled and feebly occupied by the poor depressed remnant of its aboriginal inha-bitants. Accordingly, no vestiges of their language can be traced but in the names of gres^natural objects, which belong to a much earlier period, no remains of their works*, and nomemorials of their habitations. The Saxons, therefore, are to be considered with respect to this portion of Britain, almostin the light of prime o


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1810, bookidhistoryofori, bookyear1818