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 . 78 ©apitular iFunctiong, [Part V. I employed in their capitular meetings, under the generalProvinciai.] ] title of oxtiinnxii—^^ Ad folutionem autem dehitl de jure\vel confuetudine mortuarii renuentes volumus per loco
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 . 78 ©apitular iFunctiong, [Part V. I employed in their capitular meetings, under the generalProvinciai.] ] title of oxtiinnxii—^^ Ad folutionem autem dehitl de jure\vel confuetudine mortuarii renuentes volumus per loco rumj orlJinarios {qui prcefunt jurifdictioni ordinaricBy et poffitnt\ uti cenfurd ecclejiafticd Lynd. Prov.) cenfurd ecclejiajiicd(^per fufpenjionem, excommunicationem, et interdictum ) coarctarV Gibfons CodexI. E. A. Vol. 709. By a ftatute of Hen. VITI. 21. cap. 6. mortuaries are confounded withI corfe-prefents;—which feems to be Lyndwoods interpretation ; viz. thatthey were carried to the church with the dead corpfe. But, on theauthority of Sir W. Dugdale {TFarwick. p. 470.), and Bifliop Sdllingfleet(Ecclef. Cafes^ P. i. p. 248.), corfe-prefents, in Gibfons opinion, wereproperly the voluntary oblations ufually made at funerals. S. TI. C. VI.] i^u^ine^^ of l^utal eCj^aptm,—E^jStamentatg 0iatUx^, 79 CHAPTER VII. Testamentary Wil^^% timm, in their tftaptn or court ofCjiriStianitg, had at firft not only the probate of wills, fays Kennett, and the decifion ofall tejiamentary caufes^, but, as orbinartcs ofthe place, they had cognifance of all other mattersappendant thereto; as the confirmation of executors, thedejtgnation of adminiftrators, the receipt of inventories,the dfpojition of legacies, the dijirihution of intejlatesgoods, Slc, until the archdeacons broke in upon thisprivilege, and affumed it to themfelves:—for which cites an injunction of the archdeacon to all ruraltrtans of the diocefe of Canterbury, in thefe words:—iSecanis
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Keywords: ., book, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1840, booksubjectchurchofengland