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 . lar ipunction^* [Part V. 1 capacity^ within the bcanrj) of Canterbury, it feems, thebean employed a cryer to denounce his fentences ofexcommunication^. But we muft proceed with the buiinefs of the eccle-siastical court of t{)e countr
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 . lar ipunction^* [Part V. 1 capacity^ within the bcanrj) of Canterbury, it feems, thebean employed a cryer to denounce his fentences ofexcommunication^. But we muft proceed with the buiinefs of the eccle-siastical court of t{)e countrg—after this too long digreffionon the extent of the beans judicial power, and thedegree and feverity of puniJJiment he was capacitated toimpofe.—We will firfl: take up the fubject of tithes, andthen that of mortuaries and other dues of the church(above incidentally alluded to), as connected with ourrural court of recovery. , p. 755. () It is particularly forbidden, in the Lambeth Council -^.D. mcclxi, to apparitors and bedels, to denounce fentences of excommunication, interdict, or fu/penfion, *^Jine Jpecialibus Uteris dominorum, fuorum,. Et Ji Jecus prcefumptum fuerit, fententice Jic latce, ipfo facto non teneant, neqiie ferventur, cum in veritate non ligent S. II. C. VL] i^ugin^^^ of l^uval ©j^aptcr^*—^itj^c^, JWortuanc^, $jrc. 69. CHAPTER VI. Recovery of Church-Dues.—Tithes, Mortuaries, &c. S defenders and adjudicators of the ^ churchs coUedanea ec-property m tithes, and mortuaries, when nti- , or fubtracted, tieans rural are earlyacknowledged^ according to Brewfter, inthe councils of Great Britain. But I do not there findany evidence to the point of tfecanal chapter-courts exer-cifing formal jurifdiction in fuch cafes^ though there isno doubt of the fact itfelf. The relation of Ijcans rural to tithe-hnjinefs is traced,with fome degree of doubt, by the compiler of Collec-tanea Ecclejiajiica to the days and canons of Edgar;where the p
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Keywords: ., book, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1840, booksubjectchurchofengland