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Roman Canon Law in the Church of England

Six Essays
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ISBN-13:
9780259650225
Veröffentl:
2017
Seiten:
0
Autor:
Frederic William Maitland
eBook Typ:
PDF
Kopierschutz:
NO DRM
Sprache:
Englisch
Beschreibung:

Whilst the greatest effort has been made to ensure the quality of this text, due to the historical nature of this content, in some rare cases there may be minor issues with legibility. When, in co-operation with Sir Frederick Pollock, I was at work upon certain chapters in a History of English Law, and, in particular, a chapter on marriage, I found that, on pain of leaving the book shamefully incomplete, I was compelled to make an incursion into a region that was unfamiliar to me, namely, that of ecclesiastical jurisprudence. After some study, which must not be called prolonged or profound, but none the less was unprejudiced, I discovered that I was slowly coming to results which, though they have not wanted for advocates, have not been generally accepted in this country by those whose opinions are the weightiest, and have recently been rejected by the report of a Royal Commission signed by twenty-three illustrious names. To be brief, I found myself attributing to the Roman Canon Law an authority over the doings of the English Ecclesiastical Courts such as it is not commonly supposed to have wielded. In the first three of the following essays (the other three deal with some minor but cognate matters) I endeavoured to state the reasons that had convinced me.
When, in co-operation with Sir Frederick Pollock, I was at work upon certain chapters in a History of English Law, and, in particular, a chapter on marriage, I found that, on pain of leaving the book shamefully incomplete, I was compelled to make an incursion into a region that was unfamiliar to me, namely, that of ecclesiastical jurisprudence. After some study, which must not be called prolonged or profound, but none the less was unprejudiced, I discovered that I was slowly coming to results which, though they have not wanted for advocates, have not been generally accepted in this country by those whose opinions are the weightiest, and have recently been rejected by the report of a Royal Commission signed by twenty-three illustrious names. To be brief, I found myself attributing to the Roman Canon Law an authority over the doings of the English Ecclesiastical Courts such as it is not commonly supposed to have wielded. In the first three of the following essays (the other three deal with some minor but cognate matters) I endeavoured to state the reasons that had convinced me.

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