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On Using the English Reports as a Source for Ecclesiastical Law: A Cautionary Tale

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 July 2008

Michael Smith
Affiliation:
Vicar of St. David's Exeter
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‘One swallow docs not a summer make’ – so goes the old adage – and the object of this note is not to assert that reported cases are unreliable evidence. Its aim is to suggest that research must still extend beyond the printed evidence even for that period in history when collections of reported cases start to become freely available.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Ecclesiastical Law Society 1988

References

1. SirPhillimore, Robert, Ecclesiastical Law of the Chinch of England. 2nd edn., (London, 1985), p. 1620.Google Scholar

2. De Montmorency, J.F.G., Stale lntervention in English Educatio (Cambridge, 1902). pp. 172175.Google Scholar

3. Curtis, S.J., History of Education (London, 1968). pp. 730731.Google Scholar

4. Devon Record Office. C.C. Act Book 757; Trelawny to Francis Cooke Jr.. 27th December 1700: C.C.. Act Book 828: 1 Subscription Books.