Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Dedication
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- Notes to the reader
- Introduction: canon law and the Anglican church
- 1 Texts with commentary
- 2 Supplementary texts
- 3 Appendixes
- 1 Chapter headings of the legatine constitutions of Otho (1237) and Othobon (1268)
- 2 Chapter headings of William Lyndwood's Provinciale (1433) with sources
- 3 Chapter headings of the Reformatio legum ecclesiasticarum (Reformation of the ecclesiastical laws), 1552 (1570)
- 4 A table of kindred and affinity, 1563
- 5 The canons of 1603 (1604) and the Irish canons of 1634 and 1871
- 6 The canons of 1603 (1604), the deposited canons of 1874, the proposed canons of 1947 and the revised canons of 1964-9
- 7 The revised canons of 1964-9, the proposed canons of 1947, the deposited canons of 1874 and the canons of 1603 (1604)
- 8 The principal ecclesiastical courts
- 9 The deans of the arches since 1487
- 10 The chancellors of York diocese since 1540
- 4 Indexes of references
- 5 Thematic indexes
- 6 Bibliography
- Miscellaneous Endmatter
8 - The principal ecclesiastical courts
from 3 - Appendixes
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 August 2018
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Dedication
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- Notes to the reader
- Introduction: canon law and the Anglican church
- 1 Texts with commentary
- 2 Supplementary texts
- 3 Appendixes
- 1 Chapter headings of the legatine constitutions of Otho (1237) and Othobon (1268)
- 2 Chapter headings of William Lyndwood's Provinciale (1433) with sources
- 3 Chapter headings of the Reformatio legum ecclesiasticarum (Reformation of the ecclesiastical laws), 1552 (1570)
- 4 A table of kindred and affinity, 1563
- 5 The canons of 1603 (1604) and the Irish canons of 1634 and 1871
- 6 The canons of 1603 (1604), the deposited canons of 1874, the proposed canons of 1947 and the revised canons of 1964-9
- 7 The revised canons of 1964-9, the proposed canons of 1947, the deposited canons of 1874 and the canons of 1603 (1604)
- 8 The principal ecclesiastical courts
- 9 The deans of the arches since 1487
- 10 The chancellors of York diocese since 1540
- 4 Indexes of references
- 5 Thematic indexes
- 6 Bibliography
- Miscellaneous Endmatter
Summary
The following list is a guide to the principal ecclesiastical courts. The dates given are those during which they exercised ecclesiastical jurisdiction in England and/or Ireland, however theoretically in some cases. Courts said to have been established in 1072 are those which trace their origins to the ordinance of William I, traditionally said to have been given in that year, though in fact the courts concerned were probably not functioning on a regular basis for a century or more after that. For a fuller treatment, see the relevant section in the introduction.
Higher courts
Audience courts (from early times to 1 March 1965). Each archbishop possessed his own audience court, over which he presided in person. These courts were active until 1640, but they seem to have died out after that, although there is some evidence that the one in York may have been functioning into the eighteenth century. They were formally abolished on 1 March 1965.
Convocation (c. 1250 - 1 March 1965). Apparently designated for dealing with proven cases of heresy sent to the archbishop by a bishop of the province, but it is questionable whether it was ever used in this way. Any rights the convocations may have had to hear such cases lapsed in 1965.
Court of ecclesiastical causes reserved (since 1 March 1965). Established to hear all cases involving doctrine or ritual matters, on which it is now the final court of appeal.
Court of peculiars (from early times to 11 January 1858). This court was established to deal with the thirteen London parishes which belonged to the jurisdiction of the archbishop of Canterbury. From c. 1280 until 1666 it met in the church of St Mary-le-Bow, under the presidency of its dean, who was known as the dean of the arches (from the name of the church). From the early sixteenth century it was effectively merged with the provincial appeals court, which came to be known by the title of its lesser component.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Anglican Canons, 1529–1947 , pp. 906 - 910Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 1998