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1
Wise as a serpent, gentle as a dove: Bruno of Toul and the Making of Pope Leo IX
Published 2022Subjects:Thesis -
2
Sifat dan peranan raja dan pembesar dalam naskhah Hukum Kanun Pahang
Published 2013Subjects: Get full text
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3
The impact of the Reformation on the building and repair of churches in archdeaconry of the East Riding, 1547-1730
Published 2022Subjects:Thesis -
4
The fusion of the common law and the ecclesiastical law : is it complete?
Published 1972“…The revision of the canon law did not take place but the canon law was similarly limited. …”
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5
Ordination and episcopacy in the Severan-Jacobite church AD 518-c. 588
Published 2016“…In response to this, the church developed an increasingly sophisticated series of compensatory mechanisms; these, though largely successful, nevertheless remained in tension with the territorial expectations underlying existing canon law, and thus were open to contestation. Second, concurrent with these procedural developments, the Severan-Jacobite church produced a discursive response – typified by the works of John of Ephesus –, which sought apologetically to rationalize its own consecratory practices, while delegitimizing and invalidating those adopted by rival anti-Chalcedonian sects.…”
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6
The written and the world in early medieval Iberia
Published 2015“…For the clergy, the Bible, canon law, and monastic rules were the texts which bestowed identity, but as they interacted with the laity, they set the charter in the history of salvation, and modelled textuality to society, as their monasteries became the microcosms of its written framework.…”
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7
The language of kingship under Henry III: civilian, canonical, and dictaminal ideas in practice, c.1230-c.1252
Published 2017“…Within the shared legal and cultural space of ‘Europe’, a number of factors contributed to the development of a language of power both secular and spiritual, including the growth of universities, the study of Roman civil and canon law, the development of <em>dictamen</em> and the increasing prominence of the mobile curial administrative elite. …”
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8
From Romans to Goths and Franks: ethnic identities in sixth- and seventh-century Spain and Gaul
Published 2012“…Chapter two covers ‘Romans’ of the West—the Hispano-Romans—who appear in John of Biclar’s Chronicle, a hagiographical Life, and civil and canon law. Chapter three discusses the use of ‘Goth’ as an ethnic descriptor, a religious identifier, and a political term. …”
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"Non est misericordia vera nisi sit ordinata" : pastoral theology and the practice of English justice, c. 1100 – c. 1250
Published 2014“…During this period English judges (in courts of both common and canon law) were faced with a serious dilemma. The emergence of systematic law had fundamentally altered the pastoral foundations of the act of judgement. …”
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10
Counsel amidst uncertainty: conceptual traditions of consilium and their medieval adaptations, c. 1150 – c. 1270
Published 2023“…</p> <p>Investigating <i>consilium</i> on both sides of the Channel grounds this inquiry in the broader intellectual culture influencing both English and French schools and political courts, while the specified period encompasses important intellectual and societal changes such as the development of canon law and the rise of the universities and mendicant orders. …”
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11
A study of the books owned or used by John Grandisson, Bishop of Exeter (1327-1369)
Published 1994“…</p> <p>Chapter IV discusses briefly the content of Grandisson's glosses and other annotations, which reveals a wide range of interests, not only in theology and canon law, but also in history and natural science. …”
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12
Justifying Christianity in the Islamic middle ages: the apologetic theology of ʿAbdīshōʿ bar Brīkhā (d. 1318)
Published 2015“…Better known by modern scholars for his poetry and canon law, he is far less recognised as a religious controversialist who composed works in Arabic as well as Syriac to answer Muslim criticisms. …”
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13
The historical and antiquarian interests of Thomas Tanner, 1674-1735, Bishop of St. Asaph
Published 1962“…His new appointment obliged him to leave Oxford and set up house in Norwich and his academic undertakings were temporarily laid on one side as he devoted himself to the study of canon law. Even when he had mastered his new duties he was still unable to devote as much time as he would have liked to his studies for his Chancellorship involved him in a law suit, and his only daughter died at an early age and was soon followed by his wife. …”
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