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- Title
Church, state and law: solutions to lay contumacy in the Anglo-Scottish borders during the later thirteenth century.
- Authors
Hoskin, Philippa M.
- Abstract
This article considers jurisdictional conflict between church and state in the thirteenth century through the case of Roger, rector of Whitfield, a cleric abducted from his Tynedale cure. Considering this incident and Roger's attempts to gain redress it examines the jurisdictional tensions within the liberty of Tynedale, the resultant failure of the process of signification of excommunication and the use of the private petition. A close examination of the diplomatic of this early petition demonstrates both that it was drawn up under the influence of ecclesiastical administration and that this administration made tacit acknowledgement of the importance of royal grace in the exercise of secular authority to enforce ecclesiastical law. The petition is included as an appendix.
- Subjects
UNITED Kingdom; CHURCH &; state; GEOGRAPHIC boundaries; ECCLESIASTICAL law; BRITISH church history, 1066-1485; CHURCH discipline; EXCOMMUNICATION (Catholic Church); EXCOMMUNICATION (Church discipline); CONTUMACY
- Publication
Historical Research, 2011, Vol 84, Issue 226, p559
- ISSN
0950-3471
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/j.1468-2281.2011.00575.x