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Topic: Praemunire


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In the News (Thu 17 Dec 09)

  
  Praemunire - LoveToKnow 1911
The Statute of Provisors 1306, passed in the reign of Edward I., was, according to Coke, the foundation of all subsequent statutes of praemunire.
This statute, says Stubbs, was one of the strongest defensive measures taken during the middle ages against Rome and was called for by the conduct of the pope, who had forbidden the bishops to execute the sentences of the royal courts in suits connected with ecclesiastical patronage.
The last ancient statute concerning praemunire, until the Reformation, was an extension in the reign of Henry IV.
www.1911encyclopedia.org /Praemunire   (864 words)

  
 Praemunire
Praemunire (an error, from Latin præmonere, to pre-admonish or forewarn), was an offence in English law that took its name from the introductory words of the writ of summons issued to the defendant to answer the charge, "Præmunire facias A.B.," &c., i.e.
The statute of Richard II, Purchasing bulls from Rome (1392), is usually designated the Statute of Praemunire, but it is only one of numerous stringent measures (some still unrepealed, and, as a body, of the most confused character) passed for the purpose of putting restraint on the papal usurpation of authority in England.
of Edward I, was, according to Sir Edward Coke, the foundation of all subsequent statutes of praemunire.
www.ebroadcast.com.au /lookup/encyclopedia/pr/Praemunire.html   (352 words)

  
 Praemunire - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Praemunire (an error, from Latin præmonere, to pre-admonish or forewarn), was an offence in English law that took its name from the introductory words of the writ of summons issued to the defendant to answer the charge, "Præmunire facias A.B.," andc., i.e.
Praemunire also has present significance in connection with praedicatums that derive in Scotland and England, in which it can be described as anger against the communion of that which has gone before.
The Statute of Provisors (1306), passed in the reign of Edward I, was, according to Sir Edward Coke, the foundation of all subsequent statutes of praemunire.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Praemunire   (431 words)

  
 Toby Terrar, “Catholic Mission History and the 500th Anniversary of Christopher Columbus's Arrival: A Time for ...
The same purpose had been served prior to praemunire by common law writs of prohibition, of quare impedit, of quare non admisit, of quare non-permittit, and by the long-established right, reaffirmed by an ordinance in 1343, of forbidding the introduction into England of papal bulls prejudicial to the church.
Praemunire and anti-mortmain legislation, as in the French Constitution of the Clergy of 1790, the Cisalpine Constitution of 1797, and the Polish Constitution of 1791 were typical.
Praemunire and anti-mortmain policies are currently part of the theology of liberation that puts mission on the side of national liberation and working class parties.
www.angelfire.com /un/tob-art/art-html/p8-19b.html   (5645 words)

  
 [No title]
PRAEMUNIRE (praemonere de Lat., pour pré-avertir ou avant-avertir), dans la loi anglaise une offense prétendue des mots d'introduction du mandat de la sommation publié au défendeur pour répondre à la charge, "fasces A.b.
Le statut de Praemunire (le premier statut prétendu) 1353, cependant expressément nivelé aux pré-tensions du curia romain, exclut la référence directe à lui dans des mots réels.
La gamme et la description des offenses sujet aux pénalités du praemunire ont été considérablement élargies après la réforme, de sorte que les actes d'un caractère très divers aient eu lieu de temps en temps apporté dans la portée des règlements passés pour un but très différent.
encyclopedia.jrank.org /correction/edit?locale=fr&content_id=99162   (841 words)

  
 Blackstone's Commentaries - Book the Fourth - Chapter the Eighth : Of Praemunire
IN the weak reign of Edward the fecond the pope again endeavoured to encroach, but the parliament manfully withftood him; and it was one of the principal articles charged againft that unhappy prince, that he had given allowance to the bulles of the fee of Rome.
IN the writ for the execution of all thefe ftatutes the words praemunire facias, being (as was faid) ufed to command a citation of the party, have denominated in common fpeech, not only the writ, but the offence itfelf of maintaining the papal power, by the name of praemunire.
to moleft the poffeffions of abbey lands granted by parliament to Henry the eighth, and Edward the fixth, is a praemunire.
www.yale.edu /lawweb/avalon/blackstone/bk4ch8.htm   (2974 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-06)
Praemunire legislation prevents Roman interference in the local churches and preserves the fraternal, not paternal, relation that is part of the religious freedom ideal that has always existed to a greater or lesser degree.
Liberation theology often looks with favor on praemunire and anti- mortmain, and teaches that freedom of religion means freedom for mission to do social justice, not freedom for mission to serve neo- colonialism.
Praemunire and anti- mortmain policies are currently part of the theology of liberation that puts mission on the side of national liberation and working class parties.
muweb.millersville.edu /~columbus/data/his/TERRAR01.HIS   (4438 words)

  
 Penal Laws
These penalties of Praemunire were: exclusion from the sovereign's protection, forfeiture of all lands and goods, arrest to answer to the Sovereign and Council.
The penalties of Praemunire were enacted against all who brought into England or who gave to others Agnus Dei or articles blessed by the pope or by any one through faculties from him.
The penalties of Praemunire were imposed on all who sent assistance to the seminaries abroad, and a fine of 100 pounds for each offence on those who sent their children overseas without the royal licence.
www.catholicity.com /encyclopedia/l/laws,penal.html   (6001 words)

  
 PRAEMUNIRE (Lat. praem... - Online Information article about PRAEMUNIRE (Lat. praem...
action of the popes was imposed by the Statute of Provisors (1350-1351) and the Statute of Praemunire passed in the reign of Edward III.
gunpowder was a praemunire; in the reign of Charles II.
A peer charged with praemunire is not entitled to trial by his peers, but is to be tried by a See also:
encyclopedia.jrank.org /POL_PRE/PRAEMUNIRE_Lat_praemonere_to_pr.html   (1598 words)

  
 8. Henry VIII (IV) 1529-33--The Breach With Rome Page 4   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-06)
In December of 1530, however, the Church was to receive a rough reminder that the Defender of the Faith was a stickler for the rigidity of the statutes.
The clergy were informed that they lay one and all under the royal displeasure for breach of praemunire (of which they had in fact been technically guilty), and could only hope for pardon by purchasing it for something over £100,000--practically equivalent to about a couple of millions now.
Convocation, alive to the futility of resistance, apologised for its iniquity and admitted the justice of the punishment.
www.web-books.com /Classics/Nonfiction/History/Tudors/TudorsC9P4.htm   (847 words)

  
 praemunire - definition by dict.die.net
(c) The penalty ascribed for the offense of pr[ae]munire.
Wolsey incurred a pr[ae]munire, and forfeited his honor, estate, and life.
Note: The penalties of pr[ae]munire were subsequently applied to many other offenses; but prosecutions upon a pr[ae]munire are at this day unheard of in the English courts.
dict.die.net /praemunire   (75 words)

  
 1616 and praemunire and 1353 and 1402 and 1403 and coke and appeal to rome
1616 and praemunire and 1353 and 1402 and 1403 and coke and appeal to rome
And, in an ejectione firmae, of the manor of D, B complains in the Chancery to be relieved against those judgments according to conscience and equity, allowing the judgments to be lawful and good by the rigor and strict rules of the common laws....
The Statute (the first word of it was "praemoneo"--to warn against, and was corrupted to "praemunire") was designed to prohibit Englishmen from appealing their convictions to "the courts of another" after judgment had been rendered in the King's court.
www.drbilllong.com /LegalHistory/16164.html   (875 words)

  
 Primary Sources: The fall of Cardinal Thomas Wolsey, 1530
On 9 October 1529, he was indicted for praemunire; he later confessed his guilt.
You have heard under the last year how the cardinal of York [Wolsey] was attainted in praemunire, and despite that the king had given him the bishoprics of York and Winchester, with great possessions, and had licensed him to live in his diocese of York.
The cardinal would also speak fair to the people to win their hearts, and always declared that he was unjustly and untruly commanded, which fair speaking made many men believe that he spoke the truth.
englishhistory.net /tudor/priwols1.html   (883 words)

  
 PRAEMUNIRE   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-06)
The penalty ascribed for the offense of praemunire.
Praemunire A barbarous word from the Latin præmoneri (to be forewarned).
"PRAEMUNIRE" is used about 5 times out of a sample of 100 million words spoken or written in English.
www.websters-online-dictionary.org /Pr/Praemunire.html   (783 words)

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Penal Laws
This statute, under which most of the English martyrs suffered, made it high treason for any Jesuit or any seminary priest to be in England at all, and felony for any one to harbour or relieve them.
But the main point of this Act was the new Oath of Allegiance which it prescribed, and which was subsequently condemned by the Holy See.
Finally, every householder of whatever religion was liable to a fine of 10 pounds a month for each guest or servant who failed to attend the Anglican church.
www.newadvent.org /cathen/11611c.htm   (6019 words)

  
 High Treason: Laws Against Establishing a Foreign Power in England
Their goods and land would be forfeited and they would be made to answer to the King and his council and a process of Praemunire Facias made against them.
‘Praemunire doth fortify Jurisdictionem Jurium Coronae Suae of the Kingly laws of the Crown against foreign jurisdiction and against the usurpers upon them as by divers acts of parliament appears....
Contrary to the Statutes of Praemunire traitors we elect to parliament have allowed the Jews to establish an Imperium in Imperio, the 'Board of Jewish Deputies,' which have gained to themselves powers to influence the policies of British governments to their own universal advantage.
www.heretical.com /mkilliam/treason.html   (3280 words)

  
 Amazon.com: "Statute of Praemunire": Key Phrase page   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-06)
How to react to the Statute of Praemunire was discussed at length in hopes-vain hopes it must be said-of hitting upon a way to combat this restrictive piece...
This again was criticised and slightly limited by the Statute of Praemunire in 1353, but generally accepted.
In 1351 this practice was forbidden by the first Statute of Provisors, and this was supplemented in 1353 by the Statute of Praemunire, forbidding appeals to Rome, and especially designed to prevent appeals to Avignon on the part of aliens who had been...
www.amazon.com /phrase/Statute-of-Praemunire   (573 words)

  
 Untitled Document
If such offenders are under the degree of peer, they shall for a first offence forfeit thirty pounds and suffer imprisonment for one year, and until they pay the penalty, and for a second offense, incur the penalties of a person attainted in a praemunire.
*Praemunire: "that from the conviction, the defendant shall be out of the king's protection, and his lands and tenements, goods and chattels, forfeited to the king, and that his body shall remain in prison at the king's pleasure.....
Such delinquent can bring no action for any private injury, how atrocious soever, being so far out of the protection of the law, that it will not guard his civil rights, nor remedy any grievance which he as an individual may suffer.
www.law.umn.edu /irishlaw/weapons.html   (1639 words)

  
 Amazon.com: "praemunire charges": Key Phrase page   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-06)
The assault on the Church began when PRAEMUNIRE charges were brought against THOMAS WOLSEY, later leading clerics, and finally in 1531 the whole clergy.
45 Later in the summer, praemunire charges were brought against two more individuals, one of whom was Anthony Husye, a layman.
John Ernley, Hobart's successor as attorney, began praemunire actions against ecclesiastical judges who had heard debt cases,...
www.amazon.com /phrase/praemunire-charges   (424 words)

  
 Carpenter Family of Pennsylvania
The opinion that he voluntarily repaired to Barbados is fortified by the circumstance of his possessing ample wealth; for had he been proscribed (as in the case of Charles Lloyd and others) his property, most likely, would have been placed under praemunire.
Praemunire: Introducing or acknowledging a higher power in the land, and creating imperium in imperio, by paying that obedience to Papal authority which belonged to the Ring.
It was charged that Friends acknowledged allegiance to spiritual convictions, rather than kingly authority.
www.surnameguide.com /carpenter/carpenter_family_of_pennsylvania.htm   (1747 words)

  
 English Reformation - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Praemunire, which forbade obedience to the authority of foreign rulers had been around since the 1392 Statute of Praemunire, but in this case one of the reasons for the use of the statute was that among those charged were some prominent supporters of Catherine of Aragon, obeying Cardinal Wolsey's legatine authority.
that the King pardoned the clergy for violating the statute of praemunire, and
The Act also ordered that if cathedrals refused the King's nomination for bishop, they would be liable to punishment by praemunire.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/English_Reformation   (4342 words)

  
 The Case against Committal Proceedings against Sheppard
Writs were sent out to the sheriffs of the English shires informing them that by royal edict all Jews were to leave the English realm before November 1st 1290, any who remained were to be executed.
Various Jews made begging petitions to Oliver Cromwell to get him to revoke the Edict of Expulsion; but Cromwell, being only a commoner, could not revoke a royal edict and knew this.
Contrary to the Statutes of Praemunire traitors who have won election to parliament have allowed the Jews to establish an Imperium in Imperio, the ‘Board of Jewish Deputies,’ which have gained to themselves powers to influence the policies of British governments to their universal advantage.
www.heretical.com /British/zvscommd.html   (675 words)

  
 New York Lawyer - do not find a lawyer search for meaning at a law dictionary
In older to prevent the pope from assuming the supremacy in granting ecclesiastical livings, a number of statutes were made in England during the reigns of Edward I., and his successors, punishing certain acts of submission to the papal authority, therein mentioned.
In the writ for the execution of these statutes, the words praemunire facias, being used, to command a citation of the party, gave not only to the writ, but to the offence itself, of maintaining the papal power, the name of praemunire.
A municipal officer of Rome, so called because, (praeiret populo,) he went before or took precedence of the people.
www.new-york-lawyer.ws /law-dictionary/practice.htm   (2169 words)

  
 Daily Pundit » Report Retort
For instance, they regard Kyoto as “international law” that exists, but simply hasn’t been properly recognized by the US - which is not the same thing in their minds as saying the US is not subject to Kyoto.
I’ve been thinking for a long time that we ought to revive praemunire as a felony.
Praemunire, as defined, wasn’t confined to matters involving the Pope.
dailypundit.com /?p=4700   (610 words)

  
 The History of Protestantism by J. A. Wylie
Two statutes in particular were passed during this period to set bounds to the Papal usurpations; these were the well-known and famous statutes of Provisors and Praemunire.
The tide once turned continued to flow; the two famous statutes of Provisors and Praemunire were enacted.
These were a sort of double breast-work: the first was meant to keep out the flood of usurpations that was setting in from Rome upon England; and the second was intended to close the door against the tithes, revenues, appeals, and obedience, which were flowing in an ever-augmenting stream from England to the Vatican.
www.whatsaiththescripture.com /Voice/History.Protestant.v1.b2.html   (14692 words)

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