CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION | ||
date | page | |
Object of the Book—The Relations between Church and State | — | 1 |
In Saxon Times | — | 2 |
Courts, and Law administered by them | — | 3 |
The Church older than the State—Consequent Foreign Origin of Church Law | — | 4 |
Norman Conquest | — | 5 |
Develops still further the Foreign Elements | — | 6 |
Effect of the Character of the Kings—Rivalry between Church and State | — | 8 |
Unity of the Western Church until the Reformation | — | 9 |
Its Independent Position depended on its Unity | — | 10 |
CHAPTER II INTRODUCTION (continued) Historical Sketch from Henry II. to Henry VIII | ||
Increase of Power of the Church—Four Parties in the State, viz., the King, the Baronage, and the Church, and, subsequently, the People | — | 13 |
Tendencies to Divisions in the Church—Held in check by the Papal Authority | — | 15 |
Sources of the Power of the Clergy | — | 16 |
Page:Church and State under the Tudors.djvu/13
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