Criminal-inquisitorial trials in English church courts from the Middle Ages to the Reformation
"In this book, Henry Ansgar Kelly, a noted forensic historian, describes the reception and application of inquisition in England from the thirteenth century onwards and analyzes all levels of trial proceedings, both minor and major, from accusations of sexual offenses and cheating on tithes to...
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Format: | Book |
Language: | Inglés |
Published: |
Washington, D.C. :
The Catholic University of America Press
[2023]
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Series: | Studies in medieval and early modern canon law
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Subjects: | |
See on Universidad de Navarra: | https://unika.unav.edu/discovery/fulldisplay?docid=alma991011482227708016&context=L&vid=34UNAV_INST:VU1&search_scope=34UNAV_TODO&tab=34UNAV_TODO&lang=es |
Table of Contents:
- The origins of inquisitorial procedure
- The beginnings of inquisitorial procedure in England
- The prosecution of the knights templar in England
- Alleged heretical sorcerers in Ireland
- Fourteenth-Century correction proceedings
- The processing of criminous clerks by inquisition/purgation
- Prosecuting heterodoxy after John Wyclif : the blackfriars method of interrogating present belief
- Trials of Lollards and the death penalty
- Last Wycliffites, Margery Kempe, and other alleged dissenters
- Tithes; nigromancy; teachings of reginald pecock
- Dissent, crimes, and divorce : Richard Hunne, criminous clerks, and Henry VIII
- Heresy trials and Sir Thomas More
- Parliament and inquisition under Henry VIII and Edward VI
- Marian Reversals, Elizabethan return to papal law
- Conclusion : inquisition on trial.