3278461 results
The Convocation of 1460
- Edited by Gerald Bray
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- Records of Convocation
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- Boydell & Brewer
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- 10 January 2024, pp 469-476
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The bishop of Durham's certificate, containing the archbishop's mandate and the royal writ
Reverendissimo in Christo patri et domino Domino Willelmo, permissione divina Eboracensi archiepiscopo, Angliae primati et apostolicae sedis legato, vestrisve locum tenentibus, commissariis seu commissario Iohannes Hilford, legum doctor, reverendi in Christo patris et domini Domini Laurentii, permissione divina Dunelmensis episcopi agentis in remotis, vicarius in spiritualibus generalis oboedientiam et reverentiam debitas cum honore. Mandatum vestrum reverendum dicto reverendo patri Dunelmensi directum vicesimo quinto die mensis Martii anno Domini millesimo CCCCmo sexagesimo incipiente [25 March 1460] cum ea qua decuit reverentia recepimus exequendum sub eo qui sequitur tenore verborum:
Willelmus, permissione divina Eboracensis archiepiscopus, Angliae primas et apostolicae sedis legatus, venerabili fratri nostro Laurentio, Dei gratia Dunelmensi episcopo, suffraganeo nostro, seu ipso absente, vicario eius in spiritualibus generali cuicunque, salutem et fraternam in Domino caritatem. Breve regium nobis transmissum recepimus sub eo qui sequitur verborum tenore:
Henricus, Dei gratia rex Angliae et Franciae et dominus Hiberniae venerabili in Christo patri Willelmo, eadem gratia archiepiscopo Eboracensi Angliae primati, salutem. Quibusdam arduis et urgentibus negotiis nos, statum regni nostri ac honorem et utilitatem Ecclesiae Anglicanae intime concernentibus, vobis in fide et dilectione quibus nobis tenemini rogando mandamus quatenus praemissis debito intuitu attentis et ponderatis universos et singulos episcopos vestrae provinciae ac decanos et priores ecclesiarum cathedralium abbates et priores et alios electivos exemptos et non exemptos necnon archidiaconos, capitula, conventus et collegia totumque clerum cuiuslibet dioecesis eiusdem provinciae ad comparendum coram vobis in ecclesia cathedrali Beati Petri Eboracensis vel alibi prout melius expedire videritis, cum omni celeritate accommoda more debito convocari faciatis, ad tractandum, concordandum, consentiendum et concludendum super praemissis et aliis quae sibi clarius exponentur tune ibidem ex parte nostra. Et hoc sicut nos et statum dicti regni ac honorem et utilitatem ecclesiae praedictae diligitis nullatenus omittatis. Teste rege apud Westmonasterium duodecimo die Februarii anno regni nostri tricesimo octavo [12 February 1460].
8 - Nuneham Courtenay
- Michael Symes
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- Prints and the Landscape Garden
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- Boydell & Brewer
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- 15 May 2024
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- 10 January 2024, pp 106-121
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Nuneham Courtenay, some five miles south-east of Oxford, was and still is an exceptional garden because of its several facets. The two principal features are the flower garden and ‘Capability’ Brown's landscaping, but there are echoes of other gardens together with an all-important cultural context that is unique. The river Thames was a principal attraction in the landscape. The owner was the 1st Earl Harcourt, who inherited the seat at Stanton Harcourt, also in Oxfordshire, on low-lying land without much of an external view. This estate had a particular resonance because Alexander Pope had translated the fifth book of the Iliad, which earned him a fortune, in the tower in 17181 (Fig 8.1), but by 1755 the house was becoming dilapidated, and the earl decided to move to Nuneham (originally Newnham) and build what his wife, somewhat in dismay, dubbed a villa rather than a seat. Villas, as conceived by Palladio, had found ample expression at Chiswick and Marble Hill plus Pope's own villa on the Twickenham stretch of the Thames, and perhaps Pope's association with Stanton Harcourt had suggested the idea of a villa to the earl, sited this time on a significant hill above the river. There were extensive views from the house and a magical view of it from the river, as many prints and other depictions attest.
It is particularly from prints that we can chart the progress of changes and developments in the grounds and gauge the cultural approach and associations. The late Mavis Batey made a special study of the site, based on the Harcourt papers in the Bodleian Library, and I am indebted to her work. There is a clear distinction between the approach of the 1st Earl (1714–77) and his son Viscount Nuneham (1736–1809) who succeeded to the title of 2nd Earl Harcourt on his father's death. Both were forward-thinking about landscaping, but it was the 2nd Earl rather than his father who brought radical new ideas to garden design and was responsive to general movements such as the Picturesque.
The convocation of 1819
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- 10 January 2024, pp 151-178
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The names of the right reverend the bishops and clergy of the province of Canterbury cited to appear in convocation in the chapter house of the cathedral church of St Paul, London, on Wednesday the fifth day of August 1818 [5 August 1818].
Charles [Manners Sutton], lord archbishop of Canterbury.
William [Howley], lord bishop of London.
Brownlow [North], lord bishop of Winchester.
James [Cornwallis], lord bishop of Lichfield and Coventry.
George [Pretyman-Tomline], lord bishop of Lincoln.
Richard [Beadon], lord bishop of Bath and Wells.
Ffolliott [Herbert Walker Cornewall], lord bishop of Worcester.
John [Buckner], lord bishop of Chichester.
Henry William [Majendie], lord bishop of Bangor.
George Isaac [Huntingford], lord bishop of Hereford.
George [Pelham], lord bishop of Exeter.
Thomas [Burgess], lord bishop of St David's.
John [Fisher], lord bishop of Salisbury.
Henry [Bathurst], lord bishop of Norwich.
John [Luxmoore], lord bishop of St Asaph.
William [Mansel], lord bishop of Bristol.
Walker [King], lord bishop of Rochester.
Bowyer Edward [Sparke], lord bishop of Ely.
John [Parsons], lord bishop of Peterborough.
Henry [Ryder], lord bishop of Gloucester.
Edward [Legge], lord bishop of Oxford.
Herbert [Marsh], lord bishop of Llandaff.
Canterbury:
Gerrard Andrews D. D., dean.
Houstonne Radcliffe D. D., archdeacon.
William Welfitt D. D., proctor for the chapter.
Sir John Fagg baronet,
Edward Nares, proctors for the clergy.
London:
George [Pretyman-Tomline], lord bishop of Lincoln, dean.
Proctor for the chapter.
Joseph Holden Pott M. A., archdeacon of London.
Francis John Hyde Wollaston B. D., archdeacon of Essex.
George Owen Cambridge M. A., archdeacon of Middlesex.
Joseph Jefferson M. A., archdeacon of Colchester.
John James Watson D. D., archdeacon of Saint Albans.
George Gaskin D. D.,
Richard Dickinson Shackleford D. D., proctors for the clergy.
Winchester:
Thomas Rennell D. D., dean.
Edmund Poulter M. A., proctor for the chapter.
Honourable Augustus George Legge M. A., archdeacon of Winchester.
Honourable Thomas de Grey M. A., archdeacon of Surrey.
William Gamier M. A.,
Christopher Wordsworth D. D., proctors for the clergy.
Bath and Wells:
Honourable Henry Ryder, dean.
Roger Frankland M. A.,794 proctor for the chapter.
[Josiah Thomas], archdeacon of Bath.
Charles Sandiford M. A., archdeacon of Wells.
George Trevelyan M. A., archdeacon of Taunton.
Proctors for the clergy.
Spectres of European money and Stefan Eich’s Currency of Politics
- Pavlos Roufos
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- European Law Open / Volume 2 / Issue 3 / September 2023
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- 10 January 2024, pp. 654-670
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This paper aims at discussing the historical trajectory of European money and the way it can be illuminated through a dialogue with Stefan Eich’s The Currency of Politics. Fleshing out the different theories, visions, and conceptualisations of money in Eich’s book, this paper utilises this exposition to evaluate the development and operationalisation of European money. With an eye to contemporary debates about the re-politicisation or democratisation of money, the paper will critically assess the way in which Eich’s account can be used as a framework to explain European money.
Appendices
- Edited by Coral Campbell, Deakin University, Victoria, Christine Howitt, University of Western Australia, Perth
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- Science in Early Childhood
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- 13 December 2023
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- 10 January 2024, pp 278-292
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The convocation of 1833-5
- Edited by Gerald Bray
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- Records of Convocation
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- 10 January 2024, pp 225-236
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The names of the right reverend the bishops and clergy of the province of Canterbury cited to appear in convocation in the chapter house of the cathedral church of St Paul, London, on the thirtieth day of January 1833 [30 January 1833].
William [Howley], lord archbishop of Canterbury.
Charles James [Blomfleld], lord bishop of London.
Charles Richard [Sumner], lord bishop of Winchester.
Thomas [Burgess], lord bishop of Salisbury.
Henry [Bathurst], lord bishop of Norwich.
Bowyer Edward [Sparke], lord bishop of Ely.
George Henry [Law], lord bishop of Bath and Wells.
Henry [Ryder], lord bishop of Lichfield and Coventry.
Herbert [Marsh], lord bishop of Peterborough.
John [Kaye], lord bishop of Lincoln.
William [Carey], lord bishop of St Asaph.
Christopher [Bethell], lord bishop of Bangor.
Robert James [Carr], lord bishop of Worcester.
John Banks [Jenkinson], lord bishop of St David's.
Edward [Copleston], lord bishop of Llandaff.
Robert [Gray], lord bishop of Bristol.
George [Murray], lord bishop of Rochester.
Richard [Bagot], lord bishop of Oxford.
James Henry [Monk], lord bishop of Gloucester.
Henry [Philpotts], lord bishop of Exeter.
Edward [Maltby], lord bishop of Chichester.
Edward [Grey], lord bishop of Hereford.
Canterbury:
[Richard Bagot,] dean.
James Croft M. A., archdeacon.
Honourable John Evelyn Boscawen M. A., proctor for the chapter.
Edward Nares,
William Frederick Bayley, proctors for the clergy.
London:
Edward [Copleston], lord bishop of Llandaff, dean.
Frederick William Blomberg D. D., proctor for the chapter.
Joseph Holden Pott M. A., archdeacon of London.
Hugh Chambers Jones, archdeacon of Essex.
George Owen Cambridge M. A., archdeacon of Middlesex.
William Rowe Lyall, archdeacon of Colchester.
John James Watson D. D., archdeacon of Saint Albans.
George Shepherd D. D.,
John Hume Spry D. D., proctors for the clergy.
Winchester.
Thomas Rennell, dean.
George Frederick Nott D. D., proctor for the chapter.
Charles James Hoare M. A., archdeacon of Winchester.
[Thomas de Grey,] archdeacon of Surrey.
William Wilson D. D.,
Henry Woodcock D. D., proctors for the clergy.
Bath and Wells:
Edmund Goodenough D. D., dean.
John Watson Beadon, precentor.
Frederick Beadon, chancellor.
Robert Vanbrugh Law M. A., treasurer.
Charles Edmund Keene M. A., subdean.
Frederick Beadon M. A., proctor for the chapter.
Charles Abel Moysey D. D., archdeacon of Bath.
Henry Law M. A., archdeacon of Wells.
Anthony Hamilton M. A., archdeacon of Taunton.
Frontmatter
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- Records of Convocation
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- 10 January 2024, pp i-iv
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6 - Chiswick
- Michael Symes
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- Prints and the Landscape Garden
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- 15 May 2024
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- 10 January 2024, pp 83-91
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There are real problems in considering Chiswick as a landscape garden. It was undoubtedly famed and regarded as a formative influence, but when proclaimed as the cradle of the new gardening there should be pause for thought. William Kent certainly introduced a few naturalistic touches, and there were numerous wiggling paths in the best artinatural tradition, but overwhelmingly, then and now, the stand-out, memorable features were and are the formal ones – the exedra, the pattern of goose-foot allées, the Pantheon-like temple in the orange-tree garden, plus the conservatory and the Italian garden (early 19th century). Lord Burlington (1694–1753) was the champion of Palladio, the Italian architect who embraced both classical and Renaissance designs of his own though based on classical forms, and inspired a whole generation of ‘English Palladians’ – but this was to do with architecture. There was therefore a dichotomy between architecture and native garden developments. Lord Burlington, up to the late 1720s, concentrated on creating a quasi-classical garden to complement his iconic villa, based on Palladio though far from being an exact copy. By 1733 there were those who thought that Kent was steering Chiswick in the direction of the new style, but, at the same time as his minor efforts at naturalising, the formal elements continued to be formal. When Burlington died in 1753, Chiswick already seemed old fashioned to some. And by and large it is the geometry that prevails in prints.
This heavily formal garden, partly classical and partly Italian Renaissance in feeling, is represented in the first half of the century by two sets of illustrations, by Pieter Rysbrack (oil paintings, c.1729) and Jacques Rigaud (pen and wash, 1733). Four of the paintings were engraved by Claude Du Bosc and published by Rysbrack in 1734: two are illustrated in Figs 6.1 and 6.2. prepared print studies of all four for Du Bosc, now lost, and that these studies reflected changes in the five years since the original paintings. Kent himself sketched numerous features in the period 1730–35, but it is not always clear whether these were proposals or records of what was already there.
The Convocation of 1432
- Edited by Gerald Bray
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- Records of Convocation
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- 10 January 2024, pp 301-320
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Acts of the convocation
[86v] Convocatio praelatorum et cleri Cantuariensis provinciae, facta per reverendissimum in Christo patrem et dominum Dominum Henricum, permissione divina Cantuariensem archiepiscopum, totius Angliae primatem et apostolicae sedis legatum, in ecclesia Sancti Pauli Londoniarum, quinto decimo die mensis Septembris anno Domini MCCCCXXXIIdo, indictione decima, pontificatus sanctissimi in Christo patris et domini Domini Eugenii papae quarti, anno secundo.
Monday 15 September 1432
In primis, die Lunae quinto decimo die mensis Septembris, post finitam missam de Spiritu Sancto per dominum ad summum altare dictae ecclesiae cathedralis Sancti Pauli solemniter celebratam, assistentibus sibi in eadem missa confratribus suis, videlicet Philippo Eliensi, Iohanne Roffensi, Willelmo Lincolniensi et Willelmo Norwicensi episcopis, dominus eum confratribus suis praedictis adivit capellam Beatae Mariae in ecclesia Sancti Pauli praedicta situatam, ubi (ut moris est) coram domino et dictis confratribus suis ac praelatis aliis quampluri[bu]s et clero in magna multitudine congregatis religiosus vir frater Willelmus Norham sacrae theologiae professor de ordine praedicatorum solemniter praedicavit et publice proposuit Verbum Dei, sumpta pro themate ‘ Intende, prospere procede, et regna.' Et statim post sermonem finitum, lectum fuit certificatorium venerabilis vir Magistri Reginaldi Kentwood, decani ecclesiae cathedralis Sancti Pauli praedictae, necnon reverendissimi in Christo patris Domini Roberti, Dei gratia Londoniensis episcopi in remotis agentis vicarii in spiritualibus generalis, de et super citatione praelatorum et cleri ad convocationem huiusmodi. Cuius quidem certificatorii tenor de verbo ad verbum sequitur et est talis:
The bishop of London's certificate containing the archbishop's mandate
Reverendissimo in Christo patri et domino nostro Domino Henrico, permissione divina Cantuariensi archiepiscopo, totius Angliae primati et apostolicae sedis legato, Reginaldus Kentwood decani ecclesiae cathedralis Sancti Pauli praedictae necnon reverendi in Christo patris Domini Roberti, Dei gratia Londoniensis episcopi in remotis agentis vicarii in spiritualibus generalis, oboedientiam et reverentiam debitam cum honore. Literas vestras reverendas vicesimo tertio die mensis Iulii ultime praeteriti [23 July 1432] recepimus tenorem infrascriptum continentes:
Henricus, permissione divina Cantuariensis archiepiscopus, totius Angliae primas et apostolicae sedis legatus, venerabili fratri nostro Domino Roberto, Dei gratia Londoniensi episcopo ipsove absente eius vicario in spiritualibus generali salutem in eo qui est omnium vera salus. Magna et indissimulata nunc pro ceteris temporibus nos impellit necessitas praelatos et clerum nostrae Cantuariensis provinciae pro nonnullis arduis et urgentibus negotiis universalis ecclesiae fideique Catholicae statum reformationem et utilitatem concernentibus convocare.
The Convocation of 1398
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- Records of Convocation
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- 10 January 2024, pp 265-266
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The bishop of Durham's proxy for a convocation on 20 June
Pateat universis per praesentes nos Iohannem, priorem ecclesiae cathedralis Dunelmensis ad comparendum in convocatione cleri vicesimo die instantis mensis Iunii coram honorabili viro Magistro Richardo Clifford, decano ecclesiae cathedralis Eboracensis, guardiano privati sigilli illuc per serenissimum in Christo principem et dominum nostrum Dominum Richardum, Dei gratia regem Angliae et Franciae illustrem transmittendo in eadem ecclesia summo mane (ut asseritur) celebranda, et ad tractatum super certis materiis et negotiis statum regis et regni et Ecclesiae Anglicanae concernentibus, una cum aliis provinciae Eboracensis praelatis per literam privati sigilli vocatis et praemunitis; dilectos nobis in Christo magnae reverentiae virum Magistrum T[homam de] W[alworth] canonicum residentiarium dictae ecclesiae Eboracensis necnon Magistros Iohannem S[tanton] legum baccalaurium et Iohannem Catterick, vicarium ecclesiae de Norham, pro nobis in dicta convocatione die et loco limitatis comparendos et interessendos. Causas absentiae nostrae personalis allegandas, proponendas et probandas necnon super materiis et negotiis quibuscunque pro tune ibidem plenius exponendas si et quatenus natura et qualitas praesentis negotii hoc exposcant una cum aliis dictae provinciae praelatis tractandum et his quae ibidem divina favente dementia ad statum regis, regni et ecclesiae praedictorum salubriter ordinari contigerit consentiendum necnon omnia alia et singula facienda, exercenda et expedienda quae in praemissis etc. Datum decimo sexto Iunii MCCCXCVIII [16 June 1398].
The royal writ for a convocation
Rex venerabili in Christo patri R[ichardo Scrope], eadem gratia archiepiscopo Eboracensi, Angliae primati, salutem.
Searching for spots: a comprehensive survey for the Arabian leopard Panthera pardus nimr in Saudi Arabia – CORRIGENDUM
- Carolyn E. Dunford, J. Philip B. Faure, Michael D. Ross, J. Andrew Spalton, Marine Drouilly, Kai J.P. Pryce-Fitchen, Ross De Bruin, Alexander E. Botha, Abdullah Alshehri, Nikki Le Roex, Guy Balme, Ahmed Almalki, Emma Gallacher, Mesfer Alhlafi, Saleh Alaamri, David R. Mills, Gareth Mann
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The convocation of 1812-18
- Edited by Gerald Bray
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- Records of Convocation
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- 10 January 2024, pp 139-150
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Summary
The names of the right reverend the bishops and clergy of the province of Canterbury cited to appear in convocation in the chapter house of the cathedral church of St Paul, London, on Wednesday the twenty-fifth day of November 1812 [25 November 1812].
Charles [Manners Sutton], lord archbishop of Canterbury.
Beilby [Porteous], lord bishop of London.
Brownlow [North], lord bishop of Winchester.
James [Cornwallis], lord bishop of Lichfield and Coventry.
Richard [Watson], lord bishop of Llandaff.
George [Pretyman-Tomline], lord bishop of Lincoln.
Richard [Beadon], lord bishop of Bath and Wells.
William [Cleaver], lord bishop of St Asaph.
Spencer [Madan], lord bishop of Peterborough.
Ffolliott [Herbert Walker Corenewall], lord bishop of Worcester.
John [Buckner], lord bishop of Chichester.
Henry [William Majendie], lord bishop of Bangor.
George [Isaac Huntingford], lord bishop of Gloucester.
Bowyer [Edward Sparke], lord bishop of Ely.
George [Pelham], lord bishop of Exeter.
Thomas [Burgess], lord bishop of St David's.
Henry [Bathurst], lord bishop of Norwich.
John [Fisher], lord bishop of Salisbury.
John [Luxmoore], lord bishop of Hereford.
William [Mansel], lord bishop of Bristol.
Walker [King], lord bishop of Rochester.
William [Jackson], lord bishop of Oxford.
Canterbury:
Gerrard Andrews D. D., dean.
Houstonne Radcliffe D. D., archdeacon.
William Welfitt D. D., proctor for the chapter.
Sir John Fagg baronet,
Edward Nares, proctors for the clergy.
London:
George [Pretyman-Tomline], lord bishop of Lincoln, dean.
Thomas Hughes D. D., proctor for the chapter.
William Bingham D. D., archdeacon of London.
William Gretton M. A., archdeacon of Essex.
[George] Owen Cambridge M. A., archdeacon of Middlesex.
Joseph Jefferson M. A., archdeacon of Colchester.
Joseph Holden Pott M. A., archdeacon of Saint Albans.
Richard Dickinson Shackleford D. D.,
Robert Hodgson M. A., proctors for the clergy.
Winchester:
Thomas Rennell D. D., dean
Edmund Poulter M. A., proctor for the chapter
Honourable Thomas de Grey M. A., archdeacon of Winchester.
John Carver LL. B., archdeacon of Surrey.
William Gamier M. A.,
William Vyse LL. D., proctors for the clergy.
Bath and Wells:
George William Lukin LL. D., dean.
John Watson Beadon, M. A., precentor.
Richard Nicholl, D. D., chancellor.
Charles Sandiford M. A., treasurer.
George Trevelyan LL. B., proctor for the chapter.
Abbreviations
- Edited by Gerald Bray
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- Records of Convocation
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- 10 January 2024, pp vii-viii
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The convocation of 1826-30
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- Records of Convocation
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- 10 January 2024, pp 191-202
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The names of the right reverend the bishops and clergy of the province of Canterbury cited to appear in convocation in the chapter house of the cathedral church of St Paul, London, on Wednesday the fifteenth day of November 1826 [ 15 November 1826].
Charles [Manners Sutton], lord archbishop of Canterbury.
[William Howley], lord bishop of London.
George [Pretyman-Tomline], lord bishop of Winchester.
Ffolliott [Herbert Walker Cornewall], lord bishop of Worcester.
Robert James [Carr], lord bishop of Chichester.
Henry William [Majendie], lord bishop of Bangor.
George Isaac [Huntingford], lord bishop of Hereford.
George [Pelham], lord bishop of Lincoln.
John Banks [Jenkinson], lord bishop of St David's.
Thomas [Burgess], lord bishop of Salisbury.
Henry [Bathurst], lord bishop of Norwich.
John [Luxmoore], lord bishop of St Asaph.
Walker [King], lord bishop of Rochester.
Bowyer Edward [Sparke], lord bishop of Ely.
Christopher [Bethell], lord bishop of Gloucester.
Edward [Legge], lord bishop of Oxford.
Herbert [Marsh], lord bishop of Peterborough.
Charles Richard [Sumner], lord bishop of Llandaff.
John [Kaye], lord bishop of Bristol.
William [Carey], lord bishop of Exeter.
Canterbury:
Honourable Hugh Percy D. D., dean.
James Croft M. A., archdeacon.
William Welfitt D. D., proctor for the chapter.
Edward Nares,
John Lonsdale, proctors for the clergy.
London:
Charles Richard [Sumner], lord bishop of Llandaff, dean.
Proctor for the chapter.
Joseph Holden Pott M. A., archdeacon of London.
Hugh Chambers Jones, archdeacon of Essex.
George Owen Cambridge M. A., archdeacon of Middlesex.
William Rowe Lyall, archdeacon of Colchester.
John James Watson D. D., archdeacon of Saint Albans.
George Gaskin D. D.,
Richard Dickinson Shackleford D. D., proctors for the clergy.
Winchester:
Thomas Rennell D. D., dean.
Edmund Poulter M. A., proctor for the chapter.
Gilbert Heathcote M. A., archdeacon of Winchester.
Honourable Thomas de Grey M. A., archdeacon of Surrey.
Henry Lee M. A.,
George D'Oyly D. D., proctors for the clergy.
Bath and Wells:
Honourable Henry Ryder, bishop of Gloucester, dean.
Charles Edward Keene M. A., subdean.
Frederick Beadon M. A., proctor for the chapter.
Charles Abel Moysey D. D., archdeacon of Bath.
John Watson Beadon M. A., archdeacon of Wells.
George Trevelyan M. A., archdeacon of Taunton.
Thomas Sweet Escott M. A.,
Charles Henry Pulsford B. A., proctors for the clergy.
Investigating the past, present and future responses of Shallap and Zongo Glaciers, Tropical Andes, to the El Niño Southern Oscillation
- Alasdair Richardson, Rachel Carr, Simon Cook
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- Journal of Glaciology , First View
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- 10 January 2024, pp. 1-21
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Tropical Andean glaciers are highly sensitive to climate change and are impacted by the El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO). However, glaciological data are scarce, meaning that there are substantial knowledge gaps in the response of Andean glaciers to future anthropogenic and ENSO forcing and these are crucial to address, as glaciers represent a key water source for downstream populations and ecosystems. Here we integrated data from glaciological field studies, remote sensing, statistical analysis and glacier modelling to analyse the response of two Andean glaciers (Zongo and Shallap) to ENSO and their potential sensitivity to a range of climate forcing scenarios. Both glaciers retreated and experienced increasingly negative mass balance between the 1990s and the 2010s and responded strongly and rapidly to contemporary ENSO forcing, although this relationship evolved over time. Sensitivity experiments demonstrate that Shallap and Zongo are highly sensitive to ENSO forcing scenarios and the combination of ENSO and climate warming can cause rapid ice loss under the most extreme scenarios. Results also demonstrate the strong sensitivity of both glaciers to changes in the equilibrium line altitude, whereby rapid ice loss occurred when melt extended into present-day accumulation areas.
Guide to the index volume
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- Records of Convocation
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- 10 January 2024, pp 1-4
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Summary
This volume is a composite index of the Records of Convocation arranged under four major headings - sources, references, names/places and subjects. For the most part, the entries are straightforward, but the following remarks will make it easier for the reader to find the relevant material quickly and get the best use from it. The volumes are indicated by Roman numerals in bold type, as follows. For the principles determining the volume divisions see Volume XIX.
The diocese of Sodor and Man
The province of Canterbury
The province of York
The Church of Ireland
Each volume contains its own set of indexes, which have been combined in a standardized format, according to the following principles.
Index of sources
This index is subdivided according to the types of source use, beginning with the episcopal registers and continuing with those of the different cathedral chapters, before going on to other manuscripts and printed sources.
Episcopal registers
For particulars of these, readers should consult David M. Smith, Guide to the bishops* registers of England and Wales (London, 1981), along with the supplement issued by the Borthwick Institute (York, 2004). The registers are listed here in chronological order according to the following scheme:
Canterbury, London and Winchester
The other dioceses of the province of Canterbury in alphabetical order York, Durham and Carlisle
The Irish dioceses in alphabetical order
Chapter registers, etc.
These include the registers of the dean/prior and chapter of each diocese and occasionally other records of an essentially diocesan character. The order is the same as above, except that Lichfield and Wells occur in their proper order and not under Coventry or Bath. Note also that the registers of Beverley Minster are placed at the end of the York section.
Other manuscript sources
These are listed alphabetically by place and repository. Thus, for example, under London, the British Library is followed by the Inner Temple Library, Lambeth Palace Library and so on. Note that from April 2003 the Public Record Office has been known as the National Archives and is given accordingly. The provinces of Canterbury and York are taken together and placed first, followed by Ireland and foreign repositories.
The Arab Spring Abroad: Diaspora Activism against Authoritarian Regimes Dana M. Moss (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2021). Pp. 294. $29.99 paper. ISBN: 9781108845533
- Candace Lukasik
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- International Journal of Middle East Studies / Volume 56 / Issue 1 / February 2024
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- 10 January 2024, pp. 174-176
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The convocation of 1769-74
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- Records of Convocation
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Summary
The names of the right reverend the bishops and clergy of the province of Canterbury cited to appear in convocation in the chapter house of the cathedral church of St Paul, London, on Wednesday the twenty-fifth day of January in the year of our Lord 1769.
Frederick [Cornwallis], lord archbishop of Canterbury.
Richard [Terrick], lord bishop of London.
John [Thomas], lord bishop of Winchester.
Matthias [Mawson], lord bishop of Ely.
Edward [Willes], lord bishop of Bath and Wells.
James [Beauclerk], lord bishop of Hereford.
Zachary [Pearce], lord bishop of Rochester.
James [Johnson], lord bishop of Worcester.
William [Ashburnham], lord bishop of Chichester.
Richard [Newcome], lord bishop of St Asaph.
John [Hume], lord bishop of Salisbury.
John [Egerton], lord bishop of Lichfield and Coventry.
Philip [Yonge], lord bishop of Norwich.
William [Warburton], lord bishop of Gloucester.
Bangor-vacant
John [Ewer], lord bishop of Llandaff.
John [Green], lord bishop of Lincoln.
Thomas, lord bishop of Bristol.
Frederick [Keppel], lord bishop of Exeter.
Robert [Lamb], lord bishop of Peterborough.
Robert [Lowth], lord bishop of Oxford.
Charles [Moss], lord bishop of St David's.
Canterbury:
John Potter, D.D. dean.
Sir John Head baronet, D. D., archdeacon.
Francis Walwyn D. D., proctor for the chapter.
Proctors for the clergy.
London:
Thomas [Newton], lord bishop of Bristol, dean.
Christopher Wilson D. D., proctor for the chapter.
John Jortin D. D., archdeacon of London.
Thomas Rutherford D. D., archdeacon of Essex.
John Hotham M. A., archdeacon of Middlesex.
William Samuel Powell D. D., archdeacon of Colchester.
James Ibbotson D. D., archdeacon of Saint Albans.
Richard Hind D.D.,
Henry Greene M. A., proctors for the clergy.
Winchester:
Jonathan Shipley D. D., dean.
Benjamin Woodroffe M. A., proctor for the chapter.
Thomas Balguy D. D., archdeacon of Winchester.
Newton Ogle D. D., archdeacon of Surrey.
Thomas Durnford D. D.,
Robert Eyre D. D., proctors for the clergy.
Bath and Wells:
Lord Francis Seymour, dean.
Edmund Lovell M. A., proctor for the chapter.
John Chapman M. A., archdeacon of Bath.
William Willes M. A., archdeacon of Wells.
Thomas Camplin LL. D., archdeacon of Taunton.
Henry Arnold D. D.,
Francis Warre M. A., proctors for the clergy.
The Convocation of 1351
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- Records of Convocation
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The archbishop's summons to parliament
Willelmus, permissione divina Eboracensis archiepiscopus, Angliae primas, sedis apostolicae legatus, dilecto filio officiali curiae nostrae Eboracensis vel eius commissario generali, salutem, gratiam et benedictionem. Breve regium nuper recepimus in haec verba:
Edwardus, Dei gratia rex Angliae et Franciae et dominus Hiberniae venerabili in Christo patri Domino Willelmo, eadem gratia archiepiscopo Eboracensi Angliae primati, salutem. Quia pro quibusdam arduis et urgentibus negotiis nos et statum ac bonum regimen regni nostri Angliae et aliorum terrarum et dominiorum nostrorum concernentibus, parliamentum nostrum apud Westmonasterium in octabis Purificationis Beatae Mariae Virginis proximo futuris [9 February 1351] tenere, et vobiscum et cum ceteris praelatis, magnatibus et proceribus dicti regni Angliae colloquium habere volumus et tractatum, vobis in fide et dilectione quibus nobis tenemini firmiter iniungendo mandamus quatenus, cessante excusatione quacunque, dictis die et loco personaliter intersitis, nobiscum ac cum dictis praelatis, magnatibus et proceribus dicti regni super negotiis praedictis tractaturi, vestrumque consilium impensuri, et hoc sicut nos et honorem nostrum ac commune commodum dicti regni Angliae diligitis, nullatenus omittatis, praemunientes decanum et capitulum ecclesiae vestrae Beati Petri Eboracensis ac archidiaconos, totumque clerum vestrae diocesis quod iidem decanus et archidiaconi in propriis personis et dictum capitulum per unum, idemque clerus per duos procuratores idoneos plenam et sufficientem potestatem ab ipsis capitulo et clero habentes, praedictis die et loco intersint ad faciendum et consentiendum his quae de communi consilio, favente Domino, ordinari contigerint super negotiis antedictis. Teste me ipso apud Westmonasterium, vicesimo quinto die Novembris anno regni nostri Angliae vicesimo quarto, regni vero nostri Franciae undecimo [25 November 1350].
Quocirca vobis mandamus firmiter iniungentes quatenus omnes et singulos archidiaconos et clerum nostrae diocesis faciatis celeriter praemuniri quod iidem archidiaconi in propriis personis, clerusque per duos procuratores idoneos, plenam et sufficientem potestatem ab ipso clero habentes, die et loco in dicto brevi contentis intersint, ad consentiendum his quae tune ibidem de communi consilio dicti regni, divina favente dementia, contigerint ordinari. Et nos de omni eo quod feceritis in praemissis a nominibus propriis archidiaconorum et procuratorum dicti cleri citra festum Purificationis Beatae Mariae Virginis proximo futurum [2 February 1351] indies distincte et aperte certificetis per vestras patentes literas harum seriem continentes.
The convocation of 1748-54
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The names of the right reverend the bishops and clergy of the province of Canterbury cited to appear in the chapter house of St Paul, London, on Wednesday the sixteenth day of March in the year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and forty-seven [16 March 1748].
Thomas [Herring], lord archbishop of Canterbury.692
Edmund [Gibson], lord bishop of London.
Benjamin [Hoadly], lord bishop of Winchester.
Isaac [Maddox], lord bishop of Worcester.
Joseph [Wilcox], lord bishop of Rochester.
Thomas [Sherlock], lord bishop of Salisbury.
Richard [Smallbrook], lord bishop of Lichfield and Coventry.
John [Thomas], lord bishop of Peterborough.
Martin [Benson], lord bishop of Gloucester.
James [Beauclerk], lord bishop of Hereford.
Thomas [Seeker], lord bishop of Oxford.
Zachary [Pearce], lord bishop of Bangor.
Edward [Willes], lord bishop of Bath and Wells.
John [Thomas], lord bishop of Lincoln.
John [Gilbert], lord bishop of Llandaff.
George [Lavington], lord bishop of Exeter.
Thomas [Gooch], lord bishop of Norwich.
Samuel [Lisle], lord bishop of St Asaph.
Matthias [Mawson], lord bishop of Chichester.
Joseph [Butler], lord bishop of Bristol.
Richard [Trevor], lord bishop of St David's.
Canterbury:
John Lynch, D. D. dean.
Samuel, lord bishop of St Asaph, archdeacon
Samuel Holcombe D. D., proctor for the chapter.
Thomas Rymer D. D.
Edward Lunn M. A., proctors for the clergy.
London:
Joseph, lord bishop of Bristol, dean.
Samuel Baker D. D., proctor for the chapter.
Edward Cobden D. D., archdeacon of London.
William Gibson M. A., archdeacon of Essex.
Fifield Allen, D. D., archdeacon of Middlesex.
Thomas Cartwright D. D., archdeacon of Colchester.
John Cole M. A., archdeacon of Saint Albans.
William Nichols D. D.,
Laurence Jackson M. A., proctors for the clergy.
Winchester:
Deanery vacant.
Benjamin Woodroffe M. A., proctor for the chapter
Robert Eden, archdeacon of Winchester.
Richard Furney M. A., archdeacon of Surrey.
Stephen Hales D. D.,
Robert Eyre D. D., proctors for the clergy.
Bath and Wells:
Samuel Creswick D. D., dean.
Timothy Collins M. A., subdean, proctor for the chapter.
Samuel Squire, M. A., archdeacon of Bath.
George Shakerly, M. A., archdeacon of Wells.
George Atwood, B. D., archdeacon of Taunton.
James Minifie M. A.,
Lionel Seaman M. A., proctors for the clergy.