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  1. c. 12. The Ecclesiastical Appeals Act 1532 ( 24 Hen. 8. c. 12), also called the Statute in Restraint of Appeals, [3] the Act of Appeals and the Act of Restraints in Appeals, [4] was an Act of the Parliament of England . It was passed in the first week of April 1533. It is considered by many historians to be the key legal foundation of the ...

  2. Ecclesiastical history of the Catholic Church refers to the history of the Catholic Church as an institution, written from a particular perspective. There is a traditional approach to such historiography. The generally identified starting point is Eusebius of Caesarea, and his work Church History . Since there is no assumption that contemporary ...

  3. Ecclesiastical letter. Ecclesiastical letters are publications or announcements of the organs of Roman Catholic ecclesiastical authority, e.g. the synods, but more particularly of pope and bishops, addressed to the faithful in the form of letters.

  4. Papal authority. Many of the issues that currently separate the two churches are ecclesiastical. Principal among them is the meaning of papal primacy within any future unified church. The Orthodox insist that it should be a "primacy of honor", as in the ancient church and not a "primacy of authority", [1] whereas the Catholic Church sees the ...

  5. Ethiopian ecclesiastical titles include: Patriarch we Re'ese Liqane Papasat — Patriarch and First of the Archbishop, [1] meaning Catholicos. Since 1959, the title of the head of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church is Patriarch Catholicos of Ethiopia. The first Patriarch, Abuna Basilios was enthroned by the Coptic Orthodox Pope Cyril VI in 1959, and ...

  6. Ecclesiastical province of Liverpool (founded 1911) Ecclesiastical province of Southwark (founded 1965) Ecclesiastical province of Westminster (founded 1850) Episcopal conference of Scotland. Ecclesiastical province of Saint Andrews and Edinburgh. Ecclesiastical province of Glasgow. Eastern Catholic and other exempt.

  7. t. e. The canon law of the Catholic Church (from Latin ius canonicum [1]) is "how the Church organizes and governs herself". [2] It is the system of laws and ecclesiastical legal principles made and enforced by the hierarchical authorities of the Catholic Church to regulate its external organization and government and to order and direct the ...