The Cathedral and Metropolitical Church of Christ, Canterbury

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

The Cathedral and Metropolitical Church of Christ, Canterbury THE CATHEDRAL AND METROPOLITICAL CHURCH OF CHRIST, CANTERBURY The Reverend Dr E L Pennington in Residence 10 MONDAY 7.30 Morning Prayer – Quire 14 FRIDAY 7.30 Morning Prayer – Our Lady Martyrdom 8.00 Holy Communion – Our Lady Undercroft, Crypt 8.00 Holy Communion – Our Lady Martyrdom 11.30 Funeral – Eastern Crypt 5.30 EVENSONG Responses – Piccolo Cyril and Methodius, 12.00 Sacrament of Reconciliation (until 1pm) Byrd Second service Psalms 53-55 Missionaries to the – Holy Innocents, Crypt Deep river – Tippett Hymn 541 t.231 Slavs, 869 and 885 5.30 EVENSONG Responses – Piccolo Wood in G Psalms 73; 74 11 TUESDAY 7.30 Morning Prayer – Quire Set me as a seal – Walton Hymn 507 8.00 Holy Communion – Our Lady Undercroft, Crypt William Howley, th 90 Archbishop, 1848 5.30 EVENSONG Responses – Piccolo The Reverend Dr T J N Naish in Residence Stanford in G Psalms 59-61 Jauchzet den Herrn – Schütz Hymn 493 15 SATURDAY 8.00 Holy Communion – St John the Evangelist, South-East Transept 9.30 Morning Prayer – Jesus Chapel, Crypt Henry Deane, th 12 WEDNESDAY 7.30 Morning Prayer – Quire 67 Archbishop, 1503 SERVICES SUNG BY THE VASARI SINGERS 8.00 Holy Communion – Our Lady Undercroft, Crypt 3.15 EVENSONG Responses – Pott Wulfhelm, 12.30 Holy Communion – Our Lady Undercroft, Crypt 1st of Saints and Martyrs of our Own Time st 21 Archbishop, 941 Biazeck Short service Psalm 78.1-13 5.30 EVENSONG Responses – Rose O clap your hands – Brown Collection Hymn 303i Men’s voices Wood in G Psalm 66 Great Lord of Lords – Wood Hymn 591 16 SAINTS AND 8.00 Holy Communion (BCP) – High Altar MARTYRS p236, readings p80 7.00 Sacred Space – Our Lady Undercroft, Crypt OF OUR OWN TIME 9.30 Morning Prayer (said) – Quire Psalms 100; 150 13 THURSDAY 7.30 Morning Prayer – Quire Sexagesima (BCP) 11.00 SUNG EUCHARIST – Quire 8.00 Holy Communion – Our Lady Undercroft, Crypt Richard of Dover, Dove Missa Brevis Hymns 308; 503; 683; st Aethelgar, 41 Archbishop, 1184 Pange lingua – Chilcott 776 omit v.3,6,8 th 26 Archbishop, 990 5.30 EVENSONG Responses – Archer second set Preacher: The Reverend Dr T J N Naish, Vice Dean Boys’ voices Kelly Jamaican canticles Psalm 69.1-17 3.15 EVENSONG Responses – Pott Irish Blessing – Chilcott Hymn 768i and procession to the Chapel of Saints and Martyrs of Our Own Time Introit: Justorum animae – Byrd Byrd Great service Psalm 148 Steal away – Tippett Hymn on sheet 6.30 Sermon and Compline Preacher: The Reverend M J Kramer, Precentor ROBERT WILLIS, DL, DCL, DD, DEAN CANTERBURY CATHEDRAL MAX KRAMER, MA (Oxon), MA (Cantab), MPhil, PRECENTOR CATHEDRAL HOUSE, 11 THE PRECINCTS, CANTERBURY, CT1 2EH DAVID FLOOD, MA, DMUS, FRCO (Chm), FGCM, ORGANIST TEL: +44 (0) 1227 762862 | EMAIL: [email protected] THE CATHEDRAL AND METROPOLITICAL CHURCH OF CHRIST, CANTERBURY The Reverend Dr T J N Naish in Residence 17 MONDAY 7.30 Morning Prayer – Our Lady Martyrdom 21 FRIDAY 7.30 Morning Prayer – Our Lady Martyrdom 8.00 Holy Communion – Saints and Martyrs of Our Own Time, Corona 8.00 Holy Communion – Our Lady Martyrdom Janani Luwum, 12.00 Sacrament of Reconciliation (until 1pm) Archbishop of 5.30 EVENSONG Responses – Sumsion – Holy Innocents, Crypt Uganda, Martyr, 1977 SUNG BY ST JOHN’S, BARHAM Brewer in E flat Psalm 89.1-9 5.30 EVENSONG Responses – Ayleward O thou the central orb – Wood Hymn 305 Murrill in E Psalm 106.1-12 When Mary thro' the garden went – Stanford Hymn 765 18 TUESDAY 7.30 Morning Prayer – Our Lady Martyrdom 8.00 Holy Communion – Jesus Chapel, Crypt 22 SATURDAY 8.00 Holy Communion – St Mary Magdalene, Crypt 9.30 Morning Prayer – Jesus Chapel, Crypt 5.30 EVENSONG Responses – Ayleward Stigand, th SUNG BY THE OCCASIONAL SINGERS 34 Archbishop, 1072 SERVICES SUNG BY THE LAY CLERKS Ireland in F Psalm 93 3.15 EVENSONG Responses – Moore first set Cantique de Jean Racine – Fauré Hymn 652 Howells in E Psalms 108; 109 I will lift up mine eyes – Walker Collection Hymn 544ii 19 WEDNESDAY 7.30 Morning Prayer – Our Lady Martyrdom 8.00 Holy Communion – St Martin, North-East Transept The Reverend Dr E L Pennington in Residence Thomas Arundel, 12.30 Holy Communion – Our Lady Undercroft, Crypt th 60 Archbishop, 1414 23 THE 8.00 Holy Communion (BCP) – High Altar 5.30 Evening Prayer (said) – Eastern Crypt Psalm 100 SUNDAY p236, readings p82 NEXT 7.00 Sacred Space – Our Lady Undercroft, Crypt BEFORE 9.30 Morning Prayer (said) – Quire Psalm 72 LENT 11.00 SUNG EUCHARIST – Quire 20 THURSDAY 7.30 Morning Prayer – Our Lady Martyrdom Quinquagesima with Admission of Servers 8.00 Holy Communion – Holy Innocents, Crypt (BCP) Duruflé Messe cum jubilo Psalms 99.1-5; 150 O sacrum convivium – Noon Hymns 281; 766; 603 SERVICES SUNG BY GREAT ST MARY’S, CAMBRIDGE Preacher: The Dean 5.30 EVENSONG Responses – Ayleward Purcell in G minor Psalm 104.24-end 3.15 EVENSONG Responses – Moore first set O where shall wisdom be found – Boyce Hymn 721i Walsh St Paul’s service Psalm 84 Ave Maria – Biebl Collection Hymn 821 6.30 Sermon and Compline Preacher: The Dean ROBERT WILLIS, DL, DCL, DD, DEAN CANTERBURY CATHEDRAL MAX KRAMER, MA (Oxon), MA (Cantab), MPhil, PRECENTOR CATHEDRAL HOUSE, 11 THE PRECINCTS, CANTERBURY, CT1 2EH DAVID FLOOD, MA, DMUS, FRCO (Chm), FGCM, ORGANIST TEL: +44 (0) 1227 762862 | EMAIL: [email protected].
Recommended publications
  • 1 Queen Adelaide and the Extension of Anglicanism in Malta Nicholas Dixon Close to the Centre of the Maltese Capital of Vallett
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Apollo Queen Adelaide and the Extension of Anglicanism in Malta Nicholas Dixon Close to the centre of the Maltese capital of Valletta there stands an imposing neoclassical church with an Ionic portico of six columns and a 210-foot tower crowned with a spire. Presenting a striking contrast with the large dome of the neighbouring Carmelite Church (completed in 1981), this tower occupies a prominent position on the city’s skyline. Above the portico of the church is written in Latin, ‘Queen Adelaide with a grateful heart dedicated this Collegiate Church to Almighty God 1844’.1 Consecrated to St Paul, this Anglican pro- cathedral has been more commonly known as ‘Queen Adelaide’s Church’, after its royal benefactress. Why did King William IV’s widow make such a bold statement of Anglicanism in an overwhelmingly Roman Catholic colony? The question has never been adequately answered. The standard explanation, expressed at length by Arthur Bonnici and Alan Keighley, is that Adelaide was simply providing for the needs of the English Protestant population of the island.2 Yet contemporary observers saw the building of the church in more complex terms. As Robin Gill has noted in passing, there existed a definite perception that St Paul’s was not simply an expatriate church, but also a means of propagating Protestantism.3 This perception was shared by two religious groups with widely divergent perspectives: Evangelicals and Roman Catholics. The Evangelical Malta Times stated after the consecration of St Paul’s: ‘it may be said that the public worship of the Church of England was never, with any good effects, celebrated in Malta until the 1st of November, 1844, from which day we hope we may date the rapid progress of the true faith in that island.’4 1 Alan Keighley, Queen Adelaide’s Church (Trowbridge, 2000), 172; National Inventory of the Cultural Property of the Maltese Islands, entries no.
    [Show full text]
  • Lambeth Palace Library Research Guide Biographical Sources for Archbishops of Canterbury from 1052 to the Present Day
    Lambeth Palace Library Research Guide Biographical Sources for Archbishops of Canterbury from 1052 to the Present Day 1 Introduction .................................................................................................................... 3 2 Abbreviations Used ....................................................................................................... 4 3 Archbishops of Canterbury 1052- .................................................................................. 5 Stigand (1052-70) .............................................................................................................. 5 Lanfranc (1070-89) ............................................................................................................ 5 Anselm (1093-1109) .......................................................................................................... 5 Ralph d’Escures (1114-22) ................................................................................................ 5 William de Corbeil (1123-36) ............................................................................................. 5 Theobold of Bec (1139-61) ................................................................................................ 5 Thomas Becket (1162-70) ................................................................................................. 6 Richard of Dover (1174-84) ............................................................................................... 6 Baldwin (1184-90) ............................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Academic Freedom 258–260, 281 See Also Libertas Inquirendi
    INDEX Academic Freedom 258–260, 281 See also Giles of Rome, Geoff rey See also Libertas inquirendi Hardeby, John Kedington, Philip Albert the Great 27 Repyndon, John Shipton Alneto, William of 102 Avignon 5, 76–78, 85–90, 104, 123, Alnwick, William of 65, 71, 75 137 n. 26, 206, 257, 275, 296 Alyngton, Robert 179–180, 182, 209, 250 Bacher, John Rea 69 Andreas Capellanus 29 Baconthorpe, John of 263–264 Andrew, William, bishop of Meath 211, Baketon, Th omas 168, 170 215, 219–220, 277, 299 Baldock, Robert 238 Annals of Dunstable 58–59 Ball, John 148, 179, 195 Annals of Oseney 48–51, 57–58 Baltinglass Abbey, Ireland 153 Anne of Bohemia 164, 184 Balton, John 190 Antimendicant poetry 97–98 Bangor, bishop of 213 Apostolic Poverty See Poverty Bartholemew the Cistercian 72 Controversy Barton, William 129–130, 141, 148, Appeals 17, 20–21, 60, 62, 66, 77–78, 80, 150–152, 154–155, 157–163, 168, 171, 82, 93–94, 99–107, 124, 129, 139, 141, 174, 177, 203, 241, 245, 247, 276, 280, 149–150, 153, 163, 178, 192, 194, 198, 282, 288–289, 297–298 201–203, 206, 222, 226–229, 234, Condemnation of John Wyclif’s 236–238, 244, 247, 275, 279, 281, 296, propositions 129, 148–164, 171, 298–300 177, 241 Appelby, John 170 Sententia 152, 156–159, 161–162, 288 Aquinas, Th omas 1, 17, 27, 29–30, 42, Beaufon, Walter 85 46–47, 49 n. 34, 64, 260–261, 276, 280 Bedeman, Laurence (see Laurence Arundel, Th omas, archbishop of Stephen) Canterbury 223–226, 228–230, Belluno-Feltre, Gregory of 90 250–251, 253, 261, 270–271, 286 Benedict XI 94 Th e Constitutiones 223–226, 229–231, Benedict XII 98 n.
    [Show full text]
  • The Apostolic Succession of the Right Rev. James Michael St. George
    The Apostolic Succession of The Right Rev. James Michael St. George © Copyright 2014-2015, The International Old Catholic Churches, Inc. 1 Table of Contents Certificates ....................................................................................................................................................4 ......................................................................................................................................................................5 Photos ...........................................................................................................................................................6 Lines of Succession........................................................................................................................................7 Succession from the Chaldean Catholic Church .......................................................................................7 Succession from the Syrian-Orthodox Patriarchate of Antioch..............................................................10 The Coptic Orthodox Succession ............................................................................................................16 Succession from the Russian Orthodox Church......................................................................................20 Succession from the Melkite-Greek Patriarchate of Antioch and all East..............................................27 Duarte Costa Succession – Roman Catholic Succession .........................................................................34
    [Show full text]
  • Iburtraits Qrtbhisbups Nt
    iB urtraits of the ’ Qrtbhisbups nt fian tzrhury E M . B N Emm i) B Y G . V A A N D I SSU ED W I TH TH E AP P ROV AL O F Hrs G RAC E TH E A R CHB I SHOP OF CAN TER B U RY A . R . M LTD . OWB RAY CO . ON DON : G a t Ca s tl Ox f Ci c s W . L 34 re e Street , ord r u , ’ OXFO R D : 1 06 S . Alda t e s St re e t 1 908 LAM B ETH A LA P C E . E . , S , M a r h c 7 0 . , 9 8 MY DEAR M I SS B EV AN , I cordially approve of y o u r plan of publishing a series of such portraits as exist of the successive occupants of the See of Canterbury . I gather that you propose to a c c omp a ny the plates with such biographical notes as may present the facts in outline to those who have little knowledge of English Church History . I need hardly say that so far as Lambeth is c o n cerned we offer you every facility for the reproduction of pictures or seals . Such a book as you contemplate will have a peculiar f s interest this year, when the See of Canterbury orm the - pivot of a world wide gathering . a m I , Y s our very truly, Si n e d RAN DAL R ( g ) L CAN TUA .
    [Show full text]
  • Archives & Library Newsletter Issue 59 – Summer 2019
    Newsletter Canterbury Cathedral Archives and Library William Somner Conference and Exhibition The eagerly-awaited one-day conference and exhibition marking the 350th anniversary of William Somner’s death in 1669 took place on 23rd March 2019, with over 50 people attending the highly successful and enjoyable event. Here was an opportunity to learn much more about one of Canterbury’s - and England’s - greatest scholars, the author of The Antiquities of Canterbury and compiler of the first Anglo-Saxon/Latin/English Dictionary, as well being the energetic registrar of Canterbury’s Consistory Court and Cathedral Auditor in the time of Archbishop Laud. Meeting at the Cathedral Archives and Library, the day was launched by Cressida Williams (Head of Archives and Library) who introduced us to a varied display of material relating to Somner, selected by Dr David Wright and Dr David Shaw and containing a number of volumes associated with the scholar, together with contemporary manuscripts which dwelt on his connections with the Cathedral and his life in Canterbury. Among some fascinating items, it was rewarding to note the survival of the diminutive receipt the Cathedral obtained from Somner’s widow on the purchase of his library - for £100 8s 0d! Examining a superb 17th century map of the Cathedral’s water system enabled one to pinpoint Somner’s exact dwelling in premises long since demolished. As a bonus, the opportunity was also offered by Fawn Todd (Cathedral Librarian) for attendees to view a display of unusual and attractive historic bindings in the Howley-Harrison Library. 1 NewsletterNewsletter 59 49 | | Summer Summer 2019 2011 William Somner Day (continued) Continuing at the Old Sessions House, Christ Church University, we were welcomed by Dr David Wright, whose two-part life of Somner will be published in the 2019 and 2020 volumes of Archaeologia Cantiana.
    [Show full text]
  • THE VATICAN HOARD of ANGLO-SAXON PENNIES by M
    THE VATICAN HOARD OF ANGLO-SAXON PENNIES By M. A. O'DONOVAN ABOUT the year 1928 a hoard of 517 Anglo-Saxon pennies of the late ninth- and early tenth- century was discovered in Rome, apparently on the site of the Vatican Wireless Station, then under construction, although this has been denied by an interested party. Tlxe hoard was sent to England by the owner 'residing abroad', and sold by Glendinings in two parts on May 16th, 1929 and November 13th, 1930.1 Some of the coins passed into the possession of the British Museum, but the rest were dispersed among private collections. No formal publication was made at the time, and the sale catalogues are the only published record of this important hoard.2 This article is an attempt to reconstruct the hoard in as much detail as has been found possible.3 The sale catalogues provide fairly detailed descriptions of the rarer coins, such as the pictorial issues of Edward the Elder, but only the names of the moneyers are listed for the more common types, with some intimation of the reverse patterns, occasionally inaccurate. Most fortunately, the Department of Coins and Medals in the British Museum possesses G. C. Brooke's copies of the catalogues, annotated by him with all the individual coin weights, various die-duplications and a few corrections. Dr. Brooke also caused plaster casts to be made of a majority of the coins in the earlier sale. These, now in the British Museum Coin Room, together with photographs of the collection of the late R.
    [Show full text]
  • 0 1472 the Evidence of John Stone's Chronicle
    http://kentarchaeology.org.uk/research/archaeologia-cantiana/ Kent Archaeological Society is a registered charity number 223382 © 2017 Kent Archaeological Society THE POLITICAL ALLEGIANCES OF CHRIST CHURCH PRIORY 1400-1472: THE EVIDENCE OF JOHN STONE'S CHRONICLE MERIEL CONNOR In the Parker Library of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, is to be found a fifteenth-century manuscript, CCCC MS417. A Latin edition of this manuscript, transcribed by W.G. Searle, was published by the Cambridge Antiquarian Society in 1902, and this edition is well known to many historians of the fifteenth c e n t u r y . The preface of the manuscript declares it to be the 'book of brother John Stone, a monk of Christ Church Canterbury, composed as a result of his great work in the year 1467 in his fiftieth year as a monk'.1 Stone's name first occurs in the Christ Church records on 13 December 1417, when he was about eighteen years old.2 He was born in Kent and lived as a monk at the priory for some sixty years. The surviving manuscript is a copy of that 'great work', which has been described as 'an extremely curious and interesting memorandum book of most miscellaneous character'.3 Over the years, scholars have frequently cited Searle's edition to provide evidence for some aspect of their research. However, little attention lias been given to the original manuscript or to the composition of the work as a whole. Closer examination of the text shows it to be more than a chronological account of the internal life of this important medieval religious house.
    [Show full text]
  • Archbishop of Canterbury, and One of the Things This Meant Was That Fruit Orchards Would Be Established for the Monasteries
    THE ARCHBISHOPS OF CANTERBURY And yet — in fact you need only draw a single thread at any point you choose out of the fabric of life and the run will make a pathway across the whole, and down that wider pathway each of the other threads will become successively visible, one by one. — Heimito von Doderer, DIE DÂIMONEN “NARRATIVE HISTORY” AMOUNTS TO FABULATION, THE REAL STUFF BEING MERE CHRONOLOGY “Stack of the Artist of Kouroo” Project Archbishops of Canterb HDT WHAT? INDEX ARCHBISHOPS OF CANTERBURY ARCHBISHOPS OF CANTERBURY 597 CE Christianity was established among the Anglo-Saxons in Kent by Augustine (this Roman import to England was of course not the Aurelius Augustinus of Hippo in Africa who had been in the ground already for some seven generations — and therefore he is referred to sometimes as “St. Augustine the Less”), who in this year became the 1st Archbishop of Canterbury, and one of the things this meant was that fruit orchards would be established for the monasteries. Despite repeated Viking attacks many of these survived. The monastery at Ely (Cambridgeshire) would be particularly famous for its orchards and vineyards. DO I HAVE YOUR ATTENTION? GOOD. Archbishops of Canterbury “Stack of the Artist of Kouroo” Project HDT WHAT? INDEX ARCHBISHOPS OF CANTERBURY ARCHBISHOPS OF CANTERBURY 604 CE May 26, 604: Augustine died (this Roman import to England was of course not the Aurelius Augustinus of Hippo in Africa who had been in the ground already for some seven generations — and therefore he is referred to sometimes as “St. Augustine the Less”), and Laurentius succeeded him as Archbishop of Canterbury.
    [Show full text]
  • Lambeth Palace Library Research Guide Archbishops of Canterbury – Universities Attended Abbreviations: B
    Lambeth Palace Library Research Guide Archbishops of Canterbury – Universities attended abbreviations: b. = born. c or c. = circa. e = education. e. = educated. esp. = especially. nr. = near. s = school. (ap) = apparently. (pr) = probably. (ps) = possibly. (r) = reputedly. 105th 2013- Justin Portal Welby (b. 1956) Trinity College Cambridge BA 78; St John’s College Durham BA 91. 104th 2002-2012 Rowan Douglas Williams (b. 1950) Christ’s College Cambridge BA 71, MA 75; Wadham College, Oxford DPhil 75; DD 89. 103rd 1991-2002 George Leonard Carey (b.1935) London College of Divinity. King's College London. Associate of the London College of Divinity 1st class 1961, BD Hons 1962 (London), MTh1965 (London), PhD1971 (London). 102nd 1980-1991 Robert Alexander Kennedy Runcie (1921-2000) Brasenose College Oxford (1 year). Sandhurst (trained for Guards Armoured Division). Brasenose College Oxford. BA (1st class lit. hum) 1948, MA 1948. 101st 1974-1980 Frederick Donald Coggan (1909-2000) St John's College Cambridge. 1st class oriental languages tripos part i 1930, BA (1st class oriental languages tripos part ii), MA 1935. 100th 1961-1974 Arthur Michael Ramsey (1904-1988) Magdalene College Cambridge. 2nd class classical tripos part i 1925, BA (1st class theological tripos part i) 1927, MA1930, BD1950. 99th 1945-1961 Geoffrey Francis Fisher (1887-1972) Exeter College Oxford. 1st class classical honour moderations 1908, BA (1st class literae humaniores) 1910, 1st class theology 1911, MA1913. 98th 1942-1944 William Temple (1881-1944) Balliol College Oxford. 1st class honour moderations 1902 & literae humaniores 1904. 97th 1928-1941 William Cosmo Gordon Lang (1864-1945) Glasgow. MA. Balliol College Oxford.
    [Show full text]
  • Friendship and Favour in Late Anglo-Saxon Élite Culture
    Friendship and Favour in Late Anglo-Saxon Élite Culture A Study of Documentary and Narrative Sources, c. 900–1016 2 Volumes Volume 2: Appendices Els Schröder Submitted for the degree of PhD in Medieval Studies University of York Centre for Medieval Studies May 2012 i TABLE OF CONTENTS VOLUME 2: APPENDICES Table of Contents…..……………………………………………………………… i List of Tables Volume 2..….……………………………………………………… ii Appendix A – Friendship in Anglo-Saxon Lawcodes…………………………… 1 Quotations of lawcodes containing friendship vocabulary………….……………… 4 Appendix B – Friendship in Anglo-Saxon Diplomas……………………………. 20 Quotations of diplomas containing friendship vocabulary…………………………. 24 Appendix C – Friendship in Anglo-Saxon Wills………………………………… 37 Quotations of wills containing friendship vocabulary……………………………… 42 ii LIST OF TABLES VOLUME 2 Table 1: Occurences of friendship vocabulary in the lawcodes …………………… 1 Table 2: Royal diplomas containing friendship vocabulary (924-1016)…………… 20 Table 3: Friendship vocabulary in proems and indication of type…………………. 22 Table 4: Friendship vocabulary in other parts of diplomas than proems………….... 23 Table 5: Dating and distribution complete corpus of wills………………………… 37 Table 6: Occurrences of friendship vocabulary in wills…………………………… 41 APPENDIX A – FRIENDSHIP IN THE ANGLO-SAXON LAWCODES 1 Table 1: Occurences of friendship vocabulary in the lawcodes Issued in Short Dating and specific Keywords and name of reference information themes for (based on regarding the code discussion Liebermann) 1 Æthelberht Abt 65.1 602/603? Compensation;
    [Show full text]
  • DISPENSATION and ECONOMY in the Law Governing the Church Of
    DISPENSATION AND ECONOMY in the law governing the Church of England William Adam Dissertation submitted in part fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy of the University of Wales Cardiff Law School 2009 UMI Number: U585252 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. Dissertation Publishing UMI U585252 Published by ProQuest LLC 2013. Copyright in the Dissertation held by the Author. Microform Edition © ProQuest LLC. All rights reserved. This work is protected against unauthorized copying under Title 17, United States Code. ProQuest LLC 789 East Eisenhower Parkway P.O. Box 1346 Ann Arbor, Ml 48106-1346 CONTENTS SUMMARY............................................................................................................................................................IV ACKNOWLEDGMENTS..................................................................................................................................VI ABBREVIATIONS............................................................................................................................................VII TABLE OF STATUTES AND MEASURES............................................................................................ VIII U K A c t s o f P a r l i a m e n
    [Show full text]