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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: POL-PRE |
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PRAEMUNIRE (Lat. praemonere, to pre-admonish or fore-warn) , in English law an offence so called from the introductory words of the writ of summons issued to the defendant to answer the charge, "Praemunire facias A.B.," &c., i.e. " cause A.B. to be forewarned." From this the word came to be used to denote the offences, usually ecclesiastical, prosecuted by means of such a writ, and also the penalties they incurred. The statute of Richard II., Purchasing bulls from Rome (1392), is usually designated the Statute of Praemunire, but it is only one of numerous stringent measures
body
tallage
imposition ." A much greater check on the freedom of action of the popes was imposed by the Statute of Provisors (1350-1351) and the Statute of Praemunire passed in the reign of Edward III. The former of these, after premising " that the Pope of Rome, accroaching to him the seignories of possession and benefices of the holy Church of the realm of England doth give and grant the same benefices to aliens which did never dwell in England, and to cardinals, which might not dwell here, and to others as well aliens as denizens, as if he had been patron or advowee of the said dignities and benefices, as he was not of right by the laws of England . . . ," ordained the free election of all dignities and benefices elective in the manner as they were granted by the king's progenitors. The Statute of Praemunire (the first statute so called) 1353, though expressly levelled at the pre-tensions of the Roman curia, excludes any direct reference to it in actual words. By it, the king " at the grievous and clamorous complaints of the great
Many other statutes followed that of 1353, but that passed in the sixteenth year of Richard II.'s reign is, as mentioned before, usually referred to as the Statute of Praemunire. This statute, after first stating " that the right of recovering the presentments to churches, prebends, and other benefices . . . belongeth only to the king's court of the old right of his crown, used and approved in the time of all his progenitors kings of England," proceeds to condemn the practice of papal translation, and after rehearsing the promise of the three estates of the realm to stand with the king in all cases touching his crown and his regalty, enacts " that if any purchase or pursue, or cause to be purchased or pursued in the court of Rome, or elsewhere, any such translations, processes, and sentences of excommunications, bulls, instruments or any other things whatsoever . . . he and his notaries, abettors and counsellors " shall be put out of the king's protection, and their lands tenements, goods and chattels forfeit to the king, and they shall be attached by their bodies or process .made against them by praemunire facias. This statute, says Stubbs, was one of the strongest defensive measures
ordinary were subjected to the penalties pre-scribed. The range and description of offences subject to the penalties of praemunire were greatly widened after the Reformation, so that acts of a very miscellaneous character were from time to time brought within the scope of enactments passed for a very different purpose. For instance, the penalties of praemunire were incurred, under an act of Queen Elizabeth (1571), for denying the Queen's title; and under an act of James I. the Statute of Monopolies (1623), for obtaining any stay of proceedings (other than by arrest of judgment or a writ of error) in any suit for a monopoly; under an act of Charles I. (1640) the attempting to restrain the importation or making of gunpowder was a praemunire; in the reign of Charles II. an act of 1661 made the asserting maliciously and advisedly, by speaking or, writing, that both or either house
AUTaoRIrIEs.Statutes of the Realm; Coke, Institutes; Collier, Ecclesiastical History; Hallam, Middle Ages; Reeves
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