- Abel, 3.
- Abraham, 1.
- Adam, 3, 6.
- Advowsons, sale of, 27.
- Aelfwold, King of Northumbria, 42.
- Aidan, Bishop, 36.
- Alcuin, 35.
- Alfred, King, 67.
- Alien Priories, property of, 139;
- annual amount sent to Cluny in France, 170;
- dissolved, 170.
- Allen, John, his “Inquiry into the Royal Prerogative,” 58.
- Althorp, Lord, 202.
- Appendices, see Table of Contents, p. xvi.
- Apostolical Constitutions, 5-7.
- Arundel, Archbishop of Canterbury, increased Bishop Roger’s modus for City of London, 187;
- the record of the Common Council on this modus, 188.
- Asser, 55.
- Athelstan, King, law of tithes, 70.
- Athon, John de, his “Constitutions of Otho”; refers to canon law which makes rectors repair chancel and nave of churches, 124, note 1.
- Baldred, King of Kent, his witan declined to ratify a grant of folcland, 58.
- Baron, John, 105.
- Bede, 11;
- speaks but once of tithes, to be paid to poor, 21;
- his account of landowners’ churches, 25, 26, 81, 82.
- Bellarmine, Cardinal, 5, 6.
- Benefices in England and Wales, 257.
- Birch, his “Cartularium Saxonicum,” 37, 39, 58, 61, 143;
- discovers earliest Anglo-Saxon census MS., 91.
- Birinus, first Archbishop of York, 35.
- Bishops, first distributors of church revenues, 18;
- British Bishops (A.D. 597), 35;
- Anglo-Saxon, 93.
- Blunt, in his “History of the Reformation” tells of the condition of the poor at the dissolution of monasteries, 128.
- Blackstone, Judge, quadripartite division, 18, 23;
- church endowments, 24, 25;
- monks, 88;
- his views on the origin of arbitrary consecration of tithes, 148.
- Bocland defined, 57.
- Boniface, Archbishop of Mentz, 40.
- British Churches, ancient, no tithes paid to, 14.
- Brewer, J. S., 11, 17, 119.
- Bromton, John, abbot of Jervaulx in Yorkshire, 48, 49, 114, 115.
- Burnet, Bishop, his criticisms on Wharton’s “Anglia Sacra,” 129, 130.
- Cain, 3.
- Caird, Sir James, valued tithes at six millions, 207.
- Canons, Calchyth (Chelsea), A.D. 787, p. 43.
- Canute, King, his laws, 121;
- made use of thirty-six out of the forty-five articles of the “Church Grith” Laws, 121;
- parishioners to keep churches in repair, 156.
- Canterbury, primacy of, 37.
- Catalogue of Sir Robert Cotton’s library, in A.D. 1632, 99, 100;
- second catalogue, 1695;
- third, 1705.
- Cave, Dr., his character of Wharton, 129.
- Chancel, to be kept in repair by owners of tithes, 156.
- Charibert, king of Paris, 13.
- Charles (Charlemagne), king of France, makes his first public law for payment of tithes, A.D. 779, pp. 33, 34, 40.
- Christian ministers, how maintained, 4, 7.
- Church Defence Institution, 11.
- Church of England established in the kingdom of Kent, 14, 15;
- in Northumbria, 36.
- Church Grith Law, art. 6, enacts the tripartite division of tithes, 95;
- Thorpe, Lingard, Stubbs, and Freeman acknowledge this law, 96, 97;
- chapters x., xii. refute the opinions of opponents of this law.
- Church-Scot, 77, 78.
- Church Revenues, 258.
- Clergy, their share of Church revenues, 18, 79, 132, 258;
- “They had not the sole use of tithes,” 21.
- Codex Diplomaticus, Kemble, 59, 61, 63.
- Colman, Bishop, 37, 38.
- Comber, Thomas, Dean of Carlisle, supports, like Dean Prideaux, the divine right of persons to their tithes, and abuses Selden for having denied it, 53.
- Commons, House of, petitioned the Crown against paying tithes for timber, 136;
- succeeded in 1372 in limiting power of canon of A.D. 1343 as regards timber, 136-138.
- Commutation Act, 201;
- Paley’s and Adam Smith’s definitions of tithes, 201;
- “commuted value,” defined, 203;
- an illustration of the, 204;
- formula used to find the septennial average, 204;
- the 80th sec. left a loophole by which landlords contracted themselves out of payment, 204, 205;
- great injustice of paying tithes on agricultural produce only, 206;
- tithes valued in 1836 at six millions, 207;
- who shared the profits? 207, 208.
- Confession, The, its power for exacting tithes, 28.
- Constantine, Emperor, 7.
- Cotton, Sir Robert, his library, 98-101;
- Church Grith law not in his library during his life, 99;
- Lord Selborne says it was, 102;
- not in the official catalogue of 1632, pp. 99, 100;
- first mentioned in Wanley’s catalogue of 1705, p. 100.
- Cotton, Sir John, 100, 101;
- died A.D. 1702;
- Act of Parliament passed in 1702 vesting library in trustees, 100.
- Councils, synod at Westminster, A.D. 1175, 133;
- in A.D. 1195 by Archbishop of York, 133;
- Archbishop Winchelsey’s synod in London, A.D. 1295, 134;
- synod at St. Paul’s, London, A.D. 1343;
- tithing all manner of timber, 135;
- the House of Commons frequently petitioned against this canon; arbitrary appropriation of tithes abolished by the third Lateran Council, 148;
- again in A.D. 1215, 150;
- Archbishop Stratford’s council in London in A.D. 1342, the 4th canon of which provided for poor, 157;
- the third Lateran council had forbidden “infeudations,” 159.
- Crab, Friar, 10.
- Cranmer, Archbishop, surrendered landed estates to Henry VIII., 182.
- Cromwell, Earl of Essex, his advice to Henry VIII., how and why to divide the monastic lands, 125, 126.
- Cuthbert, Archbishop of Canterbury, 40.
- Danegeld, 17.
- Danes, treaty with, between Edward the Elder and Guthrum II., for payment of tithes, 69.
- Decretals, forged, of Isidore, 10.
- Degge, Sir Simon, his “Parson’s Counsellor,” 128;
- he said, “The poor have a share in the tithes,” 129;
- a brief sketch of his life, 130;
- Lord Selborne quotes a garbled edition of Degge’s Counsellor, 130, 131.
- Deusdedit, Archbishop of Canterbury, 37.
- Dibdin, Mr. Chancellor, in his new edition of Dr. Brewer’s work wrongly translates “portiones,” 11, 17, 22, 23;
- differs from Brewer on the division of tithes, 11;
- omits material evidence, 119;
- his error on the “Penitential” of Theodore, 119;
- his “blend,” 119.
- Diocese and parish at one time, synonymous, 83.
- Dionysius, “Exiguus,” mentions nothing about tithes, 5.
- Dominicans, 170.
- Dunstan, Archbishop, 148, 163;
- first episcopal pluralist, 165.
- Eadbert, bishop of Lindisfarne in A.D. 686, paid tithes to the poor, but not to the Church, 21, 51.
- Earl of Chester, charter of, 176.
- Ecclesiastical Commission created in 1836, particulars of its “Common Fund” in 43rd Report, 141, 173.
- Edgar’s, King, laws, 79;
- manorial churches received one-third of the tithes, 79;
- threefold division of churches, 80;
- first English law expressly appropriating tithes, 80;
- canons of, 86;
- important gloss, 86.
- Edmund, King, the laws of, 77;
- bishops to keep churches in repair, 156.
- Edwin, King, 36.
- Edward the Confessor, his alleged laws for tithes, 19.
- Edward the Elder, King, his treaty with King Guthrum II., by which the Danes were to pay tithes, 69.
- Egbert, King, 37, 58.
- Egbert, Archbishop of York, his works, 29;
- his Excerptions, 30-32, 103;
- his alleged tripartite division of tithes an anachronism, 30;
- sources of Egbert’s excerptions, 32.
- Englishman’s Brief, 9, 138, 139, 142, 143, 145.
- Esdaile, Edward Jeffries, owner of tithes of St. Botolph without Aldgate, with particulars, 199, 200.
- Ethelbert, king of Kent, became a Christian, 13;
- created and endowed three bishoprics, 15;
- the Anglo-Saxon Church was thus State Established, 15, note 3;
- enacted no laws for payment of tithes, 19.
- Ethelbert, King of East Angles, 48.
- Ethelred II., called the Unready, returns from exile, A.D. 1014, p. 102;
- his Church Grith law for the tripartite division of tithes, 94, 95, etc.
- Ethelwulf’s, King, charters, 59, 60, 62, 65.
- Exon Domesday, 58.
- Extraordinary tithe-rent charge, how it originated, 211, 213;
- redeemed, 213.
- Felix, a Burgundian missionary, 35.
- Fire Acts, 188, 190.
- First Fruits and Tenths, their origin, 2.
- Folcland defined, 56.
- Franciscans, 170.
- Freeman, E. A., on lawyers, 25;
- on letter of Kentish men to Athelstan, 75;
- on tithe law passed at Greatanlea, 75;
- on Edmund’s law, 79;
- contradicts himself on the Church Grith law, 108-110;
- letter to Fuller, 108-109;
- his pedantry and inconsistency, 111 and note 2.
- Fuller, Rev. M., “Our Title Deeds,” its errors, 19, 68, 69, 73, 116, 119;
- dedicated his work to Lord Selborne, 119;
- Freeman’s letter to him about the “Church Grith law,” 108, 109;
- omits material evidence against Price’s opinion, 107;
- passes over the threefold division of Church revenues stated by the rectors of Reading, 132;
- admits threefold division in Grith law, 117;
- fails to “shake its authority,” 118, 119.
- George, bishop of Ostia, 42.
- Greatanlea, Council of, 74.
- Grith and Mund, 95.
- Guthrum I., King, his treaty with Alfred, in which there was nothing about tithes, 67;
- received from King Alfred East Anglia and Northumberland, 69.
- Guthrum II., his treaty with Edward the Elder in which the Danes were to pay tithes, 69.
- Habam, King Ethelred’s ordinances of, 95.
- Haddan and Stubbs’ “Concilia” iii. on Ethelwulf’s charters, 61, 63, 65;
- their opinions on Theodore’s “Penitential,” 20-23.
- Hale, William, archdeacon of London, first questioned the tripartite division of tithes, 85;
- foundation of his arguments, 107;
- gets Price’s opinion on the Church Grith law, 107;
- seeks and receives another opinion, which is adverse to Price’s, 107;
- Selborne, Fuller, Dibdin and others avoid quoting this adverse opinion, 107.
- Hallam, Henry, 81.
- Hasted, the historian of Kent, 175.
- Higbert, Archbishop of Lichfield, 41, 42.
- Holinshed, 48.
- Honorius, Archbishop of Canterbury, parishes traced to, 83.
- Hook, Dean of Chichester, 15.
- Howley, Archbishop of Canterbury, intr., xiii.
- Huntingdon the chronicler, 54.
- Ina, King, Church-scot in his Laws, A.D. 690, p. 78;
- tithes not mentioned, 78.
- Inclosure Awards, 257.
- Incumbents of churches, now free-holders, but up to A.D. 1180 held their positions according to will of patron, 148;
- before Richard I. and John, lay patrons, nominated, instituted, and inducted them, 150.
- Infeudations defined, 159;
- third Lateran Council, A.D. 1180 had forbidden them, 159.
- Ingulph, 55, 65, 66.
- Irish missionaries, 12.
- Isidore, Archbishop of Seville, forged decretals, 10.
- Jaenbert, Archbishop of Canterbury, 40.
- Johnson’s, John, “Laws and Customs,” 69;
- founded on “Concilia,” 105;
- the Church Grith law unknown to him, 105.
- Josephus, 10.
- Josseline, secretary to Archbishop Parker, 101.
- Justus, Bishop, 15, 16, 36, 37.
- Kemble, John, 5, 14, 33;
- on Offa’s grant, 50;
- his six canons in testing charters, 59;
- his opinions on Ethelwulf’s charters, 63-65;
- supports Athelstan’s tithe-law, 71;
- synods and councils not different in meaning, 74, 79.
- Kennett, Bishop of Peterborough, on one-third of tithes to manor churches, 85, 86;
- “the parish priest was the bank,” 24.
- Kentish men, letter of, to Athelstan, 75.
- Lambarde, William, his collection of Anglo-Saxon laws, A.D. 1568, 104.
- Landlords’ or manorial churches, 23, 24;
- earliest account of, 25, 26;
- Edgar’s laws giving them one-third of the tithes, 26, 79;
- how this one-third passed into the whole according to Lord Selborne, 123, 149.
- Laurentius, Archbishop, 36.
- Legatine Councils in England, 42.
- Lindisfarne, bishopric of, 36.
- Lingard, Dr., on Bede’s “Tributum,” 22;
- on Egbert’s excerptions, 30;
- on Athelstan’s law, 72;
- his remarks on the letter of the Kentish men to King Athelstan, 75;
- on Church Grith law, 96, 116.
- London, tithes in the city and liberties of, 186-200;
- first Fire Act enacting tithes, 188;
- second Fire Act, 190;
- parishes receiving tithes by these Fire Acts enumerated, 190-192;
- forty-one parishes out of the eighty-six now united, their incomes and populations, 192;
- other parishes in the city and liberties not included in Fire Acts, their incomes and populations, 194-200;
- the tripartite division of church revenues in London churches, 193.
- Magdeburg centuries, 43.
- Malmesbury chronicler, 54.
- Manorial churches, see Landlord’s churches.
- Market-gardens Act of 1873, how it originated, 211;
- orchards, 211.
- Masçon, provincial council of, 10, 11.
- Mellitus, Bishop, 15, 16, 36.
- Mendicant friars, 170;
- their ruling idea, 170;
- their views about tithes, 171.
- Milman, Dean of St. Paul’s, 34.
- Mirror, The, 127.
- Monasteries in England, their number up to A.D. 1215, pp. 143, 146, 147, 169;
- annual value of their properties, 159;
- brief account of, 163-185;
- monasteries commenced to decline, 170;
- precedents to guide Henry VIII. in dissolving monasteries, 177, 178;
- total number dissolved, and their annual value, 185;
- the three abbots who were executed, 184.
- Monks, 18, 88;
- the four privileged orders exempted from paying tithes, 161;
- these lands still exempt, 162.
- Norman Conquest gave a great impulse to building monasteries, 168;
- number of bishops, 168.
- Odo, Archbishop of Canterbury, 87, 88;
- the source of his canon on tithes, 88.
- Offa, king of Mercia, full particulars of, 40-42;
- his alleged law of tithes, A.D. 794, p. 47.
- Old Latin translators, 111, 112;
- they omit fifteen Anglo-Saxon laws which Thorpe has published, 112.
- Oswy, king of Northumberland, 37-39.
- Otho’s “Constitutions,” A.D. 1237, p. 124.
- Papal Legates in England, 35.
- Parish Churches, their origin, 81, 93;
- Selden’s opinion, 84;
- opinions of other writers, 93.
- “Parochia,” different meanings, 83.
- Parsonage houses, number of, 258.
- Paulinus, first Archbishop of York, 36.
- Peel, Sir Robert, solved the tithe problem, 202.
- “Penitentials” of Archbishop Theodore, 20, 21, 51.
- Pepin, King, 34.
- Perpetual curate, how it differs from vicar, 158.
- Peter’s pence, 42.
- Poor, the, Archbishop Theodore first refers to tithes paid to, 51;
- Bishop Eadbert gave tithes to, 51;
- tithes to poor in Edgar’s law, 85;
- Archbishop Stratford, 4th canon in 1342 on paying a part of the tithes to, 157;
- first Poor Law Act, 125;
- Blackstone on the, 127;
- the people also supported the poor in Edgar’s canons, 68, 127;
- “the poor have a share in the tithes,” says Degge, 129;
- four Acts of Parliament giving the poor a right to a part of the tithes, 131;
- 43 Eliz., c. ii., for relief of poor, 131.
- Popes:
- Clement I., 5, 6;
- Gregory the Great, 11, 13;
- his reply to Augustine’s letter, 16, 35;
- Sylvester, 17, 129;
- Simplicius, 17;
- Gelasius, 17;
- Honorius III., 37;
- Boniface V., 37;
- Vitalian, 39;
- Adrian I., 40, 41;
- Alexanders III.’s letter to English hierarchy commanding the people to pay tithes, 133;
- Innocent III., A.D. 1200, ordered payment of tithes, 149.
- Population in Anglo-Saxon times, 91.
- Price, Richard, his opinion of the “Church Grith Law,” 106;
- the value of this opinion, 107.
- Prideaux, Dean of Norwich, 47;
- his mistaken interpretation of Offa’s grant, A.D. 794, p. 50;
- his mistaken interpretation of Ethelwulf’s charters, 53, 54;
- supports Athelstan’s alleged tithe law, 72;
- abuses Selden and his “History of Tithes,” 53.
- Pulman, John, 19.
- Quadripartite division of church revenues, 16-18.
- Queens:
- Anne, 2;
- Bertha, 13.
- Records, city of London, 193, note.
- Redemption of tithes, 209;
- two values on it, when forming Bill for, 207;
- illustrations of the modus operandi, 207, 208.
- Repairs of Churches, Edmund’s law makes bishops do it, 77;
- Canute’s makes the parishioners, 156;
- canon law makes owner of rectorial tithes repair chancel and nave, 124, note 1.
- Roger, Bishop of London, his modus decimandi for the city of London, 186;
- tripartite division of these revenues, 186.
- Roman Mission to England, 13, 14, 35.
- Russell, Lord John, borrowed Peel’s machinery for tithe problem, 202, 203;
- originated extraordinary tithe rent charge, 211, 212;
- his “permanent settlement” of the tithe question, a delusion, 215.
- Saxon Chronicle, 54.
- Schmid, Dr. Reinhold, published Church Grith Law in his “Anglo-Saxon Laws,” 108;
- Thorpe’s opinion thereon, 108;
- referred to by Hale’s unnamed correspondent, 107.
- Selborne, the Earl of, 5, 10, 49;
- his views on the Church Grith law, 96;
- quotes Stubbs’ private letter against tripartite division of tithes, 97;
- wrongly quotes marginal writing on MS. of Grith law, 101;
- erroneous strictures on art. 43 of law, 102;
- his witnesses to upset this law, 102-116;
- their evidence against him, 102-116;
- omits material evidence which militates against his views on this law, 105, 107;
- his fallacious inferences from negative evidence, 102-106;
- quotes Freeman’s letter to Fuller on Church Grith law, 108;
- incorrect and misleading description of contents of the “Worcester Volume,” Nero, A. 1, 117, 118;
- his remarks on 15 Rich. II. c. vi. open to grave objections, 154;
- his opinion as to the origin of tithe endowments to parishes, 149.
- Selden, John, 3, 5, 10, 11;
- on legatine councils of A.D. 787, pp. 43, 45;
- on Offa’s laws of A.D. 794, p. 48;
- his interpretation of Ethelwulf’s charter, 65, 66;
- but expresses a doubt, 66;
- his remarks on the treaty between Edward the Elder and Guthrum II., 69;
- supports Athelstan’s tithe law, 71;
- supports Edmund’s law, 79, 83;
- his remarks on Edgar’s laws, 84;
- quotes Egbert’s excerptions from the Worcester Volume, 103;
- his use of the expression, “arbitrary consecration” of tithes, meaning that a layman could give his tithes without the sanction of the bishop, to whatever spiritual person he willed, 149.
- Smith, Dr. Thomas, his catalogue of the Cottonian library in A.D. 1695, 100;
- Church Grith law omitted, 100.
- Soames, History of Anglo-Saxon Church, 40.
- Spelman, Sir Henry, 5, 67;
- his “Concilia” in A.D. 1639, p. 103.
- Statutes—
- — 17 Edw. III. c. 28, 136, Commons petition against timber tithe.
- — 18 Edw. III. c. 9, 136, Commons petition against timber tithe.
- — 21 Edw. III. c. 48, 136, Commons petition against timber tithe.
- — 25 Edw. III. c. 37, 136, Commons petition against timber tithe.
- — 45 Edw. III. c. 3, 136, petition granted.
- — 12 Rich. II. c. 7, 127, Support of poor by towns.
- — 15 Rich. II. c. 6, 153, 157, provision for poor and vicar.
- — 16 Rich. II. c. 5, 161, Act of Premunire.
- — 2 Hen. IV. c. 4, 161, against purchasing bulls for exemption.
- — 4 Hen. IV. c. 12, 154, perpetual vicar created and endowed.
- — 19 Hen. VII. c. 12, 127, support of poor by towns.
- — 24 Hen. VIII. c. 12, 179, restraint of appeals to Rome.
- — 27 Hen. VIII. c. 20, 179, for payment of tithes.
- — 27 Hen. VIII. c. 21, 188, tithes of City and Liberties of London.
- — 27 Hen. VIII. c. 26, 127, support of poor by towns, etc.
- — 27 Hen. VIII. c. 28, 180, monasteries under £200 a year dissolved.
- — 28 Hen. VIII. c. 16, 179, pope’s power over tithes abolished.
- — 31 Hen. VIII. c. 13, 184, monasteries over £200 a year dissolved.
- — 31 Hen. VIII. c. 13, 126, owners of abbey lands to use hospitality.
- — 31 Hen. VIII. c. 13, 184, lands of privileged orders now exempt from paying tithes.
- — 32 Hen. VIII. c. 7, 185, lands of privileged orders now exempt from paying tithes.
- — 32 Hen. VIII. c. 8, 160, all abbey properties given to king.
- — 37 Hen. VIII. c. 12, 188, tithes of 2s. 9d. in the £ in London.
- — 2 and 3 Edw. VI. c. 13, 76, payment of personal tithes.
- — 2 and 3 Edw. VI. c. 13, adds to 27 Hen. VIII. c. 20, and 32 Hen. VIII. c. 7.
- — 1 Eliz. c. 19, 183, tithes in exchange for episcopal lands.
- — 13 Eliz. c. 20, 131, profits of benefices to the poor.
- — 18 Eliz. c. 11, s. 7, 131, confirms the above Act.
- — 43 Eliz. c. 2, 131, for relief of the poor.
- — 22 and 23 Car. II. c. 15, 188, Fire Act for tithes in London.
- — 44 Geo. III. c. 89, 190, increases tithes in London.
- — 6 and 7 Wm. IV. c. 71, 201, Commutation Act of 1836.
- — 6 and 7 Wm. IV. c. 77, 141, created Ecclesiastical Commission.
- — 2 and 3 Vict. c. 62, s. 27, 213, on tithes of orchards.
- — 36 and 37 Vict. c. 42, 213, on tithes of market gardens.
- — 49 and 50 Vict. c. 54, 213, redemption of extraordinary tithes.
- — 54 Vict. c. 8, 225, for recovery of tithes.
- Stephens, Serjeant, tithes as odious, 23.
- Stratford, Archbishop of Canterbury, his Canon set apart a portion of the tithes for the poor, 97.
- Streaneshalch (Whitby), 37, 38.
- Stubbs, William, Bishop of Oxford, 45;
- supports Athelstan’s tithe law, 71, 79, 83;
- supports Grith law of A.D. 1014 in his “Constitutional History,” 96, 97;
- contradicts his historical statements in private letters as regards this law, 97;
- Selborne quotes one of his letters, 97;
- the bishop quotes Stratford’s canon recognising the claim of poor to a share of the tithes, 97;
- admits that the poor have a claim on the tithes and other church endowments, 157.
- Terra Regis defined, 58.
- Theodore, Archbishop of Canterbury, 39, 40;
- first to have mentioned tithes, 20, 51.
- Theophylact, Bishop of Todi, 42.
- Thorpe, Benjamin, 14, 67, 72;
- his opinion on Wilkins’s “Concilia,” 106;
- frequent references.
- Tillesley, Archdeacon, 6.
- Tithes, Old Testament quotations of their payment, 1;
- their appropriation to monasteries, 8;
- how first given to the Christian Church, 8;
- the clergy had not the sole use of them, 21;
- Legatine Council in England, A.D. 787, for their payment, 43;
- first civil law in England for their payment, 44;
- Lord Selborne’s opinion on the 17th Injunction of the Legatine Council, 45;
- Athelstan’s law on, 70;
- definition of, 76;
- duties of parish priests for their tithes in pre-Reformation times, 142;
- these duties no longer performed, 144;
- parishes held their tithes by common right, but monasteries by grants or prescriptions, 151;
- traced from their origin, 151;
- appropriated to monasteries of two kinds, 151;
- tithes of Church in Wales, 214-222;
- commuted in 1836, 201;
- in London, 186-200.
- The total value in 1836 of commuted tithes according to counties, see Appendix F;
- see Appendix G for the number of parishes in England and Wales paying tithes, and the number of rectors and vicars receiving them.
- For their divisions, see the heading “Tripartite.”
- Tripartite division of tithes, by the laws of Edgar, 79;
- of Ethelred II’s, 95;
- of Canute’s, 121;
- this division in London, 193;
- is stated by the rectors of Reading, 132.
- Tripartite division of Church revenues, 7, 17, 82, 86, 95, 189.
- Trustees of Sir R. Cotton’s Library, 100.
- Vergil, Polydore, Archdeacon, 48.
- Vicar, origin of, 152;
- the “perpetual vicar” of 4 Hen. IV. c. 12, 154, 155;
- this law as regards the vicar is important in two ways, 128;
- not originally a freeholder, 158;
- number of vicars employed in the old parishes receiving tithes, see Appendix G;
- a list of the small or vicarial tithes, 155;
- generally endowed by the bishops with one-third of the tithes following Edgar’s appropriation, 158, note 1;
- vicars owe to Acts of Parliament their endowments and permanent freehold position, 158, note 1;
- Lord Selborne’s remarks on 15 Rich. II. c. 6 open to grave objections, 154.
- Wales, tithes of the four dioceses of, 216-224;
- Bangor, 217, 218;
- Llandaff, 218, 219;
- St. Asaph, 219, 220;
- St. David’s, 220-222;
- tithe-rent charge in possession of Ecclesiastical Commission in Wales in the year 1889, 222, 223;
- amount of prebendal tithes still outstanding on leases, 223;
- amount paid to the Welsh dioceses out of the Common Fund in 1889, 223;
- the net annual receipts from Wales in 1888, 224;
- the gross income for 1890, 224;
- Church and Nonconformist populations respectively, 224.
- Wanley, Humphrey, his catalogue of the Cottonian Library, 100.
- Wasserschleben, Professor, on the “Penitential” of Theodore, 120.
- Wendover, Roger, 48, 54.
- Werburgh, St., monastery at Chester, charters and grants to it by the Earls of Chester, 176.
- Wharton, Henry, division of tithes, 18;
- attacked Degge’s “Parson’s Counsellor,” 128;
- attacks Bishop Burnet’s “History of the Reformation,” 129;
- his character by the bishop and by Dr. Cave, 129, 130;
- the bishop’s exposure of the errors of “Anglia Sacra,” 129, note 3;
- he had two parishes at the age of 24, and wrote his “Defence of Pluralities,” 129;
- Degge attacked pluralists, 128.
- Wheelock, 105.
- Wickliffe, John, his views about tithes, etc., 171, 174.
- Wighard sent to Rome in A.D. 664 to be consecrated Archbishop of Canterbury and died there, 39.
- Wighood, a French abbot, 42.
- Wilfrid, 35, 38.
- Wilkins, David, the first to publish the “Church Grith Law” in his “Anglo-Saxon Laws,” 105;
- he omitted it in his “Concilia”;
- the character of his writings given by Thorpe and Archdeacon Hale’s correspondent, 107, 108.
- Witenagemót, what constitutes a, 73.
- Wolsey, Cardinal, 141.