The Elizabethan Parish in its 
Ecclesiastical and Financial 
Aspects 
 
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Title: The Elizabethan Parish in its Ecclesiastical and Financial Aspects 
Author: Sedley Lynch Ware 
Release Date: May 11, 2004 [EBook #12324] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
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SERIES XXVI NOS. 7-8 
JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY STUDIES 
IN 
HISTORICAL AND POLITICAL SCIENCE
Under the Direction of the Departments of History, Political Economy, 
and Political Science 
THE ELIZABETHAN PARISH IN ITS ECCLESIASTICAL AND 
FINANCIAL ASPECTS 
BY 
SEDLEY LYNCH WARE, A.B., LL.B. Fellow in History. 
PUBLISHED MONTHLY 
July-August, 1908 
 
PREFACE 
These chapters are but part of a larger work on the Elizabethan parish 
designed to cover all the aspects of parish government. There is need of 
a comprehensive study of the parish institutions of this period, owing to 
the fact that no modern work exists that in any thorough way pretends 
to discuss the subject. The work of Toulmin Smith was written to 
defend a theory, while the recent history of Mr. and Mrs. Webb deals in 
the main with the parish subsequent to the year 1688. The material 
already in print for such a study is very voluminous, the accumulation 
of texts having progressed more rapidly than the use of them by 
scholars. 
My subject was suggested to me by Professor Vincent, to whom as well 
as to Professor Andrews I am indebted for advice and assistance 
throughout this work. In England I have to thank Messrs. Sidney Webb, 
Hubert Hall and George Unwin, of the London School of Economics, 
for reading manuscript and suggesting improvements. For similar help 
and for reference to new material my acknowledgments are due to Mr. 
C.H. Firth, Regius Professor of Modern History, Oxford, and to Mr. 
C.R.L. Fletcher, of Magdalen College. At the British Museum I found 
the officials most courteous, while the librarians of the Peabody 
Institute, Baltimore, have given me every aid in their power. 
 
CONTENTS. 
 
CHAPTER I 
.
THE ECCLESIASTICAL GOVERNMENT OF THE PARISH. 
ITS IMPORTANCE IN LOCAL GOVERNMENT 
ARCHDEACONS' COURTS 
ILLUSTRATIONS FROM ACT BOOKS OF JUDICIAL 
ADMINISTRATION 
CHURCHWARDENS' DUTIES 
MINISTERS' DUTIES 
OBLIGATIONS EXACTED FROM ALL ALIKE 
CONTROL OF CHURCH OVER EDUCATION AND OPINION 
HOW COURTS CHRISTIAN ENFORCED THEIR DECREES 
EFFECTIVENESS OF EXCOMMUNICATION 
EVILS AND ABUSES OF THE SYSTEM 
JURISDICTION OF QUEEN'S JUDGES IN ECCLESIASTICAL 
MATTERS 
 
CHAPTER II 
. 
PARISH FINANCE. 
ENDOWED PARISHES 
EXPEDIENTS FOR RAISING MONEY 
CHURCH-ALES, PLAYS, GAMES, ETC 
OFFERINGS AND GATHERINGS 
COMMUNION DUES 
SALE OF SEATS, PEW RENTS 
PARISH TARIFFS FOR BURIALS, MARRIAGES, ETC. 
INCOME FROM FINES AND MISCELLANEOUS RECEIPTS 
RATES AND ASSESSMENTS 
INDEPENDENCE OF PARISH AS A FINANCIAL UNIT 
SIGNIFICANCE OF THIS IN COUNTY GOVERNMENT 
 
THE ELIZABETHAN PARISH IN ITS ECCLESIASTICAL AND 
FINANCIAL ASPECTS. 
 
CHAPTER I
. 
THE ECCLESIASTICAL GOVERNMENT OF THE PARISH. 
The ecclesiastical administration of the English parish from the period 
of the Reformation down to the outbreak of the great Civil War is a 
subject which has been much neglected by historians of local 
institutions. Yet during the reign of Elizabeth, at least, the church 
courts took as large a share in parish government as did the justices of 
the peace. Not only were there many obligations enforced by the 
ordinaries which today would be purely civil in character, but to 
contemporaries the maintenance of the church fabric and furniture 
appeared every whit as important as the repairing of roads and bridges; 
while the obligation to attend church and receive communion was on a 
par with that to attend musters, but with this difference, that the former 
requirement affected all alike, while the latter applied to comparatively 
few of the parishioners. 
In the theory of the times, indeed, every member of the commonwealth 
was also a member of the Church of England, and conversely. 
Allegiance to both was, according to the simile of the Elizabethan 
divine, in its nature as indistinguishable as are the sides of a triangle, of 
which any line indifferently may form a side or a base according to the 
angle of approach of the observer[1]. The Queen was head of the 
commonwealth ecclesiastical as well as of the commonwealth civil, and 
as well apprized of her spiritual as of her temporal judges[2]. For both 
sets of judges equally Parliament legislated, or sanctioned legislation. 
Sometimes, in fact, it became a mere matter of expediency whether a 
court Christian or a common law tribunal should be    
    
		
	
	
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