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if the Land be in no Parish, yet Tythe paid of the
Cattle feeding on it

241

they need not be demanded before Suit be com-
menced

Suit for them, where to be commenced
how brought into the Temporal Courts
not to be fued for where none are due
yet no Action lies against him that does fue

264.

293

294

ibid.

255

Things Tythable of common Right, befide Corn,
Hay, and Wood, which are accounted Great
Tythes.

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233

Lambs

Milk, if no Tythe be made of Cheese, and how paid 235

sue-Milk

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236

233, 234

231

267
ibid.

238

267

Wood

Wood
Wool

237, 23

Things for which Tythe cannot be paid in
but fome Recompence in Money is ufua
instead thereof.

Agiftment of barren Cattle

Houfes in great Towns

Yet See

Mills erected fince 9 Edw. II.

Things whereof Tythe is not due of Comm
but by local Cuftom only

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Fife

Lead, Lime, Salt, Stone Tin, Turf

Compofition Real for Tythe

Modules in lieu of Tythes

Parks, Modus on them when ceafes

Prescription against paying Tythe, on what gr
against paying Tythe of fome one.
Wood

Perfonal Tythes

V

not due from Day-Labourers

V

Acant Bishopricks, to whom the
thereof belong

Valuation of Benefices upon the 11 H. VI

taken

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Vicar, his Right as to the Church
and in fome Places to the Chancel
as to Tythes, &c.

Vicarages, what they are

Vigils

19

20, 242

265

68

in what they differ from Parfonage or Recto-

ries

the Vicar's Portion

143

68

wherein the Inftitution of a Vicar differs from

that of a Rector

may be held by Difpenfation

88

144

224

Vifitation of the Sick, Some liberty may be taken in that

Office

15

by whom, and bow performed of old, and at

prefent

Void. See Vacant

163, &c.

to whom the mean Profits of void Benefices belong

130

who shall pay for ferving the Cure of a void Be

nefice

ibid.

Voidance of Benefices, the feveral means thereof 110
Uniting of Benefices

107

a great Reason why Bishops should have a larger
Power in this respect

132

the Parishioners of a demolish'd Church to con-
tribute to the Repairs of the ftanding Church,
to which they are united

21

Univerfities Privilege in prefenting to the Livings of

Papifts

bow the Papifts elude the Statutes

may license to preach

Voters in electing Convocation-men

72

îbid.

57

162

Ufurpation upon the Right of Patronage, how it may

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W

AKES

W

Welch, he that is ignorant of that
capable of a Benefice in Wales

Welch Bishops have their Sees in Villages
Whitfun-Farthings, what

Wight Ifle, the last Place in England co.
Christianity
Wills, the proving of them
Witnesses to Inftitution
to Induction

to reading Liturgy, Articles, &c.
Woman married cannot prefent to a Benefice by
Woollen. See Burying

Y

ARD, Church-yard, a common Burying
by whom to be fenced

YAR

Year, when the Church begins it

York, the Privileges of the Archbishop thereof
the Archbishop thereof, whether fubje&
Canterbury

his Courts

Convocation

how it acts by concert with that of Can
of what Perfons it confifts

has receiv'd the Provincial of Canterbu

FINI S.

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at the Blue-Ball in Little-Britain.

IR Richard Baker's Chronicle of the Kings of England, brought down to the end of the Reign of King George the First.

2. Mr. William Leybourn's Compleat Surveyor; or the whole Art of Surveying Land. The 5th Edit. To which is added, Practical Obfervations in Land Surveying. By Samuel Cunn.

3. The Philofophical Tranfactions, from the Year 1700, to the Year 1720, in 2 Vols. with 62 Copper Plates; approv'd by Dr. Halley, Secretary to the Royal Society.

4. The Gazetteer's, or Newfman's Interpreter, for Europe, Asia, Africa, and America. The 12th Edit. 5. A moft Compleat Compendium of Geography, General and Special, defcribing all the Empires, Kingdoms, and Dominions in the whole World. 8th Edit. by Laurence Eachard, M. A.

The

6. Mr. Boyer's Compleat French Mafter, for Ladies and Gentlemen. The 10th Edit.

7. A Collection of all the Ecclefiaftical Laws, Canons, Answers, or Refcripts, with other Memorials,. concerning the Government, Difcipline, and Worship of the Church of England, from its first Foundation to the Conqueft. By John Johnson, M. A. Author of the Clergyman's Vade Mecum.

8. Sentences and Maxims, Divine, Moral, and Hiftorical, in Profe and Verfe; being a felect and curious Collection of Copies of all forts, put into Alphabetical Order for the use of Writing Schools. The 2d Edit. by George Shelley, late Writing Mafter of Chrift's Hofpital.

9. Exercifes to the Accidence. The 4th Edition. By William Turner, M. A. late Master of the FreeSchool at Colchester

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