- The
Arches Court or
Court of Arches,
presided over by the Dean
of Arches, is an
ecclesiastical court of the
Church of England covering the
Province of Canterbury...
-
of the
Arches is the
judge who
presides in the
provincial ecclesiastical court of the
Archbishop of Canterbury. This
court is
called the
Arches Court...
-
elaborate triumphal arches may have
multiple archways, or in a tetrapylon, p****ages
leading in four directions.
Triumphal arches are one
of the most influential...
-
history of court Courts of the
Church of England (brief)
Courts of the
Church of England,
detailed (archive link)
Archives of the
Court of Arches at Lambeth...
-
double arches (one
after the other)
while the four side (or corner)
points have
single arches. Each
arch of the
double arches at
either end
of the
court count...
-
determinations and hearings,
short of the society's
convening in the
Court of the
Arches or
Admiralty Court,
which frequently consisted of judges with
other responsibilities...
-
court of the archbishop. In the
province of Canterbury, the archbishop's
court was
known as the
Court of Arches and was
presided over by the archbishop's...
- An
arch is a
curved vertical structure spanning an open
space underneath it.
Arches may
support the load
above them, or they may
perform a
purely decorative...
-
of the
Archbishops of Canterbury and
their London headquarters. It
became home to the
Court of Arches, to
which the
church gave its name. The
Court of...
- in the
Court of Arches,
together with
Henry Bristow Wilson, the
editor of Essays and reviews. Both had been
accused of denying the
inspiration of scripture...