Description: As the force that gave birth to Anglo-Catholicism,the Oxford Movement is generally treated as an Anglican phenomenon. Yet the influence of members who converted to Roman Catholicism proved decisive for the years leading up to the First Vatican Council and the definition of papal infallibility in Pastor Aeternus (1870). This collection of original essays edited by Parker and Pahls, explores how various Oxford Movement converts to Roman Catholicism contributed to debates surrounding papal infallibility in the 1850s,1860s and beyond.s the force that gave birth to
Description: Ogle, Arthur. The Canon Law in Mediaeval England. An Examination of William Lyndwood's "Provinciale," in Reply to the Late Professor F.W. Maitland. London: John Murray, 1912. xv, 220 pp. Reprinted 2000 by The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd. LCCN 99-33827. ISBN 1-58477-026-0. Cloth. $65. Disputes Maitland's arguments in Roman Canon Law in the Church of England that advance the authority of Roman canon law over the English ecclesiastical courts. Ogle specifically disparages Maitland's "counter-declaration" of Lyndwood, whose Provinciale is considered to be a principal authority on English canon law. Marke, A Catalogue of the Law Collection of New York University (1953) 131.