The Archpriest Cometh

Author(s):  
Peter Lake ◽  
Michael Questier

The purging of the dissenters in the English College in Rome was followed by the appointment of an archpriest over the English secular clergy, one George Blackwell. He was reckoned, by some, to be a cat’s paw of the Society of Jesus. The claim was that the lobbying in Rome for his nomination had been, in effect, the product of a factional grab for power. This, it was alleged, was likely to antagonize the queen’s government. Blackwell’s friends argued in reverse that the majority of English Catholics welcomed the Roman curia’s wisdom in establishing this new form of hierarchy. All this led to the first appeal against Blackwell in December 1598.

2004 ◽  
Vol 38 ◽  
pp. 74-86 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah Hamilton

Odo of Sully, Bishop of Paris (1200-8), decreed in his statutes that each parish priest within his diocese should have a book called amanuale, which should contain theordoof service for extreme unction, the catechism, baptism, and everyday things. His prescription is the earliest mention in the episcopal legislation that a parish priest should have one particular book dedicated to the liturgy for all the services associated with pastoral care. But codices concerned with the sacerdotal rites for thecura anitnarumhave a history which goes back to the late ninth and tenth centuries. These earlyritualiawere often combined with the monastic collectar, as in the mid-tenth-centuryDurham Collectar. There are also some examples from the late tenth and eleventh centuries ofritualiamade for the secular clergy. Odo of Sully was thus providing his powerful support to an existing practice rather than instituting a new form of service book. This paper investigates further the context in which these early examples of ‘parish’ rituals were compiled, beginning with the Carolingian background.


1984 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
pp. 48-66 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mitchell Williams

It was in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries that colleges were first established in the Iberian Peninsula for the provision of Catholic priests to serve on the English mission. The first to be opened was at Valladolid in 1589; this ‘was followed by Seville in 1592 and Madrid in 1611. They were supported by the alms of the faithful, taken under the protection of the Spanish Crown, and administered by the Society of Jesus. Smaller establishments, residences, were in existence at Lisbon and San Lucar de Barrameda (near Cadiz) serving as points of entry and departure for students and priests on their journeys between Spain and England. Eventually, in 1622, a College was established at Lisbon but from the beginning, this college differed from the others in that it was always administered by the English secular clergy and not by the Jesuits. The golden age of the Spanish colleges was in the first fifty or sixty years of their existence when they not only provided many missioners, including martyrs, but also exercised a political influence on the English Catholic scene by reason of their Jesuit administration and their situation in Spain. However, by the eighteenth century a decline had set in. There were complaints about the administration, and the recruitment of students was low so that few missioners returned to work in England. In fact, between 1739 and 1756 the College at Valladolid was closed to students while rebuilding took place. Partly because of the poor recruitment and partly because of their antipathy to the Jesuits, the Vicars Aṕostolic were dissatisfied and almost lost interest in these three colleges, relying on the establishments at Douai and Lisbon which were under the direction of the seculars.


Author(s):  
W. H. Zucker ◽  
R. G. Mason

Platelet adhesion initiates platelet aggregation and is an important component of the hemostatic process. Since the development of a new form of collagen as a topical hemostatic agent is of both basic and clinical interest, an ultrastructural and hematologic study of the interaction of platelets with the microcrystalline collagen preparation was undertaken.In this study, whole blood anticoagulated with EDTA was used in order to inhibit aggregation and permit study of platelet adhesion to collagen as an isolated event. The microcrystalline collagen was prepared from bovine dermal corium; milling was with sharp blades. The preparation consists of partial hydrochloric acid amine collagen salts and retains much of the fibrillar morphology of native collagen.


Author(s):  
M.K. Lamvik ◽  
L.L. Klatt

Tropomyosin paracrystals have been used extensively as test specimens and magnification standards due to their clear periodic banding patterns. The paracrystal type discovered by Ohtsuki1 has been of particular interest as a test of unstained specimens because of alternating bands that differ by 50% in mass thickness. While producing specimens of this type, we came across a new paracrystal form. Since this new form displays aligned tropomyosin molecules without the overlaps that are characteristic of the Ohtsuki-type paracrystal, it presents a staining pattern that corresponds to the amino acid sequence of the molecule.


2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joshua Wilt ◽  
William Revelle

Nature ◽  
2001 ◽  
Author(s):  
Philip Ball
Keyword(s):  

2008 ◽  
Vol 38 (16) ◽  
pp. 5
Author(s):  
ELIZABETH MECHCATIE
Keyword(s):  

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