David Harte - Academia.edu (original) (raw)
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Papers by David Harte
Ecclesiastical Law Journal, 2008
Ecclesiastical Law Journal, 2005
The Church in Wales is a small member of the Anglican Communion, both geographically and in terms... more The Church in Wales is a small member of the Anglican Communion, both geographically and in terms of membership. For example, Easter communicants for 2004 were 74,712, by contrast with around 1,500,000 attending Easter services in the Church of England. However, the foreword of this book, written by Archbishop Rowan Williams as Archbishop of Wales before his translation to Canterbury, is a reminder that proximity to England and its origins as part of the Church of England make the Church in Wales a particularly significant partner Church for the Church of England. The value of the Church in Wales as a subject for comparative study in ecclesiastical and canon law has been underlined by the presence in Cardiff of the Centre for Law and Religion and by the LLM programme in Canon Law at Cardiff University. It was therefore fitting that Professor Doe, the architect of those academic landmarks for the subject, should write a comprehensive study of the law of the Church in Wales.
Ecclesiastical Law Journal, 2008
Ecclesiastical Law Journal, 2005
The Church in Wales is a small member of the Anglican Communion, both geographically and in terms... more The Church in Wales is a small member of the Anglican Communion, both geographically and in terms of membership. For example, Easter communicants for 2004 were 74,712, by contrast with around 1,500,000 attending Easter services in the Church of England. However, the foreword of this book, written by Archbishop Rowan Williams as Archbishop of Wales before his translation to Canterbury, is a reminder that proximity to England and its origins as part of the Church of England make the Church in Wales a particularly significant partner Church for the Church of England. The value of the Church in Wales as a subject for comparative study in ecclesiastical and canon law has been underlined by the presence in Cardiff of the Centre for Law and Religion and by the LLM programme in Canon Law at Cardiff University. It was therefore fitting that Professor Doe, the architect of those academic landmarks for the subject, should write a comprehensive study of the law of the Church in Wales.