Disestablish - Law Dictionary Search Results
Disestablishment
support of the state from an established church as the disestablishment and disendowment of the Irish Church by Act of Parliament
Disestablish
To unsettle to break up anything established to deprive as a church of its connection with the state
Bishop
Ages, ch. Viii.; Lord Selborne's Defence of the Church against Disestablishment, 5th 3d., 24-26 (45); and the Welsh Church Act, 1914,
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Bishopric
Acts, 1914 and 1919, which came into force in 1920, disestablishing the Church in Wales.
Church
civil power' (A Defence of the Church of England against Disestablishment, by Roundell, Earl of Selborne, 5th Edn., p. 10). These
Dissenters Chapels Act
see Lord Selborne's Defence of the Church of England against Disestablishment, 5th Edn., p. 218
Wales
1914, the Church of England in Wales and Monmouthshire was disestablished and disendowed. The operation of the Act was postponed, but
Welsh Church
Welsh Church. The Welsh Church Act, 1914, provided of the disestablishment of the Church of England in Wales and Monmouthshire. Its
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