Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- LIST OF MAPS
- FOREWORD
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
- ABBREVIATIONS
- 1 THE CHURCH IN IRELAND ON THE EVE OF THE INVASION
- 2 THE ESTABLISHMENT OF THE NEW ORDER
- 3 THE NEW ORDER CONSOLIDATED
- 4 THE CRISIS OF THE CISTERCIAN ORDER IN IRELAND
- 5 ECCLESIA HIBERNICANA
- 6 THE CLERGY AND THE COMMON LAW, 1255–91
- 7 THE CLERGY AND THE COMMON LAW, 1295–1314
- 8 THE EPISCOPATE IN THE REIGN OF EDWARD I
- 9 FOURTEENTH CENTURY DEVELOPMENTS
- 10 THE STATUTE OF KILKENNY
- APPENDIX 1 Canterbury's claim to primacy over Ireland
- APPENDIX 2 The Armagh election dispute, 1202–7
- BIBLIOGRAPHY
- INDEX
APPENDIX 2 - The Armagh election dispute, 1202–7
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 October 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- LIST OF MAPS
- FOREWORD
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
- ABBREVIATIONS
- 1 THE CHURCH IN IRELAND ON THE EVE OF THE INVASION
- 2 THE ESTABLISHMENT OF THE NEW ORDER
- 3 THE NEW ORDER CONSOLIDATED
- 4 THE CRISIS OF THE CISTERCIAN ORDER IN IRELAND
- 5 ECCLESIA HIBERNICANA
- 6 THE CLERGY AND THE COMMON LAW, 1255–91
- 7 THE CLERGY AND THE COMMON LAW, 1295–1314
- 8 THE EPISCOPATE IN THE REIGN OF EDWARD I
- 9 FOURTEENTH CENTURY DEVELOPMENTS
- 10 THE STATUTE OF KILKENNY
- APPENDIX 1 Canterbury's claim to primacy over Ireland
- APPENDIX 2 The Armagh election dispute, 1202–7
- BIBLIOGRAPHY
- INDEX
Summary
The facts about the beginnings of the controversy over the election of a new archbishop of Armagh after the death of Tomaltach O Conchobair in 1201 are known from a letter of Innocent III replying to his legate in Ireland, Cardinal John of Salerno, on whom fell the responsibility for settling the case. The Legate had found the affair so difficult that he did not wish to take any action until he had got advice from the Pope. He had given Innocent a detailed account of what had happened and this the Pope repeated in a lengthy summary, following the normal practice of the papal chancery, before giving the answers to questions raised.
It was the justiciar who had begun proceedings by giving the electors permission to go ahead with the election. Through the archdeacon of Armagh he instructed them to meet at Drogheda. This was not the canonically required location. But the Armagh cathedral was inter Hibernicos and Drogheda was a strongpoint of the colony. The archdeacon issued the electoral summonses in proper canonical form, but on the appointed day the only electors to join him were two suffragans and the abbot of Mellifont who came armed with a privilege which he alleged gave him ‘first voice’ in an Armagh election.
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- Information
- The Church and the Two Nations in Medieval Ireland , pp. 226 - 230Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1970