Surplice fees were, in English ecclesiastical law, the fees paid to the incumbent of a parish for rites such as baptisms, weddings, and funerals. They were paid to the incumbent, whoever performed the service.[1]
^Cross, Frank Leslie; Livingstone, Elizabeth A. (eds.) (2005). The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church. Oxford University Press. p. 1571. ISBN 978-0-19-280290-3. {{cite book}}: |first2= has generic name (help)
Surplicefees were, in English ecclesiastical law, the fees paid to the incumbent of a parish for rites such as baptisms, weddings, and funerals. They...
Christianity in 1762, and in 1763 she forbade Catholic clergy from extracting surplicefees from her Jewish subjects. In 1764, she ordered the release of those...
during Easter offerings, and mortuaries, surplicefees and other customary payments. Income and fees a list of fees which the parish clerk could charge for...
magistrate. All this we perform gratis. Still we have no tithes or surplicefees, which, in the Establishment [Anglican Church], are found so exorbitant...
or therewith now enjoyed, and also all the oblations, offerings, and surplicefees, and Easter duties that may arise out of the same, and do also pay him...
closed the church. The bone of contention between Wood and Scoresby was surplicefees. Bull departed in September 1840. The Bowling school, for Wood's factory...
low pay. For example, at Burnham, Raikes received a stipend of £100, surplicefees, and accommodation. Raikes’s married life was happy. His two oldest...
generating contentious issues. On finance, he took on Wood in 1840, over surplicefees in his new church, and was opposed by Wood's "factory movement" allies...
purchase and sale of pecuniary immunities, favoritism in taxation, of surplice money, first-fruits, pluralities,[clarification needed] and unmerited pensions...
original on 15 July 2012. Retrieved 7 August 2011. "Current Fees". Eton College. "Private school fees". Archived from the original on 10 October 2016. Retrieved...
Alleyn had prescribed the clothing of poor scholars to be "a white calico surplice, a long coat such as that worn by Christ's Hospital boys, of good cloth...
the ring in marriage Bowing at the name of Jesus The requirement of the surplice and cap The practice of giving men multiple ecclesiastical positions, receiving...
2006, he stood at Coolmore Stud, Fethard, South Tipperary, for a service fee of €25,000. His first New Zealand crop includes 2009 and 2010 Cox Plate winner...
pallium became controversial in the Middle Ages, because popes charged a fee from those receiving them, acquiring hundreds of millions of gold florins...
Puta initially stood at Farnsfield in Nottinghamshire for Houldsworth at a fee of 10 guineas and half a guinea for the groom. He became a successful stallion...
Clerical vestments were simplified—ministers were only allowed to wear the surplice and bishops had to wear a rochet. Throughout Edward's reign, inventories...
against the provisions of the bishop, welcomed with all honors, "[...] with surplice and stoles and cross [...] at the door of the land of Cerreto [... ] the...
with curate and the "singing children" from the cathedral all "in their Surplices". After a service and sermon, he was to be buried. Various disbursements...