FOOTNOTES:

[1] Divinum judicium, populi suffragium, co-episcoporum consensus. Epist. 55.

[2] Clerus et populus, apostolicæ sedis, vel metropolitani sui consensu, pastorem sibi eligat. Mansi, xx, p. 533.

[3] Acta canonisationis S. Pil. V. Romæ, 1720, folio.

[4] See in particular Le Catholicisme, le Liberalisme, et le Socialisme, and other writings of Donoso Cortes, marquis of Valdegamas, one of the most distinguished members of the constitutional party in Spain.

[5] Journal des Debats, 18th January 1853.

[6] Britannorum inaccessa Romanis loca Christo vero subdita. (Tertullian contra Judæos, lib. vii) Parts of Britain inaccessible to the Romans were, however, subjected to Christ. This work, from its bearing no traces of Montanism, seems to belong to the first part of Tertullian's life. See also Origen in Lucam, cap. i. homil. 6.

[7] Lactantius, de mortibus persecutorum, cap. xii.

[8] Multi ex Brittonibus Christiani sævitiam Diocletiani timentes ad eos coufugerant........ut vita functorum cellæ in templa commutarentur. (Buchanan, iv. c. xxxv.) Many Christians from Britain, fearing the cruelty of Diocletian, took refuge among the Scots......and the cells in which their holy lives were spent, were changed into churches.