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Intestacy Intestacy
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Making Wills Making Wills
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Wills by Ecclesiastics Wills by Ecclesiastics
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Cite
Abstract
In the first of his letters criticizing cyfraith Hywel, written as a result of a dispute between Llywelyn ap Gruffudd and Bishop Anian of Bangor in 1279, Archbishop John Pecham accused Llywelyn of having usurped ecclesiastical property and of disregarding the Catholic Church's right to dispose of the moveables of persons who had died intestate. The prince allegedly justified his actions by referring to native law. Llywelyn's actions regarding intestacy and making wills clearly caused resentment among laymen as well as ecclesiastics in his dominions. This chapter examines the accusations against Llywelyn in the light of Welsh law's treatment of testamentary disposition, and how far that treatment contradicted canon law on the subject. The policies of Llywelyn ap Gruffudd regarding testamentary matters, as evidenced by his critics, bore resemblance to rules contained in lawbooks written earlier in the 13th century in north Wales.
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