Friedrich Bernard Christian Maassen

 Jean Mabillon

 Mabinogion

 Diocese of Macao

 St. Macarius

 Macarius Magnes

 Macarius of Antioch

 Edward McCabe

 Hugh MacCaghwell

 Denis Florence MacCarthy

 Nicholas Tuite MacCarthy

 John McCloskey

 William George McCloskey

 John MacDonald

 Alexander Macdonell

 Mace

 Francisco Macedo

 José Agostinho de Macedo

 United Sees of Macerata and Tolentino

 Francis Patrick McFarland

 Thomas D'Arcy McGee

 James MacGeoghegan

 Machabees

 Books of Machabees

 John MacHale

 Nicolò Machiavelli

 Machpelah

 St. Machutus

 Vicariate Apostolic of Mackenzie

 John McLoughlin

 Marie-Edmé-Patrice-Maurice de MacMahon

 Martin Thomas McMahon

 James Alphonsus McMaster

 William James MacNeven

 Ancient Diocese of Mâcon

 Bernard John McQuaid

 Macri

 Macrina

 James McSherry (1)

 James McSherry (2)

 Richard McSherry

 Mactaris

 Madagascar

 Madaurus, or Madaura

 Carlo Maderna

 Stefano Maderno

 Madianites

 Archdiocese of Madras

 Diocese of Madrid-Alcalá

 Christopher Madruzzi

 Madura Mission

 St. Maedoc

 St. Maelruan

 St. Maelrubha

 Jacob van Maerlant

 Maestro di Camera del Papa

 Bernardino Maffei

 Francesco Maffei

 Raffaelo Maffei

 Antoine-Dominique Magaud

 Magdala

 Magdalens

 Magdeburg

 Mageddo

 Ferdinand Magellan

 Magi

 Magin Catalá

 Simone de Magistris

 Antonio Magliabechi

 Magna Carta

 Magnesia

 Alphonse Magnien

 Magnificat

 St. Magnus

 Olaus Magnus

 Valerianus Magnus

 John Macrory Magrath

 Magydus

 Ven. Charles Mahony

 Angelo Mai

 Emmanuel Maignan

 Joseph-Anna-Marie de Moyria de Mailla

 Antoine-Simon Maillard

 Olivier Maillard

 Louis Maimbourg

 Teaching of Moses Maimonides

 Maina Indians

 Maine

 François-Pierre-Gonthier Maine de Biran

 Françoise, Marquise de Maintenon

 Mainz

 Maipure Indians

 Joseph-Marie, Comte de Maistre

 Xavier de Maistre

 Diocese of Maitland

 Benedetto da Majano

 Diocese of Majorca and Iviza

 Majordomo

 Majority

 Paul Majunke

 Malabar

 Malabar Rites

 Diocese of Malacca

 Malachias

 St. Malachy

 Diocese of Malaga

 Gabriel Malagrida

 House of Malatesta

 Malchus

 Juan Maldonado

 Nicolas Malebranche

 Malediction (in Scripture)

 François Malherbe

 Maliseet Indians

 Ernest-François Mallard

 Hermann von Mallinckrodt

 Pauline Mallinckrodt

 Stephen Russell Mallory

 Mallus

 Malmesbury

 Monk of Malmesbury

 William Malone

 Sir Thomas Malory

 Marcello Malpighi

 Malta

 Claude Maltret

 Thomas Malvenda

 Malvern

 Thomas Maria Mamachi

 Alfred-Henri-Amand Mame

 Mameluco

 Mamertine Prison

 St. Mamertus

 Mammon

 Man

 Manahem

 St. Manahen

 Manasses

 Jeanne Mance

 Diocese of Manchester

 Manchuria

 Mandan Indians

 Jean de Mandeville

 Archdiocese of Manfredonia

 Diocese of Mangalore

 James Clarence Mangan

 Manharter

 Manichæism

 Manifestation of Conscience

 Archdiocese of Manila

 Manila Observatory

 Maniple

 Manitoba

 Theodore Augustine Mann

 Manna

 Henry Edward Manning

 Robert Mannyng of Brunne

 Mansard

 Gian Domenico Mansi

 Andrea Mantegna

 Mantelletta

 Diocese of Mantua

 Laws of Manu

 Manuel Chysoloras

 Manuscripts

 Illuminated Manuscripts

 Manuscripts of the Bible

 Manuterge

 Aldus Manutius

 Alessandro Manzoni

 Walter Map

 Maphrian

 Prudentius Maran

 Marash

 Carlo Maratta

 Marbodius

 Pierre de Marca

 St. Marcellina

 Pope St. Marcellinus

 Flavius Marcellinus

 Marcellinus Comes

 Marcellinus of Civezza, O.F.M.

 Benedetto Marcello

 Pope St. Marcellus I

 Pope Marcellus II

 Marcellus of Ancyra

 Auzias March

 Jean Baptiste Marchand

 Peter Marchant

 Pompeo Marchesi

 Giuseppe Marchi

 Marcian

 Marciane

 Marcianopolis

 Marcionites

 Marcopolis

 Marcosians

 Joseph Marcoux

 Marcus

 Marcus Diadochus

 Marcus Eremita

 Mardin

 Ambrose Maréchal

 Marenco

 Luca Marenzio

 St. Margaret

 Bl. Margaret Colonna

 Margaret Haughery

 St. Margaret Mary Alacoque

 St. Margaret of Cortona

 Bl. Margaret of Hungary

 Bl. Margaret of Lorraine

 Bl. Margaret of Savoy

 St. Margaret of Scotland

 Margaret of the Blessed Sacrament

 Bl. Margaret Pole

 Margaritae

 Antonio Margil

 Giacomo Margotti

 Maria-Laach

 Xantes Mariales

 Juan Mariana

 Archdiocese of Mariana

 Prefecture Apostolic of Mariana Islands

 Congregation of the Missionaries of Mariannhill

 Marian Priests

 Marianus of Florence

 Marianus Scotus

 Maria Theresa

 Marie Antoinette

 Bl. Marie Christine of Savoy

 Marie de France

 Bl. Marie de l'Incarnation

 Ven. Marie de l'Incarnation

 Marienberg

 Marini

 Luigi Gaetano Marini

 Pope Marinus I

 Pope Marinus II

 Edme Mariotte

 Sts. Maris, Martha, Audifax, and Abachum

 Adam de Marisco

 St. Marius Aventicus

 Lucius Perpetuus Aurelianus Marius Maximus

 Marius Mercator

 St. Mark

 Pope St. Mark

 Gospel of Saint Mark

 Sts. Mark and Marcellian

 Mark of Lisbon

 Paul Maroni

 Maronia

 Maronites

 Vicariate Apostolic of Marquesas Islands

 Diocese of Marquette

 Jacques Marquette

 Marquette League

 Civil Marriage

 History of Marriage

 Mixed Marriage

 Moral and Canonical Aspect of Marriage

 Mystical Marriage

 Ritual of Marriage

 Sacrament of Marriage

 Florence Marryat

 Diocese of Marseilles (Massilia)

 Thomas William Marshall

 Vicariate Apostolic of the Marshall Islands

 Diocese of Marsi

 Diocese of Marsico Nuovo and Potenza

 Luigi Ferdinando, Count de Marsigli

 Marsilius of Padua

 Edmond Martène

 St. Martha

 St. Martial

 John Martiall

 Jean Martianay

 Martianus Capella

 Joseph-Alexandre Martigny

 Pope St. Martin I

 Pope Martin IV

 Pope Martin V

 Martin

 Felix Martin

 Gregory Martin

 Konrad Martin

 Paulin Martin

 St. Martina

 Antonio Martini

 Martino Martini

 Simone Martini

 Diocese of Martinique

 St. Martin of Braga

 St. Martin of Leon

 St. Martin of Tours

 Martin of Troppau

 Martin of Valencia

 John Martinov

 Martinsberg

 George Martinuzzi

 Luis Martin y Garcia

 Martyr

 Peter Martyr d'Anghiera

 Martyrology

 Martyropolis

 Acts of the Martyrs

 Japanese Martyrs

 The Ten Thousand Martyrs

 Martyrs in China

 St. Maruthas

 Mary of Cleophas

 Little Brothers of Mary

 Missionaries of the Company of Mary

 Servants of Mary (Order of Servites)

 Society of Mary (Marist Fathers)

 Society of Mary of Paris

 Name of Mary (1)

 Bl. Mary Anne de Paredes

 Mary de Cervellione

 Ven. Mary de Sales Chappuis

 St. Mary Frances of the Five Wounds of Jesus

 Maryland

 St. Mary Magdalen

 St. Mary Magdalen de' Pazzi

 St. Mary of Egypt

 Mary Queen of Scots

 Mary Tudor

 Masaccio

 Mascoutens Indians

 Masolino da Panicale

 Richard Angelus a S. Francisco Mason

 Masonry (Freemasonry)

 Maspha

 Chapter and Conventual Mass

 Liturgy of the Mass

 Volume 11

 Music of the Mass

 Nuptial Mass

 Sacrifice of the Mass

 Massa Candida

 Diocese of Massa Carrara

 Massachusetts

 Guglielmo Massaia

 Diocese of Massa Marittima

 Enemond Massé

 Bequests for Masses (Canada)

 Bequests for Masses (England)

 Devises and Bequests for Masses (United States)

 Jean-Baptiste Massillon

 Massorah

 Antoine Massoulié

 René Massuet

 Quentin Massys

 Master of the Sacred Palace

 Bartholomew Mastrius

 Mataco Indians

 Mater

 Materialism

 Feast of the Maternity of the Blessed Virgin Mary

 Mathathias

 Theobald Mathew

 François-Désiré Mathieu

 Mathusala

 St. Matilda

 Matilda of Canossa

 Matins

 Matricula

 Matteo da Siena

 Matteo of Aquasparta

 Matter

 Carlo Matteucci

 St. Matthew

 Gospel of St. Matthew

 Sir Tobie Matthew

 Matthew of Cracow

 St. Matthias

 Matthias Corvinus

 Matthias of Neuburg

 Maundy Thursday

 Auguste-François Maunoury

 St. Maurice

 Maurice

 Maurists

 St. Maurus

 Sylvester Maurus

 Jean-Siffrein Maury

 Joannes Maxentius

 Marcus Aurelius Maxentius

 Ven. Thomas Maxfield

 Maximianopolis

 Marcus Aurelius Valerius Maximianus

 Maximilian

 Maximilian I

 St. Maximinus

 Caius Valerius Daja Maximinus

 Caius Julius Verus Maximinus Thrax

 Maximopolis

 St. Maximus of Constantinople

 St. Maximus of Turin

 William Maxwell

 Winifred Maxwell

 Maya Indians

 Christian Mayer

 Edward Mayhew

 Bl. Cuthbert Mayne

 Maynooth College

 School of Mayo

 Mayo Indians

 John Mayor

 Mayoruna Indians

 Prefecture Apostolic of Mayotte, Nossi-Bé, and Comoro

 Beda Mayr

 Francis Mayron

 Jules Mazarin

 Mazatec Indians

 Charles Joseph Eugene de Mazenod

 Diocese of Mazzara del Vallo

 Camillo Mazzella

 Lodovico Mazzolini

 Sylvester Mazzolini

 Pietro Francesco Mazzuchelli

 Mbaya Indians

 Thomas Francis Meagher

 Diocese of Meath

 Diocese of Meaux

 Mecca

 Mechanism

 Mechitar

 Mechitarists

 Archdiocese of Mechlin

 Johann Mechtel

 St. Mechtilde

 Mechtild of Magdeburg

 Mecklenburg

 Jean Paul Medaille

 Devotional Medals

 St. Medardus

 Medea

 Archdiocese of Medellín

 Media and Medes

 Mediator (Christ as Mediator)

 Hieronymus Medices

 House of Medici

 Maria de' Medici

 History of Medicine

 Medicine and Canon Law

 Bartholomew Medina

 Juan de Medina

 Miguel de Medina

 Francisco Medrano

 Andreas Medulic

 Charles Patrick Meehan

 Megara

 Megarians

 Antoine-Joseph Mège

 Mehrerau

 Guillaume-René Meignan

 Jean-Baptiste Meilleur

 Bl. Meinwerk

 Meissen

 Ernest Meissonier

 Philipp Melanchthon

 St. Melania (the Younger)

 Archdiocese of Melbourne

 Paul Melchers

 Melchisedech

 Melchisedechians

 Melchites

 Juan Meléndez Valdés

 Meletius of Antioch

 Meletius of Lycopolis

 Diocese of Melfi and Rapolla

 Giovanni Meli

 Pius Melia

 Melissus of Samos

 Melitene

 St. Melito

 Abbey and Congregation of Melk

 Melleray

 Abbey of Mellifont

 St. Mellitus

 Diocese of Melo

 Melos

 Melozzo da Forlí

 Abbey of Melrose

 Chronicle of Melrose

 Francesco Melzi

 Memberton

 Zenobius Membre

 Hans Memling

 Memory

 Memphis

 Juan de Mena

 Menaion

 Léon Ménard

 Nicolas-Hugues Ménard

 René Ménard

 St. Menas

 Mencius

 Alvaro de Mendaña de Neyra

 Diocese of Mende

 Mendel, Mendelism

 João Mendes de Silva

 Vicariate Apostolic of Méndez and Gualaquiza

 Manuel de Mendiburu

 Mendicant Friars

 Jerónimo Mendieta

 Diego Hurtade de Mendoza

 Francisco Sarmiento de Mendoza

 Pedro Gonzalez de Mendoza

 Osorio Francisco Meneses

 Diocese of Menevia

 Gregorio Mengarini

 Anthon Rafael Mengs

 Mennas

 Mennonites

 Giovanni Stefano Menochio

 Men of Understanding

 Menologium

 Menominee Indians

 Mensa, Mensal Revenue

 John Mensing

 Mental Reservation

 Johannes Mentelin

 Benedetto Menzini

 Eustache Mercadé

 Mercedarians

 Louis-Honoré Mercier

 Geronimo Mercuriali

 Brothers of Our Lady of Mercy

 Corporal and Spiritual Works of Mercy

 Sisters of Mercy

 Sisters of Mercy of St. Borromeo

 Edward Meredith

 Diocese of Mérida

 Merit

 Gaspard Mermillod

 Merneptah I

 Frédéric-François-Xavier Ghislain de Mérode

 Marin Mersenne

 Mesa

 Delegation Apostolic of Mesopotamia, Kurdistan, and Armenia

 Mesrob

 Messalians

 Messene

 Messias

 Antonello da Messina

 Archdiocese of Messina

 Thomas Messingham

 Metal-Work in the Service of the Church

 Symeon Metaphrastes

 Metaphysics

 Pietro Metastasio

 Edward Metcalfe

 Metellopolis

 Metempsychosis

 Sir Thomas Metham

 Methodism

 St. Methodius of Olympus

 Methymna

 Metrophanes of Smyrna

 Metropolis

 Metropolitan

 Prince Klemens Lothar Wenzel von Metternich

 Metz

 Jean Clopinel de Meun

 Mexico

 Archdiocese of Mexico

 Francis, Joseph, and Paul Mezger

 Giuseppe Mezzofanti

 Miami Indians

 Military Orders of St. Michael

 Michael Cærularius

 St. Michael de Sanctis

 Michael of Cesena

 Michael Scotus

 St. Michael the Archangel

 Joseph-François Michaud

 Micheas (Micah)

 Jean Michel

 Michelians

 Edward Michelis

 Michelozzo di Bartolommeo

 Michigan

 Archdiocese of Michoacan

 Adam Mickiewicz

 Micmacs

 Micrologus

 Jakob Middendorp

 Middle Ages

 Diocese of Middlesbrough

 Midrashim

 Midwives

 Christoph Anton Migazzi

 Pierre Mignard

 Jacques-Paul Migne

 Migration

 Archdiocese of Milan

 Vinzenz Eduard Milde

 George Henry Miles

 Diocese of Mileto

 Miletopolis

 Miletus

 Vitus Miletus

 Milevum

 Jan Milic

 Military Orders

 Millennium and Millenarianism

 Ferdinand von Miller

 Jean-François Millet

 Pierre Millet

 John Milner

 Ven. Ralph Milner

 Milo Crispin

 Milopotamos

 Pope St. Miltiades

 Karl von Miltiz

 Diocese of Milwaukee

 Mind

 Diocese of Minden

 John Ming

 Minimi

 Minister

 Jean-Pierre Minkelers

 Minnesota

 Minor

 Diocese of Minorca

 Minor Orders

 Diocese of Minsk

 Papal Mint

 Minucius Felix

 Mirabilia Urbis Romæ

 Miracle

 Miracle Plays and Mysteries

 Gift of Miracles

 Aubert Miraeus

 Giovanni Francesco Pico della Mirandola

 Giovanni Pico della Mirandola

 Abbey of Miridite

 Miserere

 Congregation of the Sisters of Misericorde

 Prefecture Apostolic of Misocco and Calanca

 Missal

 Congregation of Priests of the Mission

 Congregation of Missionaries of St. Charles Borromeo

 Missionaries of St. Francis de Sales of Annecy

 Missionary Society of St. Paul the Apostle

 Mission Indians (of California)

 Catholic Missions

 Catholic Indian Missions of Canada

 Catholic Indian Missions of the United States

 Catholic Parochial Missions

 Mississippi

 Missouri

 Mithraism

 Mitre

 Nicola Giacomo Mittarelli

 Mitylene

 St. George Jackson Mivart

 Mixe Indians

 Mixteca Indians

 Moab, Moabites

 Diocese of Mobile

 Mocissus

 Mocoví Indians

 Archdiocese of Modena

 Modernism

 Diocese of Modigliana

 Modra

 Mohammedan Confraternities

 Mohammed and Mohammedanism

 Archdiocese of Mohileff

 Johann Adam Möhler

 Christian Mohr

 Joseph Mohr

 François-Napoléon-Marie Moigno

 Jacques de Molai

 Notre-Dame de Molesme

 Diocese of Molfetta, Terlizzi, and Giovinazzo

 Jean-Baptiste Poquelin Molière

 Alonso de Molina

 Antonio de Molina

 Juan Ignacio Molina

 Luis de Molina

 Molinism

 Miguel de Molinos

 Wilhelm Molitor

 Francis Molloy

 Gerald Molloy

 Gasparo Molo

 Moloch

 Molokai

 Sir Caryll Molyneux

 Bonino Mombritius

 Principality and Diocese of Monaco

 Monad

 Monarchians

 Monarchia Sicula

 Double Monasteries

 Suppression of Monasteries

 Canonical Erection of a Monastery

 Monasticism

 Francisco de Moncada

 Mondino dei Lucci

 Diocese of Mondoñedo

 Diocese of Mondovi

 Franz Mone

 Moneta

 Mongolia

 St. Monica

 Monism

 Monita Secreta

 Monk

 Monogram of Christ

 Monomotapa

 Monophysites and Monophysitism

 Diocese of Monopoli

 Moral Aspects of Monopoly

 Monotheism

 Monothelitism and Monothelites

 Archdiocese of Monreale

 James Monroe

 Jacques-Marie-Louis Monsabré

 Monseigneur

 William Monsell, Baron Emly

 Monsignor

 Enguerrand de Monstrelet

 Bartolomeo Montagna

 Montagnais Indians (Quebec)

 Montagnais Indians (Chippewayans)

 Michel-Eyquen de Montaigne

 Diocese of Montalcino

 Charles-Forbes-René, Comte de Montalembert

 Diocese of Montalto

 Montana

 Juan Martínez Montañés

 Montanists

 Diocese of Montauban

 Xavier Barbier de Montault

 Bl. Peter of Montboissier

 Marquis de Louis-Joseph Montcalm-Gozon

 Abbey of Monte Cassino

 Diocese of Montefeltro

 Diocese of Montefiascone

 Jorge de Montemayor

 Montenegro

 Diocese of Montepulciano

 Diocese of Monterey and Los Angeles

 Military Order of Montesa

 Antonio Montesino

 Luis de Montesinos

 Montes Pietatis

 Charles-Louis de Secondat, Baron de Montesquieu

 Claudio Monteverde

 Monte Vergine

 Archdiocese of Montevideo

 Bernard de Montfaucon

 Simon de Montfort

 Joseph-Michel Montgolfier

 Special Devotions for Months

 Charles Huault de Montmagny

 John de Montmirail

 Anne, First Duke of Montmorency

 Alexis-François Artaud de Montor

 Diocese of Montpellier

 Archdiocese of Montreal

 Montreuil

 Montreuil Abbey

 Mont-St-Michel

 Antoine-Jean-Baptiste-Robert Auget, Baron de Montyon

 Arthur Moore

 Michael Moore

 Thomas Moore

 Mopsuestia

 Antonis Van Dashorst Mor

 Ambrosio Morales

 Juan Bautista Morales

 Luis de Morales

 Moralities

 Morality

 Leandro Fernandez de Moratín

 Moravia

 Stefano Antonio Morcelli

 Helen More

 Henry More

 Gall Morel

 Juliana Morell

 José María Morelos

 Louis Moréri

 Augustín Moreto y Cabaña

 Giovanni Battista Morgagni

 Ven. Edward Morgan

 Raffaello Morghen

 David Moriarty

 Michelangelo Morigi

 Abbey of Morimond

 Jean Morin

 Mormons

 Morocco

 Giovanni Morone

 Gaetano Moroni

 Giovanni Battista Moroni

 John Morris

 John Brande Morris

 Martin Ferdinand Morris

 Morse

 Ven. Henry Morse

 Mortification

 Mortmain

 John Morton

 Ven. Robert Morton

 Mosaic Legislation

 Mosaics

 Johannes Moschus

 Moscow

 Moses

 Moses Bar Cephas

 Moses of Chorene

 Mossul

 Dioceses of Mostar and Markana-Trebinje

 Feast of the Most Pure Heart of Mary

 Mosynoupolis

 Motet

 Toribio de Benavente Motolinia

 Motu Proprio

 Antoine de Mouchy

 Franz Christoph Ignaz Moufang

 Diocese of Moulins

 Congregations of Mount Calvary

 Feast of Our Lady of Mount Carmel

 Mount St. Mary's College

 Franz Karl Movers

 Moxos Indians

 Karl Ernst, Freiherr von Moy de Sons

 Ven. John Martin Moye

 Francis Moylan

 Stephen Moylan

 Mozambique

 Mozarabic Rite

 Johann Chrysostomus Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

 Mozetena Indians

 Mozzetta

 Luigi Mozzi

 Ignatius Mrak

 Albert Anton Von Muchar

 Engelbert Mühlbacher

 Michael George Mulhall

 St. Clair Augustine Mulholland

 John Mullanphy

 Adam Heinrich Müller

 Johann Müller

 Johann Müller (Regiomontanus)

 Karl Müller

 John T. Mullock

 Baron Eligius Franz Joseph von Münch-Bellinghausen

 Fintan Mundwiler

 Archdiocese of Munich-Freising

 Diocese of Munkács

 Diocese of Münster

 University of Münster

 Eugène Müntz

 St. Mura

 Luigi Antonio Muratori

 Muratorian Canon

 Marc-Antoine Muret

 Muri

 Bartolomé Esteban Murillo

 Thomas Murner

 Diocese of Muro-Lucano

 Daniel Murray

 Patrick Murray

 Christian Museums

 Mush

 John Mush

 Ecclesiastical Music

 Musical Instruments in Church Services

 Musti

 Markos Musuros

 José Celestino Mutis

 Alfonso Muzzarelli

 Mylasa

 Myndus

 Myra

 Myrina

 Myriophytum

 Diocese of Mysore

 Mystery

 Mystical Body of the Church

 Mysticism

Mortmain


(Old Fr., morte meyn), dead-hand, or "such a state of possession of land as makes it inalienable" (Wharton, "Law Lexicon", 10th ed., London, 1902, s. v.), is "the possession of land or tenements by any corporation" (Bouvier, "Law Dictionary", Boston, 1897, s. v.), or "where the use came ad manum mortuam, which was when it came to some corporation" (Lord Bacon, "Reading on the Statute of Uses"), alienation of lands or tenements to a corporation being termed alienation in mortmain (Stephen, "New Commentaries on the Laws of England", 15th ed., London, 1908, I, 296). The alienation was formerly expressed by the now obsolete words amortization and amortisement, the person so alienating being said to amortize (Murray, "New English Dictionary", Oxford and New York, 1888), a verb used by Chaucer in connexion with good works "amortised by some following" (The Persones Tale). In Old French amortissement was used in connexion with licences termed chartes d'amortissement, validating an alienation, amortir being defined éteindre en tout ou en partie les droits de la seigneurie féodale ("La Grande Encyclopédie", Paris, s. d.; "Century Dictionary", New York, s. d., s. v. amortization; cf. the same use of the English word in statute 15 Richard II, c. 5).

These associations "of many individuals united into one body, under a special denomination having perpetual succession under an artificial form" (Shelford, "A practical treatise on the Law of Mortmain, &c.", Philadelphia 1842, 22) had become established for purposes which, in respect to any property they were allowed to acquire or to retain, implied an ownership free from the vicissitudes and limited duration of ownership by natural persons.

The Catholic Church, having been recognized "since the time of the Emperor Constantine" in the countries which adopted the feudal system "as possessing a legal personality and the capacity to take and acquire property" (Ponce vs. Roman Catholic Church, 210 United States Supreme Court Reports, 311), feudalism recognized not only the Church, but its religious communities, as spiritual corporations. Such a community has been thought to be appropriately described to be "gens æterna eadem perpetuo permanens quasi in ea nemo uniquam moritur (an everlasting body continuing perpetually the same as if in it no one may ever die). The communities might consist of men, each of whom was deemed, because of his vows, civilly dead. But to the communities themselves, viri religiosi, "people of religion", gens de main morte, the law attributed a perpetual existence and perpetual ownership of property.

English Law, admitting the corporate existence of associations, which were corporations aggregate, and also allowing of such an artificial existence in an official individual, considered not only the king, but each bishop, parson, and vicar as a corporation sole. And such might be a chantry priest, to whom land had been given by its owner, subject to a perpetual service a chaunter par ly e par ces heyrs a tou jours (see Year Books of the reign of King Edward the First, Years XX-XXI, London, 1866, 265.)

Corporate ownership of land, however, by subjects of the realm was repugnant to feudal theory. According to this theory all land of subjects was deemed to have been acquired, immediately or mediately, by grant of the king. Of land directly acquired from the king, the person to whom the grant or feoffment was made, the feoffee, held as tenant in capite of the Crown. If the tenant in capite made a feoffment, he became immediate lord of his feoffee, and as to the king a mediate lord. And thus from successive feoffments there might result a long succession of lords, mediate and immediate, the king being ultimate lord of all land in the kingdom which was held by feudal tenure. A freeman who became a landowner was bound in many instances to render military service to his immediate lord, and liable to forfeit the land for cirime. Should he die without a proper heir, the land escheated. If he left a male heir under age, the lord was entitled to his guardianship. In the case of a female heir, the lord was entitled to her disposal in marriage (Stephen, op. cit., I, 103-140).

The Magna Carta of King Henry III (9 Henry III, c. 32; 1224), afterwards repealed as to this provision by implication (Shelford, op. cit., 15), prohibited the giving or selling by a freeman of so much of his land as that the unsold residue should be insufficient to render to the lord of the fee the services due to him.

Feudal theory, therefore, favoured ownership of land by some natural person liable to death and capable of committing crime, or according to the Norman expression, homme vivant, mourant et confiscant (Thornton vs. Robin, I, Moore's Privy Council Reports, 452). An artificial being, existing in contemplation of law, not competent to render military service, incapable of crime, and not subject to death, was thus not possessed of the attributes which, according to feudal polity, became a landowner.

In France a custom arose of the gens de main morte supplying as knight to fulfil the services of a feudal vassal. As early, however, as 1159 this custom began to be superseded by chartes d'amortissement, and these licences became, in the course of time, an important fiscal resource of the Crown. Of the conferring of relief from feudal obligations a notable instance was the exemption given in 1156 by Frederick Barbarossa to the Dukles of Austria from all service, except almost nominal military service. Land held by individuals free from feudal liabilities was designated as allodial (Fr. alleu), or a fief de Dieu, or in Germany as Sonnenlehn.

A third of the value of property is said to have been sometimes the price of its amortissement (Littré, "Dictionnaire de la langue française", Paris, 1889, s. f.).

William the Conqueror sought to promote in England holding of land by feudal tenure. That allodial holdings were known in 'England at the time of the Conquest seems quite possible (see "La Grande Encyclopédie", s.v. Alleu). And many of the holders would doubtless consent to change to the feudal tenure, which implied feudal protection.

But there appears to have arisen a somewhat widespread repugnance on the part of landowners to hold land subject to the faith and homage which accorded with the law doctrines of the Norman feudists. A method of escape was resorted to, which the Magna Carta of King Henry III indicates. Owners availed themselves of the property rights of the religious communities in order to hold land under these communities. For to contrivances of this kind the Charter evidently alludes, prohibiting the same land being given to and taken again from any religious house, and forbidding any house of religion to take land under an agreement of returning it to its former owner, terram alicujus sic accipere quod tradat illam ei a quo ipsam recepit tenendam (see c. 36).

This early statute of mortmain applies only to action by religious houses in the way of enabling lay owners to hold their lands. The statute does not seem directed against the holding by the houses of land in their own possession. The correctness of Sir William Blackstone's surmise that even before the Conquest licences in mortmain had become necessary "among the Saxons" (Commentaries, B. 11, c. 18, 269) does not appear to be confirmed by this Magna Carta, nor, in any general sense, by the fact that the allusion in the Constitutions of Clarendon (1164) to mortmain was confined to advowsons (ibid.).

The mortmain statute of Edward I, known as "Statutum de viris religiosis", 7 Edward I, enacted in 1279, and so often referred to by writers on English real property law, recites that religious men have entered into their own fees as well as into the fees of other men, and that those services due "and which at the beginning were provided for the defence of the Realm" are wrongfully withdrawn and the escheats lost to the chief lords (Duke, "The Law of Charitable Uses", London, 1805, 193).

The statute thereupon ordains that "no person, religious or other", nullus religiosus aut alius quicumque, shall buy or sell lands or tenements or receive them, or appropriate them (under pain of forfeiture) so as to cause the land to come into mortmain, per quod ad manum mortuam terræ et tenementa hujusmodi deveniant quoque modo.

A violation of the statute renders lawful to the king "and other chief lords of the fee immediate", nobis et aliis immediatis capitalibus dominis fœ, to enter and hold the land. The chief lord immediate is afforded a year to enter, the next chief lord immediate the half-year next ensuing, and so every lord immediate may enter into such land, if the next lord be negligent in entering. If all the chief lords who are "of full age, within the four seas and out of prison be negligent or slack", "we", the king, namely, "shall take such lands and tenements into our own hands", capiemus in manum nostram.

The term manus mortua is not applied to the sovereign, yet land so taken "in manum nostram" is not to be retained. Such a retaining would be in mortmain. And the king promises to convey the land to other persons subject to services from which ownership by the "religious men" or others had withdrawn it, services for the defence of the realm, alios inde feoffabimus per certa servitia nobis inde ad defensionem regni nostri facienda, saving to the lords "their wards and escheats and other services". A statute of 1290 permits any freeman to part with his land, the feoffee to hold of the same lord and by the same services as his feoffor held. But the statute cautiously adds that in no wise are the lands to come into mortmain against the statute (see 18 Edward I, c. I, c. II, c. III).

Where churches stood "the ground itself was hallowed" (see Ponce vs. Roman Catholic Church, 210 United States Supreme Court Reports, 312). And a statute of Richard II (15 Richard II, c. V; 1391) recites that "some religious persons, parsons, vicars and other spiritual persons have entered in divers lands and tenements, which be adjoining to their churches and of the same by sufferance and assent of the tenants, have made churchyards and by bulls of the bishop of Rome [(sic)-the French and more authoritative text reads: par bulles del appostoill] have dedicated and hallowed the same" and in these make "parochial burying". Therefore all persons possessed of land "to the use of religious people or other spiritual persons", of which these latter take the profits, are required upon pain of forfeiture to procure licence of amortization within a time limited, or to "sell and aliene" to some other use.

This statute does not confine its operation to "spiritual persons" and churchyards, but enacts that the statute of 1279 shall "be observed of all lands, tenements, fees, advowsons, and other possessions purchased or to be purchased to the use of guilds and fraternities" and "Mayors, Bailiffs and Commons of Cities, Boroughs and other towns that have a perpetual commonalty", all of whom are forbidded to purchase.

Licences allowing, in particular instances, transfers into mortmain, notwithstanding the statute, were issued from time to time. The text of a licence of Edward I himself has been preserved, permitting a certain person to give a parcel of land to a certain prior and convent to be held sibi et successoribus suis in perpetuum, but subject to the due and accustomed services to the capitalibus dominis fœdi, illius (Year Books of the reign of King Edward I, years XXXII-XXXIII, London, 1864, 499). This licence recites that it is given ob affectionem et benevolentiam towards the religious order. Nor do licences in mortmain seem to have ever become in England, as in France, recognized sources of royal revenue.

Legal devices, too, as in the times before the Magna Carta of Henry III, were resorted to for the purpose of escaping the operation of the statute, such as purchases alluded to in the statute of Richard II "to the use" of persons other than those to whom the legal title was transferred. These devices have produced far-reaching and enduring influence on the development of English jurisprudence. Concerning English aggregate ecclesiastical bodies of former times, Sir Edward Coke observes in language which we might imagine to be applied to modern "trusts" and combinations of capital, that those bodies "in this were to be commended, that they ever had of their counsel the best learned men that they could get" (Blackstone, "Commentaries", B. 11, c. 18, 270).

Before the coming of the Conqueror and his feudal lawyers much land in England had been acquired to be held by the spiritual tenure of frankalmoign, a tenure subjecting the holders to what was termed the trinoda necessitas f(or threefold obligation) of repairing highways, building castles, and repelling invasions, but otherwise to no service other than praying for the souls of the donor and his heirs, dead or alive (Stephen, op. cit., I, 139, 140). To such pious foundations already established none of the mortmain legislation applied.

When Henry VIII commenced his ecclesiastical alterations, the general body of the parochial clergy holding, in a corporate way, their lands by this tenure (ibid.) "acknowledged", to quote Sir Edward Coke (1 Reports, 24, a), "King Henry VIII to be supreme head of the church of England", and thus continued to hold their lands by the Saxon tenure, by which "the parochial clergy and very many ecclesiastical and eleemosynary foundations", observes Sergeant Stephen, "hold them at this day" (op. cit., I, 139).

Land held in mortmain by some of the religious corporations were confiscated by the statute 27 Henry VIII, c. 28 (1535), and thus, according to Lord Bacon (Reading on the Statute of Uses), "The possessions that had been in mortmain began to stir abroad", a "stir" extended by the statute 37 Henry VIII, c. 4 (1545), to other religious houses and to chantries, this statute transferring their lands to the sovereign's possession in consideration of His Majesty's great costs and charges in his then wars with France and Scotland.

During the brief period of reaction after the death of King Edward VI, the statutes of mortmain, in so far as they applied to future conveyances to spiritual corporations, were suspended (1554) for twenty years (1 and 2 Philip and Mary, c. 8, sec. LI).

The expressions quoted from Lord Bacon, and an allusion of his to "plenty and purchasing", suggest the view that holding of land in mortmain, being opposed to land stirring abroad and its ready purchase, was in the nature of a public inconvenience or mischief. Similar views had not actuated the English kings and barons previous to Henry VIII, who (to quote Barrington, "Observations on the more ancient Statutes", London, 1796, 113), "had no notion of an inconvenience or mischief to the public from a stagnation of property", realizing, however, that, "as the land was given to God, the king and the barons lost all the usual profits of what was held under them" (ibid.).

But opposition to mortmain holdings as being perpetuities appears in a statute of Henry VIII, which preceded the confiscating statutes. This is the statute 23 Henry VIII, c. X (1531), directed against holding of lands, "to the use of parish churches, chapels, churchwardens, guilds, fraternities, commonalties, companies, or brotherhoods", purposes previously acknowledged as charitable and religious.

Excluding from its operation cities and towns corporate, having, by their ancient customs, power to "devise into mortmain", the statute alluded to declares trusts or assurances to the uses just mentioned "erected and made of devotions or by common assent of the people without any corporation", or "to the uses and intents to have obites perpetual or a continual service of a priest forever", or for sixty or eighty years, to be within the mischiefs of alienation "into mortmain", and as to future gifts void except for terms not exceeding twenty years (cf. I Edward VI, c. XIV).

Sir Edward Coke explains this statute to have been directed against some purposes which were thenceforth to be condemned as superstitious, although formerly approved as charitable, "such superstitious uses", he points out, "as to pray for souls supposed to be in purgatory, and the like". Not long before the date of the statute Coke observes "by the light of God's word", "diverse superstitions and errors in the Christian religion which had a pretence and semblance of charity and devotion were discovered". With true charity, he claims, the statute was not intended to interfere. For, he observes, "no time was so barbarous as to abolish learning and knowledge nor so uncharitable as to prohibit relieving the poor" (op. cit., 24 a). And he allows us to infer such to be the fact, even though the charity might constitute a perpetuity.

Dispositions for charity, which the law would specially commend, a statute of Queen Elizabeth mentions (43 Elizabeth, c. IV, 1601). Dispositions in aid of "superstitions" were not to be deemed charitable, and these the courts were to ascertain and condemn, in the varying light of English Statutes, as evils like to alienations in mortmain.

An authority on the law of charitable uses (Duke, op. cit., 125) states that "religion being variable, according to the pleasure of succeeding princes, that which at one time is held for orthodoxy may at another be accounted superstitious". And accordingly the Englsih courts even condemned as superstitious the charge on land of an annual sum for education of Scotchmen to propagate in Scotland the doctrines of the Church of England. For, by statute, presbyteries had been settled in that portion of the United Kingdom [Methodist Church vs. Remington, 1 Watts (Pa.), Reports, p. 224].

The manner of establishing a charity was in the course of time restricted by "the statute of mortmain commonly so called", remarks the Master of the Rolls in Corbyn vs. French, 4 Vesey's Reports, 427, "but", he adds, "very improperly, for it does not prevent the alienation of land in mortmain, nor was that the object of the Act".

Reciting that gifts of lands in mortmain are restrained by Magna Cata, and other laws as against the public utility, but that "nevertheless this public mischief has of late greatly increased by many large and improvident alienations or dispositions to uses called charitable uses", this statute (9 George II, c. XXXVI, 1736) provides that thenceforth such dispositions shall be "null and void", unless executed with certain prescribed solemnities, and not less than twelve months before the death of the donor.

The statutes 23 Henry VIII and this statute of George II, in their effect on the dispositions of land, which they prohibit, differ from the old mortmain acts. The statutes referred to render such dispositions void, that is, of no effect whatsoever. But alienations in mortmain properly so termed were not mere nullities, but were effectual to transfer ownership of land to a corporation by which the land might be retained until its forfeiture.

Enforcement of a forfeiture and the declaring void a charge on, or use of, land are in their nature and result very different.

Notwithstanding the statements in the cases cited from Vesey's Reports that devises for charitable uses are not in themselves alienations in mortmain, the latter word's meaning has yet been claimed to embrace any perpetual holding of land "in a dead or unserviceable hand". And such, it is claimed, "is the characteristic of alienations to charitable uses". Land dedicated to the service of charity and religion is said to be "practically inalienable", because any disposition of it, which is incompatible with the carrying out or continuity of the benevolent purposes of the conveyance, will be restrained by Courts of Equity (Lewis, "A practical treatise on the Law of Perpetuity", Philadelphia, 1846, 689), in England the Court of Chancery.

For, notwithstanding mortmain statutes, and as if to protect the sovereign from the reproach which, according to Coke, he might otherwise have incurred, the lord chancellors seem, from a period long previous to that of King Henry VIII, to have protected and guarded trusts or uses in favour of charity. The chancellors seem to have administered this duty in their capacity as guardians of the king's conscience, and by force of an assumed, if not expressed, delegation of the royal prerogative and sovereign will.

We cannot here consider the subject of royal prerogative, nor how the modern differs from the ancient theory concerning it. Whether modern legislation against perpetual holdings of land is to be deemed to prohibit by implication trusts for charity, because they imply perpetual ownership, has been the subject of extensive legal discussion and of discordant judicial decisions.

But according to the existing law of England we learn from Sergeant Stephen (op. cit., III, 174) that "there is now practically no restraint whatsoever on gifts of land by will for charitable purposes. Pure personal estate", he adds, "may, of course, be freely bequeathed for these purposes". All corporations, however, are yet precluded by English law from purchasing land "except by licence in mortmain from the Crown" (ibid., 16).

As to what dispositions of property which otherwise would be charitable are to be deemed legally superstitious, the modern law of England is less narrow and rigid than the law was formerly interpreted to be (ibid., 180).

The statutes of mortmain themselves were not extended to the colonies. And respecting the United States Chancellor Kent observes, "We have not in this country re- enacted the Statutes of Mortmain or generally assumed them to be in force; and the only legal check to the acquisition of lands by corporations consists in those special restrictions contained in the acts by which they are incorporated … and in the force to be given to the exception of corporations out of the Statute of Wills" (Commentaries on American law, 14th ed., Boston, 1896, II, 282). The commentator states, by way of exception, that the statutes of mortmain are in force in the State of Pennsylvania. The supreme court of that State, in 1832, stated that these statutes had been extended to the State "only so far as they prohibit dedications of property to superstitious uses and grants to corporations without a statutory licence" (1 Watts Reports, 224). The court had in mind, but seemed reluctant to follow, the "Report of the Judges" made in 1808, and which is to be found in 3 Binney's Reports. The "Report" almost follows the statute of Henry VIII, in declaring all conveyances "void made either to an individual or to any number of persons associated, but not incorporated, if the said conveyances are for uses or purposes of a superstitious nature, and not calculated to promote objects of charity or utility".

Notwithstanding this early declaration, no such doctrine as that of the English courts on the subject of superstitious uses or trusts can well have a place in the jurisprudence of the United States, where "all religious beliefs, doctrines and forms of worship are free" (Holland vs. Alcock, 108 New York Court of Appeals Reports, 329).

The people of the States made known their sovereign will by enactments of the State legislatures, to which bodies the prerogatives of sovereignty have been delegated. And, therefore, the validity of dispositions of land in favour of charity is controlled by the law of the State where the land is situated, and without any implied delegation of prerogative to any judicial officer. And the same remark applies to the general power of corporations to acquire and to hold land in the several States. (See .)

PICKERING,The Statutes at Large (Cambridge, 1800); STUBBS,Select Charters and other illustrations of English Constitutional History (5th ed., Oxford, 1884); BURGE,Commentaries on Colonial and Foreign Laws generally (London, 1838), 11, 546, 548; Vidal vs. Girard's Executors, 2 Howard, United States Supreme Court Reports, v, 194, 195; Fountain v. Ravenel, 17 do., v, 384, 385, 389; DILLON,Bequests for Masses for the Souls of deceased persons (Chicago, 1896); Holmes vs. Mead, 52 New York Court of Appeals Reports, 332; Allen vs. Stevens, 161 do., 122; THOMPSON,Commentaries on the laws of Private Corporations (Indianapolis, 1909), sections 2365-2400; HALSBURY,The Laws of England (London, 1909), s. v. Corporations.

CHARLES W. SLOANE