Henry the Third and the Church: A Study of His Ecclesiastical Policy and of the Relations Between England and RomeG. Bell, 1905 - 446 strán (strany) |
Vyhľadávanie v obsahu knihy
Výsledky 1 - 5 z 78.
Strana vii
... GROSSETESTE 325 XIX . THE POPE'S GIFT OF THE SICILIAN CROWN TO HENRY'S SON , Edmund . · 347 XX . THE CHURCH AND THE PROVISIONS OF OXFORD XXI . THE WORK OF OTTOBONI THE LEGATE . • 375 392 INDEX 419 INTRODUCTION ALMOST every historical ...
... GROSSETESTE 325 XIX . THE POPE'S GIFT OF THE SICILIAN CROWN TO HENRY'S SON , Edmund . · 347 XX . THE CHURCH AND THE PROVISIONS OF OXFORD XXI . THE WORK OF OTTOBONI THE LEGATE . • 375 392 INDEX 419 INTRODUCTION ALMOST every historical ...
Strana xii
... Grosseteste , were the most determined in their opposition to what I may call the claims of the papacy in temporal matters , were , like him , the most clear - sighted in their perception of the pope's indefeasible and divine right and ...
... Grosseteste , were the most determined in their opposition to what I may call the claims of the papacy in temporal matters , were , like him , the most clear - sighted in their perception of the pope's indefeasible and divine right and ...
Strana 146
... Grosseteste to the See of Lincoln , which , for some reason or other , the archbishop proposed to confer in Reading Abbey . Being a Berkshire man himself , and Reading being near to his native place , he may have been more at home there ...
... Grosseteste to the See of Lincoln , which , for some reason or other , the archbishop proposed to confer in Reading Abbey . Being a Berkshire man himself , and Reading being near to his native place , he may have been more at home there ...
Strana 147
... Grosseteste himself to the archbishop on the very eve of his consecration , it would appear that the Christ Church monks not only refused their consent , but declared their intention of appealing to the supreme authority of the pope ...
... Grosseteste himself to the archbishop on the very eve of his consecration , it would appear that the Christ Church monks not only refused their consent , but declared their intention of appealing to the supreme authority of the pope ...
Strana 148
... Grosseteste's Letters , 56 . 2 Wallace's Life of St. Edmund of Canterbury , App . iv . 477 . 4 3 Brit . Mus . Add . MS . , 15,353 , f . 319. Wallace , ut sup . App . ix . 488 . the claims of the monks against him was at the 148 HENRY ...
... Grosseteste's Letters , 56 . 2 Wallace's Life of St. Edmund of Canterbury , App . iv . 477 . 4 3 Brit . Mus . Add . MS . , 15,353 , f . 319. Wallace , ut sup . App . ix . 488 . the claims of the monks against him was at the 148 HENRY ...
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Časté výrazy a frázy
abbot agents Apostolic appeal appointed archbishop of Canterbury asked authority Aylmer barons benefices Bishop Grosseteste bishop of Winchester bishop-elect Boniface Brit canons Chapter chronicler clergy confirmation Council Crown crusade declared demands diocese document earl Edmund election emperor English Church English king excommunication faithful Falkes de Breauté father favour foreign France French Friar granted Gualo Holy Land honour Ibid interdict King Henry King John king's kingdom kingdom of England legate London lord pope Lyons matter Matthew Paris meeting monastery monks nobles nuncio oath obtain once Otho Ottoboni Pandulph papal letters peace pontiff Pope Honorius Pope Innocent Pope Innocent IV pope's prelates prince proctors promised protection received refused religious reply Richard of Cornwall Roger de Wendover Roman Church Roman Curia Rome Royal Letters Rustand Rymer says secure sent sentence of excommunication Sicily suffragans summoned sums tion urged Wendover whilst wrote
Populárne pasáže
Strana 2 - his transcendent genius ... is conspicuous not only in the changes he wrought in thewhole system of European politics, but still more in his successful mastery of all opposition from contemporary sovereigns. If Alexander desired to find kings as competitors in the race, Innocent was surrounded by monarchs as able as himself, accustomed not to render but to receive homage, capable of resenting any infringement of their dignity. He found Christianity in a fluid state with a tendency to glomerate round...
Strana 3 - that by God's grace the king has become another man, since he has adopted the Roman Church as his mother. He has subjected England and Ireland to the Holy Roman Church, and has given his territories aforesaid to God, to his holy Apostles Peter and Paul, and to the Lord Pope as a patrimony. He and his heirs are to hold them of the Lord Pope and his successors. Publicly, and before every one, he has done fealty to the Holy Roman Church, and sworn homage on the Gospels, by his charter which he has...
Strana 100 - burst out into laughter at the covetousness of the Romans who did not understand the force of the moral: ' Quod virtus reddit, non copia, sufficientem Et non paupertas, sed mentis hiatus, egentem.
Strana 2 - At his death he left the papacy the sole acknowledged centre towards which all states gravitated as the law of their existence; and perhaps what was more difficult to achieve, he rooted his convictions for centuries in the hearts of men, however opposite their moral or intellectual characters.
Strana 3 - the entire kingdoms of England and Ireland and all their rights," etc., " with the common consent
Strana 285 - IV sent a further letter to the archbishops of Canterbury and York and to the bishops of Hereford, Ely, and Durham, concerning the payments to be made out of the ecclesiastical revenues to the king.
Strana 51 - But the authority assumed by Pandulph was that not of a judge, but of an executive magistrate; it dealt not with a single question, but with the continuous government of the country, and threatened the establishment of a despotic rule, wielded by a foreign priest, directed by a foreign policy, and enforced by the censures of the Church.
Strana 235 - ... their grievances, so far from diminishing, seemed rather to increase, he felt that he ought no longer to keep silence. He consequently sent his representative to the Holy Father in order to call his serious, personal attention to them. The French people, he declared, were all agreed on the matter; not only were the nobles and others astonished that he, as King, had endured the matter so long ; but it was abundantly clear that the nation, as a whole, was fast losing that devotion which it had...
Strana 85 - Nescio quod, certe est, quod me tibi temperat, astrum. Mille hominum species et rerum discolor usus; Velle suum cuique est, nec voto vivitur uno.