Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "November 18" ¶ 5
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

1302 and
Gertrude the Great ( 1256 c 1302 ).
* Gertrude the Great ( 1256 c 1302 )
* 1296 1302: Vollrad von Krempa
* 1302 Battle of the Golden Spurs ( Guldensporenslag in Dutch ) a coalition around the Flemish cities defeats the king of France's royal army.
* 1302 Battle of Bapheus: decisive Ottoman victory over the Byzantines opening up Bithyniea for Turkish conquest.
* 1302 Bruges Matins, the nocturnal massacre of the French garrison in Bruges by members of the local Flemish militia.
* 1302 St. Gertrude the Great, German theologian ( b. 1256 )
The palace and gardens were built during the reign of Muhammad III ( 1302 1309 ) and redecorated shortly after by Abu I-Walid Isma ' il ( 1313 1324 ).
* August 16 Azzone Visconti, founder of the state of Milan ( b. 1302 )
* February 3 Richard FitzAlan, 8th Earl of Arundel ( d. 1302 )
* Shōan ( 1299 1302 )
* Shōan ( 1299 1302 )
* Kengen ( 1302 1303 )
Haelwig later acted as Queen Regent, probably 1290 1302 and 1320 1327.
His daughter Elizabeth de Badlesmere ( 1313 8 June 1356 ), was married firstly ( 27 June 1316 ) to Sir Edmund Mortimer ( 1302 17 December 1331 ), eldest son of Roger Mortimer, 1st Earl of March and Joan de Geneville, Baroness Geneville.
Peter also had two daughters, Elisabeth, who married Denis of Portugal, and Yolanda ( 1273 August 1302 ), who married Robert of Naples.
* Louis ( 1250 after 10 January 1302 ), Baron of Vaud
* Robert II, Count of Artois ( 1250 1302 )
# Charles ( 12 March 1270 16 December 1325 ), Count of Valois, married firstly to Margaret of Anjou in 1290, secondly to Catherine I of Courtenay in 1302, and lastly to Mahaut of Chatillon in 1308.
# Eleanor of Anjou, ( August 1289 9 August 1341, Monastery of St. Nicholas, Arene, Elis ), married at Messina 17 May 1302 Frederick III of Sicily

1302 and Pope
Because of their corruption, they were eventually forced by the Pope to suspend their activities in 1302.
The Pope, however, did not live long enough to complete these negotiations, which finally resulted in a peaceful settlement of the Aragonese as well as the Sicilian question in 1302 under Pope Boniface VIII.
The wars continued until the peace of Caltabellotta in 1302, which saw Frederick III recognised as king of the Isle of Sicily, while Charles II was recognised as the king of Naples by Pope Boniface VIII.
It was the dispute between Philip the Fair and Pope Boniface VIII which led to the States-General of 1302 ; the king of France desired that, in addition to the Great Officers of the Crown of France, he receive the counsel from the three estates in this serious crisis.
Some of the most pertinent Roman Catholic expressions of this doctrine are: the profession of faith of Pope Innocent III ( 1208 ), the profession of faith of the Fourth Lateran Council ( 1215 ), the bull Unam sanctam of Pope Boniface VIII ( 1302 ), and the profession of faith of the Council of Florence ( 1442 ).
Pope Boniface VIII, Bull Unam sanctam ( 1302 ): " We are compelled in virtue of our faith to believe and maintain that there is only one holy Catholic Church, and that one is apostolic.
* Unam Sanctam, a bull issued on 18 November 1302 by Pope Boniface VIII
On 18 November 1302, Pope Boniface VIII issued the Papal bull Unam sanctam which historians consider one of the most extreme statements of Papal spiritual supremacy ever made.
Bernard Saisset ( c. 1232 c. 1314 ) was an Occitan bishop of Pamiers, in the County of Foix in the south of France, whose outspoken disrespect for Philip IV of France incurred charges of high treason in the overheated atmosphere of tension between the King and his ministry and Pope Boniface VIII, leading up to the papal bull Unam sanctam of 1302.
The Estates General were also meant to unite the budding nation to form a bloc against the pope, who could not accept such taxes and who proclaimed the primacy of the spiritual over the temporal ( in the papal bull Unam Sanctam of 1302, Pope Boniface VIII demands the establishment of a theocracy ).
In the dispute between Jens Grand, Archbishop of Lund, and King Eric VI Menved Martin arranged a royal rapprochement to Pope Boniface VIII in 1302, resulting in a settlement of the dispute.
It was written during the period of the acrimonious dispute between King Philip IV and Pope Boniface VIII, which culminated in the Papal bull Unam sanctam of 1302.
Lopez, dispossessed a first time by a delegate of Morimond, appealed to Pope Boniface VIII, who quashed the sentence and referred the case to the general chapter at Cîteaux, where Lopez was re-established in his dignity ( 1302 ).
* November 18, 1302: Pope Boniface VIII issues the Papal bull Unam sanctam.
Pope Clement V formally awarded ownership of the island to the Knights Templar, who ( in 1302 ) maintained a garrison with 120 knights, 500 bowmen and 400 Syrian helpers, under the Templar Maréchal ( Commander-in-Chief ) Barthélemy de Quincy.
Seal of Mahmud Ghazan, over the last two lines of his 1302 letter to Pope Boniface VIII.

1302 and Boniface
In his Bull of 1302, Unam Sanctam, Boniface VIII proclaimed that it " is absolutely necessary for salvation that every human creature be subject to the Roman pontiff ", pushing papal supremacy to its historical extreme.
From that council, on 18 November 1302, Boniface issued the bull Unam sanctam.
Having got into a violent conflict with the King of France, Philip the Fair, who assigned himself the right to tax the French clergy, Boniface VIII emanated the famous Bull Unam Sanctam of 1302, which arrogated to the Pope's absolute supremacy over earthly power, against the king.
Then, at the end of the year, Boniface, with his customary tactlessness having criticized Philip for his personal behavior and the unscrupulousness of his ministry ( that being an assessment with which many modern historians would agree ), summoned a council of French bishops for November 1302, intended to reform Church matters in France — at Rome.
Philip forbade Saisset or any of them to attend and forestalled Boniface by organizing a counter-assembly of his own, held in Paris in April 1302.

0.273 seconds.