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Page "Boniface I, Marquess of Montferrat" ¶ 12
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Boniface and founded
Boniface VIII founded the University of Rome La Sapienza in 1303.
Willibrord fled to the abbey he had founded in Echternach ( in modern-day Luxemburg ) while Boniface returned to Nursling.
In 1818, Father Norbert Provencher founded a mission on the east bank of the Red River in what was then Rupert's Land, building a log church and naming it after St. Boniface.
The university founded by Boniface VIII in 1303, had a good many students under the French popes, drawn there by the generosity of the sovereign pontiffs, who rewarded them with books or benefices.
Several synods of minor importance were held there, and its university, founded by Pope Boniface VIII in 1303 and famed as a seat of legal studies, flourished until the French Revolution.
The Benedictine monastery of Fulda was founded in 744 by Saint Sturm, a disciple of Saint Boniface, as one of Boniface's outposts in the reorganization of the church in Germany.
It was founded in 1846 by Boniface Wimmer, a monk from Bavaria, Germany.
Saint Vincent Archabbey and College was founded in 1846 by Boniface Wimmer, a monk from Metten Abbey in Bavaria.
* Boniface Wimmer, Benedictine monk, founded Saint Vincent Archabbey in 1845 and the American-Cassinese Congregation of the Benedictine Confederation in 1855.
In 1300, Boniface VIII, at the summit of his pontificate, set up the first Jubilee and founded the first Roman university.
Saint Boniface erected a chapel to Saint Martin and founded a Benedictine monastery here.
In 739, an English monk called Boniface founded the diocese of Passau and this was the largest diocese of the Holy Roman Empire for many years.
Achaea was founded in 1205 by William of Champlitte and Geoffrey I of Villehardouin, who undertook to conquer the Peloponnese on behalf of Boniface of Montferrat, King of Thessalonica.
In 1300, Pope Boniface VIII finally founded the Korčula Bishopric under the Archbishopric of Ragusa.
The Benedictine monastery founded by Boniface in Fritzlar in 724 gained prominence as a center of religious and worldly learning under its first abbot, Saint Wigbert, who built the original stone basilica of 732 on the site of Boniface's wooden chapel.
The city in evidence today was founded as a fortress by and subsequently named after Boniface II of Tuscany in 828.
Sapienza University of Rome was founded in 1303 with the Papal bull In supremae praeminentia dignitatis issued on 20 April 1303 by Pope Boniface VIII, as a Studium for ecclesiastical studies more under his control than the universities of Bologna and Padua.
Ibagué was founded by Spaniard Andrés López de Galarza on October 14, 1550 as " Villa de San Bonifacio de Ibagué del Valle de las Lanzas " (" Town of Saint Boniface of Ibagué of the Valley of the Spears ") in the place where today is located the urban area of the neighbouring municipality of Cajamarca, which lies 42 km to the west of the modern city of Ibagué.
Most of the new principality consisted of the territory of the old Prince-Bishopric of Regensburg, which had been founded in 739 by St Boniface.
In 738, Lullus joined the Benedictine order and the monastery of Fritzlar, founded by Boniface in 732, where abbot Saint Wigbert was his teacher.
* Saint Corbinian ( 723-730 ; founded the Benedictine abbey in Freising, although the diocese was not organized until 739 by Saint Boniface )
Ohrdruf was founded in 724 – 726 by Saint Boniface, as the site of the first monastery in Thuringia, dedicated to Saint Michael.

Boniface and Kingdom
Here Alexios III eventually surrendered, with Euphrosyne, to Marquis Boniface of Montferrat, who was establishing himself as ruler of the Kingdom of Thessalonica.
There are quite a few churches dedicated to St. Boniface in the United Kingdom: Bunbury, Cheshire ; Chandler's Ford and Southampton Hampshire ; Adler Street, London ; Papa Westray, Orkney ; St Budeaux, Plymouth ( now demolished ); Bonchurch, Isle of Wight ; Cullompton, Devon.
* Boniface of Montferrat, a leader of the Fourth Crusade, founds the Kingdom of Thessalonica.
He seemed at first inclined to press a quarrel with the Kingdom of France over the Burgundian frontier, but the refusal of Pope Boniface VIII to recognize his election led him to change his policy, and, in 1299, he made a treaty with King Philip IV, by which his son Rudolph was to marry Blanche, a daughter of the French king.
This decree was confirmed by Pope Boniface VIII, the feudal overlord of the Kingdom of Naples, on 27 February 1297, so Charles lost his claim to the Neapolitan throne.
William V went out to the Latin Kingdom to support his grandson, leaving Conrad and Boniface in charge of Montferrat.
In the same year, Kaloyan's troops killed Boniface of Montferrat ( 4 September 1207 ), the Latin ruler of the Kingdom of Thessalonica.
The Republic got the island of Crete and guaranted to Boniface the possession of the Kingdom of Thessalonica.
* Boniface, his successor to Montferrat and founder of the Kingdom of Thessalonica
* Boniface, his successor to Montferrat and founder of the Kingdom of Thessalonica

Boniface and Thessalonica
Captured by Boniface, Alexios and his retinue were sent to Montferrat, before being brought back to Thessalonica in c. 1209.
In this enterprise in the summer of 1204, Baldwin came into collision with Boniface of Montferrat, the rival candidate for the empire, who was to receive a large territory in Macedonia with the title of King of Thessalonica.
Boniface hoped to make himself quite independent of the empire, to do no homage for his kingdom, and he opposed Baldwin's proposal to march to Thessalonica.
Baldwin insisted on going to Thessalonica ; Boniface laid siege to Adrianople, where Baldwin had established a governor ; civil war seemed inevitable.
Boniface received Thessalonica as a fief from the emperor, and was appointed commander of the forces which were to march to the conquest of Greece.
Late 13th and 14th century sources suggest that Boniface based his claim to Thessalonica on the statement that his younger brother Renier had been granted Thessalonica on his marriage to Maria Komnene in 1180.
Boniface reluctantly accepted this, and set out to conquer Thessalonica, the second-largest Byzantine city after Constantinople.
Late 13th and 14th century sources suggest that Boniface based his claim to Thessalonica on the statement that his younger brother Renier had been granted Thessalonica on his marriage to Maria Komnene in 1180.
After this victory Boniface captured the island of Euboea, where a vassal lordship was established, and helped some other Crusaders establish the Duchy of Athens and the Principality of Achaea, which became vassal states of Thessalonica.
* Margaret ( 1175 – after 1223 ), wife firstly of Emperor Isaac II Angelos, secondly of King Boniface I of Thessalonica and thirdly of Nicolas of Saint-Omer
Peire de la Mula stayed at the Montferrat court around 1200 and Raimbaut de Vaqueiras spent most of his career as court poet and close friend of Boniface I. Raimbaut, along with several other troubadours, including Elias Cairel, followed Boniface on the Fourth Crusade and established, however briefly, Italo-Occitan literature in Thessalonica.
Later sources suggest that Renier's surviving older brother Boniface based his claim to Thessalonica on his late brother's title.
* It is a comptroller of the word Saloniki ( Thessaloniki ), after which the king of Thessalonica, Boniface of Montferrat, renamed Amfissa
In 1205, after the Fourth Crusade and the establishment of the Latin Empire, Boniface of Montferrat, the king of Thessalonica, conquered the region of Central Greece.

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