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Ecclesiastical and Latin
The coat of arms of a Latin Rite Catholic bishop usually displays a galero with a cross and crosier behind the escutcheon ; the specifics differ by location and ecclesiastical rank ( see Ecclesiastical heraldry ).
Before election to the papacy, Pacelli served as secretary of the Department of Extraordinary Ecclesiastical Affairs, papal nuncio to Germany ( 1917 – 1929 ), and Cardinal Secretary of State, in which capacity he worked to conclude treaties with European and Latin American nations, most notably the Reichskonkordat with Nazi Germany.
* Ecclesiastical Latin
** Ecclesiastical Latin
Pope Pius X ( Ecclesiastical Latin: Pius PP.
The inscription says ' St Aldhelm 639 – 709, Abbot of Malmesbury and Bishop of Sherborne, Latin Poet and Ecclesiastical Writer.
* Pronunciation of Ecclesiastical Latin
The root corp, which was borrowed from the Latin corpus, attests to the early influence of Ecclesiastical Latin on the Irish language.
* Bede's Ecclesiastical History and its Continuation ( pdf ), at CCEL, translated by A. M. Sellar, Latin edition at the Latin Library.
John Christopherson, bishop of Chichester, made a Latin translation of the Ecclesiastical History, which was published after his death in 1570.
Grundtvig was very influenced by these ancient models of Christian and historical thought ( notably the 8th-century Bede's Ecclesiastical History, written in Latin ).
* Ecclesiastical Latin in the Latin liturgical rites of the Catholic Church.
* Ecclesiastical Latin is the liturgical language of the Latin Rite of the Roman Catholic Church.
Associated with King were William Bright, Regius Professor of Ecclesiastical History and a great scholar ; Edward Stuart Talbot, Warden of Keble College and subsequently Bishop of Winchester ; Edwin James Palmer, Professor of Latin, Archdeacon of Oxford and later Bishop of Bombay ; Edward Woolcoombe, a Fellow of Balliol with a great interest in and support for the missionary movement ; and John Wordsworth, Chaplain of Brasenose College.
* Helias Ecclesiastical Latin
Ecclesiastical Latin ( sometimes called Liturgical or Church Latin ) is the Latin used by the Latin Rite of the Catholic Church in all periods for ecclesiastical purposes.
( See also Latin regional pronunciation and Latin spelling and pronunciation: Ecclesiastical pronunciation.

Ecclesiastical and Roman
The growth of canon law in the Ecclesiastical Courts was based on the underlying Roman law and increased the strength of the Roman Pontiff.
The 5 Ecclesiastical states of the Holy Roman Empire in Medieval Livonia were organized into the Livonian Confederation in 1418 A diet or Landtag was formed in 1419.
Eusebius, in his Ecclesiastical History IV, I, stated that Evaristus died in the 12th year of the reign of the Roman Emperor Trajan, after holding the office of bishop of the Romans for eight years.
Eusebius of Caesarea references Saracens in his Ecclesiastical history, in which he narrates an account wherein Dionysus, Bishop of Alexandria mentions Saracens in a letter while describing the Roman emperor Decius ' persecution: " Many were, in the Arabian mountain, enslaved by the barbarous sarkenoi.
In the middle of March 870 they kidnapped the Roman Bishop's emissaries that were returning from the Ecclesiastical Council in Constantinople.
Ecclesiastical lands in the Holy Roman Empire, 1648
The Papal State ( s ), the State ( s ) of the Church, the Pontifical States, the Ecclesiastical States, or the Roman States (, also Stato della Chiesa, Stati della Chiesa, Stati Pontifici, and Stato Ecclesiastico ;, also Dicio Pontificia ) were among the major historical states of Italy from roughly the 6th century until the Italian peninsula was unified in 1861 by the Kingdom of Piedmont-Sardinia ( after which the Papal States, in less territorially extensive form, continued to exist until 1870 ).
Some later traditions, first mentioned in the historian Eusebius in his Ecclesiastical History, held that Philip was the first Christian Roman Emperor.
King Henry VIII of England separated the Church of England from the often repressive rule of the Pope and the Roman Catholic Church and its many bishops, clerics, Ecclesiastical courts, etc.
Evagrius s only surviving work, Ecclesiastical History, addresses the history of the Eastern Roman Empire from the official beginning of the Nestorian controversy at the First Council of Ephesus in 431 to the time in which he was writing, 593.
Chesnut also comments on how the Roman historian and scholar endues his “ Ecclesiastical History ” with a dramatic style, using themes from classical Greek tragedies to characterize Justinian s life, particularly Fortune s grand fluctuations.
* In 1770, Oberammergau was informed that all passion plays in Bavaria had been banned by order of the Ecclesiastical Council of the Elector, Maximilian Joseph at the behest of the Roman Catholic Church.
It is the metropolitan archdiocese for the Roman Catholic Ecclesiastical Province of Detroit, which includes all dioceses in the state of Michigan.
Category: Roman Catholic Ecclesiastical Province of Portland
It is also an Ecclesiastical parish in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Killaloe.
ISBN 3-534-00763-8 .</ ref > The Roman Catholic congregations formed part of the Ecclesiastical Province of Gnesen-Posen, a Roman Catholic jurisdiction formed in 1821 by merging the archdioceses of Gniezno and Poznań, separated again in 1946.
Ecclesiastical provinces first assumed a fixed form in the Eastern Roman Empire.
In his writing On Ecclesiastical Power, Giles voices the supremacy of the Roman Pontiff over the material world.
* Linker, R. W. " The English Roman Catholics and Emancipation: The Politics of Persuasion ," Journal of Ecclesiastical History, April 1976, Vol.
Category: Roman Catholic Ecclesiastical Province of Portland
It is also an Ecclesiastical parish in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Killaloe.

Ecclesiastical and Catholic
In opposition to French Catholic bishop Jacques-Benigne Bossuet he published Some Remarks upon the Ecclesiastical History of the Ancient Churches of Piedmont ( 1690 ), and Remarks upon the Ecclesiastical History of the Ancient Churches of the Albigenses ( 1692 ), with the idea of showing that the Albigensians were not Manichaeans, but historically identical with the Waldenses.
This was still the situation when the 1907 article Ecclesiastical Feasts in the Catholic Encyclopedia was written.
Ecclesiastical electoral colleges abound in modern times, especially among Protestant and Eastern Rite Catholic Churches.
In Emperor Theodosius's edict De fide catholica of 27 February 380, enacted in Thessalonica and published in Constantinople for the whole empire, by which he established Catholic Christianity as the official religion of the empire, he referred to Damasus as a pontifex, while calling Peter an episcopus: "... the profession of that religion which was delivered to the Romans by the divine Apostle Peter, as it has been preserved by faithful tradition and which is now professed by the Pontiff Damasus and by Peter, Bishop of Alexandria ... We authorize the followers of this law to assume the title Catholic Christians ..." Some see in this an implied significant differentiation, but the title pontifex maximus is not used in the text ; pontifex is used instead: "... quamque pontificem damasum sequi claret et petrum alexandriae episcopum ..." ( Theodosian Code XVI. 1. 2 ; and Sozomen, " Ecclesiastical History ", VII, iv.
While in London, Barruel published an English work, A Dissertation on Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction in the Catholic Church.
As directed by the U. S. Conference of Catholic Bishops ' Committee on the Liturgy and the Ecclesiastical Province of Los Angeles, the archdiocese annually observes four Holy Days of Obligation.
* Ecclesiastical Archives, Catholic Encyclopedia
* A Primer of Ecclesiastical Latin by John F. Collins, ( Catholic University of America Press, 1985 ) ISBN 0-8132-0667-7.
The hierarchy was restored in 1850 by Pope Pius IX, and the Western District was created the Diocese of Clifton, so-called because the Ecclesiastical Titles Act 1851 made it illegal for Catholic dioceses to use the same title as current or former Anglican dioceses, despite the fact that the Diocese of Clifton had its Cathedral Church within the City of Bristol.

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