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Page "belles_lettres" ¶ 1185
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was and Boniface's
Before Pope Boniface's answer ( which has been lost ) was given, Columbanus was outside the jurisdiction of the Frankish bishops.
It was an advantage to the pope that the great sums of money he collected could be used according to Boniface's own judgment.
When the bull was presented to Philip, the Count of Artois, Robert II, reportedly snatched it from the hands of Boniface's emissary and flung it into the fire.
The body wore ecclesiatical vestments common for Boniface's lifetime: long stockings covered legs and thighs, and it was garbed also with the maniple, soutain, and pontifical habit made of black silk, as well as stole, chasuble, rings, and bejeweled gloves.
After this exhumation and examination, Boniface's body was moved to the Chapels of Pope Gregory and Andrew.
While little is known about Nursling outside of Boniface's vitae, it seems clear that the library there was significant.
The support of the Frankish mayors of the palace ( maior domos ), and later the early Pippinid and Carolingian rulers, was essential for Boniface's work.
The initial grant for the abbey was signed by Carloman, the son of Charles Martel, and a supporter of Boniface's reform efforts in the Frankish church.
According to German historian Gunther Wolf, the high point of Boniface's career was the Concilium Germanicum, organized by Carloman in an unknown location in April 743.
The earliest " Life " of Boniface was written by a certain Willibald, an Anglo-Saxon priest who came to Mainz after Boniface's death, around 765.
The dates for some of these celebrations have undergone some changes: in 1805, 1855, and 1905 ( and in England in 1955 ) anniversaries were calculated with Boniface's death dated in 755, the " Mainz tradition "; Michael Tangl's dating of the martyrdom in 754 was not accepted until after 1955.
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.
The support of the Mayors of the Palace and later, the early Pippinid and Carolingian rulers, was important to Boniface's success.
It was Henry who secured Boniface's election as Archbishop, and throughout his tenure of that office he spent much time on the continent.
Its central location in Germania beyond the Rhine was the reason it became the point d ' appui of Boniface's mission work.
Boniface does not explicitly suggest to Cuthbert that he, too, should hold a synod, but it seems clear that this was Boniface's intent.
He died at Nice, and was buried in St. Boniface's Abbey, Munich.
It also appears that the letter to Justus was written after the letters to Edwin and Æthelburg, rather than before, as Bede has it ; Boniface's letter to Edwin and Æthelburg indicates he had the news from messengers, but when he wrote to Justus he had heard from the king himself.
In 1183, Boniface's nephew Baldwin V was crowned co-king of Jerusalem.
Boniface's patronage was celebrated widely.
Boniface's family was well known in the east: his nephew Baldwin and brother Conrad had been Kings of Jerusalem, and his niece Maria was heiress of the kingdom.
Boniface's cousin Philip of Swabia was married to Irene Angelina, a daughter of the deposed Byzantine emperor Isaac II Angelus and niece of Conrad's second wife Theodora.

was and monumental
Sparrow-size Virginia Gibson, with sparkling blue eyes and a cheerful smile, made a suitably perky Amy, while Melisande Congdon, as the real aunt, was positively monumental in the very best Gibson Girl manner.
As a first step, Algerian literature was marked by works whose main concern was the assertion of the Algerian national entity, there is the publication of novels as the Algerian trilogy of Mohammed Dib, or even Nedjma of Kateb Yacine novel which is often regarded as a monumental and major work.
The entrance to the Acropolis was a monumental gateway called the Propylaea.
La Folia was the most monumental set of orchestral variations before Brahms ' Variations on a Theme by Haydn.
In 1958 Giacometti was asked to create a monumental sculpture for the Chase Manhattan Bank building in New York, which was beginning construction.
There was at the top of the Arc from 1882 to 1886, a monumental sculpture by Alexandre Falguière, " Le triomphe de la Révolution " ( the Triumph of the Revolution ), a chariot drawn by horses preparing " to crush Anarchy and Despotism ", that remained only four years up there before falling in ruins.
Thereafter, he began a massive program of monumental construction, paradigmatic for which was the state temple called the Bayon.
The Doric order later spread across Greece and into Sicily where it was the chief order for monumental architecture for 800 years.
Although the Encyclopédie was Diderot's monumental piece, he was the author of many other works that sowed nearly every field of intellectual interest with new and creative ideas.
* St. Nicholas Cathedral-a monumental 13th century Gothic church ( cathedral only from 1992, before it was a parochial church ), damaged by fire in the late 18th century, then destroyed in World War II and reconstructed
Ximenes was involved in all the major official monumental projects in Italy from the 1880s on and devoted his energies as from 1911 primarily to commissions for important public works in São Paulo, Kiev, New York and Buenos Aires.
Until recently, the Preclassic was regarded as a formative period, consisting of small villages of farmers who lived in huts and few permanent buildings, but this notion has been challenged by recent discoveries of monumental architecture from that period, such as an altar in La Blanca, San Marcos, from 1000 BC ; ceremonial sites at Miraflores and El Naranjo from 801 BC ; the earliest monumental masks ; and the Mirador Basin cities of Nakbé, Xulnal, El Tintal, Wakná and El Mirador.
In 1885, the same year that he published his monumental work, Memory: A Contribution to Experimental Psychology, he was made a professor at the University of Berlin, most likely in recognition of this publication.
After his death, he was known to be responsible for the use of columns and monumental stone in Egyptian architecture and considered to have fully advanced ancient Egyptian medicine.
Grimm's monumental dictionary of the German Language, the Deutsches Wörterbuch, was started in 1838 and first published in 1854.
The library was built to store 12, 000 scrolls and to serve as a monumental tomb for Celsus.
" It is unnecessary to imagine more than that it was monumental, and a monument of more than one king of Egypt.
One of his monumental sculptures was installed in the Hague in 1959.
The latter was a ring-fort some 500 meters in circumference, containing the duke's residence, a stone palace, the country's first monumental architecture.
Among his other accomplishments, Abel wrote a monumental work on elliptic functions which, however, was not discovered until after his death.

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