History of Latin Christianity: Including that of the Popes to the Pontificate of Nicolas V. |
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Page 5
... soul . - Bonizo , p . 803 . Was this merely the Italian hatred to a German pope , or some personal hostility of Bonizo ? Either way it is charac- teristic . the jealous hierarchical spirit throughout Europe , as well as.
... soul . - Bonizo , p . 803 . Was this merely the Italian hatred to a German pope , or some personal hostility of Bonizo ? Either way it is charac- teristic . the jealous hierarchical spirit throughout Europe , as well as.
Page 6
... throughout Europe , as well as in Italy . The flagrant venality and vices of the Roman clergy might justify , for once or for a time , the intervention of the supreme secular power . The declared aversion of Henry to the dominant evil ...
... throughout Europe , as well as in Italy . The flagrant venality and vices of the Roman clergy might justify , for once or for a time , the intervention of the supreme secular power . The declared aversion of Henry to the dominant evil ...
Page 11
... Throughout Germany his time was occupied , till he reached Cologne , in consecrating churches , and bestowing privileges March 14 . on monasteries . On his arrival at Cologne he was re- ceived by the Archbishop Herman , the Chancellor ...
... Throughout Germany his time was occupied , till he reached Cologne , in consecrating churches , and bestowing privileges March 14 . on monasteries . On his arrival at Cologne he was re- ceived by the Archbishop Herman , the Chancellor ...
Page 13
... throughout that part of France a The most remarkable miracle , of later date , was this . A precious cup , presented to him by the Archbishop of Cologne , fell on the ground and was broken to pieces . At the word of Leo the pieces came ...
... throughout that part of France a The most remarkable miracle , of later date , was this . A precious cup , presented to him by the Archbishop of Cologne , fell on the ground and was broken to pieces . At the word of Leo the pieces came ...
Page 29
... Throughout the land rose churches : the nation received the religion of their Sovereign . Stephen , during his reign of thirty years , con- tinued in the practices of that faith and of those virtues , which acquired for him the name and ...
... Throughout the land rose churches : the nation received the religion of their Sovereign . Stephen , during his reign of thirty years , con- tinued in the practices of that faith and of those virtues , which acquired for him the name and ...
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Common terms and phrases
Abbot Abélard Adalbert Adalbert of Bremen Alexander Anselm Anti-pope apostle apud Archbishop Archbishop of Milan Ariald arms army asserted authority Becket Benzo Berengar Bernard Bishop Cadalous Cardinal castle Cencius CHAP Christendom Church churchmen clergy Cologne commanded Conrad Council Count of Tusculum Crusades Damiani death declared decree dignity doctrines ecclesiæ ecclesiastical election Emperor Empire enemies England Epist excommunication faith favour France Frederick Frederick of Lorraine Germany Godfrey Gregory Guibert Guido Henry Heribert Herlembald Hildebrand Holy Land honour hostility Imperial investiture Italian Italy King King's Landulph Lanfranc Lateran Latin Christendom LATIN CHRISTIANITY legates married clergy Matilda Mentz Milan monastery monastic monk Monte Casino Nicolas nobles Normans oath Papacy Papal partisans party Paschal peace Peter Peter Damiani plunder Pontiff Pope popular possession prelates priests princes quæ quod Ravenna received religious Rheims Roman Rome sacerdotal secular simoniacal simony sovereign spiritual strife sub ann summoned synod temporal tion whole
Popular passages
Page 485 - See, I have this day set thee over the nations and over the kingdoms, to root out, and to pull down, and to destroy, and to throw down, to build, and to plant.
Page 104 - His remote and somewhat more indistinct vision was the foundation of a vast spiritual authority in the person of the Pope, who was to rule mankind by the consentient but subordinate authority of the clergy throughout the world. For this end the clergy were to become still more completely a separate, inviolable caste, their property equally sacred with their persons. Each in his separate sphere, the Pope above all and comprehending all, was to be sovereign arbiter of all disputes ; to hold in his...
Page 114 - Dunstan was, as it were, in a narrower sphere, a prophetic type and harbinger of Hildebrand. Like Hildebrand, or rather like Damiani doing the work of Hildebrand, in the spirit not of a rival sovereign, but of an ironhearted monk, he trampled the royal power under his feet. The scene at the coronation of King Edwy, excepting the horrible cruelties to which it was the prelude, and which belong to a more barbarous race, might seem to prepare mankind for the humiliation of the Emperor Henry at Canossa.
Page 150 - Henry, not by usurpation, but by God's ordinance, King, to Hildebrand, no longer Pope, but the false monk." It accused him of the haughtiness with which he tyrannized over every order of the Church, and had trampled archbishops, bishops, the whole clergy, under his feet. He had pretended to universal knowledge as to universal power. " By the authority of the priesthood, thou hast even threatened to deprive us of our royal authority, that priesthood to which thou wast never called by Christ.
Page 202 - By his firm and unbending efforts to suppress the unchristian vices which deformed society, and to restrain the tyranny which oppressed the subject as much as it enslaved the church, he taught his age 'that there was a being on earth whose special duty it was to defend the defenceless, to succour the succourless, to afford a refuge to the widow and orphan, and to be the guardian of the poor.
Page 93 - beloved brethren, that since the days of the blessed Leo this tried and prudent Archdeacon has exalted the Roman See, and delivered this city from many perils. Wherefore, since we cannot find any one better qualified for the government of the Church, or the protection of the city, we, the bishops and cardinals, with one voice elect him as the pastor and bishop of your souls.
Page 287 - ... soiled with the blood of the People, were humbled ; a tribune so pacific and tutelary, that more than once it has given refuge to its mortal enemies ; a tribune, from which many an interest, abandoned everywhere else, was long defended ; a tribune which, singly and eternally, has pleaded the cause of the poor against the rich, of the oppressed against the oppressor, and of man against himself. There, all becomes ennobled and deified. The Christian orator, with his mastery over the minds of his...
Page 501 - Paul's, that an emissary of Becket had the boldness to enter the Cathedral, to advance to the altar, and thrust the roll bearing the sentence into the hands of the officiating priest, and to proclaim with a loud voice, ' Know all men, that Gilbert, Bishop of London, is excommunicated by Thomas, Archbishop of Canterbury.
Page 465 - Concerning appeals, if they should occur, they ought to proceed from the archdeacon to the bishop, from the bishop to the archbishop. And if the archbishop should...
Page 234 - ... a commissariat, or nominated to the chief command. Each was a volunteer, and brought his own horse, arms, accoutrements, provisions. In the first disastrous expeditions, under Peter the Hermit and Walter the Pennyless, the leaders were designated by popular acclamation or by bold and confident self-election. The general deference and respect for his admirable character and qualifications invested Godfrey of Boulogne in the command of the first regular army. It was fortunate, perhaps, that none...