Chad's | ... is known to have exercised authority there: Wynfrith, who became bishop on | death in 672. In addition it is known that Wulfhere gave land at Barrow up ... |
Joseph Hall | ... the burning of certain volumes of satire by John Marston, Thomas Middleton, | , and others; it also required histories and plays to be specially approve ... |
Jöns Bengtsson Oxenstierna | ... lmar Union. He received the power from temporary Swedish regents archbishop | and lord Erik Axelsson Tott. However, Sweden being volatile and split by f ... |
Bishop of Dunkeld | ... e island, was founded in the 12th century during the episcopate of Gregoir, | . Later tradition placed it back in the reign of King Alexander I of Scotl ... |
John Chrysostom | In this same period, Saint | explained the significance of angels' wings: "They manifest a nature's sub ... |
Pope Paul VI | ... ust as cardinal bishops are given one of the suburban dioceses around Rome. | abolished all administrative rights cardinals had with regard to their tit ... |
Bishop of Winchester | ... ry, and on 3 June 1162 was consecrated as archbishop by Henry of Blois, the | and the other suffragan bishops of Canterbury |
Aidan Kelly | ... abon, which have become popular in North American Wicca, were introduced by | in the 1970s. The word "sabbat" itself comes from the witches' sabbath or ... |
Hilarion Alfeyev | Bishop | commented that the inter-Christian community is "bursting at the seams." H ... |
Pope John Paul II | With the changes in the canonization process introduced by | in 1983, a College of Relators was added to prepare the cases of those dec ... |
St Irenaeus | Eusebius implies that other works were in circulation; from | he knows of the apology "Against Marcion," and from Justin's "Apology" of ... |
Archbishop of Canterbury | ... useums and Galleries Act 1992. Prior to the 1963 Act, it was chaired by the | , the Lord Chancellor and the Speaker of the House of Commons. The board w ... |
Pope Formosus | ... ible for the "Cadaver Synod" that had condemned and mutilated the corpse of | , and placed a laudatory remark on Stephen VI's tombstone. He then reporte ... |
Manetho | ... straea (identified as Virgo), the goddess of justice. Libra is mentioned by | (3rd century B.C.) and Geminus (1st century B.C.), and included by Ptolemy ... |
Plutarch | ... ere is no evidence as to the stringing of the Greek lyre in the heroic age. | says that Olympus and Terpander used but three strings to accompany their ... |
John Colet | ... d is believed to have been the first who taught Greek in that city. In 1510 | , dean of St Paul's, who was then founding the school which afterwards bec ... |
Adolf Bertram | ... because he curtailed agitating clergy. On 20 November, when German Cardinal | announced a papal ban on all political activities of clergymen, calls for ... |
Abune Merkorios | After the death of Abuna Takla Haymanot in 1988, | who had close ties to the Derg (Communist) government was elected Patriarc ... |
Gerard Manley Hopkins | One evening in September, Merton was reading a book about | ' conversion to Catholicism and how he became a priest. Suddenly he could ... |
Henry of Blois | ... une 1162 at Canterbury, and on 3 June 1162 was consecrated as archbishop by | , the Bishop of Winchester and the other suffragan bishops of Canterbury |
Pope Clement V | In 1309 the city, still part of the Kingdom of Arles, was chosen by | as his residence, and from 9 March 1309 until 13 January 1377 was the seat ... |
John Wesley | The Methodist Church, founded by | , upholds Article VII in the Articles of Religion in the Book of Disciplin ... |
Angelo Amato | Since 9 July 2009, the Prefect is Cardinal | , while the current secretary (appointed 29 December 2010) is Archbishop M ... |
Pope John Paul II | ... guards, and palace guards. After the May 13, 1981 assassination attempt on | by Mehmet Ali Ağca, the guards were given enhanced training in unarmed com ... |
Pope Benedict IV | ... a native of Ardea, was Pope for some thirty days in 903 after the death of | (900–903). He was dethroned by antipope Christopher (903–904), who is some ... |
John Fisher | ... opponents to the Henrician Reformation, such as St. Thomas More and Bishop | , who were executed for their opposition. There was also a growing party o ... |
Pope Paul VI | On 8 May 1969, | issued the Apostolic Constitution Sacra Rituum Congregatio, dividing it in ... |
Greek Sibyl | ... tists. Whether the sibyl in question was the Etruscan Sibyl of Tibur or the | of Cumae is not always clear. The Christian author Lactantius had no hesit ... |
Edmund Scambler | ... ry was that of having a prison for felons taken in the Soke. In 1576 Bishop | sold the lordship of the hundred of Nassaburgh, which was coextensive with ... |
Robert Pursglove | ... as a result of restructuring. The Grammar School was originally founded by | , Prior of Gisborough Priory, as a charitable school for poor boys |
William Tyndale | ... his war against Protestantism. Brian Moynahan, in his book God's Messenger: | , Thomas More and the Writing of the English Bible, takes a similarly crit ... |
Pope John XXIII | ... an sees (who had been relieved of direct responsibilities for those sees by | three years earlier). Not holding a suburbicarian see, they cannot elect t ... |
Bishop of Rochester | ... g them in Gaul were Mellitus, who was Bishop of London, and Justus, who was | . Remaining in Britain, Laurence succeeded in reconverting Eadbald to Chri ... |
Paolo Giovio | ... s condottieri in Senigallia, a feat described as a "wonderful deceiving" by | , and had them executed |
Pythia | ... f the earliest recorded group of prophets to utilise this technique was the | , the priestess at the temple of Apollo in Delphi, who acted as the condui ... |
Peter | ... E.R. Dodds draws a comparison with Jesus's prophecy at the Last Supper that | would deny him three times. Jesus knows that Peter will do this, but reade ... |
Eusebius of Nicomedia | ... known by the part he took in the Arian controversy. After the followers of | , who was now the Patriarch of Constantinople, had renewed their depositio ... |
Cyril of Jerusalem | Karl Ritter (1838) suggested that when | , remarks that one of Scythianus' pupils Terebinthus changed his name to B ... |
Abuna Theophilos | Patriarch Basilios died in 1971, and was succeeded on the same year by | . With the fall of Emperor Haile Selassie I of Ethiopia in 1974, the new M ... |
Sinéad O'Connor | ... a provided spoken (not sung) vocals in Irish on the song "Never Get Old" on | 's debut album, The Lion and the Cobra |
Bishop of Winchester | ... on if he refused to dismiss his councillors, particularly Peter des Roches, | . Henry yielded, and the favourites were dismissed, Hubert de Burgh (whom ... |
Lanfranc | ... n as archbishop, Walter wielded a power unseen in England since the days of | |
Henry Wace | ... ned to supervise the first series of the NPNF. He was joined by the British | for the second series |
Gene Robinson | ... ious blow to ecumenism. The decision by the U.S. Episcopal Church to ordain | , an openly gay, non-celibate priest who advocates same-sex blessings, as ... |
Thomas Aquinas | ... ime teacher on campus named Daniel Walsh, so he decided to take a course on | with Walsh. Through Walsh, Merton was introduced to Jacques Maritain at a ... |
Pope John X | Pope Leo VI, a Roman, succeeded | (914–928) as Pope in 928. He reigned a little over seven months; the exact ... |
Juan Luis Cipriani Thorne | During the pontificate of John Paul II, two members of Opus Dei, | and Julián Herranz Casado, were made cardinals |
Saint Peter | The Cathedral Church of | , Saint Paul and Saint Andrew, whose statues look down from the three high ... |
Thomas Wolsey | | , Archbishop of York, Chief Minister and favourite of Henry VIII, took ove ... |
John Charles McQuaid | ... normal law enforcement processes." The report criticized four archbishops – | who died in 1973, Dermot Ryan who died in 1984, Kevin McNamara who died in ... |
Pope Sergius III | ... murdered, presumably strangled by Christopher, who was in turn executed by | (904–911) in 904 |
Piotr Skarga | ... ing the reign of King Sigismund III Vasa, who was under strong influence of | and other Jesuits. After the Deluge, and other wars of the mid-17th centur ... |
Duane Pederson | ... I See It" in the Hollywood Free Paper, an evangelistic newspaper founded by | , one of the leaders of the Jesus People in Hollywood and Los Angeles. |
Gregoir | ... tre of the island, was founded in the 12th century during the episcopate of | , Bishop of Dunkeld. Later tradition placed it back in the reign of King A ... |
Archbishop of York | Thomas Wolsey, | , Chief Minister and favourite of Henry VIII, took over the site of Hampto ... |
Melchett | ... t characters, though several reappear in one series or another, for example | and Lord Flashheart |
Mark Pattison | ... ary works. C.P. Snow was inspired for his novel The Masters by the story of | , a fellow at Lincoln, whose enthusiastic hopes for Lincoln were frustrate ... |
Epiphanius | ... f believers at that time favoured the Sabellian view of the oneness of God. | (Haeres 62) about 375 notes that the adherents of Sabellius were still to ... |
Julián Herranz Casado | ... ate of John Paul II, two members of Opus Dei, Juan Luis Cipriani Thorne and | , were made cardinals |
Archbishop of Vienna | In 1995 Cardinal Hans Hermann Groër resigned from his post as | , Austria over allegations of sexual abuse, although he remained a Cardina ... |
Geoffrey of Monmouth | ... especially the Matter of Britain and Matter of France, the former based on | 's Historia Regum Britanniae ("History of the Kings of Britain"), written ... |
Eusebius | ... tively describe it as a temple to Venus, the Roman equivalent to Aphrodite. | claims, in his Life of Constantine, that the site of the Church had origin ... |
Thomas Wolsey | ... ing a diplomatic mission to the Holy Roman Emperor, Charles V, accompanying | to Calais and Bruges, More was knighted and made under-treasurer of the Ex ... |
Eusebius | After Rufinus, Justin was known mainly from St Irenaeus and | or from spurious works. The Chronicon Paschale assigns his martyrdom to th ... |
Hydatius | ... l sack of Rome (June 2–16, 455). Oost has pointed out that in his chronicle | wrote Placidia was unmarried as of 455 |
Wynfrith | ... he Mercian bishops of Lichfield is known to have exercised authority there: | , who became bishop on Chad's death in 672. In addition it is known that W ... |
Christian Gottlob Wilke | In 1838, two theologians, | and Christian Hermann Weisse, independently extended Lachmann's reasoning ... |
Pope Clement VII | ... presented Albert's sovereign, Sigismund. Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor, and | objected to the Prussian Homage, which was derided as the Krakauer Kuhhand ... |
Thomas Aquinas | ... ny things that God cannot do, but that nonetheless he counts as Omnipotent. | advanced a version of the omnipotence paradox by asking whether God could ... |
Pope Gregory VII | ... on, where he was joined by the young monk Hildebrand, who afterwards became | ; arriving in pilgrim garb at Rome in the following February, he was recei ... |
Abuna Takla Haymanot | ... n 1979. The Ethiopian government then ordered the Ethiopian Church to elect | as Patriarch of Ethiopia. The Coptic Orthodox Church refused to recognize ... |
Andrew Greeley | Roman Catholic priest and author | criticized liberation theology in his 2009 fictional book Irish Tweed. In ... |
Pope Pius IX | ... This was the case throughout the majority of Severn's tenure as Consul, as | managed to retain a fragile hold on power, relying on a garrison of French ... |
Joseph Milner | ... ing Hull Grammar School, at the time headed by a young, dynamic headmaster, | , who was to become a lifelong friend. Wilberforce profited from the suppo ... |
Pope Paul VI | In 1965 | decreed in his motu proprio Ad Purpuratorum Patrum that patriarchs of the ... |
Norbert of Xanten | ... order was a reformed branch of the Augustinian canons, founded, AD 1119, by | , on the Lower Rhine, c. 1080) at Prémontré, a secluded marshy valley in t ... |
Athanasius as bishop of Alexandria | ... ho was now the Patriarch of Constantinople, had renewed their deposition of | , at a synod held in Antioch in 341, they resolved to send delegates to Co ... |
Pope John Paul II | ... said that his religion was the "most important thing" in his life. In 1998, | made him a Knight of the Order of St. Gregory the Great (KSG), the highest ... |
Geoffrey of Monmouth | ... h which combines the elements ("battle, hard"), and ("breach, gap, notch"). | Latinised this to Caliburnus (likely influenced by the medieval Latin spel ... |
Pope Stephen VII | ... ittle over seven months; the exact dates are not known. He was succeeded by | (928 or 929–931). Leo VI was son of the primicerius Christopher and held t ... |
Wulfsige | ... year of succession is unknown. Asser's predecessor as Bishop of Sherborne, | , is known to have attested a charter sometime between 890 and 896. Asser' ... |
Angelo Liteky | ... knife" of which only 144 were made. It also contains the Medal of Honor of | , who renounced it in 1986 by placing the medal at the memorial in an enve ... |
Erythraea | ... ius, and was said to have given birth to the Sibyl, who is sometimes called | , from Erythrae, a small place on Mount Ida (Dionysius of Halicarnassus i. ... |
Gregory of Tours | ... entury Lombardic manuscript, which contains De cursu stellarum ratio by St. | . The Latin text taught readers how to determine the times of nighttime pr ... |
Pope Stephen II | ... lly used in Western Europe after the end of the Roman Empire; for instance, | granted the title "Patricius of the Romans" to the Frankish ruler Pepin II ... |
Francis Xavier Pierz | ... ly by Catholic German-Americans, who were attracted to the region by Father | . Lower Town was founded by settlers from New England and the mid-Atlantic ... |
Bartolomé de las Casas | ... lined to sixty thousand by 1509. Although population estimates vary, Father | , the “Defender of the Indians” estimated there were 6 million (6,000,000) ... |
Jacint Verdaguer | ... ere was a national boom of writers in the local languages, like the Catalan | and the Galician Rosalía de Castro, the main figures of the national reviv ... |
Meletian | # The | schis |
Archbishop of Canterbury | ... all number of barons to pay homage to Eustace as their future king; but the | , Theobald of Bec, and the other bishops declined to perform the coronatio ... |
Bishop of Peterborough | ... uilt in its present form between 1118 and 1238. It has been the seat of the | since the Diocese was created in 1541. Peterborough Cathedral is one of th ... |
Philander Chase | Bexley Hall is an Episcopal seminary founded in 1823 by | , the Bishop of Ohio. Most of the East Coast Episcopal leadership did not ... |
Richard of Chichester | ... edicated to him, St Edmund's Chapel, was consecrated in Dover by his friend | (making it the only chapel dedicated to one English saint by another) |
Reverend Lovejoy | Flanders has been shown to call | for advice often, even over minuscule things, to the point that Lovejoy ha ... |
Turibius of Astorga | ... stimation of Priscillian as a heretic and Manichaean rested upon Augustine, | , Leo the Great and Orosius (who quotes a fragment of a letter of Priscill ... |
Hippolytus | ... neus exercised wide influence on the immediately following generation. Both | and Tertullian freely drew on his writings. But his literal hope of an ear ... |
Pope John Paul II | ... visited the capital such as former U.S. Secretary of State James Baker and | . The former visit came amidst an historical setting after the fall of com ... |
Simon of Southwell | ... had been educated at Bologna in his household, including John of Tynemouth, | , and Honorius of Kent. He also employed the architect Elias of Dereham, w ... |
Samuel Wilberforce | ... Barbara (b. 1799), Elizabeth (b. 1801), Robert Isaac Wilberforce (b. 1802), | (b. 1805) and Henry William Wilberforce (b. 1807). Wilberforce was an indu ... |
Aquinas | ... lic theology was well integrated with scientific knowledge from the time of | to the time of Galileo, and that too was a deliberate program. Critics sug ... |
Rowan Williams | ... appeared at the "The Gathering", organised by the Archbishop of Canterbury, | , at Canterbury Cathedral to discuss religion, society and journalism, amo ... |
Antipope Christopher | When | (903–904) seized the seat of St. Peter by force, the Theophylact faction o ... |
John of Montecorvino | ... jumeau. Later envoys included Odoric of Pordenone, Giovanni de' Marignolli, | , Niccolò de' Conti, or Ibn Battuta, a Moroccan Muslim traveller, who pass ... |
Dominique Mamberti | ... l Tarcisio Bertone, is the See's equivalent of a prime minister. Archbishop | , Secretary of the Section for Relations with States of the Secretariat of ... |
Timothy | ... with them before leaving for Athens. In his concern, he sent his delegate, | , to visit the Thessalonians and to return with a report. While, on the wh ... |
Pope Benedict XV | ... Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity. It was formally set up by | on 1 May 1917. The title of Prefect was held by the s from 1917 until 1967 ... |
Pope Stephen VI | ... ned, an unwelcome decision reversed again after his death. Sergius honoured | (896–897), who had been responsible for the "Cadaver Synod" that had conde ... |
John Meyendorff | ... see the epistle as more fraternal than authoritative, and Orthodox scholar | sees it as connected with the Roman church's awareness of its "priority" ( ... |
Philander Chase | ... Bates College Oren B. Cheney, founder and first president of Kenyon College | , first professor of Wabash College Caleb Mills, and former president of U ... |
Mark | He was a native of Rome and was chosen as successor of | after the Roman seat had been vacant for four months. He is chiefly known ... |
Juan de Padilla | ... them was fabulously wealthy in gold. West of Lyons is a cross commemorating | , a member of Coronado's expedition, who returned the following year as a ... |
Archbishop of Canterbury | ... into the castle without meeting resistance and looted the Jewel House. The | , Simon Sudbury, took refuge in St John's Chapel, hoping the mob would res ... |
Abuna Basilios | ... ian Church on 14 January 1951. In 1959, Pope Cyril VI of Alexandria crowned | as the first Patriarch of Ethiopia |
Plutarch | ... of the Maenads or Thyades in the Korykion cave on Mount Parnassos, although | informs us that his friend Clea was both a Priestess to Apollo and to the ... |
Dermot Ryan | ... report criticized four archbishops – John Charles McQuaid who died in 1973, | who died in 1984, Kevin McNamara who died in 1987, and retired Cardinal De ... |
Fulton J. Sheen | ... broadcasting in the Spring of 1949. Another television preacher of note was | , who successfully switched to television in 1951 after two decades of pop ... |
Saint Andrew | The Cathedral Church of Saint Peter, Saint Paul and | , whose statues look down from the three high gables of the West Front, wa ... |
William of Sainte-Mère-Eglise | ... ily he heard of the king's capture, and diverted to Germany. He, along with | , was among the first of Richard's subjects to find the king at Ochsenfurt ... |
Jonathan Swift | ... extual criticism as pedantry. His classical controversies also called forth | 's Battle of the Books |
Ronald Knox | ... s the end of his life, he converted to Roman Catholicism. He had hoped that | , a Roman Catholic priest and writer whom he admired, would instruct him i ... |
Pope Pius XI | ... oly See. Relations with the Holy See were defined during the pontificate of | (1922–1939 |
Eusebius of Caesarea | ... y Christian writers, who competed with one another to execrate her worship. | , down the coast, averred that 'men and women vie with one another to hono ... |
Brynjólfur Sveinsson | ... is known of its whereabouts until 1643 when it came into the possession of | , then Bishop of Skálholt. At that time versions of the Prose Edda were we ... |
Georges Darboy | ... he Commune. The Commune unsuccessfully tried to exchange him, first against | , Archbishop of Paris, then against all 74 hostages it detained, but flatl ... |
Tarcisio Bertone | ... retary of State, directs and coordinates the Curia. The incumbent, Cardinal | , is the See's equivalent of a prime minister. Archbishop Dominique Mamber ... |
Pope John Paul II | ... re chanting in Skanderbeg Square Baker's famous saying of "Freedom works!". | became the first leading religious figure to visit Tirana after Mother Ter ... |
Archbishop of Armagh | #The Most Rev. and Hon. William Stuart, | (March 1755 – 6 May 1822 |
Pope Paul VI | ... op Thuc had the power to ordain he did not have the authority to do so from | , which is a requirement for licit episcopal holy orders in Roman Catholic ... |
Plutarch | ... ries of Sparta are from the writings of Xenophon, Thucydides, Herodotus and | , none of whom were Spartans. Plutarch was writing several centuries after ... |
William Joseph Hafey | ... later the Lasallian Christian Brothers, from 1888 to 1942. In 1942, Bishop | invited the Society of Jesus to take charge of the university. Today, the ... |
Plutarch | ... Pyrrhus of Epirus. Deidamia bore him a son called Alexander who is said by | to have spent his life in Egypt, probably in an honourable captivity. His ... |
Archbishop of Canterbury | ... e years 1490 to 1492 as a page in the household service of John Morton, the | and Lord Chancellor of England. Morton enthusiastically supported the "New ... |
The Most Rev. and Hon. William Stuart | # | , Archbishop of Armagh (March 1755 – 6 May 1822 |
Clemens August of Bavaria | ... e place at least since 1578, and around 1720 a Baroque garden was built for | . The first director of the Botanical Garden was Nees von Esenbeck from 18 ... |
John Newton | ... between October 1860 and 1864. The painting is permanently displayed at the | , Anglican clergyman and author of many hymns including Amazing Grace was ... |
Ignatius of Antioch | ... rchangeably for the higher order of ministers above deacons. The letters of | (c. 35 – c. 107) indicate the several congregations were headed by individ ... |
Girolamo Savonarola | ... the courtly poet Girolamo Benivieni, and probably the young Dominican monk | . For the rest of his life he remained very close friends with all three, ... |
Eorcenwald | ... early 670s, when a charter shows Wulfhere confirming a grant made to Bishop | by Frithuwold, a sub-king in Surrey, which may have extended north into mo ... |
Duns Scotus | ... ncept of "inscape" which was derived, in part, from the medieval theologian | . The exact detail of "inscape" is uncertain and probably known to Hopkins ... |
Richard Montagu | ... igious policies increased with his support of a controversial ecclesiastic, | . In his pamphlets A New Gag for an Old Goose, a reply to the Catholic pam ... |
John Newton | ... were first published in February 1779, and are the combined work of curate | (1725–1807) and his poet friend, William Cowper (1731–1800). The hymns wer ... |
Michael Choniates | ... nae. The town was the birthplace of the Byzantine Greek writers Nicetas and | |
Stephen Langton | ... in France which had been the refuge of his predecessors, Thomas Becket and | |
Thomas Aquinas | ... r "blessed happiness", described by the 13th-century philosopher-theologian | as a Beatific Vision of God's essence in the next life. Human complexities ... |
Hugh Latimer | ... lerk or registrar of the court of requests which the Protector, possibly at | 's instigation, illegally set up in Somerset House to hear poor men's comp ... |
Saint Basil the Great | ... re currently used: one is attributed to Saint John Chrysostom, the other to | . Among the Oriental Orthodox, a variety of anaphoras are used, but all ar ... |
Irenaeus | ... church writers appear to indicate that Matthew's gospel was written first. | , in Against Heresies 3.1.1, says "Matthew also published a gospel in writ ... |
Pope Gregory VII | ... he tomb of Saint Peter in Rome to defend the Church around 1070–73. In 1074 | was trying to persuade William I, Count of Burgundy, to remember this vow ... |
Venantius Fortunatus | ... e Goths by the historian Jordanes dating from 551. Then follows a remark by | in his description of his travels from Ravenna to Tours (565-571) in which ... |
Gerard Manley Hopkins | ... E. Henley – George Herbert – Ralph Hodgson – Thomas Hood – Teresa Hooley – | – A. E. Housman – Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey – T. E. Hulme – Leigh Hunt ... |
Irenaeus | ... ch has been offered as a parallel showing the use of logos in 3 John 1.7. . | in Adversus Haereses iii. 16. 7 (written ca. 175), quotes 2 John. 7 and 8, ... |
Abuna Basilios | ... s completed when Joseph II consecrated the first Ethiopian-born Archbishop, | , as head of the Ethiopian Church on 14 January 1951. In 1959, Pope Cyril ... |
Justus | ... ht's death. Among them in Gaul were Mellitus, who was Bishop of London, and | , who was Bishop of Rochester. Remaining in Britain, Laurence succeeded in ... |
Pope Pius IX | ... e "Congregatio de Propaganda Fide pro negotiis ritus orientalis" founded by | on January 6, 1862. Included in the Congregation's membership are all East ... |
Zechariah ben Jehoiada | ... I Chronicles XXIV attributing the gift of prophecy to Joad's son Zacharie ( | ) in order to suppose that the father (whom the Bible does not describe as ... |
Henry William Wilberforce | ... 1801), Robert Isaac Wilberforce (b. 1802), Samuel Wilberforce (b. 1805) and | (b. 1807). Wilberforce was an indulgent and adoring father who revelled in ... |
Avitus | ... troops from among the Franks, the Burgundians, and the Celts. A mission by | , and Attila's continued westward advance, convinced the Visigoth king The ... |
Bishop Hoadley | ... mesley and Tanfield in Durham. He married in 1715. It was the year in which | preached the famous sermon on 'The Kingdom of Christ', which gave rise to ... |
Archbishop of Canterbury | ... 4 September 2009, Hislop appeared at the "The Gathering", organised by the | , Rowan Williams, at Canterbury Cathedral to discuss religion, society and ... |
Irenaeus | ... nd among some of the early Christian groups called "gnostic" ("learned") by | and other early Christian heresiologists. The term also has reference to p ... |
Walter Bower | Among the Abbots of Inchcolm was the 15th-century chronicler | |
Francis Xavier | ... ly See. His pontificate was marked by the canonizations of Teresa of Avila, | , Ignatius Loyola, Philip Neri and Isidore the Farmer. He also beatified A ... |
John of the Cross | ... to set up two houses for men who wished to adopt the reforms; she convinced | and Anthony of Jesus to help with this. They founded the first convent of ... |
David Beaton | ... uder of The Bass, Knt., as "the Cardinal's Secretary" representing Cardinal | at a reconsecration of the restored and ancient St. Baldred's chapel on Th ... |
Victor II | ... rban II) and in other versions Victor (which is plausibly identifiable with | ). Ferdinand was prepared to pay, but one of his vassals, later known as E ... |
see of Canterbury | ... is mother, Queen Eleanor of Aquitaine, that Walter should be chosen for the | , as well as to the monks of the cathedral chapter, and soon after Walter' ... |
Plutarch | ... e founder and first King of Rome. She is described as such in both Livy and | ; but in Dionysius, Macrobius, and another tradition recorded by Plutarch, ... |
Archbishop Konrad von Hochstaden | Winterberg was declared a city by | (1238-’61) about 1270. The foundation of the city of Winterberg was presum ... |
Thomas Cranmer | ... rine of transubstantiation. It was especially influential in England, where | claimed to have been finally convinced against transubstantion by Ratramnu ... |
Bishop of London | ... that followed Æthelberht's death. Among them in Gaul were Mellitus, who was | , and Justus, who was Bishop of Rochester. Remaining in Britain, Laurence ... |
Álvaro del Portillo | In 1975, Escriva died and was succeeded by | . In 1982, Opus Dei was made into a personal prelature. This means that Op ... |
Silvano Maria Tomasi | In a statement read out by Archbishop | in September 2009, the Holy See stated "We know now that in the last 50 ye ... |
Thomas S. Monson | ... is organized under a Board of Trustees, with the President of the Church ( | as of 2012) as chairman. This board consists of the same people as the Chu ... |
Brooke Westcott | ... ternal resurrection and judgment of all will likewise take place"). Scholar | notes that this reference to the author of the single prophetic book of th ... |
Pope Paul VI | ... limit of 70, and this continued under his successors. At the start of 1971, | set an age limit of eighty years for electors, who were to number no more ... |
Pope Paul VI | ... m His sub-Vicar, with the automatic right of succession to the papacy after | . On August 6, 1978, Pope Paul died and Domínguez claimed the papacy, proc ... |
Pope Benedict XVI | ... reign affairs. Bertone and Mamberti were named in their respective roles by | in September 2006 |
Pope Gregory VII | ... g miracles were said to have occurred at his tomb. Stephen was canonized by | as Saint Stephen of Hungary in 1083, along with his son, Saint Emeric and ... |
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Mechelen-Brussels | ... Rogge, Jacques - Rogier, Charles - Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Cambrai - | - Roman Catholic Diocese of Liège - Roman/Red - Ronse - Rotselaar - Royal ... |
Pietro Gasparri | ... try to look for Vatican ties. On 11 April 1919, Cardinal Secretary of State | informed the Estonian authorities that the Vatican would agree to have dip ... |
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Cambrai | ... vorsel - Rivers of Belgium - Roeselare - Rogge, Jacques - Rogier, Charles - | - Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Mechelen-Brussels - Roman Catholic Diocese ... |
Roger Mahony | ... cealing the priests' problems from those they served. For example, Cardinal | of the Archdiocese of Los Angeles, said: "We have said repeatedly that ... ... |
Pope John IX | ... ds. He was his faction's unsuccessful candidate for the papacy in 896. When | (898–900) was elected instead, he excommunicated Sergius, who had to withd ... |
Vivian H. H. Green | ... tional spymaster George Smiley was partly modelled on former Lincoln rector | . At least one other recent Lincoln Rector, Sir Maurice Shock, enjoyed a p ... |
Thomas Becket | ... ian Pontigny Abbey in France which had been the refuge of his predecessors, | and Stephen Langton |
Fulton J. Sheen | ... o Pulpit on NBC received 4,000 letters weekly and Roman Catholic archbishop | received between 3,000–6,000 letters weekly. The total radio audience for ... |
Pope Julius II | ... s the unfinished statues of the slaves Michelangelo created for the tomb of | . Other sights include the medieval city hall, the Palazzo della Signoria ... |
Pope Sixtus IV | ... impotent, which prevented her from fulfilling her desire to have children. | commissioned three bishops to decide the case, who granted the annulment |
Spyridion of Trimythous | ... astopolis; Achilleus of Larissa (considered the Athanasius of Thessaly) and | , who even while a bishop made his living as a shepherd. From foreign plac ... |
Peter Akinola | ... ence against LGBT people and criminalizing homosexual behavior. Archbishops | of Nigeria and Henry Orombi of Uganda would not condemn violence against g ... |
Junípero Serra | ... the area until 1770, when Gaspar de Portolà, along with Franciscan Fathers, | and Juan Crespí visited the area in search of a mission site. Portola and ... |
Alexander of Constantinople | ... ts. Athanasius eventually spent most of his life battling against Arianism. | , then a presbyter, was also present as representative of his aged bishop |
Nicander | ... ecially attracted him. He published editions of Aelian, De natura animalium | ;, Alexipharmaca and Theriaca; the Scriptores rei rusticae; Aristotle, His ... |
Tomás de Torquemada | Several notorious Inquisitors, such as | , and Don Francisco the archbishop of Coria, were descendants of apostate ... |
St. Laurence O'Toole | The Book of Glendalough was written there about 1131. | , born in 1128, became Abbot of Glendalough and was well known for his san ... |
José Saraiva Martins | ... process formally opened in the Cathedral Basilica of Belluno with Cardinal | in charge |
Thomas Cranmer | ... II's commissioners in the Dissolution of the monasteries. It was awarded to | in 1542, but reverted back to the crown when Cranmer was executed in 1556. ... |
Ignatius | ... to the interpretation of Scripture. His writings, with those of Clement and | , are taken to hint at papal primacy. Irenaeus is the earliest witness to ... |
Bishop Atterbury | ... freemasonry, through his cousin Charles Boyle, 4th Earl of Orrery, through | , through Dr Drake (the Jacobite historian of York), and via servants such ... |
Pope Formosus | ... the disbursements, and thus of patronage. Sergius III and his party opposed | (891–896), who ordained him bishop of Caere (Cerveteri) in order to remove ... |
Pope John Paul II | ... protected by a bubble of clear bulletproof glass, such as the Popemobile of | – built following an attempt at his life. Politicians often resent this ne ... |
Charles Kingsley | ... eigh Hunt – Elizabeth Jennings – Samuel Johnson – John Keats – Henry King – | – Rudyard Kipling – Philip Larkin – Henry Wadsworth Longfellow – John Lydg ... |
Cardinal Richelieu | ... er Louis XIII. In 1632, Isaac de Razilly became involved, at the request of | , in the colonization of Acadia, by taking possession of the Habitation at ... |
Angelo Sodano | ... division became public, with Christoph Cardinal Schönborn accusing Cardinal | of blocking Ratzinger’s investigation of a high-profile case in the mid 19 ... |
Eusebius | ... e first four centuries the author is largely dependent on his predecessors, | , Socrates Scholasticus, Sozomen, Theodoret and Evagrius, his additions sh ... |
Peter Lombard | ... law, including commentaries on the Pauline epistles and on the Sentences of | . He is sometimes referred to as famosissimus doctor |
Pythia | The name | remained as the title of the Delphic Oracle |
Jonathan Swift | ... 14, by the formation of the Scriblerus Club, which included Alexander Pope, | , John Gay, John Arbuthnot, Robert Harley, Thomas Parnell, and Henry St Jo ... |
Bishopric of Utrecht | ... entury, the city of Groningen was a village in Drenthe that belonged to the | , while most of the province was in the diocese of Münster. During the Mid ... |
Gerald Gardner | After her death in 1951, Clutterbuck was identified by | as a leading member of the New Forest coven of witches into which he claim ... |
Gerard Sagredo | ... y to evangelize his kingdom. Saint Astricus served as his adviser and Saint | as the tutor for his son Emeric (also rendered as Imre) |
Saint Gregory the Illuminator | ... opular Santa Claus character would be derived; Aristakes of Armenia (son of | ); Leontius of Caesarea; Jacob of Nisibis, a former hermit; Hypatius of Ga ... |
Hellespontine | ... raclitus names at least three Sibyls, the Phrygian, the Erythraean, and the | . Frazer, James, translation and commentary on Pausanias, Description of G ... |
see of York | ... ing diplomatic and judicial efforts. After an unsuccessful candidacy to the | , Walter was elected Bishop of Salisbury shortly after the accession of He ... |
Pope Sergius II | ... 9 and took up his residence in that country and was crowned king at Rome by | on 15 June 844. He at once claimed the rights of an emperor in the city, w ... |
Polycarp's | ... and 142 according to others), Irenaeus is thought to have been a Greek from | hometown of Smyrna in Asia Minor, now İzmir, Turkey. Unlike many of his co ... |
bishop of Milan | ... n in English as Saint Ambrose (c. between 337 and 340 – 4 April 397), was a | who became one of the most influential ecclesiastical figures of the 4th c ... |
Bishop of London | ... family related by marriage to Nicholas Bacon, and probably to John Aylmer, | . He matriculated at Clare Hall, Cambridge, in November 1566, and graduate ... |
Pope Urban VIII | ... elo) and installed at Palazzo Barberini by Cardinal Maffeo Barberini (later | ). Gian Lorenzo Bernini restored and refinished the statue |
Irenaeus | ... he atonement is the recapitulation view, first comprehensively expressed by | . In it, Christ succeeds where Adam failed, undoing the wrong that Adam di ... |
Pope Innocent IV | ... ol over some lands in western Lithuania, in return for an acknowledgment by | as king. The Pope welcomed a Christian Lithuania as a bulwark against Mong ... |
William of Auvergne | ... science (as we call it today), including Grosseteste (who preceded Bacon), | , Henry of Ghent, Albert Magnus, Thomas Acquinas, John Duns Scotus, and Wi ... |
Aristakes of Armenia | ... holas of Myra, from whom the popular Santa Claus character would be derived | ;(son of Saint Gregory the Illuminator); Leontius of Caesarea; Jacob of Ni ... |
Hellespontine Sibyl | ... ave been her home. The sibylline collection at Gergis was attributed to the | and was preserved in the temple of Apollo at Gergis. Thence it passed to E ... |
John Whitgift | ... 9 November 1586 he was detained by the gaoler and brought before Archbishop | . He insisted on the illegality of this arrest, refused either to take the ... |
Plutarch | ... st of his life occupied in the affairs of the alliance, dying (according to | ) a few years later in Pontus, whilst determining what the tax of new memb ... |
Pope Martin V | ... V, Duke of Brabant, made a formal request to the Holy See for a university. | issued a papal bull dated 9 December 1425 founding the University in Leuve ... |
William Whewell | ... ibed as Lyell's first disciple. In a comment on the arguments of the 1830s, | coined the term uniformitarianism to describe Lyell's version of the ideas ... |
Hydatius | ... ssures to retire "from Italy without ever setting foot south of the Po." As | writes |
William O'Hara | ... northeast region of the state. The school was founded in 1888 by Most Rev. | , the first Bishop of Scranton, as St. Thomas College. It was elevated to ... |
Marc Ouellet | ... and arranges the creation of new dioceses. The current Prefect is Cardinal | . The current Secretary is Archbishop |
Saint Timothy | ... ing to Gentiles. At a later period, Paul's epistles place him with Paul and | at Ephesus, whence he was sent by Paul to Corinth, Greece for the purpose ... |
Martinho da Costa Lopes | On the resignation of | in 1983, Carlos Filipe Ximenes Belo was appointed Apostolic Administrator ... |
Philip Heselton | ... buck had personally initiated him into the coven, but later authors such as | and Eleanor Bone claim that his initiator was in fact Edith Woodford-Grime ... |
Pierre Daniel Huet | ... se, a friendly critic, Mark Pattison, is obliged to approve the judgment of | , who says, "par ses poésies brutes et informes Scaliger a déshonoré le Pa ... |
Saint Marcellinus | ... lendar had on April 26 the feast day of Saint Cletus, honoured jointly with | , and on 13 July the feast day of Saint Anacletus. In 1960, Pope John XXII ... |
Brynjólfur Sveinsson | ... is known of its whereabouts until 1643 when it came into the possession of | , then the Church of Iceland's Bishop of Skálholt. At that time, versions ... |
Alfonso López Trujillo | Cardinal | was a central figure at the Medellín Conference, and was elected in 1972 a ... |
Ottobuon | ... wing him to regain control of the country and the Tower of London. Cardinal | came to England to excommunicate those who were still rebellious; the act ... |
Plutarch | ... e of his occasional absence to ravage the defenceless part of his kingdom ( | , Pyrrhus, 7 if.); at length, the combined forces of Pyrrhus, Ptolemy and ... |
Saint Andrew | ... Portus Victoriae Iuliobrigensium. Its present name is possibly derived from | (Sanct Ander) or Saint Emeterio (Santemter, Santenter, Santander), a marty ... |
Archbishop of Canterbury | ... Becket acquired a position in the household of Theobald of Bec, by now the | |
Plutarch | ... , Romulus, the Fidenates and the Veientes were defeated in a war with Rome. | , Life of Romulus, says of them: The first (to oppose Romulus) were the Ve ... |
Aloysius Schmitt | Father | (1909–1941), the first chaplain to die in World War II, on board the USS O ... |
Pope John XI | ... on the Roman citizenry like a man" and her daughter Marozia, the mother of | (931–935) and reputed to be the mistress of Sergius III, largely upon a re ... |
Thomas S. Monson | ... atter-day Saints, including two Church presidents:Ezra Taft Benson '26, and | '74), six apostles (Neil L. Andersen, D. Todd Christofferson '69, David A. ... |
Robert Stillington | ... e dead by this time, but a clergyman (named only by Philippe de Commines as | , Bishop of Bath and Wells), claimed to have carried out the ceremony. The ... |
Cardinal Richelieu | ... verwhelming in the empire triggered France, led by Louis XIII of France and | , to enter the war on the Protestant side. (Louis's father Henry IV of Fra ... |
Gerald Gardner | ... f the Craft, the first Book of Shadows was created by the pioneering Wiccan | sometime in the late 1940s or early 1950s, and which he utilised first in ... |
John Chrysostom | ... urch service. The latter include settings of portions of the Liturgy of St. | (despite his staunch atheism) |
Cardinal Humbert of Silva Candida | Before his death, Leo IX had sent a legatine mission under | to Constantinople to negotiate with Patriarch Michael I Cerularius in resp ... |
Pope Benedict XVI | ... ed in that they are "doing God's work" by ridding the world of LGBT people. | , the leader of the Roman Catholic Church has stoked this sentiment as wel ... |
Plutarch's | From | 'Lives' |
Archbishop of Canterbury | ... Canterbury, and as Saint Edmund of Abingdon) (1175–1240) was a 13th century | in England. Today he is primarily remembered for his connection to St Edmu ... |
Cardinal Wolsey | ... It is possible that the current design replaced an earlier maze planted for | . It was originally planted with hornbeam; it has been repaired latterly u ... |
Pope Leo IV | ... was decisively rejected; but in 850 he was crowned joint emperor at Rome by | , and soon afterwards, in 851, married Engelberga and undertook the indepe ... |
Pope Sergius III | ... own monastery, Nicholas regarded his deposition as unjustified and involved | in the dispute |
Pope Pius II | The city came again under papal jurisdiction under the rule of | (1458–1464) |
Saint Boniface | ... essed indeed a heathen reaction, but the arrival in Bavaria in about 734 of | checked apostasy. Boniface organised the Bavarian church and founded or re ... |
Theodoret | ... ly dependent on his predecessors, Eusebius, Socrates Scholasticus, Sozomen, | and Evagrius, his additions showing very little critical faculty; for the ... |
Pope Innocent III | Historian Geoffrey Hindley's The Crusades mentions that in 1202 | forbade the Crusaders of Western Christendom from committing any atrocious ... |
Álvaro del Portillo | ... e the second Prelate of Opus Dei in 1994. The first Prelate of Opus Dei was | , who held the position from 1982 until his death in 1994.Opus Dei's highe ... |
Pope John XXIII | ... tion of the Congregation for Rites on the application to local calendars of | 's motu proprio Rubricarum instructum of 25 July 1960 decreed that "the fe ... |
Mark Pattison | ... ve volumes in 1533, 1534, 1539, 1546 and 1547; of these, a friendly critic, | , is obliged to approve the judgment of Pierre Daniel Huet, who says, "par ... |
Theobald of Bec | ... y homage to Eustace as their future king; but the Archbishop of Canterbury, | , and the other bishops declined to perform the coronation ceremony on the ... |
Jöns Bengtsson Oxenstierna | ... almar Union. In Sweden his short tenure as monarch was preceded by regents, | and Erik Axelsson Tott and succeeded by regent Kettil Karlsson Vasa. Also ... |
Hans Tausen | ... of protecting Lutheran preachers and reformers, of whom the most famous was | . During his reign, Lutheranism made significant inroads among the Danish ... |
Nicholas of Myra | ... us of Nicomedia; Eusebius of Caesarea, the purported first church historian | ;, from whom the popular Santa Claus character would be derived; Aristakes ... |
Albertus Magnus | ... onsidered to be magicians in popular legend, notably Gerbert d'Aurillac and | : both men were active in the scientific research of their day as well as ... |
Peter des Roches | ... with excommunication if he refused to dismiss his councillors, particularly | , Bishop of Winchester. Henry yielded, and the favourites were dismissed, ... |
Luigi Sturzo | ... ions as well. This led to a surgence of the Partito Populare Italiano under | . Anti-Catholic politicians were gradually replaced by persons who were ne ... |
Thomas Wolsey | ... cuments, and serving as a liaison between the King and his Lord Chancellor: | , the Cardinal Archbishop of York |
Plutarch | ... e minds of many with the Alexander with the spear of the sculptor Lysippus. | was among the unimpressed, deciding that it had failed accurately to repro ... |
Wilhelm von Gennep | ... ed by Gottfried IV. von Arnsberg during his war with the Cologne archbishop | . For the reconstruction the archbishop granted an at first ten-year-old t ... |
Frederick V, Elector Palatine | ... the winter of 1612, in celebration of the wedding of Princess Elizabeth and | |
Jonathan Swift | ... and biting satire of institutions and individuals became a popular weapon. | was one of the greatest of Anglo-Irish satirists, and one of the first to ... |
Apuleius | ... stored through the intervention of a benevolent female spirit is taken from | ' The Golden Ass, while his being swallowed by a giant fish may owe someth ... |
Félix-Antoine-Philibert Dupanloup | ... for women’s education and its separation from the church. He opposed famous | (1802–1878), Roman Catholic bishop of Orléans, who wanted to keep control ... |
Eusebius of Caesarea | ... Libya and the Pentapolis. Other supporters included Eusebius of Nicomedia, | , Paulinus of Tyrus, Actius of Lydda, Menophantus of Ephesus, and |
J. I. Packer | ... cal understandings of the atonement need not conflict'. Reformed theologian | , for example, although he maintains that 'penal substitution is the mains ... |
Thomas Aquinas | ... like a coherent sentence does not mean the sentence really makes any sense. | asserts that the paradox arises from a misunderstanding of omnipotence. He ... |
Irenaeus | ... o determine exactly to what extent this is true and how far the teaching of | on redemption is derived from him |
Junípero Serra | ... in the nearby settlement of Monterey, but was relocated to Carmel by Father | due to the interaction between soldiers stationed at the nearby Presidio a ... |
John Paul II | ... r 1978, the Archbishop of Kraków, Cardinal Karol Józef Wojtyła, became Pope | , head of the Roman Catholic Church. Polish Catholics rejoiced at the elev ... |
Giuseppe Caprio | ... des, he was not the naive idealist his critics made him out to be. Cardinal | , the substitute Papal Secretary of State, said that John Paul quickly acc ... |
Theodore Schneider | ... well, Wally Amos, Licensed Unity Teacher Ruth Warrick, Barbara Billingsley, | , Erykah Badu, Matt Hoverman, author Victoria Moran, Patricia Neal, Holmes ... |
Alister McGrath | ... are we required to isolate only those that might be regarded as diseased?" | , a Christian theologian, has also commented critically on Dawkins' analys ... |
Eugênio de Araújo Sales | ... cardinals are barred from the conclave. The current cardinal protopriest is | of Brazil |
Ponet | ... l royalism by the actions of Queen Mary… The political thinking of men like | , Knox, Goodman and Hales. |
Liutprand of Cremona | The pontificate of Sergius III, according to | , was remarkable for the rise of what papal historians saw as a "pornocrac ... |
Tiridates I of Armenia | ... tells how the name of Mithras was spoken during the state visit to Rome of | , during the reign of Nero. (Tiridates was the son of Vonones II of Parthi ... |
Eusebius of Nicomedia | ... all of whom hailed from Libya and the Pentapolis. Other supporters included | , Eusebius of Caesarea, Paulinus of Tyrus, Actius of Lydda, Menophantus of ... |
Mauro Piacenza | ... ests and deacons not belonging to religious orders. The Cardinal Prefect is | , and the secretary is Archbishop Celso Morga Iruzubieta. The Congregation ... |
Pope John XXIII | ... on rare occasions, generally due to a building falling into disrepair. When | abolished the limit, he began to add new churches to the list, which Popes ... |
John Robinson | ... the 20th century, theologians like Karl Barth, Jürgen Moltmann, Hans Küng, | , Bishop David Jenkins, Don Cupitt, challenged traditional theological pos ... |
Juan Bautista Villalpando | ... ders and an unknown Temple plan (possible derived from the Jesuit architect | who produced a classical reconstruction of the sanctum sanctorum at the he ... |
Irenaeus | ... ed to a figure called Abraxas who was at the head of 365 spiritual beings ( | , Adversus Haereses, I.24); it is unclear what to make of Irenaeus' use of ... |
Pope John Paul II | | , following his personalist philosophy, considered that a danger of utilit ... |
Pope John Paul II | ... ed rapidly during the 1990s. The city has a redeveloped airport named after | , Karol Wojtyła Airport, with connections to several European cities |
Jon Sobrino | ... ng theology from the perspective of the poor and the oppressed. For example | , S.J., argues that the poor are a privileged channel of God's grace |
Pope Alexander II | ... rebuilt and decorated with the utmost splendor, was consecrated in 1071 by | . A detailed account of the abbey at this date exists in the Chronica mona ... |
Robert Grosseteste | Englishman | 's treatise De iride ("On the Rainbow"), written between 1220 and 1235, me ... |
Archbishop of York | ... aison between the King and his Lord Chancellor: Thomas Wolsey, the Cardinal | |
Theobald of Bec | ... nd her family may have originated near Caen. Gilbert was perhaps related to | , whose family also was from Thierville. Gilbert began his life as a merch ... |
Pythia | ... thon, Pythia in older myths, but according to some later accounts his wife, | , who lived beside the Castalian Spring. According to some because Python ... |
the bishop of Milan, Auxentius | ... p conflict in the diocese of Milan between the Catholics and Arians. In 374 | , an Arian, died, and the Arians challenged the succession. Ambrose went t ... |
Ludovico Ludovisi | ... her, the Duchy of Zagarolo, purchased from the Colonna family by his nephew | in 1622. A second nephew, Niccolò, was made reigning Prince of Piombino an ... |
Pope Damasus II | On the death of | in 1048, Bruno was selected as his successor by an assembly at Worms in De ... |
Pius X | Following the death of | , the resulting conclave opened at the end of August 1914. The war would c ... |
St Andrew | ... reham to a shrine at Shaftesbury Abbey. In 984, in obedience to a vision of | , he persuaded King Æthelred to appoint Ælfheah as Bishop of Winchester in ... |
Mitt Romney | ... n instrumental in the prior 2004 alteration of this law to prevent Governor | from appointing a Republican senator should John Kerry's presidential camp ... |
Nicasius | ... determined by the hagiographic vitae written to commemorate their bishops: | was slaughtered before the altar of his church in Rheims; Servatus is alle ... |
Pope Gregory IX | In 1233 came the news of his appointment, by | , to the Archbishopric of Canterbury. The chapter had already made three s ... |
Robert Runcie | ... stant for Anglican Communion Affairs for the then Archbishop of Canterbury, | , in the 1980s. As an envoy for the Church of England, he travelled to Leb ... |
Francisco Suarez | ... the end of the Middle Ages, many philosophers, such as Nicholas of Cusa and | , propounded similar theories. The church was the final guarantor that Chr ... |
Thomas Aquinas | ... ogical commentaries, had a great influence on Medieval philosophers such as | . Scholastic European scholars, who sought to reconcile the philosophy of ... |
D. Todd Christofferson | ... Taft Benson '26, and Thomas S. Monson '74), six apostles (Neil L. Andersen, | '69, David A. Bednar '76, Jeffrey R. Holland '65 & '66, Dallin H. Oaks '54 ... |
Pope John Paul II | ... ter II. Incidentally, the papacy of Gregory XVII closely overlapped that of | . He died, aged only 58, a mere 11 days prior to the death of his "rival" ... |
St. Peter | ... en as Anencletus), also called Pope Cletus, was the third Roman Pope (after | and St. Linus) |
Archbishop of Canterbury | Waite was the Assistant for Anglican Communion Affairs for the then | , Robert Runcie, in the 1980s. As an envoy for the Church of England, he t ... |
Juan Crespí | ... , when Gaspar de Portolà, along with Franciscan Fathers, Junípero Serra and | visited the area in search of a mission site. Portola and Crespi traveled ... |
Francis Asbury | ... ort by New York brush manufacturer James A. Bradley, the city was named for | , the first American bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church in the Unite ... |
David A. Bednar | ... S. Monson '74), six apostles (Neil L. Andersen, D. Todd Christofferson '69, | '76, Jeffrey R. Holland '65 & '66, Dallin H. Oaks '54, and Reed Smoot 1876 ... |
Lupus | ... saved Tongeren with his prayers, as Saint Genevieve is to have saved Paris. | , bishop of Troyes, is also credited with saving his city by meeting Attil ... |
Plutarch | Additionally, according to | 's essay on the meaning of the "E at Delphi"--the only literary source for ... |
Saint Irenaeus | ... etus". The Annuario Pontificio gives both forms, as alternatives. Eusebius, | , Saint Augustine and Optatus all suggest that both names refer to the sam ... |
Pope Victor III | ... th century under the abbot Desiderius (abbot 1058 - 1087), who later became | . The number of monks rose to over two hundred, and the library, the manus ... |
Irenaeus | Chronologically, the second explanation, first clearly enunciated by | , is the "ransom" or "Christus Victor" theory. "Christus victor" and "rans ... |
Geoffrey of Monmouth | ... ant of Aeneas. This work was also the "single most important source used by | in creating his Historia Regum Britanniae", and via the enormous popularit ... |
Francis Asbury | Whitefield is honored together with | with a feast day on the liturgical calendar of the Episcopal Church (USA) ... |
Joan Enric Vives Sicília | ... twelfth century. There is still a bishop of Urgell, who since 2003 has been | . This role carries with it the position of joint head of state of Andorra |
Secundus of Ptolemais | The supporters of Arius included | , Theonus of Marmarica, Zphyrius, and Dathes, all of whom hailed from Liby ... |
T. Pelham Dale | Fr. | SSC, famous for having been prosecuted and imprisoned for Ritualist practi ... |
Jonathan Swift | ... mathematics, his membership in the Scriblerus Club (where he inspired both | 's Gulliver's Travels book III and Alexander Pope's Peri Bathous, Or the A ... |
Leo I | ... ian officers Gennadius Avienus and Trigetius, as well as the Bishop of Rome | , who met Attila at Mincio in the vicinity of Mantua, and obtained from hi ... |
Pope Damasus I | ... l); Athanasius' Ad Afros Epistola Synodica in 369; and the Letter in 382 to | and the Latin bishops from the First Council of Constantinople |
Bishop of Salisbury | ... ated to the episcopy as Bishop of Llandaff and in 1782 was translated to be | and again in 1791 to be Bishop of Durham |
Charles Coughlin | ... s, a famous radio evangelist of the period was Roman Catholic priest Father | , whose strongly anti-Communist and anti-Semitic radio programs reached mi ... |
Pope Sylvester I | ... are found in the decretals that it gives as those of post-Nicene popes from | (314–335) to Pope Gregory II (715–731). The False Decretals were part of a ... |
Pope Paul VI | ... s canonized by Pope Gregory XV, and in 1970 named a Doctor of the Church by | . Her books, which include her autobiography, The Life of Teresa of Jesus, ... |
William Tyndale | Coverdale is honoured together with | with a feast day on the liturgical calendar of the Episcopal Church (USA) ... |
Louis Duchesne | ... unanimously admitted afterwards, while numerous modern scholars, following | , reject it. The Bollandists however defended it (their Acta Sanctorum, Ju ... |
Leonardo Boff | ... nt's most famous books, A Theology of Liberation. Other noted exponents are | of Brazil, Jon Sobrino of El Salvador, and Juan Luis Segundo of Uruguay |
Cardinal Pole | ... ent to Mass, confessed, and in no particular official capacity went to meet | on his return to England in December 1554, again accompanying him to Calai ... |
Henry de Sully | ... astic cathedral of Worcester, he disciplined the monks between the death of | and the election of John of Coutances, as was his right as the archbishop ... |
William Montgomery Brown | Galion was also home to | , a bishop of the Episcopal Church who was tried by the church and convict ... |
bishop | ... jurisdiction of the Catholic Church in Rome. The primacy of Rome makes its | the worldwide leader of the church, commonly known as the Pope. Since Rome ... |
Pope Paul IV | Two years later | issued orders to have all the conversos thrown into the prisons of the Inq ... |
J. P. Migne | ... form in various European libraries. Most of Pletho's works can be found in | , Patrologia Graeca, collection; for a complete list see Fabricius, Biblio ... |
Thomas Greene | ... ws of Trinity again brought Bentley to trial before the bishop of Ely (then | ), and he was sentenced to deprivation. The college statutes required the ... |
Bishop of London | The earliest records of Muswell Hill date from the 12th century. The | , who was the Lord of the Manor of Harringay, owned the area and granted 6 ... |
Plutarch | ... Professor Barry Powell has suggested she was Minoan Crete's Snake Goddess. | , in his vita of Theseus, which treats him as a historical individual, rep ... |
Pope Benedict XIV | In 1749, | endorsed as official Church policy the view that the Colosseum was a sacre ... |
Pope Gregory V | Gerbert now became the teacher of Otto III, and | (996–999), Otto III's cousin, appointed him Archbishop of Ravenna in 998. ... |
Thomas Wolsey | ... sing, Henry VIII imposed a series of taxes devised by his finance minister, | . Soon the people began to resent Wolsey's taxes and a new source of finan ... |
Geoffrey of Monmouth | | 's History of the Kings of Britain is the first non-Welsh source to speak ... |
Lords Spiritual | ... reform of 1999, diocesan bishops of the Church of England (who are not yet | ), retired bishops who formerly sat in the House of Lords, the Dean of Wes ... |
Cardinal Richelieu | ... attempting to overthrow Mazarin and reverse the policies of his predecessor | who had taken power for the crown from great territorial nobles, some of w ... |
Pope Nicholas V | ... as Frederick IV and in 1452 crowned Holy Roman Emperor as Frederick III by | . In 1452, at the age of 37, he married the 18-year-old Infanta Eleanor, d ... |
John Wilkins | ... y Basil and Chrysostom. The result of this reading, and of the influence of | , Master of Trinity College, Cambridge, was seen in the general tone of hi ... |
Pope Benedict XVI | ... ates, two Fields Medalists, twelve Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Prize winners, | , Heinrich Heine, Friedrich Nietzsche and Joseph Schumpeter. In the years ... |
Pope John Paul II | In Solicitudo Rei Socialis, a major document of Catholic Social Teaching, | identifies the concept of solidarity with the poor and marginalized as a c ... |
Francesco Zantedeschi | ... ery of induction in 1831 though it may have been anticipated by the work of | in 1829. Around 1830 to 1832 Joseph Henry made a similar discovery, but di ... |
Pope Pius IX | On the apparent contradictions between Dignitatis Humanæ and | 's Syllabus of Errors—seeming contradictions that, e.g., the Society of St ... |
Isidore of Seville | ... egislation known as the False Decretals, which was once attributed to Saint | , is largely composed of forgeries. All of what it presents as letters of ... |
Bishop of Durham | ... nd in 1782 was translated to be Bishop of Salisbury and again in 1791 to be | |
John Amos Comenius | ... s displaced by French, Italian, and English by the end of the 16th century. | was one of many people who tried to reverse this trend. He composed a comp ... |
Mitt Romney | ... on Paul, but votes from Washington County were not counted because of snow. | ultimately won the state by a narrow margin |
Jaruman | ... ication of Wulfhere's gift both Archbishop Deusdedit (died 664), and Bishop | (held office from 663), were present. The endowment was signed by Wulfhere ... |
Siegfried III | ... the war of Emperor Frederick II against the Pope, the Archbishop of Mainz, | , ordered the city's destruction |
Seán Fortune | ... BBC Television documentary "Suing the Pope", which highlighted the case of | , one of the most notorious clerical sexual offenders, the Irish governmen ... |
Jerzy Popiełuszko | In addition, the priest | , who regularly gave sermons to the striking workers, was eventually kille ... |
Pope Paul VI | ... o was beatified by Pope Leo XIII in 1886 and canonised with the other 39 by | in 1970 |
Stephen Nye | ... sympathy with Socinianism in his previous associations with Thomas Firmin, | and others |
Pope John Paul II | ... antium Cura) is a dicastery of the Roman Curia. The Council, established by | on June 28, 1988, is dedicated to the spiritual welfare of migrant and peo ... |
Caesar Baronius | ... ius and the Church historians, and damned Constantine as a tyrant. Cardinal | , a man of the Counter-Reformation, criticized Zosimus, favoring Eusebius' ... |
Photius | ... lieved to have been the Eighth Ecumenical Council by some Eastern Orthodox. | had been appointed Patriarch of Constantinople but deposed by a Council of ... |
Plutarch | ... he height of the Roman Empire, famous historians such as Polybius, Livy and | documented the rise of the Roman Republic, and the organization and histor ... |
Pope Pius II | In 1459 | endowed the University of Basel where such notables as Erasmus of Rotterda ... |
Leo of Ostia | ... sts for the decoration of the rebuilt abbey church. According to chronicler | the Greek artists decorated the apse, the arch and the vestibule of the ba ... |
Pope Clement IV | ... ów was first mentioned under the Old Polish name of Lubin in a 1267 deed by | as a fiefdom of Trzebnica Abbey |
Geoffrey of Monmouth | ... s chief court was in Caerleon in Wales; this was the king's primary base in | 's Historia Regum Britanniae and subsequent literature. Chrétien depicts A ... |
Cardinal Richelieu | ... nt, and for attempting to undermine the influence of both his mother and of | . After waging an unsuccessful war in Languedoc, he took refuge in Flander ... |
Archbishop of Mainz | ... ever, in 1242, during the war of Emperor Frederick II against the Pope, the | , Siegfried III, ordered the city's destruction |
Geoffrey of Monmouth | | 's legendary History of the Kings of Britain makes Caracalla a king of Bri ... |
Archbishop of Canterbury | ... to learning that he is said to have been summoned by his uncle Athelm, the | , to enter his service. He was later appointed to the court of King Athels ... |
Pius Ncube | ... ion reported no major irregularities, opposition figures such as Archbishop | have made charges of vote rigging. Elections were held on a single day, no ... |
Orderic Vitalis | ... it is said, in effect, that this went on for nine weeks, ending at Easter. | (1075–c. 1142), an English monk at St Evroul-en-Ouche, in Normandy, report ... |
Pope Nicholas IV | ... d's mind is clear from the fact that a papal dispensation was received from | ten days after the treaty was signed. Thought to show bad faith on Edward' ... |
Fan S. Noli | ... (Step of Tujan). In 1924, Tirana was at the center of a coup d'état led by | . Since 1925, when they were banned in Turkey, the Bektashis, an order of ... |
Henry King | ... E. Hulme – Leigh Hunt – Elizabeth Jennings – Samuel Johnson – John Keats – | – Charles Kingsley – Rudyard Kipling – Philip Larkin – Henry Wadsworth Lon ... |
Archbishop of Canterbury | ... 78, where he took a job with the British Council of Churches. In 1980, then | , Dr Robert Runcie, appointed him Archbishop of Canterbury's Assistant for ... |
Pope John XV | ... much opposition to Gerbert's elevation to the See of Rheims, however, that | (985–996) sent a legate to France who temporarily suspended Gerbert from h ... |
Jonathan Swift | ... to the British ambassador to the court of Hanover through the influence of | when the death of Anne, Queen of Great Britain, three months later put an ... |
Iphigenia | ... on in the year he killed the sacred deer. This was his first-born daughter, | . He sent word home for her to come (in some versions of the story on the ... |
Bishop of Norwich | ... n was abroad. In April 1204 Walter returned to France with John de Gray the | , Eustace the Bishop of Ely, William Marshal, and Robert de Beaumont the E ... |
St Martin | Towards the end of the 4th century, a follower of | , St Mexme, established first a hermitage, and then a monastery on the eas ... |
Plutarch | ... erial era. Roman historians dated the city's foundation from 758 to 728 BC. | says Romulus was fifty-three at his death; his reckoning gives the twins' ... |
Pope John Paul II | ... an, the largest of such event ever attended in Rome, second only to that of | who died two years later |
Saint Remigius | ... anoint and sanctify Clovis at his coronation, perhaps brought by a dove to | . Another variation says a lily appeared at Clovis' baptismal ceremony as ... |
Priscillian | ... bility that a cult of James was instituted to supplant the Galician cult of | (executed in 385) who was widely venerated across the north of Iberia as a ... |
Juan Luis Segundo | ... oted exponents are Leonardo Boff of Brazil, Jon Sobrino of El Salvador, and | of Uruguay |
Erastus Otis Haven | ... n had inferior minds and could not master mathematics and the classics. Dr. | , Syracuse University chancellor and former president of the University of ... |
Luis de Molina | ... 3–1546), Domingo de Soto (1494–1560), Martin de Azpilcueta (1491–1586), and | (1535–1600). Themes also existed in writers from the German historical sch ... |
Augustus III of Poland | King | died in 1763, and therefore Poland needed to elect a new ruler. Catherine ... |
Cardinal Mazarin | ... means sling, which Parisian mobs used to smash the windows of supporters of | |
Stanko Premrl | ... n the national symbols of Slovenia, passed in 1994, the eponymous melody by | , written after the lyrics of the seventh stanza of the Prešeren's poem, e ... |
Anselm of Lucca | ... siastical and political conflicts between the papacy and the secular power: | and Cardinal Deusdedit inserted it in their collections of canons; Gratian ... |
Pope Julius II | ... iations, including the League of Cambrai, an alliance engineered in 1508 by | against the Republic of Venice. The alliance collapsed in 1510 when the Po ... |
Pope John Paul II | ... documents have led some to question the Church's commitment to ecumenism . | personally endorsed Dominus Iesus, and ratified and confirmed it "with sur ... |
Williamson affair | For instance, during the | , Monsignor Robert Wister publicly declared that the negationist comments ... |
Athelm | ... his devotion to learning that he is said to have been summoned by his uncle | , the Archbishop of Canterbury, to enter his service. He was later appoint ... |
Plutarch | The Greek biographer | (46 - 127 AD) says that "secret mysteries... of Mithras" were practiced by ... |
Marcel Lefebvre | ... er, almost immediately a lightning rod for conservative attacks. Archbishop | cited this document as one of the fundamental reasons for his difficulties ... |
Rowan Williams | ... f the Christian right, he is still a favorite of many Christian viewers. Dr | , the Archbishop of Canterbury, is a confessed Simpsons fan, and likes Fla ... |
John of Coutances | ... sciplined the monks between the death of Henry de Sully and the election of | , as was his right as the archbishop of the province. In his own diocese, ... |
Robert Runcie | ... the British Council of Churches. In 1980, then Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr | , appointed him Archbishop of Canterbury's Assistant for Anglican Communio ... |
Pope Sixtus I | As early as | , some Christians had set Easter to a Sunday in the lunar month of Nisan. ... |
John de Gray | ... regent while John was abroad. In April 1204 Walter returned to France with | the Bishop of Norwich, Eustace the Bishop of Ely, William Marshal, and Rob ... |
Nicolas Steno | The existence of angular unconformities had been noted by | and by French geologists including Horace-Bénédict de Saussure, who interp ... |
Anselm of Canterbury | ... because God is not taken to be in any sense omnipotent. On the other hand, | seems to think that almightiness is one of the things that makes God count ... |
Sinéad O'Connor | ... ated with Neneh Cherry, Madonna, David Bowie, Mos Def, Elizabeth Fraser and | amongst many others. Despite the group's many associations with Bristol, C ... |
Pope Leo XII | ... f during a performance so he could further display his virtuosity. In 1827, | honoured Paganini with the Order of the Golden Spur |
Gerard Manley Hopkins | ... hese include T. S. Eliot, who taught the poet laureate John Betjeman there, | the poet, the composers John Taverner and John Rutter, John Venn the inven ... |
Bishop Zummáraga | ... Tlatolatl. The statue appeared some years later during an investigation by | in the 1530s, only to be lost again. There is speculation that the statue ... |
Leo of Ostia | ... of the abbey at this date exists in the Chronica monasterii Cassinensis by | and Amatus of Monte Cassino gives us our best source on the early Normans ... |
Pope Gregory II | ... t it gives as those of post-Nicene popes from Pope Sylvester I (314–335) to | (715–731). The False Decretals were part of a series of falsifications of ... |
Eunapius | ... great pagan emperors, and given over to luxury and greed. Following Julian, | began—and Zosimus continued—a historiographic tradition that blamed Consta ... |
Plutarch | ... orus, i. 84, v. 57; Arrian, Exp. Alex. iii. 1; Aelian, H. A. vi. 58, xii. 7 | ;, Solon. 26, Is. et Osir. 33; Diogenes Laertius, xviii. 8. § 6; Josephus, ... |
Jon Sobrino | ... Theology of Liberation. Other noted exponents are Leonardo Boff of Brazil, | of El Salvador, and Juan Luis Segundo of Uruguay |
Pope Gregory IX | ... from the region, largely thanks to the famous inquisitor Bernard Gui. Under | the Inquisition was given great power to suppress the heresy. Contrary to ... |
Pope Gregory XV | In 1622, forty years after her death, she was canonized by | , and in 1970 named a Doctor of the Church by Pope Paul VI. Her books, whi ... |
Archbishop of Canterbury | ... t, he is still a favorite of many Christian viewers. Dr Rowan Williams, the | , is a confessed Simpsons fan, and likes Flanders. Ned's "unbearable pious ... |
Rei Hino | ... agi for some time. The character Minako is closest to being friends with is | , with whom she has a conflicted relationship. Rei is supposed to be the s ... |
Pope Boniface VIII | ... ubject of Louis IX, which ended with his canonization, announced in 1297 by | . As Joinville had been a close friend of the king, his counselor and his ... |
Saint Cyril of Alexandria | ... e nature called "the nature of the incarnate word", which was reiterated by | |
Jonas Totoraitis | ... anian state". The first academic study of his life by a Lithuanian scholar, | (Die Litauer unter dem König Mindowe bis zum Jahre 1263) was not published ... |
Pope Paul VI | ... to 3 of the bishops assembled at the council, the decree was promulgated by | on October 28, 1965. (The full text in English is available from the . |
Pope Paul VI | ... elopment is part of the Curia of the Catholic Church. It was established by | on 15 July 1971 and is based in the Palazzo San Callisto, in Piazza San Ca ... |
Leopoldo de' Medici | ... halk portraits of friends are in the collection of the Uffizi. For Cardinal | , brother of Ferdinando II de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany and a scholar ... |
Thomas Aquinas | ... tent description of a state of affairs. This position was once advocated by | . This definition of omnipotence solves some of the paradoxes associated w ... |
John Wilkins | ... r year he was alao elected a Fellow of the Royal Society. In 1675 he edited | 's Principles of Natural Religion, completing what was left unfinished of ... |
John Paul II | ... he limit, he began to add new churches to the list, which Popes Paul VI and | continued to do. Today there are close to 150 titular churches, out of ove ... |
Plutarch | ... us; Paeon's works are lost, but his narrative is among the sources cited by | in his vita of Theseus (20.3-.5). According to the myth that was current a ... |
Gilbert of Sempringham | ... request of the papacy, Walter also led inquiries into the canonizations of | and Wulfstan of Worcester. Walter refused to acquiesce in the election of ... |
Archbishop of Canterbury | ... bot of Glastonbury Abbey, a Bishop of Worcester, a Bishop of London, and an | , later canonised as a saint. His work restored monastic life in England a ... |
Tarcisio Bertone | ... eph Ratzinger, now Pope Benedict XVI, and of its then Secretary, Archbishop | , now Cardinal Secretary of State. The declaration was approved by Pope Jo ... |
Pope Leo XIII | The authenticity of the relics at Compostela was asserted in the Bull of | , Omnipotens Deus, of 1 November 1884 |
Bishop of Bristol | In 1963, Waite was appointed Education Advisor to the Anglican | , Oliver Tomkins, and assisted with Tomkins's implementation of the SALT ( ... |
Egidio Vagnozzi | ... ressure continued on Murray, with Apostolic Delegate to the U.S. Archbishop | attempting to silence him. Cardinal Spellman, along with his Jesuit superi ... |
John Whitgift | ... he had no love for ecclesiastical jurisdiction. He warmly remonstrated with | , the Anglican Archbishop of Canterbury, over his persecuting Articles of ... |
Diarmuid Martin | ... enouncement of every abusive priest to the police. The Archbishop of Dublin | described the cooperation with the Congregation for the Clergy as "disastr ... |
Jean François Paul de Gondi | ... ister, Madame de Longueville; Madame de Chevreuse; and the astute intriguer | , the future Cardinal de Retz. The military operations fell into the hands ... |
Benedict XVI | Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger (now | ), who was prefect of the CDF at the time when the Instructions were issue ... |
Antonio Vivaldi | ... wrote concertos in the style of Corelli. He also had a strong influence on | |
Pope Nicholas I | ... gia, and King Charles the Bald. But after Louis had secured the election of | in 858, he became reconciled with his brother, and received some lands sou ... |
Peter of Bruys | ... ned the teachings of the Petrobrusians and the Henricians, the followers of | and Henry of Lausanne. Finally, the council drew up measures for the amend ... |
Cesare Borgia | ... f the Renaissance Popes. He fathered seven children, including Lucrezia and | , by at least two mistresses. Fourteen years after his death, the corrupti ... |
Latin Patriarch of Antioch | ... , Baldwin III of Jerusalem. Neither King Baldwin nor Aimery of Limoges, the | , approved of Constance's choice of a husband of such low birth. With Cons ... |
Oliver O'Grady | ... e scandal in Latin America* Criticism of Pope John Paul II* Marcial Maciel* | * Roman Catholic sex abuse cases by country* Sexual abuse scandal in the E ... |
Kirill I of Moscow | ... ian Orthodox church of Yerevan was conducted on 18 March 2010, by Patriarch | . The church is being built on Admiral Isakov Avenue, and is set to be fin ... |
Plutarch | Numerous ancient sources, including | 's Life of Alcibiades, preserve stories of Anytus' tumultuous relationship ... |
Pythia | ... passed it to Phoebe. The Delphic Sibyl has sometimes been confused with the | , the priestess of Apollo who gave prophecies at the Delphic Oracle. The t ... |
Archbishop of Canterbury | ... tical jurisdiction. He warmly remonstrated with John Whitgift, the Anglican | , over his persecuting Articles of 1583. The finest encomium was passed on ... |
Pierre de Castelnau | ... ay 1207 and an interdict was placed on his lands. The Church senior legate, | , responsible for these actions was murdered by fanatical supporters of Co ... |
Girolamo Savonarola | ... ther held in place by hand or by exerting pressure on the nose (pince-nez). | suggested that eyepieces could be held in place by a ribbon passed over th ... |
Pope Pius V | In 1567, soon after the close of the Council of Trent, | went beyond Trent by sanctioning Aquinas's distinction between nature and ... |
Gerald Gardner | It was at Spielplatz that Ross Nichols first met | |
Pope Innocent III | ... a endorsed the move as necessary to prevent the crusade's complete failure, | was alarmed at this development and wrote a letter to the Crusading leader ... |
Archbishop of Canterbury | ... ion of Wilberforce and Bishop Porteus, King George III was requested by the | to issue in 1787 the Proclamation for the Discouragement of Vice, as a rem ... |
John Donne | ... losed and self-contained, as opposed to the enjambed couplets of poets like | . The heroic couplet is often identified with the English Baroque works of ... |
Bishop of Worcester | Dunstan (909 – 19 May 988) was an Abbot of Glastonbury Abbey, a | , a Bishop of London, and an Archbishop of Canterbury, later canonised as ... |
Maximilian Kolbe | ... site of the martyrdom (according to the Catholic Church) of saints such as | |
Pope Paul VI | ... to take command of the ruins on May 18. The Abbey was rebuilt after the war | ;reconsecrated it in 1964 |
Eusebius of Caesarea | ... of the toleration edict of Galerius (see Edict of Toleration by Galerius). | , for example, writes that Maximinus conceived an "insane passion" for a C ... |
Pope John Paul II | ... ly is part of the Curia of the Roman Catholic Church. It was established by | on May 9, 1981 with the Motu Proprio Familia a Deo Instituta and substitut ... |
Vicelinus | German missionaries such as St | converted the Obotrites to Christianity. In 1170 they acknowledged the suz ... |
Maximos IV | ... it were raised then some mention of the Muslims be made. Melkite patriarch | was among those pushing for this latter position |
John of the Cross | ... e was a reformer of the Carmelite Order and is considered to be, along with | , a founder of the Discalced Carmelites |
Anselm | ... reeks and Latins on the question of the filioque clause in the Creed, which | ably defended, seated at the pope's side. The Greeks were not brought over ... |
George Scholarius | ... n the Differences of Aristotle from Plato, commonly called De Differentiis. | responded with a Defence of Aristotle, which elicited Plethon's subsequent ... |
Archbishop of Westminster | ... in Newcastle upon Tyne in 1709 and died there in 1770. Cardinal Basil Hume, | (1976–1999) was born in the city in 1923. Vice Admiral Cuthbert Collingwoo ... |
Pope Alexander VI | ... ad, thereby establishing a new stream of revenue with agents across Europe. | (1492–1503) was one of the most controversial of the Renaissance Popes. He ... |
Rt Rev Dr Tom Wright | ... of scholars and historians. According to the Anglican Bishop of Durham, the | , the novel is a "great thriller" but "lousy history". For example, the ma ... |
Frederick III, Elector of Saxony | ... Diet of Worms) because he was unexpectedly backed by German princes such as | who strongly objected to the Catholic Church meddling in their affairs and ... |
Bishop of London | ... 9 – 19 May 988) was an Abbot of Glastonbury Abbey, a Bishop of Worcester, a | , and an Archbishop of Canterbury, later canonised as a saint. His work re ... |
Pope John Paul II | ... oing stress he endured began to show their effects on Bishop Belo's health. | accepted his resignation as Apostolic Administrator of Dili on November 26 ... |
Jan Długosz | Polish chronicler | mentions usage of poisonous gas by the Mongol army in 1241 in the Battle o ... |
Archbishop Byzantius | ... Norman adventurer allies a first foothold in the region. In 1025, under the | , Bari became attached to the see of Rome and was granted "provincial" sta ... |
bishop | ... cardinal bishops. Those who are named cardinal priests today are generally | s of important dioceses throughout the world, though some hold Curial posi ... |
George Berkeley | ... foundation of Isaac Newton's calculus ("fluxions") against the criticism of | , author of The Analys |
Saint Nicholas | | ' Anglican Church is home to the de Brus cenotaph. The church was possibly ... |
Ulfilas | ... The Gothic language was written in the Gothic alphabet developed by Bishop | for his translation of the Bible in the 4th century. Later, Christian prie ... |
Augustin Bea | ... l both the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity led by Cardinal | and the Theological Commission (led by Cardinal ) introduced revised draft ... |
Saint Peter | ... deed, the chapel has remained much unchanged since the wooden figurines (of | , Saint Paul, Moses and Aaron) were placed on the front pews and the carve ... |
Leonidas Polk | ... merican War (including Robert E. Lee and Jefferson Davis), but some such as | (who had attended West Point but did not graduate) had little or no experi ... |
Saint Clement | ... the secret of feltmaking was discovered by Urnamman of Lagash. The story of | and Saint Christopher relates that while fleeing from persecution, the men ... |
Pope Paul VI | ... nisext Council. Constantine was the last pope to visit Constantinople until | did again in 1967 |
Pope John XIII | ... ll II made a pilgrimage to Rome, taking Gerbert with him. There Gerbert met | (965–972) and the Emperor Otto I, surnamed the Great (936–973). The Pope p ... |
Latin Patriarch of Antioch | ... sum of money, and vowed to attack the island of Cyprus in revenge. When the | refused to finance this expedition, Raynald had the Patriarch seized, stri ... |
Thomas Aquinas | ... t least to the 12th century, addressed by Averroës (1126–1198) and later by | . Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite (before 532) has a predecessor version o ... |
Delphic Oracle | ... stions the King and Queen, they deny it, but, still suspicious, he asks the | who his parents really are. The Oracle seems to ignore this question, tell ... |
Charles Henry Brent | ... t World War further developments were the "Faith and Order" movement led by | , and the "Life and Work" movement led by Nathan Soderblom. In the 1930s, ... |
Archbishop of Dublin | ... well known for his sanctity and hospitality. Even after his appointment as | in 1162, he returned occasionally to Glendalough, to the solitude of St. K ... |
Pope Benedict XVI | ... given on the occasion of his visit to the extermination camp of Auschwitz, | suggested a reading of the events of the Holocaust as motivated by a hatre ... |
John Macquarrie | ... nkers such as Nikolai Berdyaev, Karl Barth, Paul Tillich, Wilfrid Desan and | |
Francis Spellman | ... Murray was called to the Council in April, 1963 at the request of Cardinal | of New York (who was otherwise a theological conservative) to be a peritus ... |
Paul VI | ... abolished the limit, he began to add new churches to the list, which Popes | and John Paul II continued to do. Today there are close to 150 titular chu ... |
Cardinal Bea | Early in 1964 | notified Cardinal Cicognani, President of the Council's Coordinating Commi ... |
Gerald Gardner | ... er of Bards, Ovates and Druids. In turn he attracted both fellow Druids and | , who later established his first coven at Bricket Wood in his development ... |
Father Damien | | - Flag of Belgium - Flamingant - Flanders - Flanders Investment and Trade ... |
Pope Honorius II | ... ralise the after-effects of the schism, which had arisen after the death of | in February 1130 and the setting up of Petris Leonis as the antipope Anacl ... |
Ignatius of Loyola | ... t school, he was intensely pious—before marrying, he completed the whole of | 's Spiritual Exercises to discover whether he should in fact devote himsel ... |
George Lily | A sketch of Lily's life by his son | was written for Paulus Jovius, who was collecting for his history the live ... |
Stanisław Ryłko | ... their contributions to the Church. The President of the council is Cardinal | . Its secretary is |
Saint Frumentius | ... der the dominion of the Church of Alexandria. The first bishop of Ethiopia, | , was consecrated as Bishop of Axum by Pope Athanasius of Alexandria in 32 ... |
Albertus Magnus | ... uslim psychology and theory of knowledge influenced William of Auvergne and | , while his metaphysics had an impact on the thought of Thomas Aquinas |
Grzegorz Gerwazy Gorczycki | ... Tamburetta, Sentinella, Bentrovata, and Nova Casa. Other composers include | , Franciszek Lilius, Bartłomiej Pękiel, Stanisław Sylwester Szarzyński and ... |
Basil Hume | ... y, was born in Newcastle upon Tyne in 1709 and died there in 1770. Cardinal | , Archbishop of Westminster (1976–1999) was born in the city in 1923. Vice ... |
Felix V | ... ntury Council of Basel (1431–1449), including the 1439 election of antipope | |
Hugh O'Flaherty | Monsignor | was an Irish priest who saved thousands of people, British and American se ... |
Thomas Aquinas | ... and Albertus Magnus, while his metaphysics had an impact on the thought of | |
Plutarch | ... ies initially appeared to back their ships away as if in fear. According to | , this was to gain better position, and also in order to gain time until t ... |
Plutarch | ... es, Herodotus, Julian, Justin, Livy, Lucan, Ovid, Pausanias, Pindar, Plato, | , Sophocles, Strabo, Thucydides, and Xenophon |
Peter of Capua | ... together and returned home. While the Papal legate to the Crusade, Cardinal | endorsed the move as necessary to prevent the crusade's complete failure, ... |
Diodorus of Tarsus | ... ople until literacy became more widespread after the invention of printing. | (d. 394) may have argued for a flat Earth based on scriptures; however, Di ... |
John Michell | ... massive that even light could not escape was first put forward by geologist | in a letter written to Henry Cavendish in 1783 of the Royal Society |
Bishop of Llandaff | ... at St George's Chapel, Windsor. In 1769 he was elevated to the episcopy as | and in 1782 was translated to be Bishop of Salisbury and again in 1791 to ... |
Thomas Sydserf | ... eral to Oliver Cromwell. About 1661 he was ordained without subscription by | , a Scottish bishop. Tillotson was present at the Savoy Conference in 1661 ... |
Henri Grégoire | The term Vandalisme was coined in 1794 by | , bishop of Blois, to describe the destruction of artwork following the Fr ... |
Marcial Maciel | ... olic sexual abuse scandal in Latin America* Criticism of Pope John Paul II* | * Oliver O'Grady* Roman Catholic sex abuse cases by country* Sexual abuse ... |
Gilbert White | | studied the Barn Swallow in detail in his pioneering work The Natural Hist ... |
Pope Leo XIII | ... ter designated the Forty Martyrs of England and Wales, who was beatified by | in 1886 and canonised with the other 39 by Pope Paul VI in 1970 |
Pope John XXII | ... e was rebuilt it marked the beginning of a long period of decline. In 1321, | made the church of Monte Cassino a cathedral, and the carefully preserved ... |
Macarius of Jerusalem | ... which had provided a flat surface for the temple - be removed, instructing | , the local Bishop, to build a church on the site. The Pilgrim of Bordeaux ... |
Bishopric of Mainz | ... ut it does form part of an official title of two sees: as well as Rome, the | (the former Archbishopric of Mainz), which was also of electoral and prima ... |
Cyril I of Alexandria | ... ria met in an emergency session and a unanimous agreement was reached. Pope | , supported by the entire See, sent a letter to Nestorius known as "The Th ... |
Sidonius Apollinaris | ... d in Spain, considered the year 457 the third of Avitus' reign; furthermore | tells about a failed coup d'etat in Gaul, organised by one Marcellus and p ... |
Matija Majar | ... rganized by Slovene students that studied in Graz and Vienna. Together with | and Lovro Toman, he was among the authors who elaborated the political dem ... |
Giovanni Botero | ... , and Spain produced noted writers of mercantilist themes including Italy's | (1544–1617) and Antonio Serra (1580-?); France's, Jean Bodin, Colbert and ... |
Sancroft | ... ame time named dean of St Paul's. Soon afterwards he was elected to succeed | ; but accepted the promotion with extreme reluctance, and it was deferred ... |
Adalbert of Prague | ... religion. According to his legends, Vajk was baptized a Christian by Saint | . He was given the baptismal name Stephen (István) in honour of the origin ... |
Irenaeus | ... ntury, the belief of many, including the Church Fathers Papias (c. 60-130), | (c. 130-200), Origen (c. 185-254), Eusebius (c. 260-340) Jerome (c. 340-42 ... |
St Augustine | The first Archbishop of Canterbury was | (not to be confused with St Augustine of Hippo), who arrived in Kent in 59 ... |
Gabriele Amorth | Father | , a Vatican-appointed exorcist in Rome, has said, "if English and American ... |
Plutarch | ... ces to the condition can be found in the work of Hippocrates, Erasistratus, | and Galen . In the psychiatric literature it was first referred to in 1623 ... |
Ersilio Tonini | ... e oldest living cardinal, following the death of Cardinal Mayer in 2010, is | , the Archbishop Emeritus of Ravenna-Cervia (born 1914, elevated 1994) |
Archbishop of Canterbury | ... e new government was supported by the Queen Mother, Eadgifu of Kent, by the | , Oda, and by the East Anglian nobles, at whose head was the powerful eald ... |
Pope Pius VII | ... n, 1940–1942; Pradel, 1937; Verlet, 1985). Nevertheless, on 3 January 1805, | , who came to France to officiate at Napoléon's coronation, visited the pa ... |
Ányos Jedlik | ... kola Tesla, Galileo Ferraris, Oliver Heaviside, Thomas Edison, Ottó Bláthy, | , Sir Charles Parsons, Joseph Swan, George Westinghouse, Ernst Werner von ... |
James Henry Monk | ... nathan Toup, T Tyrwhitt, Richard Porson, Peter Paul Dobree, Thomas Kidd and | . Although the Dutch school of the period had its own tradition, it was al ... |
Fulton J. Sheen | ... Martin, who gave him his first big break, and the televangelist archbishop, | . In a 2003 Inside the Actors Studio interview, Sheen explained, "Whenever ... |
Laurence Sterne | ... le in the early revival of Gothic architecture. Tristram Shandy, a novel by | (1759–67) introduced a whimsical version of the anti-rational sentimental ... |
Herbert de Losinga | In 1096, | , the Bishop of Thetford, began construction of Norwich Cathedral. The chi ... |
Bishop of Llandaff | Shute Barrington (26 May 1734 – 25 March 1826) was an English churchman, | in Wales, as well as Bishop of Salisbury and Bishop of Durham in England |
Pope Benedict XVI | ... or the Doctrine of the Faith by its prefect, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger (now | ), to Bishops of the entire Catholic Church * Pontifical secret;Church pre ... |
Ignatius | ... ", in some sense, was expressed in the second century writings of Polycarp, | , and Justin Martyr. But the doctrine in a more full-fledged form was not ... |
Pope John Paul II | ... with Gelsenberg-Benzin-AG to form the new corporation VEBA-Oel AG. In 1987, | celebrated Mass before 85,000 people at Gelsenkirchen's Parkstadion. The P ... |
Cyril I of Alexandria | When reports of this reached the Apostolic Throne of Saint Mark, Pope Saint | acted quickly to correct this breach with orthodoxy, requesting that Nesto ... |
Iphigenia | ... ng Agamemnon, which she did in revenge for Agamemnon killing their daughter | ). The infant Helen was also killed or at least died young |
Odo of Bayeux | ... cts with the Danes and the devastation north of the River Tyne inflicted by | after the 1080 rebellion against the Normans, Monkchester was all but dest ... |
Pope Damasus I | ... s based on the Septuagint, and thus included books not in the Hebrew Bible. | assembled the first list of books of the Bible at the Council of Rome in A ... |
John Polkinghorne | ... tion of black holes. In his book Questions of Truth, the particle physicist | has another difficulty with Smolin's thesis, in that one cannot impose the ... |
Epiphanius | Early 3rd century–4th century Christian writers such as Hippolytus and | write about a Scythianus, who visited India around 50 AD from where he bro ... |
Pope John Paul II | ... unicationibus Socialibus) is a dicastery of the Roman Curia. Established by | on June 28, 1988, it is responsible for using the various forms of the med ... |
José María Morelos | ... 1810 by Miguel Hidalgo, starting the Mexican War of Independence. In 1813, | and the Congress of Anáhuac signed the Solemn Act of the Declaration of In ... |
Eustathius of Antioch | ... ascribes to him the actual formulation of the creed. Great leaders such as | , Alexander of Alexandria, Athanasius, and Marcellus of Ancyra all adhered ... |
John of Salisbury | ... traditional historiography has given them names. The known biographers are | , Edward Grim, Benedict of Peterborough, William of Canterbury, William fi ... |
Sydney Smith | ... hose who did not respect the Sabbath. Years later, the writer and clergyman | criticised Wilberforce for being more interested in the sins of the poor t ... |
John Parsons | ... the Visitor of Balliol College, Oxford and in 1806 backed the then Master, | , in opening the Fellowships to competition |
Cardinal Richelieu | Louis XIII, taciturn and suspicious, leaned heavily on his Prime Minister | , to govern the Kingdom. They are remembered for the establishment of the ... |
Pope John XXIII | ... ix cardinal bishops, 50 cardinal priests, and 14 cardinal deacons; however, | began to exceed the overall limit of 70, and this continued under his succ ... |
Thomas Cranmer | ... her regency council, and to the sympathies of fellow appointed councillors | (the Archbishop of Canterbury) and Lord Hertford, Catherine obtained effec ... |
Bishop of London | ... Dunstan) from exile to have him made Bishop of Worcester (and subsequently | and Archbishop of Canterbury). Dunstan remained Edgar's advisor throughout ... |
Archbishop of Canterbury | John Tillotson (October 1630 – 22 November 1694) was an | (1691–1694) |
Albertus Magnus | ... and theory of knowledge influenced William of Auvergne, Bishop of Paris and | , while his metaphysics had an impact on the thought of Thomas Aquinas |
Guillaume Dubois | ... u was so successful that his successor, Jules Mazarin, was also a cardinal. | and André-Hercule de Fleury complete the list of the "four great" cardinal ... |
Christoph von Utenheim | In 1503 the new bishop | refused to give Basel a new constitution whereupon, to show its power, the ... |
Walter Kasper | ... archaic term "Unction of the Sick" or the term "Extreme Unction". Cardinal | used the latter term in his intervention at the 2005 . However, the Church ... |
Pope Urban VIII | ... uly 1623, and was buried in the Church of Sant'Ignazio. He was succeeded by | |
Francesco Coccopalmerio | ... of the Church". (Pastor Bonus, 154). Its President is currently Archbishop | . The current Vice-President is |
Bishop of Worcester | ... d Dunstan (eventually canonised as St. Dunstan) from exile to have him made | (and subsequently Bishop of London and Archbishop of Canterbury). Dunstan ... |
Rimbert | ... at any independent Geatish kingdom no longer existed in the 9th century. In | 's account of Ansgar's missionary work, the Swedish king is the sole sover ... |
Pope Innocent III | ... is doctrines were condemned by the university, and, on a personal appeal to | , the sentence was ratified, Amalric being ordered to return to Paris and ... |
Pope Paul II | ... the death of his first consort, Maria of Tver (1467), at the suggestion of | (1469), who hoped thereby to bind Russia to the Holy See, Ivan III wedded ... |
Huldrych Zwingli | The Reformation in Switzerland began in 1523, led by | , priest of the Great Minster church in Zürich since 1518. Zürich adopted ... |
William Longchamp | ... e reign of Richard the Lionheart (1189–1199). The castle was extended under | , Richard's Lord Chancellor and the man in charge of England while he was ... |
Francesco Barberini | ... ançois de Bagni at Rome, and on Bagni's death in 1641 librarian to Cardinal | |
Hugh of Lincoln | ... ays, "one of the most outstanding government ministers in English History". | , a contemporary and later canonized, is said to have asked forgiveness of ... |
Archbishop of Canterbury | ... to have him made Bishop of Worcester (and subsequently Bishop of London and | ). Dunstan remained Edgar's advisor throughout his reign |
Nightcrawler | ... aturing several X-Men in solo series, such as Emma Frost, Gambit, Mystique, | , and Rogue. Another book, Exiles, started at the same time and concluded ... |
Plutarch | ... was one of approximately 50 ancient figures given an extensive biography by | in his Parallel Lives, in which he is paired with the Roman statesman Scip ... |
Pope Pius IX | ... ers, who held on to traditional ideas of relations with the secular powers. | had condemned the idea of religious freedom. Pope Leo XIII, who had establ ... |
Archbishop of Canterbury | ... Queen Mother. Baptised in the Palace's Music Room on 8 April 1960, by then | , Geoffrey Fisher, the Prince's godparents were: The Duke of Gloucester (h ... |
Pierre Teilhard de Chardin | ... iew has certain similarities to the concepts of Christogenesis advocated by | |
Vestal Virgin | ... er Amulius deposed his brother, killed his sons and forced Rhea to become a | , intending to deprive Numitor of lawful heirs and thus secure his own pos ... |
Polycarp | ... is certain that, while still very young, Irenaeus had seen and heard Bishop | (d. 155) at Smyrna. Irenaeus sets out a forthright account of Mary's role ... |
Thomas Lockey | ... s Bodley's Librarian; their levels of diligence have varied over the years. | (1660–1665) was regarded as not fit for the post, John Hudson (1701–1719) ... |
Bishop of Worcester | ... ossibly the third largest in England, was founded by Saint Egwin, the third | , in around 701 AD, following the vision of the Virgin Mary to a local swi ... |
Charles Kingsley | ... (who set many of her novels in a thinly disguised version of the borough), | , Edmund Gosse and Rudyard Kipling. Peter Cook, comic, (half of a famous c ... |
Frederick V | ... ally confined to Bohemia, was spiralling into a wider European war. In 1620 | was defeated at the Battle of White Mountain and by 1622, despite the aid ... |
André-Hercule de Fleury | ... hat his successor, Jules Mazarin, was also a cardinal. Guillaume Dubois and | complete the list of the "four great" cardinals to have ruled |
Thegan of Trier | ... n author usually called "the Astronomer", and Vita Hludowici Imperatoris by | . It is possible that Asser may have known these works. He also knew Bede' ... |
Pope Leo XIII | Pope Pius IX had condemned the idea of religious freedom. | , who had established working relationships with both the French and Germa ... |
Pope John Paul II | ... sexual abuse committed by priests in his archdiocese. On December 13, 2002 | accepted Law's resignation as Archbishop and reassigned him to an administ ... |
Pietro Gasparri | ... hese allegations were rejected by the Vatican’s Cardinal Secretary of State | , who wrote on 4 March 1916 that the Holy See is completely impartial and ... |
Saint Januarius | ... o, it means "Little Gennaro", like Ratface in Italian comics. San Gennaro ( | in English) is the patron of Naples |
Jonathan Swift | ... England never had and never again will have its like". Two centuries later | said he was "the person of the greatest virtue this kingdom ever produced" ... |
Francesco Barberini | ... chetti who in turn introduced him to another of his early patrons, Cardinal | . Financial difficulties arose with the departure to Spain of Barberini, a ... |
Anselm | ... ther or not God can "deny himself" ala 2 Tim 2:13. In the 11th century, St. | argues that there are many things that God cannot do, but that nonetheless ... |
Geoffrey Fisher | ... the Palace's Music Room on 8 April 1960, by then Archbishop of Canterbury, | , the Prince's godparents were: The Duke of Gloucester (his maternal grand ... |
William Laud | Archbishop | described Charles as "A mild and gracious prince who knew not how to be, o ... |
Eusebius of Caesarea | ... aid to be "one in being with The Father," in direct opposition to Arianism. | ascribes the term homoousios, or consubstantial, i.e., "of the same substa ... |
John of Viktring | The ceremony was first described by the chronicler | on the occasion of the coronation of Meinhard II of Tyrol in 1286. It is a ... |
Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla's | ... r 15) and Aniversario de la Independencia (September 16) commemorate Father | Grito de Dolores — on September 16, 1810, in the village of Dolores, near ... |
Bishop of Basel | ... bero II in 999 till the Reformation, Basel was ruled by prince-bishops (see | , whose memory is preserved in the crosier shown on the Basel coat-of-arms ... |
Bishop of Durham | ... churchman, Bishop of Llandaff in Wales, as well as Bishop of Salisbury and | in England |
Hippolytus of Rome | ... al part of which was the coupling its characters in pairs, male and female. | (Ref. vi. 20, p. 176) connects the system of Valentinus with that of Simon ... |
Pope John Paul II | ... e sanctifying value of work, and its fidelity to Catholic beliefs. In 2002, | canonized Escrivá, and called him "the saint of ordinary life. |
Bishop of Salisbury | ... rch 1826) was an English churchman, Bishop of Llandaff in Wales, as well as | and Bishop of Durham in England |
William Laud | ... the impeachment and subsequent execution of the king's advisers, Archbishop | and Thomas Wentworth, Earl of Strafford |
François Fénelon | The first archbishop appointed by the king of France was | . He came to be known as the "swan of Cambrai" ("le cygne de Cambrai"), in ... |
Dunstan | Upon Eadwig's death in October 959, Edgar immediately recalled | (eventually canonised as St. Dunstan) from exile to have him made Bishop o ... |
Basilios Bessarion | ... graphy, and compiled digests of many classical writers. His pupils included | and George Scholarius (later to become Patriarch of Constantinople and Ple ... |
John Michell | ... too strong for light to escape were first considered in the 18th century by | and Pierre-Simon Laplace. The first modern solution of general relativity ... |
Leo the Great | ... ian as a heretic and Manichaean rested upon Augustine, Turibius of Astorga, | and Orosius (who quotes a fragment of a letter of Priscillian's), although ... |
Francis Borgia | ... rtifications of the flesh upon herself. But her confessor, the Jesuit Saint | , reassured her of the divine inspiration of her thoughts. On St. Peter's ... |
Chrysostom | ... f to an exact study of biblical and patristic writers, especially Basil and | . The result of this reading, and of the influence of John Wilkins, Master ... |
Joseph Clemens of Bavaria | ... in building was built by Enrico Zuccalli for the prince-elector of Cologne, | from 1697–1705. Today it houses the faculty of humanities and theology and ... |
Pope Adrian II | ... he was released from his oath, and was crowned a second time as emperor by | on May 18, 872 |
Jonathan Swift | Houyhnhnms are a race of intelligent horses described in the last part of | 's satirical Gulliver's Travels. The name is pronounced either or .. (Swif ... |
Pierre Batiffol | According to Hosea Ballou, then | (1911) and George T. Knight (1914) Amalric was a believer that all people ... |
Venantius Fortunatus | A vita of Hilary was written by | c. 550 but is not considered reliable. More trustworthy are the notices in ... |
Coman mac Faelchon | The name Roscommon is derived from | who built a monastery there in the 5th century. The woods near the monaste ... |
Gerald Fitzgerald | ... "One early opponent of the treatment of sexually abusive priests was Father | , the founder of The Congregation of the Servants of the Paraclete. Althou ... |
Pope Nicholas I | ... m the Tyrrhenian Sea by the Muslim conquest of Sicily in 827. A letter from | in 864 mentions for the first time the "Sardinian judges", their autonomy ... |
Thomas Gataker | ... g. Before him there were only John Selden, and, in a more restricted field, | and Pearson. "Bentley inaugurated a new era of the art of criticism. He op ... |
Archbishop of Canterbury | ... , and to the sympathies of fellow appointed councillors Thomas Cranmer (the | ) and Lord Hertford, Catherine obtained effective control and was able to ... |
Pope Pius IX | ... hern Mexico negotiated local agreements to cover trade on the Texas border. | wrote a letter to Jefferson Davis in which he addressed Davis as the "Hono ... |
Pope Benedict | ====2008====In April, during a visit to the United States, | admitted that he was "deeply ashamed" of the clergy sex abuse scandal that ... |
Archbishop of Canterbury | ... es. In 1980, then Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Robert Runcie, appointed him | 's Assistant for Anglican Communion Affairs, on the recommendation of Tomk ... |
Thomas Becket | ... efore Anthelm himself died on 26 June 1178. He was named in honour of Saint | |
Cardinal Mazarin | ... e Naudé his librarian, and on his death Naudé accepted a similar offer from | . For the next ten years he devoted himself to bringing together from all ... |
Zygmunt Zimowski | ... nto its present form in 1988. It is part of the Roman Curia with Archbishop | as its President. The apostolic constitution describes the work of the cou ... |
Saint Peter | ... il of Raphael and the chisel of Algardi", reporting that the Pope, aided by | and Saint Paul, convinced Attila to turn away from the city. According to ... |
Soldier Field | The group was the opening band for the final Grateful Dead shows at | , in Chicago, Illinois in July 1995 |
Ulfilas | ... influenced by Gothic haiþi "dwelling on the heath", appearing as haiþno in | ' bible as "gentile woman" (translating the "Hellene" in ). This translati ... |
Irenaeus | Charges of Gnostic libertinism find their source in the works of | . According to this writer, Simon Magus (whom he has identified as the pro ... |
Domingo de Soto | ... anish School of Salamanca writers Francisco de Vitoria (1480 or 1483–1546), | (1494–1560), Martin de Azpilcueta (1491–1586), and Luis de Molina (1535–16 ... |
St. Basil | ... esolve the outstanding ecclesiastical issues, and unsuccessfully confronted | over the Nicene Creed |
Joseph Hall | At the cost of some discomfort to the Mayor, a Royalist, and the bishop, | , a moderate, was targeted because of his position as bishop |
Diego de Torres Vargas | ... Coat of Arms of the City. The orange color was based and taken from Father | ' text and it reads : "Escudo de armas dado a Puerto Rico por los Reyes Ca ... |
W. H. C. Frend | ... been criticized by biblical scholars and ecclesiastical historians such as | and Robert E. Van Voorst. After reviewing criticisms from several authors, ... |
Papias of Hierapolis | ... e ear of wheat with ten thousand grains, and so forth, which he quotes from | |
Pope Paschal I | ... nment of Italy, and at Easter, 5 April 823, he was crowned emperor again by | , this time at Rome |
Pope Pius IX | ... ches", and his works continued to be highly influential in later centuries. | formally recognized him as Universae Ecclesiae Doctor in 1851 |
Pope John VIII | ... time the "Sardinian judges", their autonomy now clear in a later letter by | , which defined them as "Princes" |
John Nobili | ... iests of the Jesuit Order took over the Mission Santa Clara de Asís. Father | , S.J., was put in charge of the Mission. He began a college on the Missio ... |
Pierre de Castelnau | ... Catharism met with little success and after the murder of the papal legate, | , Innocent III declared a crusade against Languedoc, offering the lands of ... |
Cardinal Richelieu | ... ief minister was Cardinal Wolsey. An even more prominent example is that of | , whose power was so great that he was for many years the real ruler of Fr ... |
Pope John Paul II | ... a became the first saint from a Central European country to be canonized by | before the "Velvet Revolution" later that year. After the dissolution of C ... |
Bishop of London | Historically, Highgate adjoined the | 's hunting estate. The Bishop kept a toll-house where one of the main nort ... |
Wilfrid | Wulfhere's relationship with Bishop | is recorded in Stephen of Ripon's Life of Wilfrid. During the years 667–9, ... |
Pope Sylvester I | ... f the Papacy. Hence, by the early fourth century, a legend had emerged that | (314–35) had cured the pagan emperor from leprosy. According to this legen ... |
Mitt Romney | ... Republican Party presidential primaries, McCain endorsed former 2008 rival | and campaigned for him, but compared the contest to a Greek tragedy due to ... |
Christopher John Cocksworth | ... nnetts, who retired from the post on 31 January 2008. The Reverend Canon Dr | BA, PhD, PGCE was nominated Bishop of Coventry on 3 March 2008 and HM The ... |
Eusebius of Nicomedia | ... on, who initially supported Arianism, agreed to the whole creed. Similarly, | and Theognis of Nice also agreed, except for the certain statements |
Bishop of Ely | ... ter returned to France with John de Gray the Bishop of Norwich, Eustace the | , William Marshal, and Robert de Beaumont the Earl of Leicester to seek pe ... |
Saint Boniface | ... 845 until 1849 by Philipp Hoffmann in Gothic Revival style and dedicated to | |
Bishop of Durham | ... cies, by a wide array of scholars and historians. According to the Anglican | , the Rt Rev Dr Tom Wright, the novel is a "great thriller" but "lousy his ... |
Archbishop of Canterbury | ... as of London, and later Thomas à Becket; circa 1118 – 29 December 1170) was | from 1162 until his murder in 1170. He is venerated as a saint and martyr ... |
Anthony O'Connell | ... hild abuse allegations. Resigned bishop Joseph Keith Symons was replaced by | , who later also resigned in 2002 |
Pope John XXIII | ... aint Marcellinus, and on 13 July the feast day of Saint Anacletus. In 1960, | , while keeping the 26 April feast, which mentions the saint under the nam ... |
Archbishop of Canterbury | ... 's role in the Church of England is titular; the most senior clergyman, the | , is the spiritual leader of the Church and of the worldwide Anglican Comm ... |
Plutarch | ... ch in turn revolved around the Sun. Though the arguments he used were lost, | stated that Seleucus was the first to prove the heliocentric system throug ... |
The Rt. Rev. William E. Swing | Guided by the vision of founder | the URI Charter was developed through a series of international conference ... |
Anselm | The third metaphor, used by the 11th century theologian | , is called the "satisfaction" theory. In this picture mankind owes a debt ... |
Antipope Christopher | Pope Leo V (903) and | both died in 904, allegedly strangled in prison on the order of Sergius, a ... |
William Whewell | English philosopher and historian of science | coined the term scientist in 1833, and it was first published in Whewell's ... |
Bishop of Exeter | ... aplain and almoner to the queen dowager, Catherine Parr. In 1551, he became | , but was deposed in 1553 after the succession of Queen Mary. He went to D ... |
vicar | In Anglican churches, a curate may be commonly called a | , a rector or a priest-in-charge (depending upon the way s/he has been lic ... |
Jonathan Swift | ... ch to Augustan British writers of the Enlightenment like Joseph Addison and | |
Lanfranc | ... from the early 16th century. At the time of the Norman Conquest, Archbishop | had contacts with the parish. St Mary's has a 12th century font, and many ... |
William Tyndale | ... ponent of the Protestant Reformation and in particular of Martin Luther and | |
Cardinal Richelieu | At the desire of | he began a controversy with the Benedictines, denying Jean Gerson's author ... |
Maximilian Frederick of Königsegg-Rothenfels | ... ish: Academy of the Prince-elector of Cologne) which was founded in 1777 by | , the prince-elector of Cologne. In the spirit of the Enlightenment the ne ... |
Pope Alexander III | ... the king in Canterbury Cathedral. Soon after his death, he was canonized by | |
Marcellus of Ancyra | ... ers such as Eustathius of Antioch, Alexander of Alexandria, Athanasius, and | all adhered to the Homoousian position |
Pope Damasus I | The commentary itself was written during the papacy of | , that is, between 366 and 384, and is considered an important document of ... |
Joseph Clemens of Bavaria | ... lsdorfer Schloss), which was built from 1715 to 1753 by Robert de Cotte for | and his successor Clemens August of Bavaria. Today the Poppelsdorf Palace ... |
Saint Athanasius | The Council confirmed the teachings of | and confirmed the title of Mary as "Mother of God". It also clearly stated ... |
Désiré-Joseph Mercier | ... d to have exclaimed to be sorry not to be a Frenchman. The Belgian Cardinal | , known as a brave patriot during German occupation but also famous for hi ... |
Plutarch | ... asury from Delos to Athens, allegedly to keep it safe from Persia. However, | indicates that many of Pericles' rivals viewed the transfer to Athens as u ... |
Manetho | ... ons ascribed by Josephus to the Greek writer Apion, and myths accredited to | are also addressed |
Stanko Premrl | Zdravljica was first set to music in 1905 by the Slovene composer | in a choral composition |
Gregory of Tours | ... ions to the basilica of Saint Julian in Avernia, his homeland. According to | , Avitus died during the journey; according to other sources, he was kille ... |
Pope Paul VI | ... claration on Christian Education. It was promulgated on October 28, 1965 by | , following approval by the assembled bishops by a vote of 2,290 to 35 |
Pope Leo V | ... n the Deacon of Naples, Flodoard, and others make no mention of this story. | (903) and Antipope Christopher both died in 904, allegedly strangled in pr ... |
Giovanni da Pian del Carpine | ... stian missionaries to the East, such as William of Rubruck, Benedykt Polak, | , and Andrew of Longjumeau. Later envoys included Odoric of Pordenone, Gio ... |
Mitt Romney | ... ed his first serious challenger, the young, telegenic, and very well-funded | . Romney ran as a successful entrepreneur and Washington outsider with a s ... |
Pope Innocent III | Finally, in 1212, through the mediation of | , a crusade was called against the Almohads. Castilians under Alfonso, Ara ... |
Pope John Paul II | ... rs was set up by the Motu Proprio Dolentium Hominum of 11 February 1985, by | who reformed the Pontifical Commission for the Pastoral Assistance to Heal ... |
Clemens August of Bavaria | ... to 1753 by Robert de Cotte for Joseph Clemens of Bavaria and his successor | . Today the Poppelsdorf Palace houses the university's mineral collection ... |
Anselm | ... ed a number of windows, and more recent additions include windows to Saints | and Nicholas. The Coronation window is in the north aisle above the Tripty ... |
Pope Clement IV | ... through his acquaintance with Cardinal Guy le Gros de Foulques, who became | in 1265. The new Pope issued a mandate ordering Bacon to write to him conc ... |
Hippolytus | ... ne, the followers of Marcellina use the term gnostikos of themselves. Later | uses "learned" (gnostikos) of Cerinthus and the Ebionites, and applied "le ... |
Saxwulf | ... deshamstede to have possibly been an Anglian settlement before AD 655, when | founded a monastery on land granted to him for that purpose by Peada of Me ... |
Duns Scotus | ... ed him from wholly devoting himself to his religion. However, after reading | in 1872, he saw that the two did not necessarily conflict. He continued to ... |
Pope John XXIII | On 15 December 1958, Luciani was appointed Bishop of Vittorio Veneto by | . He received his episcopal consecration on the following 27 December from ... |
Saint Peter | ... lly to the see of the Bishop of Rome, whom that Church sees as successor of | , the head of the apostles |
Eusebius of Caesarea | ... . It largely drew on Edward Gibbon's history of the Roman Empire as well as | 's contemporary account, as indicated in the afterword of the original edi ... |
Mitt Romney | ... rizona) won Franklin County with 35.68 percent of the vote. Former Governor | (R-Massachusetts) came in a close second place with 30.51 percent while fo ... |
Thomas Becket | ... 935. This one, Murder in the Cathedral, concerning the death of the martyr, | , was more under Eliot's control. After this, he worked on commercial play ... |
Ottobuono | ... chets had to be sent for from London. Papal intervention through the legate | finally resulted in the compromise of the Dictum of Kenilworth, under whic ... |
Bishop of Quebec | ... 20 July 1703, by Jean-Baptiste de la Croix de Chevrières de Saint-Vallier, | . The parish was the first established on the Gulf Coast of the United Sta ... |
Simplician | ... ediately and forcefully stopped Arianism in Milan. He studied theology with | , a presbyter of Rome. Using his excellent knowledge of Greek, which was t ... |
Archbishop of Canterbury | The Church of England's three senior bishops—the | , the Archbishop of York and the Bishop of London are made Privy Counsello ... |
Pope John VIII | ... lip Schaff, "To the Greek acts was afterwards added a (pretended) letter of | to Photius, declaring the Filioque to be an addition which is rejected by ... |
Pope John XI | ... who suggested that Pope Joan's tale may have originated in a satire against | , who died in his early 20s. Blondel, through detailed analysis of the cla ... |
Pope Leo XIII | In 1882 | had a Mass and an Office composed for his feast day, which he set at 14 Ap ... |
Richard Montagu | ... les further allied himself with controversial ecclesiastic figures, such as | and William Laud, whom Charles appointed Archbishop of Canterbury. Many of ... |
Girolamo Bortignon | In 1947, he was named vicar general to Bishop | , OFM Cap, of Belluno. Two years later, in 1949, he was placed in charge o ... |
Francis Xavier | Probably the most spectacular landmark of Hrodna is the Cathedral of St. | , the former (until 1773) Jesuit church on Batory Square (now: Soviet Squa ... |
Marin Barleti | ... he area had no special importance in Illyrian and classical times. In 1510, | , an Albanian Catholic priest and scholar, in the biography of the Albania ... |
Archbishopric of Mainz | ... cial title of two sees: as well as Rome, the Bishopric of Mainz (the former | ), which was also of electoral and primatial rank, bears the title of "the ... |
Archbishop of Canterbury | ... early thirteenth centuries in the positions of Chief Justiciar of England, | , and Lord Chancellor. As chancellor, Walter began the keeping of the Char ... |
The Rev. J. McEnery | ... cating the prehistoric coexistence there of humans and now-extinct animals. | explored the cave between 1825 and 1829 and put forth the coexistence theo ... |
Archbishop of Canterbury | ... he first land grant including Yeading was made by Offa in 790 to Æthelhard, | : "in the place called on linga Haese [Hayes] and Geddinges [Yeading] arou ... |
Albertus Magnus | In the Opus Minus he criticizes his contemporaries Alexander of Hales and | who, he says, had not studied the philosophy of Aristotle but only acquire ... |
Walter Lini | ... ginally was called the New Hebrides National Party. One of the founders was | , an Anglican Priest, who later became Prime Minister. Renamed the Vanua'a ... |
Pope John XII | ... an, theorized that the story of Pope Joan may have originated from tales of | ; John, it is reported, had many mistresses, including one called Joan, wh ... |
Pope Gregory I | ... pitone, a leader of the Barbaricinos (people of Barbagia). According to the | 's letters, in the island co-existed a Romanized and Christianized area (t ... |
Bruce Kent | ... l with a banner reading, "Help the Soviets, Support CND!" It also denounced | , the general secretary of CND, as a supporter of IRA terrorism |
Felix of Ravenna | ... had". Prior to Constantine's departure, the Emperor had blinded Archbishop | for plotting to overthrow the Emperor, an act that had improved the papal- ... |
Tiedemann Giese | ... out their problems in navigation. Rheticus also visited Copernicus' friend, | , who was Bishop of Culm (now Chełmno) |
Gioacchino Muccin | ... he following 27 December from Pope John himself, with Bishops Bortignon and | serving as co-consecrators. As a bishop, he participated in all the sessio ... |
Peadar Ua Laoghaire | ... s by Henry Glassie. The first modern novel in the Irish language, Séadna by | , is a version of the tale |
Francis Spellman | ... s father insisted the wedding not be put off. They were married by Cardinal | on November 29, 1958, at St. Joseph's Church in Bronxville, New York. They ... |
Polycarp | ... e Logos theology he inherited from Justin Martyr. Irenaeus was a student of | , who was said to have been tutored by John the Apostle. (John had used Lo ... |
Cardinal Albornoz | ... assive presence meant to intimidate the people of the town: it was built by | (1367) and added to by Popes Pius II and Paul III. The smaller of the two ... |
Severian | ... who were more inclined to follow the letter of the Old Testament. Diodorus, | , and Cosmas Indicopleustes, but also Chrysostom, belonged just to this la ... |
Pope Clement VII | ... ed to sign a letter by the leading English churchmen and aristocrats asking | to annul Henry's marriage to Catherine, and also quarrelled with Henry VII ... |
William Laud | ... imself with controversial ecclesiastic figures, such as Richard Montagu and | , whom Charles appointed Archbishop of Canterbury. Many of Charles's subje ... |
Nicholas Callan | ... ype of transformer to see wide use was the induction coil, invented by Rev. | of Maynooth College, Ireland in 1836. He was one of the first researchers ... |
Archbishop of Canterbury | ... 634, following the appointment of the strongly anti-Puritan William Laud as | , the colony saw a large influx of immigrants |
Pietro Gasparri | ... lle Ratti became Pope Pius XI, shaping Vatican policies towards Poland with | and Eugenio Pacelli for the following 36 years (1922–1958) |
Archbishop of York | ... Church of England's three senior bishops—the Archbishop of Canterbury, the | and the Bishop of London are made Privy Counsellors on their appointment. ... |
Pope John Paul II | During his tour of America in October 1979, | was also among those hosted by Shea Stadium. On the morning of the Pontiff ... |
Duane Pederson | ... sing to as many as 4,000 people at the Jesus People Festivals organized by | . At the "Rock of Ages Folk Festival" held on February 26, 1970 in Northri ... |
John Davenant | ... e, he was born at his father's rectory and was baptised on 19 June 1608. Dr | , bishop of Salisbury, was his uncle and godfather. According to John Aubr ... |
Æthelhard | ... g Brook). The first land grant including Yeading was made by Offa in 790 to | , Archbishop of Canterbury: "in the place called on linga Haese [Hayes] an ... |
Pope Paul VI | ... or the Roman Curia to function". (Pastor Bonus, 172). It was established by | on 15 August 1967. Its current President is Archbishop Domenico Calcagno s ... |
Pope Gregory VII | ... region, and is generally regarded as the founder of the Kingdom of Hungary. | canonized Stephen I, together with his son, Saint Emeric of Hungary and Bi ... |
Jonathan Swift | The term big-endian originally comes from | 's satirical novel Gulliver’s Travels by way of Danny Cohen in 1980. In 17 ... |
Pius II | ... of the town: it was built by Cardinal Albornoz (1367) and added to by Popes | and Paul III. The smaller of the two was built much earlier, in the Roman ... |
Plutarch | ... orem occurred five centuries after his death, in the writings of Cicero and | |
Frederick II, Elector of Saxony | ... he Albert III, Margrave of Brandenburg by his second wife Anna, daughter of | . His elder half-brother was the Elector Johann Cicero of Brandenburg. Fri ... |
Juan de Mariana | ... the sixteenth century this account re-appeared, extended and elaborated, in | , who wrote that in 1055, at a synod in Florence, the Emperor Henry III ur ... |
Bishop of London | ... senior bishops—the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Archbishop of York and the | are made Privy Counsellors on their appointment. Senior members of the Roy ... |
Plutarch | ... ur progressively more perfect ones, the oldest of which was the Golden Age. | , the Greek historian and biographer of the 1st century, dealt with the bl ... |
Pope Boniface VIII | ... synods of minor importance were held there, and its university, founded by | in 1303 and famed as a seat of legal studies, flourished until the French ... |
Jonathan Swift | ... as L. Frank Baum and Lloyd Alexander alongside the works of Gene Wolfe and | , which are more often considered adult literature. The Hobbit has been ca ... |
Bernard Francis Law | ... s live in retreat houses that are carefully monitored and sometimes locked. | , Cardinal and Archbishop of Boston, Massachusetts, United States resigned ... |
Eusebius | ... rt in the Christian community by allowing it to elect a new Bishop of Rome, | |
Charles Theodore | ... is residence to nearby Mannheim. The court remained there until the Elector | became Elector of Bavaria in 1777 and established his court in Munich. In ... |
John Pitts | ... attributed Piers Plowman to "John Malvern," a name that surfaces again with | in 1619 and Anthony à Wood in 1674. Wood also supplied "Robertus de Langla ... |
Andrés de Urdaneta | ... e Eel River Athapaskan peoples, including the Wailaki, Mattole and Nongatl. | hit the coast near Cape Mendocino, California, then followed the coast sou ... |
Michael I Cerularius | ... inal Humbert of Silva Candida to Constantinople to negotiate with Patriarch | in response to his actions concerning the church in Southern Italy. Humber ... |
Aristoclea | ==See also==*Delphi Archaeological Museum* | – Delphic priestess of the 6th century BC, said to have been tutor to Pyth ... |
Pope John Paul II | Eight hundred years after the Fourth Crusade, | twice expressed sorrow for the events of the Fourth Crusade. In 2001, he w ... |
Saint Peter | ... Will the Smith. Will is a wicked blacksmith who is given a second chance by | at the gates to Heaven, but leads such a bad life that he ends up being do ... |
Pope John VII | ... n was the Western rejection of the Trullan canons of the Quinisext Council. | had been sent the canons for approval and instead had sent them back, "wit ... |
James II of Cyprus | ... ptember 1467. Five were candidates pressed by kings, placating respectively | , Edward IV of England, Louis XI of France, Matthias Corvinus of Hungary a ... |
Archbishop of Canterbury | ... c figures, such as Richard Montagu and William Laud, whom Charles appointed | . Many of Charles's subjects felt this brought the Church of England too c ... |
Pope Leo XIII | The Devotion to the Holy Face of Jesus was eventually approved by | in 1885. St Veronica is commemorated on 12 July |
Ermolao Barbaro | ... mmentators (see Averroes, Avicenna) on Aristotle in a famous long letter to | in 1485. It was always Pico’s aim to reconcile the schools of Plato and Ar ... |
Pope Sergius I | ... d sent them back, "without any emendations at all". John VII's predecessor, | had declared that he would rather die than subscribe to the council |
Pope Alexander VI | ... Italian condottiero, nobleman, politician, and cardinal. He was the son of | and his long-term mistress Vannozza dei Cattanei. He was the brother of Lu ... |
Tarcisio Bertone | ... tered what the Associated Press called "full damage control mode". Cardinal | , the Vatican's secretary of state, during a visit to Chile, linked the sc ... |
Thomas Aquinas | ... he old alliance between reason and faith of the medieval period laid out by | |
Pope Pius XI | ... Ratti's expulsion climaxed in Warsaw. Two years later, Achille Ratti became | , shaping Vatican policies towards Poland with Pietro Gasparri and Eugenio ... |
Pope Martin IV | ... t the Latin West, particularly his neighbors in Italy (Charles I of Sicily, | , and the Venetians) would unite against him and attempt the restoration o ... |
Archbishop of Kraków | In October 1978, the | , Cardinal Karol Józef Wojtyła, became Pope John Paul II, head of the Roma ... |
Paul III | ... it was built by Cardinal Albornoz (1367) and added to by Popes Pius II and | . The smaller of the two was built much earlier, in the Roman era. However ... |
Plutarch | ... ed near Athens, once Aegina was under Athenian's power. The Greek historian | (46 AD–120 AD) also refers to an instance during the Parthenon's construct ... |
Patriarch of Venice | On 15 December 1969, he was appointed | by Pope Paul VI and took possession of the archdiocese on 3 February 1970. ... |
Edmund Campion | ... was given Scota in marriage as a reward for his services. Writing in 1571, | named the pharaoh Amenophis; Keating named him Cincris |
Saint Cyril | ... in 1896 and decorated in the Gothic style. The Greek Orthodox Community of | , Patriarch of Jerusalem was established in 1991 under the Orthodox |
Richard Pococke | ... incia (1718 and 1720–21), Granger (1731), Frederick Louis Norden (1737–38), | (1738), James Bruce (1769), Charles-Nicolas-Sigisbert Sonnini de Manoncour ... |
Fulk of Neuilly | ... ill engaged in warfare against each other. However, due to the preaching of | , a crusading army was finally organised at a tournament held at Écry by C ... |
Giuseppe Piazzi | In 1801, the astronomer | discovered an object which he initially believed to be a comet. Shortly th ... |
Thomas Becket | ... ortsmouth's first real church was built in 1181, when a chapel dedicated to | was erected by Augustinian monks; it was run by the monks of Southwick Pri ... |
Virgilio Canio Corbo | ... edicule, and the temple enclosure would have reached back slightly further. | , a Franciscan priest and archaeologist, who was present at the excavation ... |
Gregory of Tours | ... his classical pagan education, already being looked on with misgivings (see | ). He was an ascetic mystic and regarded the Christian life as continual i ... |
George Pell | ... pinion article for Sydney's Sunday Telegraph newspaper, Cardinal Archbishop | wrote that the Greens were hostile to the family, opposed to religious sch ... |
Jonathan Swift | ... follows the model of the famous Tory satirists of the previous generation ( | and John Gay, in particular) |
Niccolò Alamanni | ... ana) was discovered centuries later in the Vatican Library and published by | , Latin Anecdota, "unpublished writings"). The Secret History covers rough ... |
Pope Benedict XVI | ... 4, 2010, a report by the New York Times cited the Fr. Murphy case to accuse | of a cover-up while he was head of the CDF in 1996.However Father Thomas B ... |
John Newton | ... n whether he should remain in public life. Wilberforce sought guidance from | , a leading Evangelical Anglican clergyman of the day and Rector of St Mar ... |
Thomas Becket | File:Canterbury Cathedral 012 window showing leading and support.JPG| | window from Canterbury showing the pot metal and painted glass, lead H-sec ... |
Pope Innocent III | | succeeded to the papacy in 1198, and the preaching of a new crusade became ... |
Jean-Louis Tauran | ... ereignty in international affairs" (quotations from the treaty). Archbishop | , the Holy See's former Secretary for Relations with States, said that the ... |
Palladius | ... ine actively condemned the Pelagians and was zealous for orthodoxy. He sent | to Ireland to serve as a bishop in 431. Bishop Patricius (Saint Patrick) c ... |
Archbishop Sigeric of Canterbury | ... iking invasion. The battle ended in an Anglo-Saxon defeat. After the battle | and the aldermen of the south-western provinces advised King Aethelred to ... |
Geoffrey of Monmouth | ... tine's mother Helena was a Briton, the daughter of King Cole of Colchester. | expanded this story in his highly fictionalized Historia Regum Britanniae, ... |
Lorenzo Antonetti | ... s Archbishop Domenico Calcagno since 7 July 2011. Cardinals Attilio Nicora, | and are former Presidents |
Kim B. Clark | BYU alumni in academia include former Dean of the Harvard Business School | and Michael K. Young '73, current President of the University of Washingto ... |
Cardinal Richelieu | He spent most of his working life in Rome, except for a short period when | ordered him back to France to serve as First Painter to the King |
Bishop of Ross | ... er was Mary, Queen of Scots. Charles was baptised on 2 December 1600 by the | , in a ceremony held in Holyrood Abbey and was created Duke of Albany, Mar ... |
Io | ... uropa was kidnapped by Minoans who were seeking to avenge the kidnapping of | , a princess from Argos. His variant story may have been an attempt to rat ... |
Raymond Brown | According to | 's introduction of his edition Epistle of John, the source of the Comma Jo ... |
Methodius of Olympus | ... beheaded with six other Christians in Rome for his beliefs. Hippolytus and | also mention or quote him. Eusebius of Caesarea deals with him at some len ... |
Ælfsige | ... t a successor to Archbishop Oda, who died on 2 June 958. First he appointed | of Winchester, but he perished of cold in the Alps as he journeyed to Rome ... |
Girolamo Savonarola | During this period, the Dominican monk | had become prior of the San Marco monastery in 1490. He was famed for his ... |
Edward Carpenter | ... the late nineteenth century with Magnus Hirschfeld, John Addington Symonds, | , Aimée Duc and others. These writers described themselves and those like ... |
Archbishop of Canterbury | In 1716, in a letter to William Wake, | , Bentley announced his plan to prepare a critical edition of the New Test ... |
John Wesley | ... iritual observance. Members of holiness movements, such as those started by | and George Whitefield, often practice such regular fasts as part of their ... |
Irenaeus | ... ly been preserved in the summaries and assessments of early church fathers. | declares in his treatise "Against Heresies" that Gnostic movements subject ... |
Irenaeus | ... use of death to himself. For God made man free, and with power of himself.” | said, “But man, being endowed with reason, and in this respect similar to ... |
John Fisher | ... nd furthermore publicly refused to uphold Henry's annulment from Catherine. | , Bishop of Rochester, refused the oath along with More. The oath reads |
Bishop of Worcester | ... e existed in Oxford was founded in the fourteenth century by Thomas Cobham, | . This small collection of chained books was situated above the north side ... |
Attilio Nicora | ... rent President is Archbishop Domenico Calcagno since 7 July 2011. Cardinals | , Lorenzo Antonetti and are former Presidents |
Vedic priesthood | ... composition, the texts were preserved and codified by an extensive body of | as the central philosophy of the Iron Age Vedic civilization. The Brahma P ... |
Abbot Desiderius | ... f Monte Cassino gives us our best source on the early Normans in the south. | sent envoys to Constantinople some time after 1066 to hire expert Byzantin ... |
Byrhthelm | ... Alps as he journeyed to Rome for the pallium. In his place Eadwig nominated | , the Bishop of Wells. As soon as Edgar became king he reversed this act o ... |
Bishop of Ostia | ... ch she did many years of penance. Her son from the affair eventually became | , and ordered her entombement in his cathedral when she died |
Giosuè Cattarossi | ... empted to join the Jesuits, but was denied by the seminary's rector, Bishop | . Ordained a priest on 7 July 1935, Luciani then served as a curate in his ... |
Dean Jonathan Swift | They couple were friends of | and, through him, of Alexander Pope. Pope encouraged the Delaneys to devel ... |
Pope Sisinnius | Constantine's predecessor | , a Syrian, was pope for only twenty days. Constantine became pope in Marc ... |
Rowan Williams | The current archbishop is the Most Reverend | . He is the 104th in a line which goes back more than 1400 years to St Aug ... |
Basil Hume | ... s employed part-time at his local bureau. Bruce Kent was warned by Cardinal | not to become too involved in politics |
Irenaeus | ... imself his own cause that sometimes he becomes wheat, and sometimes chaff.” | said, “Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good dee ... |
Clement VII | During the Great Schism (1378–1415) the antipopes | and Benedict XIII returned to reside at Avignon. Clement VII lived in Avig ... |
Pope John XXIII | ... on in a manner and to a degree appropriate to their present divided state." | , who convoked the Council that brought this change of emphasis about, sai ... |
Arval Brethren | #redirect | |
Eusebius of Caesarea | ... his beliefs. Hippolytus and Methodius of Olympus also mention or quote him. | deals with him at some length, and names the following works |
Archbishop of Canterbury | ... mony for British monarchs, in which they are anointed with holy oils by the | , thereby ordaining them to monarchy, perpetuates the ancient Roman Cathol ... |
John Henry Newman | ... ed to Birmingham in September to consult the leader of the Oxford converts, | . Newman received him into the Church on 21 October 1866. On 5 May 1868 Ho ... |
Juan de Velasco | ... nclude the Jesuits Juan Bautista Aguirre, born in Daule in 1725, and Father | , born in Riobamba in 1727. De Velasco wrote about the nations and chiefdo ... |
Ercole Consalvi | On 30 May 1814, the French annexation was recognized by the Pope. | made an ineffectual protest at the Congress of Vienna in 1815 but Avignon ... |
Desmond Tutu | ... statues of South Africa's four Nobel Peace Prize winners – Albert Luthuli, | , F. W. de Klerk and Nelson Mandela. Since 1994, the city has struggled wi ... |
Cardinal Mazarin | A centre of cloth production, begun under the patronage of | , supported the town until the late nineteenth century |
Bishop of Lincoln | ... rivalry with neighbour Brasenose College (which was also founded by a later | ). The two colleges share a tradition revived annually on Ascension Day. T ... |
Tyndale's | ... ation. More vigorously suppressed the travelling country ministers who used | English translation of the New Testament. This English language translatio ... |
Henri de Lubac | | , Augustinianism and Modern Theology (Herder & Herder) ISBN 0-8245-1802-0 ... |
Mitt Romney | ... '60, who was United States Solicitor General under President Ronald Reagan. | , former Governor of Massachusetts and 2008 Republican Presidential Candid ... |
Irenaeus | ... otes a saying of his, and says that the Cynic Crescens laid snares for him. | speaks of his martyrdom and of Tatian as his disciple. Irenaeus quotes Jus ... |
primacy over the Archbishop of York | Along with | , the Archbishop of Canterbury also has a precedence of honour over the ot ... |
Athanasius of Alexandria | ... ut a smaller and unknown number attended. Eusebius of Caesarea counted 220, | counted 318, and Eustathius of Antioch counted 270 (all three were present ... |
Pope Zachary | ... s either destroyed or recarved and relabeled, replaced by a male figure, of | |
Ippolito de' Medici | ... ence, republican enemies of the Medici took advantage of the chaos to exile | . Bandinelli, a supporter of the Medici, was also exiled. In 1530 Emperor ... |
Gaugericus | ... rai, an administrative centre for the region. Successive bishops, including | (in French Géry), founded abbeys and churches to host relics, which contri ... |
Benedict XIII | During the Great Schism (1378–1415) the antipopes Clement VII and | returned to reside at Avignon. Clement VII lived in Avignon during his ent ... |
Pope John XII | Dunstan went to Rome in 960, and received the pallium from | . On his journey there, Dunstan's charities were so lavish as to leave not ... |
The Reverend Stewart Headlam | ... erdict. Wilde's counsel, Sir Edward Clarke, was finally able to agree bail. | put up most of the £5,000 bail, having disagreed with Wilde's treatment by ... |
Eustathius of Antioch | ... Eusebius of Caesarea counted 220, Athanasius of Alexandria counted 318, and | counted 270 (all three were present at the council). Later, Socrates Schol ... |
Gregory I | ... The medieval chronicler Bede says that Augustine sent Laurence back to Pope | to report on the success of converting King Æthelberht of Kent and to carr ... |
Pope Leo II | ... Constantinople there in 680/681. He also delivered a combative letter from | to Constantine IV in 682. He met and developed a rapport with Prince Justi ... |
Augustine DiNoia | Antonio Canizares Llovera is the Cardinal Prefect, Archbishop | , O.P. is the Secretary, and Father Anthony Ward, S.M., is Under-secretary |
Pope Leo XIII | ... pon the principles of Catholic social teaching, especially the teachings of | in his encyclical Rerum Novarum and Pope Pius XI in Quadragesimo Anno |
Anselm of Canterbury | ... cal sense, but this identification was challenged by the 11th-century Saint | , who defined original sin as "privation of the righteousness that every m ... |
St Anselm | ... Fellowes Prynne. His brother George Fellowes Prynne carved the Reredos with | and St George in the niches. The embossed roof of the Nave reflects the Tu ... |
Thomas Aquinas | ... and Albertus Magnus, while his metaphysics had an impact on the thought of | |
Pietro Respighi | ... est of the titulus Santi Quattro Coronati, which before him was occupied by | . When after the consistory in Rome, the new cardinal tried to return to B ... |
Tindal | ... Praier and Complaynte of the Ploweman unto Christe was "first set forth by | , since, exemplified by Mr. Fox." Since the language of this text is simil ... |
Eusebius of Caesarea | ... n the east and 800 in the west), but a smaller and unknown number attended. | counted 220, Athanasius of Alexandria counted 318, and Eustathius of Antio ... |
Basil of Caesarea | ... died the Hebrew Bible and Greek authors like Philo, Origen, Athanasius, and | , with whom he was also exchanging letters. He applied this knowledge as p ... |
Henry Chadwick | The modern assessment of Priscillian is summed up in Cambridge professor | 's Priscillian of Avila: The Occult and the Charismatic in the Early Churc ... |
William Laud | ... s. In 1633 and 1634, following the appointment of the strongly anti-Puritan | as Archbishop of Canterbury, the colony saw a large influx of immigrants |
Hilary of Poitiers | ... e became a bishop, and added to it in later years, incorporating remarks of | on Romans. The best presentation of the case for Ambrose is by P. A. Balle ... |
Gregory of Tours | ... In a change of alliances, he also joined forces with Odoacer, according to | , to stop a band of the Alamanni who wished to invade Italy |
Benedict XIII | ... non. Clement VII lived in Avignon during his entire anti-pontificate, while | only lived there until 1403 when he was forced to flee to Aragon |
Pope Gregory XII | ... cted of sorcery, for example John XXI (1276–77) and Benedict XII (1334–42). | (1406–15) was questioned about magical practices in 1409 at the Council of ... |
Philippe Barbarin | ... han hatred," he said during a liturgy attended by Roman Catholic Archbishop | of Lyon, France. "We receive with gratitude and respect your cordial gestu ... |
Francisco Garcés | ... ty now exists was largely uninhabited prior to the last half century. Padre | , a Franciscan missionary, camped at Castle Butte in what is now Californi ... |
Pope Innocent I | ... t Milan with St. Ambrose. The first known record of him is in a document of | from the year 416, where he is spoken of as "Celestine the Deacon" |
Pope Leo XIII | ... not only to secularism, but also to both capitalism and socialism. In 1891 | promulgated Rerum Novarum, in which he addressed the "misery and wretchedn ... |
Huldrych Zwingli | ... for the community. Similarly, the Swiss Reformation of the "Third Reformer" | began with an ostentatious public sausage-eating during Lent—though Zwingl ... |
Athanasius | ... erred to as the "Hammer of the Arians" (Latin: Malleus Arianorum) and the " | of the West." His name comes from the Latin word for happy or cheerful. Hi ... |
Plutarch | ... lly to learn information concerning the secret or mystic cults of the gods. | asserted in his book On Isis and Osiris that during his visit to Egypt, Py ... |
Clement VII | ... the antipopes Clement VII and Benedict XIII returned to reside at Avignon. | lived in Avignon during his entire anti-pontificate, while Benedict XIII o ... |
Pope Pius XI | ... pecially the teachings of Pope Leo XIII in his encyclical Rerum Novarum and | in Quadragesimo Anno |
Pope John Paul II | ... ncil's decree on ecumenism, Unitatis Redintegratio of 21 November 1964, and | 's encyclical, Ut Unum Sint of 25 May 1995 |
Thomas Cobham | ... ry known to have existed in Oxford was founded in the fourteenth century by | , Bishop of Worcester. This small collection of chained books was situated ... |
Óscar Romero | ... lects events of the time, exemplified in the political sermon of Archbishop | , which is based almost word-for-word on the speech Romero made before he ... |
William Wake | In 1716, in a letter to | , Archbishop of Canterbury, Bentley announced his plan to prepare a critic ... |
Pope Leo XIII | ... f the Administration of the Property of the Holy See, a commission to which | entrusted the administration of the property remaining to the Holy See aft ... |
Jeffrey R. Holland | ... ration, a new library was also added, doubling the library space on campus. | followed as President in 1980, encouraging a combination of educational ex ... |
Pope Callixtus III | ... re's great-uncle Alonso Borgia (1378–1458), bishop of Valencia, was elected | in 1455. Cesare's father, Pope Alexander VI, was the first pope who openly ... |
Karol Wojtyła | Cardinal | was elected John Paul I's successor as Supreme Pontiff on Monday, 16 Octob ... |
Trevor Huddleston | ... Gollancz, Dr I.Grunfeld, E.M.Forster, Barbara Hepworth, Patrick Heron, Rev. | , Sir Julian Huxley, Edward Hyams, the Bishop of Llandaff Dr Glyn Simon, D ... |
Pope Pius X | ... Rampolla, on 18 December 1907, he received the episcopal consecration from | himself. The Pope donated his own [[:Episcopal ring]] and crosier to the n ... |
Peter Lombard | ... tury the identification of original sin with concupiscence was supported by | and others, but was rejected by the leading theologians in the next centur ... |
Manuel Rojo del Rio y Vieyra | ... nal British governor, acting through the Mexican-born Archbishop of Manila, | and the captive Real Audiencia. However, armed resistance to the British p ... |
Bishop of London | In 1599, the Archbishop of Canterbury John Whitgift and the | George Abbot, whose offices had the function of licensing books for public ... |
Cardinal Wolsey | ... mple of this was found in Henry VIII's England where his chief minister was | . An even more prominent example is that of Cardinal Richelieu, whose powe ... |
Pope Gregory I | ... er embellishment of his legend: it was commonly said in medieval times that | , through divine intercession, resurrected Trajan from the dead and baptiz ... |
Talleyrand | ... onfident of his victory. In a letter written to Minister of Foreign Affairs | , Napoleon requested Talleyrand not tell anyone about the upcoming battle ... |
Bishop of Monmouth | ... owan Cantuar. Immediately prior to his appointment to Canterbury he was the | in Wales. Whilst at Monmouth he was later, for a shorter period, also the ... |
Geoffrey Keating | In | 's Foras Feasa ar Éirinn Ireland's "ninth appellation it received likewise ... |
Pope Leo XIII | More was beatified by | in 1886 and canonised, with John Fisher, on 19 May 1935 by Pope Pius XI, a ... |
Cardinal Richelieu | ... (1941), she fictionalized Genghis Khan; in The Arm and the Darkness (1943), | ; in A Pillar of Iron (1965), the Roman senator and orator Cicero; and in ... |
Jim McGreevey | ... the first Canadian Member of Parliament to come out. Governor of New Jersey | announced his decision to resign, publicly came out as "a gay American" an ... |
Pey Berland | The university was created by the archbishop | in 1441 and was abolished in 1793, during the French Revolution, before re ... |
Karol Wojtyła | ... reasingly internationalist College of Cardinals, were figures like Cardinal | . Over the days following the conclave, cardinals effectively declared tha ... |
Archippus | ... e was the author of a treatise on the thratta — a kind of fish mentioned by | and other comic poets—and of a history of the Syrian kings. Both works are ... |
Frederick V | ... the Belgian general Johann Tserclaes, count of Tilly, smashed the rebels of | , who had been elected as rival King in 1618. After Frederick's flight to ... |
Pope Pius IX | ... ranco-Prussian War of 1870 inflicted further losses. Then from the curia of | came a decree condemning the use of Mass stipends for the purchase of book ... |
Archbishop of Canterbury | The chief minister of Henry VIII, the | Thomas Cranmer suggested removal of the Roman Catholic papacy's imperium i ... |
Cardinal d'Estouteville | ... 000 ducats, and a magnificent diamond worth 7,000 ducats, which was sent to | to cover monies he had advanced to the pontiff. The coin was not immediate ... |
Antonio Vivaldi | ... 006 of Johann Sebastian Bach (1685–1750). Other notable violinists included | (1678–1741) and Giuseppe Tartini (1692–1770), who, in their compositions, ... |
John Fisher | More was beatified by Pope Leo XIII in 1886 and canonised, with | , on 19 May 1935 by Pope Pius XI, and his feast day was established as 9 J ... |
Alexander du Toit | Earlier theories (e.g. by Alfred Wegener and | ) of continental drift were that continents "plowed" through the sea. The ... |
David Nitschmann | On Christmas Eve in 1741, | and Count Nicolaus von Zinzendorf, leading a small group of Moravians, fou ... |
Archbishop of Wales | ... h in Wales. Whilst at Monmouth he was later, for a shorter period, also the | . On 18 March 2012, Rowan Williams announced he would be stepping down as ... |
Plutarch | ... emeteries were merely the cremated remains of children that died naturally. | (ca. 46–120 AD) mentions the practice, as do Tertullian, Orosius, Diodorus ... |
Aristide Rinaldini | ... mfortable. Italian papers announced that on 15 April 1907, the papal nuncio | in Madrid would be replaced by Della Chiesa, who had worked there before. ... |
Laurence Sterne | ... night a traveler is a good indicator of this novel which is reminiscent of | 's Tristram Shandy. The book commences on a hypothesis of novelistic eleme ... |
Bishop of Coventry | The | since April 1998 has been the Rt Revd. Colin James Bennetts, who retired f ... |
Photius | In 858, | , a scholar who taught philosophy and lectured at the University of Consta ... |
Frederick V | ... e. In November 1619, the royal crown of Bohemia was offered to the Elector, | . (He was married to Elizabeth, eldest daughter of James I and VI of Engla ... |
NFC East | With Staubach and his team's "Doomsday Defense", the Cowboys won the | with a 12-2 regular season record |
Heliodorus of Emesa | The Hellenistic novelist | in his Aethiopica refers to the dancing of Tyrian sailors in honor of the ... |
Lawrence Jenco | ... on, and he assisted in successful negotiations which secured the release of | and David Jacobsen. His use of an American helicopter to travel secretly b ... |
Rei Hino | ... er series, but are usually considered as separate. Later, she co-stars with | in a special short story titled Rei and Minako's Girls School Battle |
Pope John Paul II | ... Redemptor the Pontiff called acts of reparation a duty for Roman Catholics: | referred to the concept as |
John Whitgift | In 1599, the Archbishop of Canterbury | and the Bishop of London George Abbot, whose offices had the function of l ... |
Gerald Gardner | ... agic was heralded by the repeal of the last Witchcraft Act in 1951. In 1954 | published a book, Witchcraft Today, in which he claimed to reveal the exis ... |
Thomas Cranmer | The chief minister of Henry VIII, the Archbishop of Canterbury | suggested removal of the Roman Catholic papacy's imperium in imperio (Lati ... |
Boniface IV | In 610 Laurence received letters from Pope | , addressed to him as archbishop and Augustine's successor. The correspond ... |
Peter | ... nastery church built by Augustine in Canterbury, and dedicated it to saints | and Paul; it was later re-consecrated as St Augustine's Abbey, Canterbury. ... |
Thomas Aquinas | ... ism saw something of a return to the idea of a mere unchallengeable despot. | condoned extra-legal tyrannicide in the worst of circumstances |
Kolos Vaszary | ... at Esztergom. He was for a time one of the professors there under Cardinal | . After acquiring considerable local reputation as chief notary of his cou ... |
Auxentius | ... cese, but in 364, extending his efforts once more beyond Gaul, he impeached | , bishop of Milan, and a man high in the imperial favour, as heterodox. Su ... |
Pope Pius V | ... 17th centuries that the Colosseum came to be regarded as a Christian site. | (1566–1572) is said to have recommended that pilgrims gather sand from the ... |
Rodrigo Borgia | ... ia Borgia (; 18 April 1480 – 24 June 1519) was the illegitimate daughter of | , the powerful Renaissance Valencian who later became Pope Alexander VI, a ... |
Pope Sylvester I | ... regory V as Pope in 999. Gerbert took the name of Sylvester II, alluding to | (314–335), the advisor to Emperor Constantine I (324–337). Soon after he w ... |
Pope Gregory VII | In consequence of his support of | in his quarrel with Henry, Welf lost but subsequently regained Bavaria; tw ... |
see of St David's | ... ster. Walter refused to acquiesce in the election of Gerald of Wales to the | in Wales and opposed the efforts of Gerald and others to elevate St David' ... |
Innocent II | ... I, Petrus Leonis, under the name of Anacletus II, was elected as a rival to | . In 1135, Innocent II held a council at Pisa, which confirmed his authori ... |
Archbishop of Canterbury | In 1958, the | appointed Eliot to a commission that produced The Revised Psalter (1963). ... |
titular bishopric of Ostia | ... College of Cardinals in addition to such a titular church also receives the | , the primary suburbicarian see. Cardinals governing a particular Church r ... |
Zenobius | ... ign. As an emblem of the city, it is therefore found in icons of the bishop | . The currency of Florence, the fiorino, was decorated with it, and it inf ... |
Pope Sixtus IV | ... nico d'Arignano, the nominal husband of Vannozza de' Cattanei. More likely, | granted Cesare a release from the necessity of proving his birth in a papa ... |
Bishops | ... sollicitationis. In this letter, addressed to "all Patriarchs, Archbishops, | and other Local Ordinaries, including those of Eastern Rite", the Holy Off ... |
Gregory of Tours | ... populania in the Early Middle Ages, founding its claims on the testimony of | , on the etymological link between the words "Basque" and "Gascon" – both ... |
Jędrzej Kitowicz | ... d pączki . Pączki have been known in Poland at least since the Middle Ages. | has described that during the reign of the August III under influence of F ... |
Glyn Simon | ... evor Huddleston, Sir Julian Huxley, Edward Hyams, the Bishop of Llandaff Dr | , Doris Lessing, Sir Compton Mackenzie, the Very Rev George McLeod, Miles ... |
Lords Spiritual | ... rham and Winchester), the Archbishop of Canterbury is ex officio one of the | of the House of Lords. He is one of the highest-ranking men in England and ... |
Sinéad O'Connor | ... d Del Naja steered "LP4" on their own. Enlisting the vocals of a flu-ridden | and perennial favourite Horace Andy, 100th Window was mastered in August 2 ... |
Henry of Huntingdon | ... ons regarded Constantine as a king of their own people. In the 12th century | included a passage in his Historia Anglorum that Constantine's mother Hele ... |
Gasparo Contarini | ... lace of Venice or Cyprus. For knowledge of this Shakespeare would have used | 's The Commonwealth and Government of Venice, in Lewis Lewkenor's 1599 tra ... |
Laud | ... an answer to Lysimachus Nicanor by John Corbet in the form of an attack on | and his system, in reply to a publication which charged the Covenanters wi ... |
Bishop of Piacenza | ... h-ranking officer both in the civil and military administration, as well as | |
Samuel Horsley | ... the third edition. In a new edition of 1821 he omitted the attack on Bishop | , and stated that his political opinions had undergone no substantial chan ... |
Archbishop of Canterbury | In 1599, the | John Whitgift and the Bishop of London George Abbot, whose offices had the ... |
Pope Pius X | ... when the Papal States were lost to the papacy. A reorganization, ordered by | , was incorporated into the Code of Canon Law (promulgated 1917). Further ... |
Silvano Maria Tomasi | ... oming more common than reinstatement.In a statement, read out by Archbishop | at a meeting of the United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva on 22 Se ... |
Johannes Schöner | ... Nuremberg to visit the professor of mathematics at the Eigidien Oberschule | . In Nuremberg he also made the acquaintance of other mathematicians such ... |
Nicholas of Cusa | ... tant threat. Towards the end of the Middle Ages, many philosophers, such as | and Francisco Suarez, propounded similar theories. The church was the fina ... |
Pope Eugene IV | He was born in Venice, a nephew of | (1431–1447) through his mother. His adoption of the spiritual career, afte ... |
Clement | ... e's action in consecrating Laurence to Saint Peter's action of consecrating | as Bishop of Rome during Peter's lifetime, which the theologian J. Robert ... |
Pope John Paul I | In the work known as Illustrissimi, a collection of letters written by | when he was Patriarch of Venice, Dupanloup is one of the "recipients" of t ... |
Thomas Aquinas | ... rejected by the leading theologians in the next century, chief of whom was | . He distinguished the supernatural gifts of Adam before the Fall from wha ... |
Deusdedit | ... een endowed by Peada; for the dedication of Wulfhere's gift both Archbishop | (died 664), and Bishop Jaruman (held office from 663), were present. The e ... |
Luigi d'Este | ... gardens of Sallust had been in antiquity. A visit to the villa of Cardinal | in 1573 convinced Pope Gregory XIII to start the building of a summer resi ... |
Everett Francis Briggs | ... r in Marion County, located .12 miles west of county route 27/2, the Father | Bridge", in honor of Briggs' dedication to the forgotten victims of the 19 ... |
Cesare Borgia | ... spered into the ears of some people that they were better off looking for a | than a Parsifal, they did not believe their ears." Safranski argues that t ... |
Pope Gregory II | ... re also of Eastern extraction. Also accompanying Constantine was the future | , then a deacon, and another Latin subdeacon Julian. Constantine specifica ... |
Jermain Wesley Loguen | ... y other religious congregations. Prior to the Civil War, due to the work of | and others in defiance of federal law, Syracuse was known as the "great ce ... |
Gregory Palamas | ... s is known as the psychosomatic union between the body and the soul). Saint | argued that man's body is not an enemy but a partner and collaborator with ... |
Pope Alexander VI | ... rms leading to a more democratic rule. But when Savonarola publicly accused | of corruption, he was banned from speaking in public. When he broke this b ... |
Pope Innocent II | ... o have been the Tenth Ecumenical Council by Roman Catholics. It was held by | in April 1139, and was attended by close to a thousand clerics. Its immedi ... |
John of Burgundy | ... entury the county was surrounded on all parts by Burgundy's possessions and | , an illegitimate son of John the Fearless, was made bishop. However what ... |
Hassan Dehqani-Tafti | ... rch member), Jean Waddell (who was secretary to the Iranian Anglican bishop | ), John Coleman, and Coleman's wife. On 10 Nov 1984, he negotiated with Co ... |
Everett Francis Briggs | Father | oversaw the memorial project and died just a few days after its completion ... |
Georges Lemaître | ... es (see Eddington–Finkelstein coordinates), although it took until 1933 for | to realize that this meant the singularity at the Schwarzschild radius was ... |
Rufino | In 238 AD Assisi was converted to Christianity by bishop | , who was martyred at Costano. According to tradition, his remains rest in ... |
Ignatius of Antioch | ... trine of the Second Coming of Christ first touched on by Paul of Tarsus and | (c. 35–107 AD), then given more consideration by the Christian apologist, ... |
see of Canterbury | Laurence succeeded Augustine to the | in about 604, and ruled until his death on 2 February 619. To secure the s ... |
Pope Pius II | He was elected to succeed | by the accessus in the first ballot of the papal conclave of 1464 with a m ... |
Pope Pius XI | As expressed by | in his encyclical Miserentissimus Redemptor, in the Roman Catholic traditi ... |
Joseph Ratzinger | ... legel, the historian Barthold Georg Niebuhr, the theologians Karl Barth and | and the poet Ernst Moritz Arndt |
Marcel Lefebvre | ... sia Dei of 2 July 1988 for the care of those former followers of Archbishop | who broke with him as a result of his consecration of four priests of his ... |
John III Rizocopo | ... ping in transit in Naples, Constantine crossed paths with Exarch of Ravenna | , then on his way to Rome to execute four high-ranking papal officials by ... |
Stefan Wyszyński | ... rations of the 1,000th anniversary of the Baptism of Poland led by Cardinal | and other bishops turned into a huge demonstration of the power and popula ... |
Jules Mazarin | ... s the real ruler of France. Richelieu was so successful that his successor, | , was also a cardinal. Guillaume Dubois and André-Hercule de Fleury comple ... |
Keith O'Brien | ... h descent.) The current head of the Catholic Church in Scotland is Cardinal | |
Pope Pius X | ... n Cardinal Rampolla had to leave his post with the election of his opponent | , and was succeeded by Cardinal Rafael Merry del Val, Della Chiesa was ret ... |
Adam of Usk | ... Boccaccio wrote about her in De Mulieribus Claris (1353). The Chronicon of | (1404) gives her a name, Agnes, and furthermore mentions a statue in Rome ... |
Gregory the Great's | According to | biography of Benedict, Life of Saint Benedict of Nursia, the monastery was ... |
Pope Benedict XIV | ... Vatican gained the recognition of Portugal as a lawful sovereign country by | in 1748 and the title "Most Faithful King" bestowed upon him and his succe ... |
Severian | ... opinion on the matter is known to us only by a criticism of it by Photius. | , Bishop of Gabala (d. 408), wrote that the Earth is flat and the sun does ... |
Cardinal Richelieu | ... e la Fresnaye and Jean Mairet). The support which the unities received from | eventually secured their complete triumph and Pierre Corneille, who had no ... |
Pope Alexander VI | ... hter of Rodrigo Borgia, the powerful Renaissance Valencian who later became | , and Vannozza dei Cattanei. Her brothers included Cesare Borgia, Giovanni ... |
Aldhelm | ... omposition of a large of vernacular religious poetry. In contrast to Saints | and Dunstan, Cædmon’s poetry is said to have been exclusively religious. B ... |
Saint Patrick | ... w lost) biography about this saint, a unique collection of traditions about | , as well as a section describing events in the North of England in the si ... |
Pope Sixtus IV | ... ficum qui hactenus ducenti fuere et XX in 1479 at the behest of his patron, | . The book contains the following account of the female Pope |
Ranulf Flambard | ... n for the king. At the latest, it was probably finished by 1100 when Bishop | was imprisoned there. Flambard was loathed by the English for exacting har ... |
Pythia | ... no connection to the oracle of Apollo, and should not be confused with the | |
Julian of Eclanum | ... uthern Italy and Sicily, where they were openly preached until the death of | in 455, and in Britain until the coming of |
Jonathan Swift | More was greatly admired by the Anglican writer | . Swift wrote that More was "a person of the greatest virtue this kingdom ... |
John Keble | Irenaeus' works were first translated into English by | and published in 1872 as part of the Library of the Fathers series |
Ludovico Trevisan | ... they had enjoyed under Pius II, a capitulation was subscribed by all except | . It bound the future Pope to continue the Turkish war, but he was not to ... |
Pope Paul VI | ... tially relaxed some of the regulations concerning fasting in 1956. In 1966, | in his apostolic constitution Paenitemini, changed the strictly regulated ... |
Robert Runcie | ... with a Primate, is a humorous account of his journeys with his former boss, | |
Ignatius of Antioch | ... ich the rite is referred to by the Didache (late 1st or early 2nd century), | (who died between 98 and 117) and Justin Martyr (writing between 147 and 1 ... |
Innocent III | ... supporting the monks and the king supporting the archbishop. Finally, Pope | ruled for the monks and ordered Walter to destroy what had been built |
Paul VI | ... mentioning Pinocchio to the learned intellectual discourses of Pius XII or | . Visitors spoke of his isolation and loneliness, and the fact that he was ... |
Pope Benedict XVI | ... of Roman Catholic ceremonies in the 20th and 21st centuries. For instance, | leads the Stations of the Cross called the Scriptural Way of the Cross (wh ... |
Germanus of Auxerre | There are also chapters relating events about Saint | that claim to be excerpts from a (now lost) biography about this saint, a ... |
Pope Agatho | ... occupied by Pope Vigilius in 547, the representatives of Pope Martin I, and | (while attending the Third Council of Constantinople). Eleven of Constanti ... |
Plutarch | ... ociety, 1947.*Parke, Herbert William, History of the Delphic Oracle, 1939.* | "Lives"*Rohde, Erwin, Psyche, 1925.* Seyffert, Oskar, , London: W. Glaishe ... |
Pope Gregory I | During his reign, Sabinian was seen as a counterfoil to his predecessor | . Whereas Gregory distributed grain to the Roman populace as invasion loom ... |
Pope John XXII | Fournier succeeded | as Pope in 1334, being elected on the first ballot of the papal conclave. ... |
Bishop of Winchester | ... ion by Catholic and anti-Protestant officials such as Stephen Gardiner (the | ) and Lord Wriothesley (the Lord Chancellor), who tried to turn the king a ... |
Pope Adrian II | ... uncil of Constantinople called in 869 by Emperor Basil I the Macedonian and | . Called in 879, this Greek Fourth Council of Constantinople, held after P ... |
Plutarch | ... icarnassus's Roman Antiquities, written during the late 1st century BC, and | 's early 2nd century Life of Romulus. These accounts provide the broad lit ... |
Thomas Bradwardine | In De causa Dei contra Pelagium et de virtute causarum, | denounced Pelagians in the 14th century and Gabriel Biel did the same in t ... |
Pope Paul VI | ... ed by a vote of 2,137 to 11 of the bishops assembled and was promulgated by | on November 21, 1964. The title in Latin means "Restoration of Unity" and ... |
Bruno the Great | In 959 the Lotharingian duke | divided the duchy between Lotharingia superior (Upper Lorraine) and Lothar ... |
Photius | ... Diodorus' opinion on the matter is known to us only by a criticism of it by | . Severian, Bishop of Gabala (d. 408), wrote that the Earth is flat and th ... |
Richard Cumberland | The utilitarian philosopher, Dr. | , was 14th Lord Bishop of Peterborough from 1691 until his death in 1718; ... |
Saint Boniface | In 744 the Synod of Soissons met at the instigation of Pippin III, and | , the Pope's missionary to pagan Germany, secured the condemnation of the ... |
Rodney K. Smith | ... a system), John Frederick Zeller III (President of Bucknell University) and | (President of Southern Virginia University), Robert Butkin (Dean of the Un ... |
Philippe de Cabassoles | ... y sought him to make him their archbishop. As Bishop of Cavaillon, Cardinal | , seigneur of Vaucluse, was the great protector of the Renaissance poet Pe ... |
Hincmar, archbishop of Reims | ... eigns (see the twelve legendary Paladins). A Frankish capitulary of 882 and | , writing about the same time, testify to the extent to which the judicial ... |
Duns Scotus | ... the Franciscans, though the most prominent Franciscan theologians, such as | and William of Ockham, eliminated the element of concupiscence |
Pope Damasus I | ... inus, bishop of Cordoba, and Hydatius, bishop of Mérida. Their complaint to | (also from Hispania) resulted in a synod held at Zaragoza in 380, in the a ... |
Pope Martin I | ... had formerly been occupied by Pope Vigilius in 547, the representatives of | , and Pope Agatho (while attending the Third Council of Constantinople). E ... |
Thomas Aquinas | ... which has successfully used this paradigm in the past, likely starting with | , who divided the study of behavior into two broad categories: cognitive ( ... |
Pius XI | ... as the first pope in decades not to have had either a diplomatic role (like | and John XXIII) or role (like Pius XII and Paul VI) in the Church |
Pope Urban III | ... his domains shocked and dismay in the Catholic countries of Western Europe. | literally died of the shock. The Crusader states had been reduced to three ... |
Guillaume Durand | ... and the celebration of the Eucharist. The first attribution was this was in | 's thirteenth-century Rationale Divinorum Officiorum |
James Bradley | ... n of the axis of the Earth was discovered in 1728 by the British astronomer | , but this nutation was not explained in detail until 20 years later |
Archbishop of York | ... ereign is the Supreme governor of the church). Along with his colleague the | he chairs the General Synod and sits or chairs many of the church's import ... |
Gordon H. Smith | ... with Democrat Jeff Merkley winning 48.8% of the vote (111,367); Republican | won 46.5% of the vote (106,114) |
Augustus of Saxony | ... 733–1738), which started as a dispute over the throne of the Poland between | , the previous King's elder son, and Stanisław Leszczyński. Austria suppor ... |
John XXIII | ... lus that he took it as a thankful honour to his two immediate predecessors: | , who had named him a bishop, and Paul VI, who had named him Patriarch of ... |
Eva Brunne | ... Mary Glasspool are openly homosexual bishops in the US Episcopal Church and | in Lutheran Church of Sweden. The Episcopal Church's recent actions vis-a- ... |
Peter | ... t James has been resurrected and that in 1829 he—along with the resurrected | and the translated John—visited Joseph Smith and Oliver Cowdery and restor ... |
Thomas Aquinas | Theologians, such as | , discussed Trajan as an example of a virtuous pagan. In the Divine Comedy ... |
John Wheelwright | ... ip. These two men, along with Anne Hutchinson and pastors Thomas Hooker and | , espoused religious or political views that were at odds with those of th ... |
Cumaean Sibyl | The sibyl who most concerned the Romans was the | , located near the Greek city of Naples, whom Virgil's Aeneas consults bef ... |
Athanasius of Alexandria | ... has been noted that the Greek term "homoousian" or "con-substantial", which | favoured, was actually a term reported to be put forth by Sabellius, and w ... |
Arnobius | ... , both separately and along with the writings of Minucius Felix, Cyprian or | . The Neoplatonist work was first printed by Aldus Manutius in 1501, and h ... |
Bossuet | ... s the "swan of Cambrai" ("le cygne de Cambrai"), in opposition to his rival | , the "eagle of Meaux" ("l'aigle de Meaux"), and he wrote his Maxims of th ... |
bishop of Milan | ... n 364, extending his efforts once more beyond Gaul, he impeached Auxentius, | , and a man high in the imperial favour, as heterodox. Summoned to appear ... |
Pope Simplicius | ... regory I. He was a widower with two children when he was elected to succeed | in 483 |
Pope Leo IV | ... tations, she acquired so great respect and authority that upon the death of | (as Martin says) by common consent she was chosen Pope in his room. As she ... |
Æthelwold | ... land's undisciplined monastic communities peaked during the era of Dunstan, | , and Oswald. (Historians continue to debate the extent and significance o ... |
Gil de Albornoz | ... people in 1189, was rebuilt in 1367 on orders of the papal legate, cardinal | |
Pope Vigilius | ... stantine stayed in the Placidia Palace, which had formerly been occupied by | in 547, the representatives of Pope Martin I, and Pope Agatho (while atten ... |
Álvaro del Portillo | ... mbers were 50:50 for and against Franco, according to John Allen. Similarly | , the former Prelate of Opus Dei, said that any statements that Escrivá su ... |
John Payne | ... nd now lends his name to several places and businesses in the city; and St. | , one of the group of prominent Catholics martyred between 1535 and 1679 a ... |
Saint Adalbert of Prague | ... of his royal court. While in Rome for Otto's imperial coronation, Bruno met | , the first Apostle of the Prussians, killed a year later, which inspired ... |
Sinéad O'Connor | ... edward, The Boomtown Rats, Boyzone, Ronan Keating, Thin Lizzy, Paddy Casey, | , The Script and My Bloody Valentine. The two best known cinemas in the ci ... |
Archbishop of Wales | ... included the suburban cathedral 'village' of Llandaff, whose bishop is also | since 2002. There is also a Roman Catholic cathedral in the city. Since 19 ... |
Paul VI | ... his two immediate predecessors: John XXIII, who had named him a bishop, and | , who had named him Patriarch of Venice and a cardinal. He was also the fi ... |
Bishop of Rochester | ... e begun in 1078, however the exact date is uncertain. William made Gundulf, | , responsible for its construction, although it may not have been complete ... |
Ferdinand Maria | ... ts effect during the next two centuries was more dubious. Maximilian's son, | (1651–1679), who was a minor when he succeeded, did much indeed to repair ... |
Pope John Paul II's | ... on Ecclesia Dei is a commission of the Roman Catholic Church established by | motu proprio Ecclesia Dei of 2 July 1988 for the care of those former foll ... |
Stephen Gardiner | ... ere viewed with suspicion by Catholic and anti-Protestant officials such as | (the Bishop of Winchester) and Lord Wriothesley (the Lord Chancellor), who ... |
Pope John Paul II | On Sunday, October 9, 1979, | celebrated Mass on the National Mall during a visit to Washington. The cel ... |
Rafael Merry del Val | ... ith the election of his opponent Pope Pius X, and was succeeded by Cardinal | , Della Chiesa was retained in his post |
Roger Vangheluwe | ... of such claims had been raised since April 2010, when the Bishop of Bruges, | , admitted to molesting a boy and resigned. The Vatican protested against ... |
Pope John Paul II | ... ormation, maintained, at the King's mercy, allegiance to the pope. In 2000, | declared More the "heavenly patron of statesmen and politicians". In 1980, ... |
archbishopric of Seville | ... to remain linked to the king of Spain. Since then it was a suffragan of the | . The Diocese of Tanger was suppressed and incorporated to that of Ceuta i ... |
Nicolaus Ludwig Zinzendorf | ... cution of the Austrian emperor, and some found refuge on the lands of Count | . These followers became known as Schwenkfelders. A group arrived in Phila ... |
Gary Crittenden | ... ly, alumni of BYU who have served as business leaders include Citigroup CFO | '76, former Dell CEO Kevin Rollins '84, Deseret Book CEO Sheri L. Dew, and ... |
Pope Gregory I | ... as born into a Roman senatorial family and was a great-great-grandfather of | . He was a widower with two children when he was elected to succeed Pope S ... |
Athanasius | While he thus closely followed the two great Alexandrians, Origen and | , in exegesis and Christology respectively, his work shows many traces of ... |
Archbishopric of Salzburg | ... russia, founding numerous towns. Thousands of Protestants expelled from the | were allowed to settle in depleted East Prussia. The province was overrun ... |
Gene Robinson | ... ns. Within the Anglican communion there are openly gay clergy; for example, | and Mary Glasspool are openly homosexual bishops in the US Episcopal Churc ... |
Stephen Langton | ... barons assembled there before they met King John at Runnymede in 1215, and | held a consecration there shortly after the issue of Magna Carta. Sir Thom ... |
Saint Mungo | #redirect | |
Georges Darboy | Shortly afterwards Mgr | , archbishop of Paris, forbade the continuance of the business, and even s ... |
Karol Wojtyla | ... his papal name. This legacy was so remarkable that his successor, Cardinal | , chose the same name |
Romano Bonaventura | ... 26), and helped by Theobald IV of Champagne and the papal legate to France, | , she organized an army. Its sudden appearance brought the nobles momentar ... |
Saint Adalbert | ... ed in Magdeburg, seat of Adalbert of Magdeburg, the teacher and namesake of | . While still a youth he was made a canon of Magdeburg cathedral. The fift ... |
Cardinal Newman | ... 's new French novel about Christian redemption; and essays by St Augustine, | and Walter Pater |
Pope Leo XIII | But Della Chiesa's association with Rampolla, the architect of | 's (1878–1903) foreign policy, made his position in the Secretariat of Sta ... |
Bishop Berkeley | ... s fiercely criticized by a number of authors, most notably Michel Rolle and | . Berkeley described infinitesimals in his book The Analyst in 1734 |
Hrabanus Maurus | ... elm, Bede, Alcuin - and was abridged or largely used in the next century by | of Fulda and Servatus Lupus of Ferrières. About a thousand manuscripts exi ... |
Archbishop of Canterbury | Laurence (sometimes Lawrence or Laurentius; died ) was the second | from about 604 to 619. He was a member of the Gregorian mission sent from ... |
Thomas Becket | Until | ’s fame overshadowed Dunstan's, he was the favourite saint of the English ... |
Maximilian Kolbe | ... yr in the Calendar of Saints of the Lutheran Church on August 14, alongside | |
Martin of Tours | ... nown for his chronicle of sacred history, as well as his biography of Saint | |
Roberto Tucci | ... rule from which dispensation may be obtained from the pope, as by Cardinals | , Albert Vanhoye, Domenico Bartolucci and most recently Karl Josef Becker. ... |
Pope John XXIII | In 1960, | commented that Opus Dei opens up "unsuspected horizons of ". Furthermore, ... |
Matthew Parker | ... sold. Leland died in 1552 and it is known to have been in the possession of | from some time after that until his own death in 1575. Although Parker beq ... |
Pope Gregory XV | In 1622, forty years after her death, she was canonized by | . The Cortes exalted her to patroness of Spain in 1617, and the University ... |
Pope Pius V | ... I. This identification is not found in the Tridentine Missal promulgated by | in 1570. Since nothing is known of the Saints Alexander, Eventius and Theo ... |
Fray Tomás de Berlanga | European discovery of the Galápagos Islands occurred when Spaniard | , the fourth Bishop of Panama, sailed to Peru to settle a dispute between ... |
Walter de Merton | ... y of Oxford in England. Its foundation can be traced back to the 1260s when | , chancellor to Henry III and later to Edward I, first drew up statutes fo ... |
Pope Paul VI | ... ed that Opus Dei opens up "unsuspected horizons of ". Furthermore, in 1964, | praised the organization in a handwritten letter to Escrivá, saying |
Aidan Kelly | ... gical was later found amongst his papers from the Museum after his death by | and was later obtained by Richard and Tamarra James of the Wiccan Church o ... |
Benedict III | ... he 11th to the 9th century, indicating that Joan reigned between Leo IV and | in the 850s. According to the Chronicon |
Christoph Schönborn | ... esthood is morally superior to other sections of society."On 11 March 2010, | , Archbishop of Vienna, said that priestly celibacy could be one of the ca ... |
Lanfranc | ... g was destroyed by a fire in 1074, his relics were translated by Archbishop | to a tomb on the south side of the high altar in the rebuilt Canterbury Ca ... |
Pope Eleuterus | ... fering imprisonment for the faith, sent him in 177 to Rome with a letter to | concerning the heresy Montanism, and that occasion bore emphatic testimony ... |
Gerald Gardner | ... al calendar, as they desired more frequent celebrations. Their High Priest, | , was away visiting the Isle of Man at the time, but he did not object whe ... |
William Longchamp | ... e Lucy to the see of Winchester, Richard FitzNeal to the see of London, and | to the see of Ely. The elevation of so many new bishops was probably meant ... |
Bishop of London | ... ia, or court, consisting of some of the senior bishops of his province. The | —the most senior cleric of the church with the exception of the two archbi ... |
Martynas Mažvydas | ... l translation in 1545; the first printed book in Lithuanian, a Catechism by | was published in 1547 in Königsberg, Prussia (now Kaliningrad, Russia). La ... |
Pope Paul III | ... e Defence of the Seven Sacraments. After Henry broke from the Roman Church, | revoked the grant, but Parliament passed a law authorising its continued u ... |
Hippolytus of Rome | ... n the third century. This had come to him via the teachings of Noetus and . | knew Sabellius personally and mentioned him in the Philosophumena. He knew ... |
Geoffrey of Monmouth | ... s well as Sir Thomas Malory's Le Morte d'Arthur and other Arthurian tales ( | 's Historia Regum Britanniae, the Pearl Poet's Sir Gawain and the Green Kn ... |
Pope Leo XIII | ... and was there in Rome when, in 1878, Pope Pius IX died and was followed by | . The new pope received the students of the Capranica in private audience ... |
Pope Pius IX | ... gy several times. In 1877, Wilde was left speechless after an audience with | in Rome. He eagerly read Cardinal Newman's books, and became more serious ... |
Pope Martin IV | ... e the diplomatic intent of the union worked out in the West, but in the end | , an ally of Charles of Anjou, excommunicated Michael VIII. In 1275, Micha ... |
Pope Leo III | ... the Eastern Empire's claim to the Roman legacy for several centuries, after | crowned Charlemagne, king of the Franks, as the "Roman Emperor" on Decembe ... |
Thomas Aquinas | ... is founded on a natural law argument informed by scripture and proposed by | , the traditional conservative Protestant view is based on an interpretati ... |
Angelo Sodano | ... t peace and a crime against international law". Cardinal Secretary of State | indicated that only the United Nations Security Council had the power to a ... |
George Pell | ... the Greens' Lee Rhiannon lobbied the Vatican to reject Australian Cardinal | as a candidate for the Papacy on the basis of his support for conservative ... |
Bruno the Great | In 953 the German king Otto I had appointed his brother | Duke of Lotharingia |
Angelo Mai | ... in the excerpts of Constantine Porphyrogenitus and an epitome discovered by | in a Milan manuscript. The first three books of Appian, and Plutarch's Lif ... |
Richard FitzNeal | ... o bishoprics at this council were Godfrey de Lucy to the see of Winchester, | to the see of London, and William Longchamp to the see of Ely. The elevati ... |
George Bell | ... liot accepted credit only for the authorship of one scene and the choruses. | , the Bishop of Chichester, had been instrumental in connecting Eliot with ... |
Leo IV | ... date from the 11th to the 9th century, indicating that Joan reigned between | and Benedict III in the 850s. According to the Chronicon |
John Kaye | Boole became a prominent local figure, an admirer of | , the bishop. He took part in the local campaign for early closing. With E ... |
Aicard | ... h Hugues de Dié, papal legate as council president. During the 1080 council | , usurper of the See of Arles was deposed, and Gibelin placed in his posit ... |
Jacob of Nisibis | ... kes of Armenia (son of Saint Gregory the Illuminator); Leontius of Caesarea | ;, a former hermit; Hypatius of Gangra; Protogenes of Sardica; Melitius of ... |
Cardinal Richelieu | ... rought more attention to Corneille. He was selected to write verses for the | ’s visit to Rouen. The Cardinal took notice of Corneille and selected him ... |
Scholasticus | ... ppus was overthrown in June 713 and his successor, Anastasius II had exarch | deliver to the Pope a letter affirming his support for the Sixth General C ... |
Eusebius of Nicomedia | ... he belief several years later for political reasons; under the influence of | and others |
Pope John XXIII | ... as given the Pacem in Terris Award, named after a 1963 encyclical letter by | that calls on all people of good will to secure peace among all nations. P ... |
Patriarch Acacius of Constantinople | ... first act was to repudiate the Henoticon, a deed of union originating with | and published by Emperor Zeno with the view of allaying the strife between ... |
Mitt Romney | ... Hampshire primary on January 8, defeating former Governor of Massachusetts | in a close contest, to once again become one of the front-runners in the r ... |
Mariano Rampolla | ... which cardinals and high members of the Roman Curia were invited. Cardinal | took note of him and furthered his entry in the diplomatic service of the ... |
Plutarch | ... genuine exiles, were able to access their income in Attica from abroad. In | , following as he does the anti-democratic line common in elite sources, t ... |
Epiphanius | ... on incorrect interpretations of scripture, or simply duplicitous in nature. | provides an example when he writes of the "Archontics": "Some of them ruin ... |
Pope Paul VI | ... full university in 1955. The title of Pontifical University was granted by | in 1972. The university has three campuses in the city |
Missionary Bishop | ... n Archbishops, Metropolitan Bishops, Diocesan Bishops, Patriarchal Exarchs, | s, Auxiliary Bishops, Suffragan Bishops, Assistant Bishops, Chorbishops an ... |
Archdiocese of Esztergom | ... ioceses of Veszprém, Győr, Kalocsa, Vác, and Bihar. He also established the | . Thus he set up an ecclesiastical organisation independent of the German ... |
Pope John Paul II | ... e of about a million at his home city of Lyon, in celebration of a visit by | . Watching from Lyon Cathedral, the Pope began the concert with a good-nig ... |
Albertus Magnus | ... he existence of "speaking heads" involved Gerbert of Aurillac (d. 1003 AD), | (1198–1280), and Roger Bacon (1214–1294) |
Thomas Aquinas | For Saint | (who also taught the Perfection of Christ) the "'Son of God' is God as kno ... |
John Polkinghorne | ... ch it has created the physical world. However many modern scholars (such as | ) hold that it is part of a deity's nature to be consistent and that it wo ... |
Cesare Borgia | ... became Pope Alexander VI, and Vannozza dei Cattanei. Her brothers included | , Giovanni Borgia, and Gioffre Borgia. It is often suggested that Cesare a ... |
Albert Vanhoye | ... dispensation may be obtained from the pope, as by Cardinals Roberto Tucci, | , Domenico Bartolucci and most recently Karl Josef Becker. A cardinal who ... |
Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I of Constantinople | The canonization of Saint Stephen was recognized by | in the year 2000 |
Peter the Fuller | In his first synod, Felix excommunicated | , who had assumed the See of Antioch against papal wishes. In 484, Felix a ... |
Nightcrawler | ... n universe also includes such notable heroes as Wolverine, Storm, Colossus, | , Shadowcat, Rogue, Psylocke, Dazzler, Gambit and Emma Frost. Besides the ... |
Richard Fleming | The College was founded on 13 October 1427 by | , then Bishop of Lincoln, to combat the Lollard teachings of John Wyclif. ... |
Pope Pius XI | ... itical) should perform a function which can be performed by a smaller unit. | , in Quadragesimo Anno, provided the classical statement of the principle: ... |
Pope Adrian I | ... Rome and was elected Pope only one day after the burial of his predecessor, | , who had worked for good relations between Rome and the Frankish Empire u ... |
Augustus III | ... farms. The reigns of two kings of the Saxon Wettin dynasty, Augustus II and | , brought the Commonwealth further disintegration. The Great Northern War, ... |
John XXIII | ... able to have a great deal of influence in all university affairs. In 1413, | granted the university extensive special privileges, such as university ju ... |
Pope Paul VI | ... y Gómez (May 23, 1946 – March 22, 2005) was a self-proclaimed successor of | , and was recognised as Pope Gregory XVII by supporters of the Palmarian C ... |
Pope John Paul II | ... inier III; King Baudouin of the Belgians; King Juan Carlos and Queen Sophia | ;; Prince Charles, and Prince Philip |
Martynas Mažvydas | ... cabulary used in the first book printed in the Lithuanian language in 1547, | 's Catechism. The majority of loan words in the 20th century arrived from ... |
Pope Gregory I | He had been sent by | as Apostolic nuncio, to Constantinople, but he apparently was not entirely ... |
Patriarch Heraclius of Jerusalem | ... aks of dysentery and fever, which claimed the lives of Frederick of Swabia, | , and Theobald V of Blois. When the sailing season began again in spring 1 ... |
John Wesley | ... clergyman and poet Samuel Wesley, the younger brother of Anglican clergyman | and Anglican clergyman Samuel Wesley (the Younger), and father of musician ... |
Polycarp | ... vine three", in some sense, was expressed in the second century writings of | , Ignatius, and Justin Martyr. But the doctrine in a more full-fledged for ... |
Pope Gregory VII | ... of Cavaillon) accompanied the legate to Rome and were consecrated there by | |
Pope Pius II | ... do Pandolfo Malatesta, duke of Rimini, who was later defeated. As a result, | gave San Marino some castles and the towns of Fiorentino, Montegiardino an ... |
William Warham | ... n carried for safety to their abbey. This story was disproved by Archbishop | , who opened the tomb at Canterbury in 1508. They found Dunstan's relics s ... |
Hippolytus of Rome | ... Flavius Josephus, to be derived from the eponymous Lud son of Shem; however | (AD 234) offered an alternative view that the Lydians were descended from ... |
Saint Patrick | ... Hacienda San Patricio", which they named after the patron saint of Ireland, | . A relative of O'Daly, Demetrio O'Daly, succeeded Captain Ramon Power y G ... |
Bishop of Lincoln | The College was founded on 13 October 1427 by Richard Fleming, then | , to combat the Lollard teachings of John Wyclif. He intended it to be "a ... |
Pope John Paul I | ... denied Opus Dei's petition to become a personal prelature, Moncada stated. | , a few years before his election, wrote that Escrivá was more radical tha ... |
Pope Gregory I | ... St Augustine of Hippo), who arrived in Kent in 597 AD, having been sent by | on a mission to the English. He was accepted by King Æthelbert, on his con ... |
Benedict XVI | ... ls prior to his election. After being elected Pope, Ratzinger took the name | . Benedict is the eighth German Pope, and is the second non-Italian Pope s ... |
John Donne | During her reign Queen Elizabeth I made at least five visits to the area. | and Sir Walter Raleigh also had residences here in this era. It was at thi ... |
Leo I | ... that contained the first four Pope Leos. In the 18th century, the relics of | were separated from the other Leos, and he was given his own chapel |
Pope Sixtus III | ... historians accept this belief doubt remains. The basis for this is because | 's list of saints buried in St. Callistus' Catacomb does not include Urban ... |
Richard Busby | ... st Earl of Clarendon. From Westminster School, where he was a scholar under | , at the age of eighteen he was elected to Christ Church, Oxford in 1681. ... |
Apuleius | ... s of Bidpai, Hitopadesha and Vikram and the Vampire. Both The Golden Ass by | and Metamorphoses by Ovid extend the depths of framing to several degrees. ... |
Basil of Caesarea | At least one early Christian writer, | (329–379), believed the matter to be theologically irrelevant |
Charles Theodore | ... arian line of the Wittelsbachs became extinct, and the succession passed to | , the elector palatine. After a separation of four and a half centuries, t ... |
Senator Orrin Hatch | ... federate flag, Helms ran into Moseley Braun in an elevator. Helms turned to | and said, "Watch me make her cry. I'm going to make her cry. I'm going to ... |
William Laud | ... ng actions of both king and council, particularly in the form of Archbishop | |
Marcellus of Ancyra | ... as Bishop of Alexandria, was deposed by the First Synod of Tyre in 335 and | followed him in 336. Arius himself returned to Constantinople to be readmi ... |
William Tyndale | In 1531, | published An Answer unto Sir Thomas More’s Dialogue in response to More’s ... |
Pope Alexander II | ... ed, had such a cross on his flag in the Battle of Hastings, given to him by | . A red ensign with the cross in the fly is used as civil ensign |
Louis Massignon | ... VI, who had been a member of the circle (the Badaliya) of the Islamologist | . Pope Paul VI chose to follow the path recommended by Maximos IV and he t ... |
Pope John VIII | ... some Medieval writers referred to the female Pope as "John VIII," a genuine | reigned between 872 and 882. Due to the Dark Ages lack of records, confusi ... |
Lords Spiritual | In the case of a demise of the crown, the Privy Council—together with the | , the Lords Temporal, the Lord Mayor of the City of London, the Aldermen o ... |
Spottiswood | ... n and itself superseded the term chirch which was derived from Old English. | , in his account of religious houses in Scotland, mentions that the Franci ... |
Thomas Becket | ... centered around the attempt by Baldwin to build a church dedicated to Saint | , just outside of the town of Canterbury. The plan was to staff the church ... |
Pope Urban V | The return of | from Avignon in 1367 led to an increased interest in ancient monuments, pa ... |
Karol Józef Wojtyła | In October 1978, the Archbishop of Kraków, Cardinal | , became Pope John Paul II, head of the Roman Catholic Church. Polish Cath ... |
Eusebius of Caesarea | ... urch, which they left to ecclesiastical history—a genre that was founded by | . However, Averil Cameron has argued convincingly that Procopius' works re ... |
Orrin Hatch | ... letics, such as gold-medal wrestler Kurt Angle; politics, such as Utah Sen. | ; business, such as self-made billionaire Mark Cuban; and science, such as ... |
Pope Paul VI | ... n Law (promulgated 1917). Further steps toward reorganization were begun by | in the 1960s. Among the goals of this curial reform were the modernization ... |
Pope Paul VI | ... which is always conferred posthumously and was finally bestowed upon her by | in 1970 along with Saint Catherine of Siena making them the first women to ... |
Carlo Fea | ... gain and built the Alessandrine neighborhood over it. But the excavation by | , who began clearing the debris from the Arch of Septimius Severus in 1803 ... |
Plutarch | ... nificantly towards its restoration. Hadrian offered complete autonomy. Also | was a significant factor by his presence as a chief priest |
Archbishop of Canterbury | ... involving the Church, which culminated in the murder of Thomas Becket, the | . The problem for the King was that the Church acted like an imperium in i ... |
Jozef Tiso | ... nderground resistance against the wartime pro-German Slovak state headed by | . In August 1944, Dubček fought in the Slovak National Uprising and was wo ... |
Bartolomé de las Casas | ... y evidence is the multi-volume History of the Indies by the Catholic priest | who observed the region where Columbus was governor. In contrast to "the m ... |
John Chrysostom | ... fore at Constantinople from Pope Theophilus of Alexandria towards Patriarch | and the unfortunate turnouts of the Second Council of Ephesus in AD 449, w ... |
John Wesley | In the 18th century Lincoln became the cradle of Methodism when | , a fellow there from 1726, held religious meetings with his brother Charl ... |
Pope Gregory II | The negotiations regarding the Trullan canons were conducted by the future | . A degree of compromise (the "so-called Compromise of Nicomedia")—which " ... |
Pope John XXIII | ... period between the first and second sessions saw the change of pontiff from | to Pope Paul VI, who had been a member of the circle (the Badaliya) of the ... |
Brendan Smyth | ... difficult”.One of the most notorious cases of sex abuse in Ireland involved | , who, between 1945 and 1989, sexually abused and indecently assaulted 20 ... |
Abel Muzorewa | ... support for the Internal Settlement government in Zimbabwe Rhodesia, under | , and campaigned along with Samuel Hayakawa for the immediate lifting of s ... |
Plutarch | Polybius and | , a Greek author writing under the Roman empire, cite a battle at Mt. Lyka ... |
Thomas Aquinas | | acknowledged difficulty in comprehending a deity's power. Aquinas wrote th ... |
Archbishop of Armagh | ... International Commission on Decommissioning, as well as Lord Eames, former | and Sir George Quigley, former top civil servant. Chastelain stated that t ... |
Archbishop of Canterbury | ... annoyance with the interference of their Visitor (patron) William Laud, the | . Due to this, the college was moved to London at the start of the Civil W ... |
Nicholas V | ... er, which chose the occupants of the see until 1447; in that year a bull of | gave the right of nomination to the elector of Brandenburg, with whom the ... |
Juan Carlos Patino-Arango | ... lawsuit of conspiring to cover up the molestation of three boys in Texas by | in Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston. He sought and obtained immunity from ... |
Pope Boniface VIII | ... ng the recent strings of political humiliation, such as the apprehension of | by Philip IV of France, the "Babylonian Captivity." the Great Schism, and ... |
Gilbert White | ... iased empirical research for modern estimates of biodiversity. In 1768 Rev. | succinctly observed of his Selborne, Hampshire "all nature is so full, tha ... |
William of Tyre | The chronicler | reports on the renovation of the Church in the mid-12th century. The crusa ... |
Pope Paul VI | ... first and second sessions saw the change of pontiff from Pope John XXIII to | , who had been a member of the circle (the Badaliya) of the Islamologist L ... |
Erythraean | ... h several Sibyls: Heraclitus names at least three Sibyls, the Phrygian, the | , and the Hellespontine. Frazer, James, translation and commentary on Paus ... |
Pope Honorius II | ... e Order was founded in 1120. In 1126, when it received papal approbation by | , there were nine houses; others were established in quick succession thro ... |
Irenaeus | ... e Greek adjective gnostikos ("learned", "intellectual", Greek γνωστικός) by | (c.185 AD) to describe the school of Valentinus as he legomene gnostike ha ... |
Thomas Becket | ... standing difficulty involving the Church, which culminated in the murder of | , the Archbishop of Canterbury. The problem for the King was that the Chur ... |
Pope John XXII | ... postasy rests largely on two near-contemporary sources: a 1324 assertion by | that Mindaugas had returned to error, and the Galician–Volhynian Chronicle ... |
Salii | ... Republic, only minor priesthoods with little political importance like the | , the Flamines and the Rex Sacrorum were exclusively filled by patricians |
John Chrysostom | In his Homilies Concerning the Statutes St. | (344–408) explicitly espoused the idea, based on his reading of Scripture, ... |
Eusebius of Nicomedia | ... the Church during the remainder of the fourth century. Almost immediately, | , an Arian bishop and cousin to Constantine I, used his influence at court ... |
Tarcisio Bertone | ... Catholic Church. It is headed by the Cardinal Secretary of State, currently | , and performs all the political and diplomatic functions of Vatican City ... |
Walter de Merton | Merton College was founded in 1264 by | , Lord Chancellor and Bishop of Rochester. It has a claim to be the oldest ... |
Pope Benedict XVI | The district of Altötting was established in 1837. The current | was born here 1927 in the village of Marktl |
Cesare Borgia | ... short period of time. Two of these periods were in the feudal era. In 1503, | occupied the republic until his death several months later. On October 17, ... |
Jonathan Swift | A Yahoo is a legendary being in the novel Gulliver's Travels (1726) by | |
Jeremy Taylor | ... choly Dane." Other major melancholic authors include Sir Thomas Browne, and | , whose Hydriotaphia, Urn Burial and Holy Living and Holy Dying, respectiv ... |
Thomas Rotherham | ... f the college's validity and the munificence of a second Bishop of Lincoln, | . Richard Fleming died in 1431, and the first rector, William Chamberleyn, ... |
Pope John Paul II | ... es. The office also settles labour issues which arise. It was instituted by | on 1 January 1989 by an apostolic letter in the form of a |
Archbishops of York | ... Eardwulf of Northumbria and settled various matters of dispute between the | and Canterbury. He also reversed the decision of his predecessor Pope Adri ... |
Patriarch Nikon | ... and 1504, and the New Jerusalem Monastery in Moscow Oblast, constructed by | between 1656 to 1666 |
Sixtus IV | ... sonal splendor that gratified his sense of self-importance. After his death | and a selected group of cardinals inspected the treasure laid up against e ... |
Pope John Paul II | ====2003==== | stated that "there is no place in the priesthood and religious life for th ... |
Pope Victor I | ... haereses (Against Heresies). In 190 or 191, he was influential in bringing | to reality over his attempted excommunication of the Christian communities ... |
Archbishop of York | ... archbishopric of York. Walter was also an unsuccessful candidate to become | in September 1186. The medieval chronicler Gervase of Canterbury said that ... |
Louis Duchesne | ... ring of the Popes to exclude Joan from history. Historians have known since | 's critical edition of the Liber Pontificalis that the 'renumbering' was a ... |
Aidan Kelly | ... Goddess and the God during the winter months. The name Mabon was coined by | around 1970 as a reference to Mabon ap Modron, a character from Welsh myth ... |
St. Saturnin | ... spania. A rival tradition places the relics of the Apostle in the church of | at Toulouse; if any physical relics were ever involved, they might plausib ... |
Ludovico Ludovisi | ... licit confidence, to assist him in the government of the Church. His nephew | , a young man of 25 years, seemed to him to be the right person and, at th ... |
Plutarch | ... graphers dispute the claim, including the highly regarded secondary source, | . He mentions 14 authors, some of whom believed the story (so Onesicritus, ... |
Eustathius of Antioch | ... to sway Constantine's favor from the orthodox Nicene bishops to the Arians. | was deposed and exiled in 330. Athanasius, who had succeeded Alexander as ... |
Caleb Sprague Henry | ... mni include priests and ministers Ebenezer Porter, Jonathan Clarkson Gibbs, | , Arthur Whipple Jenks, Solomon Spalding, and Joseph Tracy; and rabbis Mar ... |
Eusebius of Caesarea | Fragments attributed by the Christian | to the semi-legendary Phoenician historian Sanchuniathon, which Eusebius t ... |
Io | ... y, but agree that she is Phoenician, and from a lineage that descended from | , the mythical nymph beloved of Zeus, who was transformed into a heifer. S ... |
Pope Lucius I | ... k ancestry, he became bishop of Rome in 254, having served as archdeacon of | , who appointed Stephen his successor |
Rex Sacrorum | ... hoods with little political importance like the Salii, the Flamines and the | were exclusively filled by patricians |
Saint Pothinus | ... sacre took place in Lyons. Returning to Gaul, Irenaeus succeeded the martyr | and became the second Bishop of Lyon |
Eusebius of Caesarea | ... aphies dealing with Constantine's life and rule. The nearest replacement is | 's Vita Constantini, a work that is a mixture of eulogy and hagiography. W ... |
Gerald Gardner | ... anuary 1880 – 12 January 1951), was a wealthy Englishwoman who was named by | as a leading member of the New Forest coven, a group of pagan Witches into ... |
Augustine of Canterbury | ... his arrival is disputed. He was consecrated archbishop by his predecessor, | , during Augustine's lifetime, in order to ensure continuity in the office ... |
Martin Waldseemüller | ... the largest wall map made to date, both created by the German cartographer | in Saint-Dié-des-Vosges in France. These were the first maps to show the A ... |
Pope Pius IX | ... Chiesa entered the Collegio Capranica and was there in Rome when, in 1878, | died and was followed by Pope Leo XIII. The new pope received the students ... |
Hugh Candidus | ... version of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle and a history of the abbey by the monk | . The burgesses received their first charter from "Abbot Robert" – probabl ... |
Giulio Alberoni | ... epublic until his death several months later. On October 17, 1739, Cardinal | , legate (papal governor) of Ravenna who in 1739, aiding certain rebels, p ... |
Benedict XIII | ... sed for the papal chair, and secured ten votes at the conclave that elected | |
Plutarch | ... d by Angelo Mai in a Milan manuscript. The first three books of Appian, and | 's Life of Camillus also embody much of Dionysius |
Pope John XXIII | ... awarded the Pacem in Terris Award, named after a 1963 encyclical letter by | calling for all people to strive for peace |
Nicasius of Dijon | ... Italia, Cecilian of Carthage from Africa, Hosius of Córdoba from Hispania, | from Gaul, and Domnus of Stridon from the province of the Danube |
Don Cupitt | ... arl Barth, Jürgen Moltmann, Hans Küng, John Robinson, Bishop David Jenkins, | , challenged traditional theological positions and understandings of the B ... |
William Laud | ... this was Merton's annoyance with the interference of their Visitor (patron) | , the Archbishop of Canterbury. Due to this, the college was moved to Lond ... |
Reginald Pole | ... ed only in the order of cardinal deacons. For example, in the 16th century, | was a cardinal for 18 years before he was ordained a priest. In 1917 it wa ... |
Luis Ladaria Ferrer | Cardinal William Levada is the Prefect and Archbishop | is the Secretary |
Jeffrey R. Holland | ... postles (Neil L. Andersen, D. Todd Christofferson '69, David A. Bednar '76, | '65 & '66, Dallin H. Oaks '54, and Reed Smoot 1876), and two General Relie ... |
Pope Clement IV | ... ity of bias in this account, since Mindaugas had been at war with Volhynia. | , on the other hand, wrote in 1268 of "Mindaugas of happy memory" (clare m ... |
Pope Alexander VI | ... many mistresses of Lucrezia's father Rodrigo Borgia, who is better known as | |
John Chrysostom | ... ple, two different anaphoras are currently used: one is attributed to Saint | , the other to Saint Basil the Great. Among the Oriental Orthodox, a varie ... |
Archbishop of Canterbury | William Laud was appointed | in 1633, and began a series of unpopular reforms such as attempting to ens ... |
John Chrysostom | ... part of the empire, even when facing a strong emperor — the controversy of | with a much weaker emperor a few years later in Constantinople led to a cr ... |
John Wesley | In terms of theology, Whitefield, unlike | , was a supporter of Calvinism. The two differed on eternal election, fina ... |
Pope Benedict XVI | | showed his own admiration for Benedict XV following his election to the Pa ... |
Cornelius Jansen | ... er writers, such as Martin Luther (1483-1546), John Calvin (1509-1564), and | (1585-1638) reacted in different ways against Pelagianism, and evaluations ... |
Georges Lemaître | In 1927, | set out a theory that has since come to be called the Big Bang theory of t ... |
Avitus | ... as a fast succession of Emperors. After Petronius, the Gallic-Roman senator | was proclaimed Emperor by the Visigoth king Theodoric II and ruled for two ... |
John Ball | ... iating the poem from Lollardy and the religious and political radicalism of | during the Great Rising of 1381. (Ball appropriated Piers and other charac ... |
Abune Antonios | ... Church does not recognize the deposition of the third Patriarch of Eritrea, | |
Reginald Heber | ... Ford – Roy Fuller – Robert Graves – Thomas Gray – Fulke Greville – Heath – | – Felicia Dorothea Hemans – W. E. Henley – George Herbert – Ralph Hodgson ... |
Victor of Vita | The impression given by ancient sources such as | , Quodvultdeus, and Fulgentius of Ruspe was that the Vandal take-over of C ... |
John Ponet | ... Thomas Wyatt the younger instigated what became known as Wyatt's rebellion, | , the highest-ranking ecclesiastic among the exiles, allegedly participate ... |
Randall Balmer | ... was simply way ahead of the curve". American professor of religious history | believed that the causes of the demise of Solid Rock were "Idealism, marit ... |
Eusebius of Caesarea | ... Ecclesiastica ("Church History"), which departed from its ostensible model, | , in emphasizing the place of the emperor in church affairs and in giving ... |
Sebastian Kappen | ... d others were censured. Tissa Balasuriya, in Sri Lanka, was excommunicated. | , an Indian theologian, was also censured for his book Jesus and Freedom. ... |
Saint Blane | ... ly known. Dunoon may have been important. The late 6th or early 7th century | was associated with Bute, but modern scholars are less certain that his tr ... |
Samuel Peters | ... e, such as: "Connecticotian" – Cotton Mather in 1702. "Connecticutensian" – | in 1781. "Nutmegger" is sometimes used, as is "Yankee" (the official state ... |
Narcissus Marsh | ... e Prizes, Keeper of the Records in Birmingham's Tower, and Vicar-General to | , the primate. King found a friend in Anthony Upton, one of the judges, wh ... |
Hilary of Poitiers | ... ouncil). Later, Socrates Scholasticus recorded more than 300, and Evagrius, | , Jerome and Rufinus recorded 318. Delegates came from every region of the ... |
Bérenger Saunière | ... had deposited a treasure in Rennes-le-Château that was later discovered by | during the late 19th century. This was later utilised by Pierre Plantard i ... |
Ivan Illich | ... ises and efficacy of compulsory schooling, including Deschooling Society by | , 1970 and No More Public School by Harold Bennet, 1972 |
Pio Laghi | ... t the U.S. plan to invade Iraq. Pope John Paul II's special envoy, Cardinal | , was sent by the Church to talk with George W. Bush to express opposition ... |
Æthelwold | ... ointed to the Bishopric of London, and Oswald to that of Worcester. In 963, | , the Abbot of Abingdon, was appointed to the See of Winchester. With thei ... |
Pope Paul V | ... 54 – 8 July 1623), born Alessandro Ludovisi, was pope from 1621, succeeding | on 9 February 1621 |
Pope Urban II | Many historians maintain that the main concern of | , when calling for the First Crusade, was the threat to Constantinople fro ... |
Pope Sylvester I | ... vice of the Holy See can be traced back to the First Council of Nicaea when | sent legates to represent him during the discussions of the council. The p ... |
Pope Innocent IV | ... a of its enormous dimensions from the fact recorded, that when, in AD 1245, | , accompanied by twelve cardinals, a patriarch, three archbishops, the two ... |
Karl Theodor Anton Maria von Dalberg | ... which Goethe experienced in Wetzlar. In 1803 Wetzlar came under the rule of | , the Archchancellor of the Holy Roman Empire and a close ally of Napoleon ... |
Bishop of Maidstone | The | was previously a second actual suffragan bishop working in the diocese, un ... |
Comiskey Park | ... olo Grounds in Manhattan, Boston's Fenway Park along with Wrigley Field and | in Chicago. Likewise from the Eastern League to the small developing leagu ... |
Gerard Manley Hopkins | ... species for s, so bluebell woods are likely to date back to at least 1600. | , one of the romantic poets, was very keen on the plant as revealed by the ... |
Bishop Porteus | ... lave trade as equally important goals. At the suggestion of Wilberforce and | , King George III was requested by the Archbishop of Canterbury to issue i ... |
Pope John Paul II | The Holy See took a firm stance against the U.S. plan to invade Iraq. | 's special envoy, Cardinal Pio Laghi, was sent by the Church to talk with ... |
Laurent Cassegrain | ... reflecting telescope developed around 1672 and attributed to French priest | . The first Cassegrain antenna was invented and built in Japan in 1963 by ... |
Pope Adrian I | ... ps of York and Canterbury. He also reversed the decision of his predecessor | , in regards to the granting of the pallium to Higbert, Bishop of Lichfiel ... |
Pope Sixtus IV | ... coes by Il Romanino in the Malpaga Castle) and Rome, in Italy, where he met | . In that occasion, his wife received by the pope the authorization to fou ... |
Pope Sylvester II | ... in the late 10th century with the efforts of Gerbert d'Aurillac, the later | (r. 999–1003). Pope Sylvester II applied the use of sighting tubes with hi ... |
Saint Martin | At this time Severus came under the powerful influence of | , bishop of Tours, by whom he was led to devote his wealth to the Christia ... |
Pope John Paul II | ... ins unaccepted by Roman Catholics, who accepted Pope John Paul I (1978) and | (1978–2005) as the true successors of Pope Paul VI. Pope Gregory XVII is g ... |
Thomas Bradwardine | How to react to Pelagius has remained a question in Christian theology. | (c. 1290-1349) wrote De causa Dei contra Pelagium et de virtute causarum a ... |
Wolsey | After | fell, More succeeded to the office of Chancellor in 1529. He dispatched ca ... |
Luigi Sturzo | ... improved as well, as the Pope now permitted Catholic politicians led by Don | to participate in national Italian politics |
Irenaeus | ... mber 96. Elliot begins his lengthy review of historical evidence by quoting | , a disciple of Polycarp. Polycarp was a disciple of the Apostle John. Ire ... |
Simplician | ... er (April 4, 397) Ambrose also died. He was succeeded as bishop of Milan by | . Ambrose's body may still be viewed in the church of S. Ambrogio in Milan ... |
Eusebius of Caesarea | ... II, i.e., before 450. The purpose of the history is to continue the work of | (1.1). It relates in simple Greek language what the Church experienced fro ... |
John II Casimir | ... because of large scale internal conflicts (e.g. Lubomirski's Rokosz against | and rebellious confederations), corrupted legislative processes and manipu ... |
Polycarp | ... is lengthy review of historical evidence by quoting Irenaeus, a disciple of | . Polycarp was a disciple of the Apostle John. Irenaeus mentions that the ... |
Ernesto Cardenal | ... ion was published in 1961. In a letter to a Latin-American Catholic writer, | , Merton wrote: "The world is full of great criminals with enormous power, ... |
Pope John Paul I | ... of the Catholic Church remains unaccepted by Roman Catholics, who accepted | (1978) and Pope John Paul II (1978–2005) as the true successors of Pope Pa ... |
Vivaldi | ... nt), Presto of the violin concerto RV 315 (Summer) from the Four Seasons by | , and a scene in Act II of Rossini's opera The Barber of Seville |
Jonathan Swift's | Micropsia has also been related to | novel Gulliver's Travels. It has been referred to as "Lilliput sight" and ... |
Patrick Clune | ... of the British agents, together with another man, Conor Clune (a nephew of | , Archbishop of Perth, Australia), who were being held in Dublin Castle, w ... |
José María Arizmendiarrieta | ... in the region of Spain and France, was founded by a Catholic priest, Father | , who seems to have been influenced by the same Catholic social and econom ... |
Leonardo Boff | ... ssident priests from teaching such doctrines in the Catholic Church's name. | was suspended and others were censured. Tissa Balasuriya, in Sri Lanka, wa ... |
Saint Peter | ... n about Clement's life. According to Tertullian, Clement was consecrated by | , and he is known to have been a leading member of the church in Rome in t ... |
Georges Lemaître | ... erse. Alexander Friedman proposed a number of such solutions in 1922 as did | in 1927. In some of these the universe has been expanding from an initial ... |
Plutarch | ... inspiration. However, most commonly, these refer to an observation made by | , who presided as high priest at Delphi for several years, who stated that ... |
Willibrord | ... ar / by thorns) in a deed of gift from the Frankish Lord Herelaef to bishop | in 721, Deurne remained a collection of subsistence farming hamlets stretc ... |
James Hackman | On 19 April 1779, clergyman | was hanged there following his 7 April murder of courtesan and socialite M ... |
Pietro Gasparri | ... litus, and, for the codification of Canon Law, which under della Chiesa and | , he as Eugenio Pacelli had the opportunity to participate in |
Plutarch | ... device appeared. A description of how it operated is not known from before | (50-120 AD) |
Pietro Gasparri | ... aw of the Roman Catholic Church, the creation of which he had prepared with | and Eugenio Pacelli during the pontificate of Pius X. The new Code of Cano ... |
R. S. Thomas | ... e – George Szirtes – Alfred, Lord Tennyson – Dylan Thomas – Edward Thomas – | – Francis Thompson – Anthony Thwaite – Chidiock Tichborne – Aurelian Towns ... |
Archbishop of Canterbury | ... as solicitors or barristers but satisfy the Master of the Faculties of the | that they possess an adequate understanding of the law. Both the latter tw ... |
Bishop of Lichfield | ... cessor Pope Adrian I, in regards to the granting of the pallium to Higbert, | . He believed that the English episcopate had been misrepresented before A ... |
Ludwig Kaas | ... mocrats were physically removed. After meeting with Centre leader Monsignor | and other Centre Trade Union leaders daily and denying them a substantial ... |
Bishop of Rochester | ... shop of Salisbury as precentor, the Bishop of Worcester as chaplain and the | as |
Archbishop of Canterbury | ... hapel Royal of Kensington Palace on 27 July 1867 by Charles Thomas Longley, | , and her three godparents were Queen Victoria, the Prince of Wales (later ... |
Pope Pius II | ... Catholics and Utraquists. It would only last for a short period of time, as | declared the Basel Compacts to be invalid in 1462 |
Bishop of Pamiers | ... known for his intelligence and organizational ability. In 1317 he was made | . There he undertook a rigorous hunt for Cathar heretics, which won him pr ... |
Simon Sudbury | ... eeting resistance and looted the Jewel House. The Archbishop of Canterbury, | , took refuge in St John's Chapel, hoping the mob would respect the sanctu ... |
Ascanio Sforza | Alexander asked Giovanni's uncle, Cardinal | , to persuade Giovanni to agree to a divorce. Giovanni refused and accused ... |
Hippolytus | It is believed that the schismatic | was still leading a rival Christian Congregation in Rome, and that he publ ... |
Bishop of Chichester | George Bell, the | , was instrumental in getting Eliot to work as writer with producer E. Mar ... |
Pope John Paul II | The visit of | to Ireland in September proved to be a welcome break for Lynch from the da ... |
Pope John IV | ... He was made a cardinal deacon (possibly around 640) and a full cardinal by | |
Ulfilas | ... ext preserved is the 4th century Gothic translation of the New Testament by | . Early testimonies of West Germanic are in Old Frankish (5th century), Ol ... |
Pope Benedict XVI | ... tween Ratzinger and some of the bishops. As mentioned above, Ratzinger (now | ) issued official condemnations of certain elements of liberation theology ... |
Pope Paul V | ... and there is no evidence that he had been ordained. In March 1612, however, | appointed him as the Archbishop of Bologna, for which he was presumably or ... |
John XI | ... the only pope to have fathered an illegitimate son who later became pope ( | ), his pontificate has been described as "dismal and disgraceful" |
Pope Urban IV | ... had hired earlier, and began a rapprochement with Venice. With the help of | Michael VIII concluded peace with his former enemies. By the terms of the ... |
Pope Julius II | ... ibyl, Persian Sibyl, Cumaean Sibyl and the Erythraean Sibyl. The library of | in the Vatican has images of sibyls and they are in the pavement of the Si ... |
Eustathius of Antioch | ... , the first rank was held by the three patriarchs: Alexander of Alexandria, | , and Macarius of Jerusalem. Many of the assembled fathers—for instance, P ... |
Paulinus of Nola | ... and wrote Saint Paulin, évêque de Nôle (St. Paulinus, Bishop of Nola, about | ). Just like Jean Chapelain's La Pucelle, ou la France délivrée, an epic p ... |
Irenaeus | ... after Linus and Cletus/Anacletus in the earliest (c. 180) account, that of | , who is followed by . The meaning of these early reports is unclear, give ... |
Pope Pius XI | ... was founded by the Roman Catholic Church in 1936 under its current name by | and is placed under the protection of the reigning Pope). Its aim is to pr ... |
Eusebius of Nicomedia | ... the sacred ceremonies according to custom". He chose the Arianizing bishop | , bishop of the city where he lay dying, as his baptizer. In postponing hi ... |
Saint Patrick | ... e sent Palladius to Ireland to serve as a bishop in 431. Bishop Patricius ( | ) continued this missionary work. Pope Celestine strongly opposed the Nova ... |
Henry More | ... rm "Gnosticism" does not appear in ancient sources, and was first coined by | in a commentary on the seven letters of the Book of Revelation, where More ... |
Lindsay Urwin | Other examples of his bold interviewing style include getting | , the Bishop of Horsham, to admit that God created the Universe, and then ... |
Orrin Hatch | ... dy continued his close working relationship with ranking Republican Senator | , and they were close allies on many health-related measures |
Bishop of Salisbury | ... rts. After an unsuccessful candidacy to the see of York, Walter was elected | shortly after the accession of Henry's son Richard I to the throne of Engl ... |
Basil of Caesarea | ... matters of exegesis he is, like Hilary, an Alexandrian. In dogma he follows | and other Greek authors, but nevertheless gives a distinctly Western cast ... |
John Carmel Heenan | ... nce to the biblical quote of Jesus as a "sign that is spoken against." Said | , Cardinal Archbishop of Westminster: "One of the proofs of God's favour i ... |
Abune Paulos | ... essure and went to exile in the United States. The newly elected Patriarch, | was officially recognized by the Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria in 1 ... |
Bishop of Ely | ... ocese of Ely, with pastoral care for these parishes delegated to him by the | . The city falls wholly within the Roman Catholic Diocese of East Anglia ( ... |
Bishop of Worcester | ... op of Lincoln as vice-chancellor, the Bishop of Salisbury as precentor, the | as chaplain and the Bishop of Rochester as |
Pope Pius XI | ... ans of production, rather than the large units typical of modern economies. | further stated, again in Quadragesimo Anno, "every social activity ought o ... |
Alfredo Ottaviani | ====1962====Cardinal | , Secretary of the Sacred Congregation of the Holy Office, sent a letter w ... |
Wilfrid | ... eded as King of Mercia by his brother, Æthelred. Stephen of Ripon's Life of | describes Wulfhere as "a man of proud mind, and insatiable will" |
Merrill J. Bateman | ... alled the Rex Lee Run. Lee was replaced shortly before his death in 1996 by | . Bateman was responsible for the building of 36 new buildings for the Uni ... |
Pope Alexander IV | ... d the Holy See were reinforced. In 1255, Mindaugas received permission from | to crown his son as King of Lithuania. A noble court, an administrative sy ... |
Thomas Aquinas | ... scholars to estimate the circumference of Earth with Eratosthenes' method. | (1225–1274), the most important and widely taught theologian of the Middle ... |
Pope Sylvester II | ... Pomerania) to help convert the local population into Christianity. In 1003 | appointed Bruno, at the age of 33, to head a mission amongst the pagan peo ... |
Johannes Dantiscus | The canon of Warmia Georg Donner and the bishop of Warmia | were both patrons of Rheticus. Rheticus was also commissioned to make a st ... |
Victor III | ... were several Antipopes; during this time the reign of the legitimate Popes | , Urban II, and Paschal II was not always established in Rome, since the c ... |
Irenaeus | ... Apostle. ( and ) It began to be developed by the 2nd-century Bishop of Lyon | in his controversy with the dualist |
Pythia | ... his oracle: the sibyl or priestess of the oracle at Delphi was known as the | ; she had to be an older woman of blameless life chosen from among the pea ... |
Geoffrey of Monmouth | The tower story is repeated and embellished by | in his Historia Regum Britanniae, though he attributes it to Merlin, sayin ... |
Macarius of Jerusalem | ... y the three patriarchs: Alexander of Alexandria, Eustathius of Antioch, and | . Many of the assembled fathers—for instance, Paphnutius of Thebes, Potamo ... |
Pope Leo XIII | The Roman Catholic Diocese of Portsmouth was founded in 1882 by | . Vatican policy in England at the time was to found sees in locations oth ... |
Bishop of Chichester | ... dit only for the authorship of one scene and the choruses. George Bell, the | , had been instrumental in connecting Eliot with producer E. Martin Browne ... |
Henry of Huntingdon | ... Biedanheafde. It is not known where this battle was, or who was the victor. | , a 12th-century historian who had access to versions of the Anglo-Saxon C ... |
Athanasius of Alexandria | ... y on the teaching put forth by a man who eventually would become Pope Saint | , the chief opponent of Arius |
Pope Siricius | ... val of the synod which met at Trier in the same year, but Ambrose of Milan, | and Martin of Tours protested against Priscillian's execution, largely on ... |
Parson Woodforde | ... l Defoe stayed in Aylsham in 1732 and enjoyed a meal at the Black Boys Inn. | , the famous Norfolk diarist, also dined there in 1781, and Horatio Nelson ... |
Pope Benedict XV | ... a priest. With the revision of the Code of Canon Law promulgated in 1917 by | , only those who are already priests or bishops may be appointed cardinals ... |
Pope Innocent VIII | In February 1487, | halted the proposed debate, and established a commission to review the ort ... |
Cardinal Richelieu | ... al authority decayed in the coures of the Thirty Years' War, Chief Minister | urged the occupation of the duchy in 1641. France again had to vacate it a ... |
Pope Paul VI | On 15 December 1969, he was appointed Patriarch of Venice by | and took possession of the archdiocese on 3 February 1970. Pope Paul creat ... |
Emmanuel-Joseph Sieyès | ... ngland and to Montesquieu in 18th century France, the latter especially via | pamphlet What Is the Third Estate? |
Ulfilas | Of Gothic literature in the Gothic language we have the Bible of | and some other religious writings and fragments. Of Gothic legislation in ... |
John Wesley | ... he early 13th century, but little remains from that period. John Bunyan and | both preached in the church. In 1865–1868 the tower and spire were complet ... |
Apuleius | ... m Syria her worship extended to Greece and to the furthest West. Lucian and | give descriptions of the beggar-priests who went round the great cities wi ... |
Charles Theodore | ... ved with joy by the long-suppressed Liberals, and laid siege to Ingolstadt. | , who had done nothing to prevent wars or to resist the invasion, fled to ... |
Gilbert Foliot | In June 1170, Roger de Pont L'Évêque, the archbishop of York, along with | , the bishop of London, and Josceline de Bohon, the bishop of Salisbury, c ... |
Bishop of Salisbury | ... of Winchester as chancellor, the Bishop of Lincoln as vice-chancellor, the | as precentor, the Bishop of Worcester as chaplain and the Bishop of Roches ... |
Photius | ... th independent additions, to elucidate the portions of Scripture concerned. | (cod. 206), while blaming the diffuseness of these commentaries, praises t ... |
Pietro Bembo | ... cesco II Gonzaga, Marquess of Mantua as well as a love affair with the poet | . Francesco's wife was the cultured intellectual , the sister of Alfonso, ... |
Cardinal Richelieu | ... alk over literary subjects, and to read and mutually criticize their works. | offered the society his protection, and in this way (1635) the Académie fr ... |
Clodoald | ... Île-de-France, near Paris), which was named for the 6th-century French monk | |
Pope Clement VII | ... . His desire for an annulment of his marriage was known as the . Ultimately | refused the petition; consequently it became necessary for the King to ass ... |
Pope Nicholas I | ... Photius I of Constantinople, who became Patriarch in 858 and was deposed by | in 863, was an enemy of the Pope. He vehemently asserted his own authority ... |
Josceline de Bohon | ... he archbishop of York, along with Gilbert Foliot, the bishop of London, and | , the bishop of Salisbury, crowned Henry the Young King at York. This was ... |
Roger de Pont L'Évêque | In June 1170, | , the archbishop of York, along with Gilbert Foliot, the bishop of London, ... |
Pierre Teilhard de Chardin | ... have been strongly influenced by the Jesuit paleontologist and philosopher | |
Eusebius of Caesarea | Other remarkable attendees were Eusebius of Nicomedia | ;, the purported first church historian; Nicholas of Myra, from whom the p ... |
Pierre Batiffol | ... ristian living, is dependent upon Clement of Alexandria, and is assigned by | to the Novatian Bishop Sisinnius (c. 400). The extant work under the title ... |
Comiskey Park | LaMotta and Robinson had their fifth bout at | , Chicago, Illinois on September 26, 1945. Robinson won by a very controve ... |
Pope Martin V | ... cardinals were created by the contending popes. Beginning with the reign of | , cardinals were created without publishing their names until later, terme ... |
William Belton Murrah | ... Millsaps in 1889-90 by the donation of the college's land and $50,000. Dr. | was the college's first president, and Bishop Charles Betts Galloway of th ... |
Thomas Becket | ... a verse drama by T. S. Eliot that portrays the assassination of Archbishop | in Canterbury Cathedral in 1170, first performed in 1935. Eliot drew heavi ... |
Polycarp | ... ormative in the early development of Christian theology. He was a hearer of | , who in turn was a disciple of John the Evangelist |
Timothy | ... drinus, Mosquensis, and Angelicus) state that Paul wrote it in Athens after | had returned from Macedonia with news of the state of the church in Thessa ... |
Pope Pius V | ... the like. In various respects, Baius was rightly seen as Pelagian. In 1567 | condemned seventy-nine propositions from his writings in the papal bull Ex ... |
George Herbert | ... reville – Heath – Reginald Heber – Felicia Dorothea Hemans – W. E. Henley – | – Ralph Hodgson – Thomas Hood – Teresa Hooley – Gerard Manley Hopkins – A. ... |
Edward Stillingfleet | ... appointed to be the headmaster of Spalding Grammar School before he was 21. | , dean of St Paul's, hired Bentley as tutor to his son, which enabled the ... |
Irenaeus | ... doctrine of original sin was first developed in 2nd-century Bishop of Lyon | 's struggle against Gnosticism. Irenaeus contrasted their doctrine with th ... |
Eusebius' | ... e definitely dated. Two prominent sources do exist for Urban's pontificate: | history of the early Church and also an inscription in the Coemeterium Cal ... |
Bishop of Winchester | # Aymer of Lusignan (1222–1260), | # Agnès de Lusignan (1223–1269). Married William II de Chauvigny (d. 1270) ... |
Pope John Paul II | Of the 232 cardinals that | elevated, four were named in pectore. The identities of three of these wer ... |
Cardinal Richelieu | ... hdrawn in 1629, by Louis XIII, following the Siege of La Rochelle, in which | blockaded the city for fourteen months |
Baldwin of Exeter | ... sed a "Saladin tithe" on their citizens to finance the venture. In Britain, | , the archbishop of Canterbury, made a tour through Wales, convincing 3,00 ... |
Bernabé Cobo | ... s from their description by the Spanish chroniclers Pedro Cieza de León and | |
Thomas Becket | ... ally was dedicated to the Virgin Mary. Later, following the murder of Saint | in 1170, Becket's name was added to the dedication. A modern icon panel by ... |
Pope Benedict XVI | Among its notable alumni and faculty are | , Heinrich Heine, Heinrich Hertz, Friedrich Hirzebruch, Friedrich Nietzsch ... |
Eusebius of Nicomedia | Other remarkable attendees were | ; Eusebius of Caesarea, the purported first church historian; Nicholas of ... |
Nestorius | ... other theological dispute in the 5th century occurred over the teachings of | , the Patriarch of Constantinople who taught that God the Word was not hyp ... |
Bishop of Lincoln | ... s Canterbury's provincial dean, the Bishop of Winchester as chancellor, the | as vice-chancellor, the Bishop of Salisbury as precentor, the Bishop of Wo ... |
Pope Martin I | ... o condemn the Ecthesis, but died before he could convene it. His successor, | , did so instead. Theodore was buried in St. Peter's Basilica |
Archbishop of Westminster | ... Jesus as a "sign that is spoken against." Said John Carmel Heenan, Cardinal | : "One of the proofs of God's favour is to be a sign of contradiction. Alm ... |
Bishop of Horsham | ... examples of his bold interviewing style include getting Lindsay Urwin, the | , to admit that God created the Universe, and then asked him, "And since t ... |
Bishop of Durham | ... Alnwick Castle and the surrounding manor were bequeathed to Antony Bek the | . The Percy family benefited from England's wars with Scotland; through hi ... |
Martin of Tours | ... hich met at Trier in the same year, but Ambrose of Milan, Pope Siricius and | protested against Priscillian's execution, largely on the jurisdictional g ... |
John Ball | | , a priest involved as a leader in the Great Rising of 1381 (also known as ... |
Pope Alexander III | ... mmunication and interdict against the king and bishops and the kingdom, but | , though sympathising with him in theory, favoured a more diplomatic appro ... |
Archbishop of Canterbury | ... Court of Faculties. The Court of Faculties is attached to the office of the | |
Bishop of Peterborough | ... ich covers the remainder of Cambridgeshire and western Norfolk. The current | has been appointed Assistant Bishop in the Diocese of Ely, with pastoral c ... |
Charles Betts Galloway | ... 00. Dr. William Belton Murrah was the college's first president, and Bishop | of the United Methodist Church organized the college's early fund-raising ... |
Bishop Fisher | ... efulness and necessity of Revelation (London, 1709—1710) and the preface to | 's Funeral Sermon for Margaret, Countess of Richmond and Derby (1708)—both ... |
Stephen II | ... ateran Palace. In the eighth century, most likely during the pontificate of | (752–7), a document called the Donation of Constantine first appeared, in ... |
Mitt Romney | ... letter was issued immediately before the Florida primary. Dole has endorsed | for the Republican nomination |
Bishop of Winchester | ... xception of the two archbishops—serves as Canterbury's provincial dean, the | as chancellor, the Bishop of Lincoln as vice-chancellor, the Bishop of Sal ... |
Huldrych Zwingli | ... events in Germany, a movement began in Switzerland under the leadership of | . These two movements quickly agreed on most issues, as the recently intro ... |
Eduardo Francisco Pironio | ... th general great joy they had elected "God's candidate". Argentine Cardinal | stated that, "We were witnesses of a moral miracle." And later, Mother Ter ... |
Germanus of Auxerre | ... s own right, and also includes other characters such as Vortimer and Bishop | |
Jonathan Swift | ... uel Beckett. Other influential writers and playwrights include Oscar Wilde, | and the creator of Dracula, Bram Stoker. It is arguably most famous as the ... |
Josyf Slipyj | ... wear Eastern-style cassocks entirely of scarlet. (There is a photograph of | , Major Archbishop of the Ukrainian Catholic Church and Cardinal, wearing ... |
Gregory XII | ... opo d'Angelo de Scarparia, who visited Rome in 1406 for the enthronement of | . The pope sat briefly on two "pierced chairs" at the Lateran: "...the vul ... |
St. Adalbert | ... tival of Polish Song. The city is also known for its 10th century Church of | and the 14th century Church of the Holy Cross. There is a zoo, the Ogród Z ... |