The Papal Conclaves, as They Were and as They areChapman and Hall, 1876 - 434 頁 |
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第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 37 筆
第 xvi 頁
... Difficulty of entirely abolishing nepotism . - Changing characteristics of the Papacy . - Dispute at the death - bed of Alexander . - Rospigliosi elected Pope as Clement IX . - His character . The fluctuations in the population of Rome ...
... Difficulty of entirely abolishing nepotism . - Changing characteristics of the Papacy . - Dispute at the death - bed of Alexander . - Rospigliosi elected Pope as Clement IX . - His character . The fluctuations in the population of Rome ...
第 xvii 頁
... difficult.- Moderation of recent Popes as to nepotism operates to increase this.- Saying of the Princess Albani . - Abundant evidence in this Conclave that negotiations with a view to the election were not checked by the Bulls to that ...
... difficult.- Moderation of recent Popes as to nepotism operates to increase this.- Saying of the Princess Albani . - Abundant evidence in this Conclave that negotiations with a view to the election were not checked by the Bulls to that ...
第 7 頁
... difficulty of the matter arises from the number of Antipopes , and the exceedingly obscure questions which arise as to many of these whether he is to be con- sidered as Pope or Antipope . From all which it will be readily understood ...
... difficulty of the matter arises from the number of Antipopes , and the exceedingly obscure questions which arise as to many of these whether he is to be con- sidered as Pope or Antipope . From all which it will be readily understood ...
第 11 頁
... difficult , whether from the standpoint of the fifth or that of the fifteenth century , to imagine any scheme by which the end to be attained could have been on the whole more advantageously reached . It may be admitted further , that ...
... difficult , whether from the standpoint of the fifth or that of the fifteenth century , to imagine any scheme by which the end to be attained could have been on the whole more advantageously reached . It may be admitted further , that ...
第 23 頁
... difficulty in coming to an election , and consequent long duration of the Conclave - a circumstance which has always been held to be , and may readily be believed to be , injurious to the Church . In old times , indeed , when the period ...
... difficulty in coming to an election , and consequent long duration of the Conclave - a circumstance which has always been held to be , and may readily be believed to be , injurious to the Church . In old times , indeed , when the period ...
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常見字詞
accessit adoration Aldobrandino Alexander Altieri ambassador Apostolic Archbishop Barberini Baronius bishop Borghese Borgia Borromeo Brosses Bull Camerlengo candidate Caraffa cardinal nephew cell ceremonial chance character Chigi Church clave clavist Clement Clement VIII Clement X Colonna Conclave which elected conclavist Council Court creatures crowns death declared deemed dinal ecclesiastical electors Eminences Emperor faction Farnese favour French cardinals French party friends give Gregory XV hand Holy hope Innocent interregnum Italian Julius Ludovisi matter Medici Montalto Moroni nepotism object Olympia Orsini palace Paoline Chapel papabili Papacy Papal Papal Conclaves Paul person Peter Pius Pius IV Pontiff Pope's present probably Prospero Colonna recognised reigned remarks Roman Rome rules Sacred College San Marcello Saoli says the conclavist scrutators scrutiny seems simoniacal simony Sixtus squadrone volante successor things thought throne tion Tosco Urban VIII Vatican Venetian voting papers writer zealous Popes
熱門章節
第 19 頁 - College ") of cardinals forming the Council of the Pope, and electing the Pope from their own number. This did not become a stabilized regulation till after the third Lateran Council (1173), since when the College of Cardinals has consisted of six cardinal bishops, fifty cardinal priests, and fourteen cardinal deacons. The cardinals' " Red hat " was made part of the official vestments by Innocent IV (1245) " in token of their being ready to lay down their life for the gospel.
第 326 頁 - Olympia established herself in the Vatican as its mistress ! No step of domestic government or foreign policy decided on, no grace, favour, or promotion accorded, no punishment inflicted, was the pontiff's own work. His invaluable sister-in-law did all. He was absolutely a puppet in her hands. The keys of S. Peter were strung to her girdle; and the only function in which she probably never interfered, was blessing the people.
第 421 頁 - Christum Dominum qui me judicaturus est me eligere quern secundum Deum judico eligi deberé et quod idem in accessu prœstabo...
第 50 頁 - ... our stories are usually separated from their divine ancestors by two or three generations'. Whatever may be the explanation of this phenomenon it is doubtless to be connected with the stories of conjugal relations between human and divine beings which we find both in Greece and in northern Europe. This is a subject to which we shall have to return in a later chapter. Above all, however, we have to take account of the influence of folk-tales...
第 179 頁 - The inclusion of this epistle without any comment is not creditable to the perspicacity of the editor, and on the principle of setting a thief to catch a thief...
第 421 頁 - I call to witness Christ our Lord, who shall be my judge, that I am electing him who before God I think ought to bo elected.
第 15 頁 - Bingham notices the opinion of Bellarmine, that the word was first applied to certain principal churches, and remarks, that others have supposed that those among the priests in populous cities, who were chosen from among the rest to be a council for the bishop, were first called cardinals. And he cites Stillingfleet, who writes, in his "Irenicon
第 15 頁 - ... of Christians as there was then. In the life of Marcellus, about forty years after Dionysius, we read of twenty-five titles in the church of Rome; of which number, what use is made for interpreting the number 666! may be seen in Mr. Potter's ingenious tract on that subject. But when afterwards these titles were much increased, those presbyters that were placed in the ancient titles which were the chief among them, were called cardinales presbyteri,1 which were then looked on as chief of the clergy,...
第 222 頁 - As soon as he had come in measures of precaution were, however, taken for everything, and no one entered more but a few prelates, who came to kiss the feet of his Holiness. All that night long one slept but badly from the sound and noise made by those who were removing their goods out of the Conclave. Next morning, Wednesday, the 10th, the Pope and cardinals entered the chapel an hour before day, according to the regulations ; and mass having been read by the...