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 90 筆
第 vi 頁
... Church should think fit to give the world the spectacle of it . But such will not be the case . And such a change of spirit as would lead them to do so is quite as impro- bable as such a change in the disposition of the Italian ...
... Church should think fit to give the world the spectacle of it . But such will not be the case . And such a change of spirit as would lead them to do so is quite as impro- bable as such a change in the disposition of the Italian ...
第 xii 頁
... Church . - Papal History falls into Groups of Popes . - Causes of this Phenomenon . - Paul III . the last of a Group of Popes . - Paul IV . the first of a different Group . - List of Popes from 1271 to 1549 · PAGE . 75 CHAPTER II ...
... Church . - Papal History falls into Groups of Popes . - Causes of this Phenomenon . - Paul III . the last of a Group of Popes . - Paul IV . the first of a different Group . - List of Popes from 1271 to 1549 · PAGE . 75 CHAPTER II ...
第 xiii 頁
... Church of the first menaces of Protestantism . -The all - devouring nepotism of Sixtus IV . - Peter Riario , his Nephew . -Sixtus dies of a Broken Heart . - Epigrams on Sixtus . - Interregnum after the Death of Sixtus . - Conclave which ...
... Church of the first menaces of Protestantism . -The all - devouring nepotism of Sixtus IV . - Peter Riario , his Nephew . -Sixtus dies of a Broken Heart . - Epigrams on Sixtus . - Interregnum after the Death of Sixtus . - Conclave which ...
第 5 頁
... Church , may be one of these . It will be expedient , therefore , to trace very briefly the course of those events and arrangements which led to the defini- tive organisation of the Conclave , as the means by which a successor to St ...
... Church , may be one of these . It will be expedient , therefore , to trace very briefly the course of those events and arrangements which led to the defini- tive organisation of the Conclave , as the means by which a successor to St ...
第 6 頁
... Church has , to a great extent , preserved its characteristic democratic tendencies as regards its relations with the lay world outside the priestly pale , it is a curious and significant fact that the policy of its own internal ...
... Church has , to a great extent , preserved its characteristic democratic tendencies as regards its relations with the lay world outside the priestly pale , it is a curious and significant fact that the policy of its own internal ...
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常見字詞
adoration Aldobrandino Alexander Altieri Angelo Antipope Apostolic Archbishop Avignon Barberini Baronius berretta Bishop Borghese Borromeo Bull called Camerlengo candidate canons cardinal nephew cardinal's cell century ceremonies chapel CHAPTER Chigi Church clave Clement Clement VIII Clement X clergy Colonna Conclave which elected conclavist Consistory Council created creation creatures crowns death declared decree died dinal ecclesiastical electors Eminence Eugenius fact faction Farnese favour French cardinals friends give Gregory XV hand held Holy Innocent Italian Julius Ludovisi matter Medici Montalto months Moroni mozzetta Nicholas occasion Olympia Orsini palace Paoline papabili Papacy Papal Conclaves papal elections Paul person Peter Pius Pius IV Pontiff Pope's predecessor present probably proceeded purple recognised reigned remarks Roman Rome rules Sacred College says the conclavist scandalous scrutiny seems simoniacal simony Sixtus squadrone volante successor thing throne tion Tosco Urban VIII Vatican Venetian voting papers words writer
熱門章節
第 337 頁 - Never indeed was any man more contented with doing his duty in that state of life to which it had pleased God to call him.
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 339 頁 - In the whole of the eighteenth and the first half of the nineteenth centuries the slavetrade flourished.
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 301 頁 - without quarrels, homicides, and ambuscades. Many men and women were found killed in various parts of the city; many headless bodies were found, many, also headless, which had been thrown into the Tiber; many houses were broken into by night and sacked ; doors were broken open; women were done violence to, some killed, and others carried off by violence ; many young girls were dishonoured, forced, and taken away.
第 217 頁 - ... Two of them, Cardinal Madruzzi and Cardinal Caraffa, stole privately to Cervini's cell to prepare him for anything that might happen, and then, when the college was assembled, and the debate ran high and hot, Cardinal Crispo, one of the confederates, sprang to his feet, and with the exclamation, " Up, and let us be going ; I for one will not rebel against the Holy Ghost...