How To Use Concordat In A Sentence
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For the Concordat, in theory at least, brought to a close the Investiture Contest of the twelfth century.
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So, why doesn't the Scottish Executive cite the spending concordat and get Westminster to pay for the cost of this change in policy?
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Ever since the Concordat of 1516 between Francis I and Pope Leo X the king had appointed all bishops and the abbots of greater monasteries.
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Only an international outcry can move these bureaucrats to honor the constitution instead of the concordat.
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Hence it follows that it is utterly impossible to call a concordat an international treaty in the real and true sense of the word (cf. a pamphlet anonymously edited in Rome, 1872, under the title: "Della Natura e carattere essenziale dei Concordati", whose author was Cardinal Cagiano de
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 4: Clandestinity-Diocesan Chancery
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He had even signed a Concordat with the papacy in July 1801, allowing the return of Roman Catholicism.
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The canonical-mission requirement was later incorporated into concordats between the Vatican and several German states, and the Reich itself.
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However, he conceded there could be opportunities for NHS consultants to boost their income from private work under the concordat.
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I have seen photos of Hitler and top Roman Catholic officials at a signing of a "concordat" and etc.
Alex Jones' Prison Planet.com
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Concordat (1905) the Diocese of Saint-Brieuc contained 609,349 inhabitants, 48 parishes, 354 succursal parishes, 395 vicariates, towards the support of which the State contributed.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 13: Revelation-Stock
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An official concordat was signed in 2000 between the Slovak Republic and the Roman Catholic Church.
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To this day, the learned do not agree as to the important question whether or not the concordat was a personal agreement with Henry or with the empire as such.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 7: Gregory XII-Infallability
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For I am of that school of French traditionalists which has made a kind of concordat with the Republique, a la Leo XIII.
Governor Palin
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A declaration of Anglican common law and polity could then be issued by the primates at their meeting in 2008, in the form of a concordat.
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MUSEUMS across the east of Scotland have signed a new "concordat" designed to boost services for local residents.
Undefined
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Very often in such regimes, relations with churches are managed through special agreements, concordats, and the like.
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XIV. of the Concordat to 'ensure to the bishops and the curates salaries befitting their functions,' and by Article XV. to 'protect the right of the Catholics of France to re-endow the churches.'
France and the Republic A Record of Things Seen and Learned in the French Provinces During the 'Centennial' Year 1889
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In a bid to end the dispute, NHS employers have presented a Scottish concordat that ties wage increases in with wide-sweeping changes to pay structures and working conditions.
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All that can be demanded of them is external deference, personal attendance on the ceremonies of worship, a brief prayer in Latin muttered in haste at the beginning and end of each lesson, [6153] in short, acts like those of raising one's hat or other public marks of respect, such as the official attitudes imposed by a government, author of the Concordat, on its military and civil staff.
The Modern Regime, Volume 2
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And the salient point for our wider discussion is that there is no useful way of talking about 'Britishness' without telling a specific story – a story which is about how both invasion and foreign adventure created a flexible and hybrid language, how a particular kind of concordat between royal, feudal and ecclesiastical power outlasted a brief experiment with royal absolutism in the early modern period, how the reaction against absolutism moulded a set of legal standards and protocols (habeas corpus, jury trial), how lessons were learned and not learned in the treatment of subject societies through England's relations with its Celtic neighbours ... and so on.
Multiculturism: Friend or Foe
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They signed a concordat with the Scottish Trade Union Congress at their recent Perth conference, pledging consultation with the unions.
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Though Muslims and even Protestants also have such access in some provinces, they have no formal concordats with federal ministries, and they are justified in worrying about discrimination.
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He did not rest content with a mere strict fulfilment of the pecuniary obligations to the Church to which the Concordat had bound the State; in 1803 and 1804 it became the custom to pay stipends to canons and desservants of succursal parishes.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 10: Mass Music-Newman
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The Austrian court was dominated by the Jesuits, its government had concluded a concordat with Pius IX, the pope who ardently combated all modern ideas.
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Both Pius XI and Pius XII had pontificates that built upon the concordats begun under Benedict.
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It was election purdah at the time so the concordat was not released.
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Theiner: Histoire des deux concordats de la république française et de la république cisalpine conclus en 1801 et 1813, entre Napoléon Bonaparte et le Saint-Siège.]
The Life of Napoleon Bonaparte Vol. III. (of IV.)
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The Concordat re-established the Church in France, but it did not re-endow the Church on a scale which would have enabled it at once to reconstruct its own educational system.
France and the Republic A Record of Things Seen and Learned in the French Provinces During the 'Centennial' Year 1889
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In open violation of the Concordat, these nuptiality restrictions encroached upon the authority of canon law in the sacrament of matrimony and deprived the Christian wedlock of converts from Jewry of civil effects.
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His concordat was the work of a real psychologist, who knew that moral forces do not use violence, and the great danger of persecuting such.
The Psychology of Revolution
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In 1801, while still first consul, he signed a concordat with the Catholic Church.
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Both originals (instrumenta) of the Concordat of Worms were read and ratified, and twenty-two disciplinary canons were promulgated, most of them reinforcements of previous conciliary decrees.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 9: Laprade-Mass Liturgy
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Prescinding for the present from the exact nature of a concordat, and without giving an exact definition, we may say that a concordat is a law, ecclesiastical and civil, made for a certain country in regard to matters which in some way concern both Church and State, a law, moreover, possessing the force of a treaty entered into by both the ecclesiastical and civil power and to a certain extent binding upon both.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 4: Clandestinity-Diocesan Chancery
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If a concordat with the private sector is desirable in England, it should be considered here too.
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Nevertheless, as this subject matter of a concordat is not necessarily homogeneous (the unity of a concordat being merely extrinsic and accidental) it follows that although the term privilege may be applied to a concordat taken as a whole, it cannot necessarily be used of every clause in the same.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 4: Clandestinity-Diocesan Chancery
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The Spanish clergy, which had been deprived of most of its land, was salaried by the state under the Concordat of 1851.
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The concordat with the pope, however, reconciled Catholics with the new regime by re-establishing their Church.
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As most followers of Scottish Politics will be aware, we are potentially entering the third year of a concordat between the Government and COSLA that will ensure more funding for the councils if they freeze council tax for you and I, affectionately known as hard-working families and struggling pensioners.
Politicians showing their class
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Godman devotes significant attention to the 1933 concordat between the Holy See and Germany.
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If I had had more space, I would have pursued the issue of the concordat and the general antiliberal tenor of Pius's papacy.
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The concordat fails to address all the workers' grievances.