How To Use Innocent iii In A Sentence

  • Very high among Innocent III's ambitions was the improvement of the parish clergy.
  • In his call for a crusade, Innocent III denounced the Cathars as “pestiferous men.” Bloodlust
  • Innocent III addressed precisely this issue in his letter to the archbishop of Arles (1202) when reciting the heretics 'argument that little children would receive no benefit from baptism because they lacked three things: "They neither understand nor consent, and they do not have caritas, which is amply imparted in those who understand and consent. A Tender Age: Cultural Anxieties over the Child in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries
  • Or, again, if we borrow from Pope Innocent III. his ideas as to the mystical meanings of gems, we find that chalcedony, which is pale in the light and sparkles in the dark, is synonymous with humility; the topaz with chastity and the merit of good works, while the chrysoprase, the queen of minerals, implies wisdom and watchfulness. The Cathedral
  • Palermo the victory over the troops sent by Innocent III. against Marckwald; Huillard-Bréholles, _Hist.dipl. _, i. p., Life of St. Francis of Assisi
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  • Note 17: Innocent III, Sermo VII, dominica III in adventu Domini, PL 217.341. back A Tender Age: Cultural Anxieties over the Child in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries
  • Up to the end of the twelfth century, the popes were the vicars of Peter; after Innocent III. they were the vicars of Christ. History of the Conflict between Religion and Science
  • Indeed, in a bull of 1212, Pope Innocent III relaxed the obligations of prior oaths and forbade the exaction of similar oaths in the future.
  • After all, Francis of Assisi and Dominic Guzman, not Innocent III, energized the mendicant movement that swept Europe in the thirteenth century.
  • Indeed, in a bull of 1212, Pope Innocent III relaxed the obligations of prior oaths and forbade the exaction of similar oaths in the future.
  • In the time of Innocent III the liturgical vestments numbered seventeen, the fanon, that is the papal amice, not being included among these. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 15: Tournely-Zwirner
  • Note 53: Innocent III, Sermo VII, dominica III in adventu Domini, PL 217. 341 A Tender Age: Cultural Anxieties over the Child in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries
  • Those who think little of the papacy or the Catholic Church can blame Pope Innocent III.
  • Very high among Innocent III's ambitions was the improvement of the parish clergy.
  • It was also against them in southern France that the war known as the Albigensian crusade was proclaimed by Pope Innocent III in 1210, after all other previous efforts at conversion, including preach - ing missions by the Cistercians and the future Domini - cans, and coercion had failed. HERESY IN THE MIDDLE AGES
  • It was by virtue of this power that English John, that great landlord, surnamed Lackland, by declaring himself the liegeman of Pope Innocent III., and placing his kingdom under submission, delivered the souls of his parents, who had been excommunicated: “Pro mortuo excommunico, pro quo supplicant consanguinei.” A Philosophical Dictionary
  • It was for this reason that, when Simon de Montfort and the armies of Pope Innocent III descended upon the region in 1209, it was called the Albigensian Crusade. The Sion Revelation
  • CLVIII, 550); and a hundred years later we find Pope Innocent III stating, "there are two kinds of palls or corporals, as they are called [duplex est palla qu dicitur corporale] one which the deacon spreads out upon the altar, the other which he places folded upon the mouth of the chalice" (De Sacrif. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 4: Clandestinity-Diocesan Chancery
  • The Church defined heresy, and repressed it severely, as when Pope Innocent III launched the armed Crusade that brutally repressed the Albigenses and desolated much of southern France.
  • At the same time the papacy, which with Innocent III (died 1216) had entered the "trecento" as arbiter of rulers, peoples, and nations and the acknowledged conscience of The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 8: Infamy-Lapparent
  • This right of a married person to bonk on demand could take priority over other duties and was such serious business that, until a decretal from Pope Innocent III (1198-216), a man needed his wife's permission to go on a Crusade because without him home she might be led to commit adultery. Jane Minogue: The Ever-Changing Definition of Marriage

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