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Topic: Fifth Council of the Lateran


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  21 Ecumenical Councils
Summary: The Third General Council of Constantinople, under Pope Agatho and the Emperor Constantine Pogonatus, was attended by the Patriarchs of Constantinople and of Antioch, 174 bishops, and the emperor.
The synod dealt with the crimes and errors imputed to the Knights Templars, the Fraticelli, the Beghards, and the Beguines, with projects of a new crusade, the reformation of the clergy, and the teaching of Oriental languages in the universities.
The Council of Constance was held during the great Schism of the West, with the object of ending the divisions in the Church.
www.davidmacd.com /catholic/21_catholic_councils.htm   (1733 words)

  
  Ecumenical council - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Fifth Council of Constantinople, (1341–1351); affirmed hesychastic theology according to St. Gregory Palamas and condemned the Westernized philosopher Barlaam of Calabria.
Fifth Council of the Lateran, (1512–1517); attempted reform of the Church.
Council of Trent, (1545–1563, discontinuously); response to the challenges of Calvinism and Lutheranism; imposition of uniformity in liturgy in the Roman Rite (the "Tridentine Mass").
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Ecumenical_council   (2357 words)

  
 Lateran council - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Lateran councils were ecclesiastical councils or synods of the Catholic Church held at Rome in the Lateran Palace next to the Lateran Basilica.
The Third Council of the Lateran (1179) limited papal electees to the cardinals alone, condemned simony, forbade the promotion of anyone to the episcopate before the age of thirty.
The Fourth Council of the Lateran (1215) dealt with transubstantiation, papal primacy and conduct of clergy.
www.wikipedia.org /wiki/Lateran_Council   (224 words)

  
 18th Council, Fifth Lateran Council 1512-17 A.D.
Fifth Lateran Council, sat from 1512 to 1517 under Popes Julius II and Leo X, the emperor being ilian I. 120 Bishops, representatives of kings and princes, took part in it.
Twice postponed, the council held its first session in full solemnity at Rome in the Lateran residence on 10 May 1512, at which session an elaborate address on the evils of the church was made by Giles of Viterbo, general of the order of Augustinian hermits.
We are continuing the sacred Lateran council for the praise of the almighty and undivided Trinity and for the glory of him whose place we represent on earth, who develops peace and harmony in his high heavens, and who, on his departure from this world, left peace as a lawful inheritance to his disciples.
truecatholic.bizland.com /Ecumenical_Councils/Lateran5.htm   (9511 words)

  
 Fifth Lateran Council - Encyclopedia.com
Fifth Lateran Council 1512-17, 18th ecumenical council of the Roman Catholic Church, convened by Pope Julius II and continued by his successor Leo X.
Julius called the council to counter an attempt begun (1510) by Louis XII of France to revive the conciliar theory (i.e., that a council has supreme power, even over the pope) of a hundred years before (see Schism, Great) and thus precipitate a new schism.
A first-class general study of lay religiosity in the period between the Fourth Lateran Council in 1215 and the conclusion of the Fifth Lateran Council in 1515.
www.encyclopedia.com /doc/1E1-LateranC5.html   (937 words)

  
 Fifth Lateran Council 1512-17 A.D.
Fifth Lateran Council 1512-17 A.D. Fifth Lateran Council 1512-17 A.D. This council was summoned by pope Julius II by the bull Sacrosanctae Romanae Ecclesiae, issued at Rome on 18 July 1511, after several schismatic cardinals, officially supported by Louis XII, king of France, had assembled a quasi-council at Pisa.
Twice postponed, the council held its first session in full solemnity at Rome in the Lateran residence on 10 May 1512, at which session an elaborate address on the evils of the church was made by Giles of Viterbo, general of the order of Augustinian hermits.
We are continuing the sacred Lateran council for the praise of the almighty and undivided Trinity and for the glory of him whose place we represent on earth, who develops peace and harmony in his high heavens, and who, on his departure from this world, left peace as a lawful inheritance to his disciples.
www.piar.hu /councils/ecum18.htm   (9514 words)

  
 MAJOR COUNCILS OF THE CHURCH: (councils.htm)
Lateran IV also condemned as anathema once more the heresies of Albigensianism, which taught marriage and the sacraments were not needed, and Waldensianism, which taught that the laity could perform the same duties as a priest when said priest was in mortal sin.
This Council's main docket was the attempt to reunite with the Eastern Church, but it was only temporary and the schism grew wider after the solidification of the Dogmatic Filioque in which it was reaffirmed emphatically that the Holy Ghost proceeds from both the Father and the Son.
The greatest and longest of all the major ecumenical councils was convened by Pope Paul III on December 13, 1545 in the mouintain village of Trent in northern Italy.
www.dailycatholic.org /history/councils.htm   (2468 words)

  
 Fourth Council of the Lateran - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Fourth Council of the Lateran was summoned by Pope Innocent III with his Bull of April 19, 1213.
It was the 12th ecumenical council and is sometimes called "the General Council of Lateran" due to the attendance by seventy-one patriarchs and metropolitans, four hundred and twelve bishops, and nine hundred abbots and priors.
The pope presented to the council seventy decrees; these were considered along with measures against heretics, and the organisation of the Fifth Crusade.
www.wikipedia.org /wiki/Fourth_Council_of_the_Lateran   (314 words)

  
 Trent, Council of. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-05   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-20)
The work of the council embraced dogmatic definition and correction of abuses, and it was so planned that discussion of doctrine and of reforms of practices could be carried on at the same time.
The chief functions of the council were occasional solemn one-day sessions (25 in all, of which 10 dealt with formalities only) for the purpose of making the final decisions and declarations; the hard work of the council was done at informal, sometimes private, meetings.
The reform measures of the council were tremendously far-reaching and their enforcement was probably the most thoroughgoing reform in the history of the church.
www.bartleby.com /65/tr/Trent-Co.html   (724 words)

  
 All Ecumenical Councils - All the Decrees
Third Council of Constantinople (680-681), under Pope Agatho and the Emperor Constantine Pogonatus, was attended by the Patriarchs of Constantinople and of Antioch, 174 bishops, and the emperor.
Council of Constance (1414-1418), was held during the great Schism of the West, with the object of ending the divisions in the Church.
Council of Basle (1431), Eugene IV being pope, and Sigismund Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire.
www.piar.hu /councils   (1185 words)

  
 Roman Catholic Listing of Ecumenical Councils
Council of Ephesus (#3) June 22 to July 17, 431 AD The Council of Ephesus was significant for its dogmatic decrees on the position of the Virgin Mary in the celestial hierarchy and on the nature of the incarnation of Jesus Christ.
Second Council of Nicaea (#7) 787 AD This Council ruled on the use of saints' images and icons in religious devotion, declaring that whereas the veneration of images was legitimate and the intercession of saints efficacious, the veneration of icons must be carefully distinguished from the worship due God alone.
The Council of Constance (1414-18) settled the division.
www.mb-soft.com /believe/txs/councils.htm   (3947 words)

  
 Ecumenical Councils and the rise and fall of the Church of Rome (Roman Catholic Church) - abelard
The purpose of the council was twofold: reform of the Church and the recovery of the Holy Land.
The Council of Vienne (fifteenth Ecumenical Council, 1311 – 1312, Templars).
The Council of Trent (nineteenth Ecumenical Council, 1545 – 1563).
www.abelard.org /councils/councils.htm   (12581 words)

  
 Fifth Lateran Council (1512-17)
In the fourth session the advocate of the council demanded the revocation of the Pragmatic Sanction of Bourges.
In the eighth (17 December, 1513), an act of King Louis XII was read, disavowing the Council of Pisa and adhering to the Lateran Council.
The latter was solemnly revoked and condemned, and the concordat with Francis I approved, in the eleventh session (19 December, 1516).
www.catholicity.com /encyclopedia/l/lateran_council,fifth.html   (559 words)

  
 International Catholic University: 18.3   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-20)
While the council was convened, Leo saw this as a chance to effect perhaps some reforms in the Curia or in the bureaucracy of the organs of papal government.
One noteworthy thing is that this council did declare that a pope was superior to a council, and that the council would derive its authority from the recognition and the approval of the pope.
One of the principles they followed was that the council should be called and it should meet at the place which is the occasion or the reason for the calling of the council, as the early councils were.
home.comcast.net /~icuweb/c01803.htm   (4710 words)

  
 A History of the General Councils - AD 325 through AD 1870 - Mgr. Philip Hughes
This Fifth General Council of the Lateran really originated in the tangled politics, national and international, of the last years of the reign of Pope Julius II (1503-13).
There was an average attendance at the council of about go to 100 bishops, and almost all of them were from sees in one or other of the Italian states, subjects, that is, of the King of Spain, of Florence, Venice and the rest, as well as of the pope.
There were no more than twelve public meetings of the council in all: four in 1512, four in 1513, and one in each of the years 1514, 1515, 1516, 1517 The legislation of the council appeared in the form of papal bulls, published in the several sessions.
www.christusrex.org /www1/CDHN/coun19.html   (3939 words)

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Fifth Lateran Council
In the fourth session the advocate of the council demanded the revocation of the Pragmatic Sanction of Bourges.
The latter was solemnly revoked and condemned, and the concordat with Francis I approved, in the eleventh session (19 December, 1516).
Finally, the council promulgated a decree prescribing war against the Turks and ordered the levying of tithes of all the benefices in Christendom for three years.
www.newadvent.org /cathen/09018b.htm   (596 words)

  
 The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition: Lateran Council, Fifth @ HighBeam Research   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-20)
LATERAN COUNCIL, FIFTH [Lateran Council, Fifth] 1512-17, 18th ecumenical council of the Roman Catholic Church, convened by Pope Julius II and continued by his successor Leo X.
Julius called the council to counter an attempt begun (1510) by Louis XII of France to revive the conciliar theory (i.e., that a council has supreme power, even over the pope) of a hundred years before (see Schism, Great) and thus precipitate a new schism.
Otherwise the council accomplished little; the reforming party had to wait until the Council of Trent.
www.highbeam.com /library/doc0.asp?DOCID=1E1:LateranC5&refid=ip_encyclopedia_hf   (214 words)

  
 Lateran Councils
The Lateran councils were five ecumenical councils of the Roman Catholic church held during the 12th, 13th, and 16th centuries at the Lateran Palace in Rome.
At these councils all that was wrong locally was investigated, the bishops were reminded of the kind of men they were supposed to be, indeed obliged to be by God's law, the old regulations about simony and clerical continency were renewed, incorrigible prelates were deposed, and a general revival of religious life inaugurated.
This was the law enacted in a council at the Lateran in 1050, which restricted the election to the cardinals.[4a] To them alone it belongs, henceforth, to elect the pope, and a majority of their votes is essential and sufficient.
mb-soft.com /believe/txs/lateran.htm   (16763 words)

  
 To Tell You The Whole Truth - The Church: The 21 Ecumenical (General) Councils of the Church
It declared the authority of the Pope to be superior to that of a General Council.
Declared that the teachings of the Council of Pisa were invalid since it did not have the Pope's approval.
This Council declared the infallibility of the Pope, and reaffirmed the teachings of the Church.
www.scborromeo.org /truth/c2.htm   (545 words)

  
 Medieval Sourcebook: Second Lateran Council 1139
The council condemned the errors of the Petrobrusians and the Henricians, the followers of Peter of Bruys and Arnold of Brescia.
One of the purposes of the council was to remove the evils of an eight-year schism, and it seems more than merely probable that the Pope was not content with this only, but went a step farther to prevent the repetition of such a schism from that particular contributing cause.
We decree that that which was enacted in the Council of Chalcedon (canon 22) be inviolately observed; namely, that the possessions of deceased bishops be not seized by anyone, but that they remain in the hands of the steward and the clergy for the needs of the Church and his successor.
www.fordham.edu /halsall/basis/lateran2.html   (6430 words)

  
 Flyfree Ministries Outreach   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-20)
The first general council called (while not the very first council) was the council of Nicaea in 325 AD.
Councils are generally called when a doctrine of the faith is called into question, in order to settle the matter.
The Council of Trent in 1545 was called to address the Protestant movement.
www.flyfreeministries.org /Outreach-education.htm   (2507 words)

  
 Under Pope Alexander
The particular object of this council was to put an end to the schism within the church and the quarrel between the emperor and the papacy.
For this reason it is not surprising that chronicles of the period frequently refer to this council as Lateran I. Although we do not possess the acts of the council, we have evidence from chronicles and annals and especially from the canons which the fathers laid down in the final session on 19 March.
Certainly the canons, unlike those of Lateran I and II and many preceding councils, appear to have been worked out by an excellent legal mind so that it is probable they were composed under the authority of Alexander III himself, who was an expert lawyer.
www.ewtn.com /library/COUNCILS/LATERAN3.HTM   (4802 words)

  
 Trent, Council of
Trent, Council of, 1545–47, 1551–52, 1562–63, 19th ecumenical council of the Roman Catholic Church, convoked to meet the crisis of the Protestant
Trent, Council of: Influence - Influence The doctrinal canons of the Council of Trent cover most of the controverted points in...
Trent, Council of: Bibliography - Bibliography The most complete history is found in Ludwig Pastor's history of the popes; there is...
www.factmonster.com /ce6/society/A0849364.html   (195 words)

  
 Burning ideas call for censorship   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-20)
It was to respond to this danger that the 1515 session of the Fifth Lateran Council held in March, decreed that books should no longer be printed without ecclesiastical examination and consent.
Various church authorities had already declared that scripture was not to be placed into the hands of the laity in their native languages.
Luther's theses were still two years away, so the council cannot have had him in mind.
chi.gospelcom.net /morestories/lateran_council.shtml   (604 words)

  
 Lateran Council, Fifth
Encyclopedia: Roman Catholic and Orthodox churches: Councils and Treaties - Encyclopeadia articles concerning Roman Catholic and Orthodox churches: Councils and Treaties.
The voice of theologians in general councils from Pisa to Trent.
Great saints, two councils led wayward church back towards Jesus the reformer.(Paul and Francis of Assisi, Councils of Constance and Second Vatican)(Transcript) (National Catholic Reporter)
www.infoplease.com /ce6/society/A0828963.html   (312 words)

  
 Lateran Council, Fifth - ENCYCLOPEDIA - The History Channel UK
Lateran Council, Fifth, 1512-17, 18th ecumenical council of the Roman Catholic Church, convened by Pope Julius II and continued by his successor Leo X
Julius called the council to counter an attempt begun (1510) by Louis XII of France to revive the conciliar theory (i.e., that a council has supreme power, even over the pope) of a hundred years before (see Schism, Great
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www.thehistorychannel.co.uk /site/search/search.php?word=LateranC5   (291 words)

  
 Trent, Council of
Walsall Metropolitan Borough Council reduces paperwork by implementing leading HR and payroll "Trent".
North Somerset Council makes the most of its greatest asset with Midland HR's Trent solution.
Trent University researchers receive $779,830 from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada; Twelve research projects in an array of disciplines funded.
www.infoplease.com /ce6/society/A0849364.html   (349 words)

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: John Laski
In 1502 he became royal arch-secretary, in 1505 arch-chancellor, in 1509 coadjutor of Archbishop Boryszewski of Gnesesn, and, after the death of the latter in 1510, Archbishop of Gnesen and Primate of Poland, whereupon he resigned as arch-chancellor in 1511.
During the progress of the Lateran Council, Leo X conferred upon Laski and his successors in the archiepiscopal See of Gnesen the title of legatus natus.
The Bull conferring the title is dated 25 July, 1515, and is still preserved in the archives of the cathedral chapter of Gnesen (no. 625).
www.newadvent.org /cathen/09011a.htm   (567 words)

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