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Topic: Philip IV of France


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In the News (Mon 23 Nov 09)

  
  Philip IV of France - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A member of the Capetian dynasty, Philip was born at the Palace of Fontainebleau at Seine-et-Marne, the son of King Philip III and Isabella of Aragon.
Philip arrested Jews so he could seize their assets to accommodate the inflated costs of modern warfare; he was condemned by his enemies in the Catholic Church for his spendthrift lifestyle.
Philip tried and tortured a number of the Templars that he had captured, and in 1314 he had Jacques de Molay, the Templar Grand Master, and Geoffrey de Charney, the Preceptor of Normandy, burned at the stake.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Philip_IV_of_France   (794 words)

  
 AllRefer.com - Philip IV, king of France (French History, Biography) - Encyclopedia
Philip IV (Philip the Fair), 1268–1314, king of France (1285–1314), son and successor of Philip III.
Philip, in retaliation, convoked the nobility, clergy, and commons in the first French States-General (1302–3) to hear a justification of his course of action; and Boniface issued (1302) the bull Unam sanctam, an extreme statement of his right to intervene in temporal and religious matters.
Philip was more successful in his attempts to expand at the expense of the Holy Roman Empire; Lyons and Viviers were incorporated into France during his reign.
reference.allrefer.com /encyclopedia/P/Philip4-Fr.html   (529 words)

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Philip IV (The Fair)
Philip IV was not really a free-thinker; he was religious, and even made pilgrimages: his attitude toward the inquisition is not that of a free-thinker, as is especially apparent in the trial of the Franciscan Bernard Délicieux.
The latter brought the deputies of Carcassonne and Albi to Philip IV at Senlis, to complain of the Dominican inquisitors of Languedoc; the result of his action was an ordinance of Philip putting the Dominican inquisitors under the control of the bishops.
Philip IV, by his formal condemnation of the memory of Boniface VIII, appointed himself judge of the orthodoxy of the popes.
www.newadvent.org /cathen/12004a.htm   (1087 words)

  
 ipedia.com: Philip IV of Spain Article   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
The eldest son of Philip III, Philip IV was born at Valladolid.
Philip IV (April 8, 1605 - September 17, 1665) was the king of Spain, from 1621 until his death, and king of Portugal until 1640.
With Elizabeth Valois (or Elisabeth of France, 1603-1644, daughter of Henry IV of France) - married 1615 at Burgos
www.ipedia.com /philip_iv_of_spain.html   (653 words)

  
 France 2
Henry I (of France) (circa 1008-60), king of France (1031-60), son of King Robert II and grandson of Hugh Capet, founder of the Capetian dynasty.
Philip I (of France) Philip I (of France)Philip I (of France) (1052-1108), king of France (1060-1108), the eldest son of Henry I, king of France.
Philip VI (1293-1350), king of France (1328-50), the grandson of King Philip III, the nephew of King Philip IV (the Fair), and son of Charles de Valois, born in Fontainebleau.
website.lineone.net /~johnbidmead/france_2.htm   (3903 words)

  
 Philip IV of France - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Philip IV (French: Philippe IV; 1268–November 29, 1314) was King of France from 1285 until his death.
Philip IV arrested Jews so he could seize their goods to accommodate the inflated costs of modern warfare, condemned by his enemies in the Catholic Church as his spendthrift lifestyle.
He suffered a major embarrassment when a army of 2,500 noble men-at-arms (Knights and Squires) and 4,000 infantry he sent to suppress an uprising in Flanders was defeated in the Battle of the Golden Spurs near Kortrijk on 11 July 1302.
www.onalaska.us /project/wikipedia/index.php/Philip_IV_of_France   (763 words)

  
 ORB: The Online Reference Book for Medieval Studies
Philip IV is one of the most important of the medieval French kings.
Philip saw assertion of royal authority over the French Church (sometimes called the Gallican Church, after Gaul, the old name for France) as at one and the same time a matter of royal dignity and a matter of pressing fiscal and national concern.
Philip counteracted this move by issuing a royal edict to the effect that no hard currency was to leave the kingdom without royal permission.
the-orb.net /textbooks/westciv/avignon.html   (4808 words)

  
 King Philip Iv Of Spain - Spain BR   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Philip IV of Spain Philip IV of Spain Philip IV (April 8, 1605 - September 17, 1665) was the king of Spain, from 1621 until his death, and king.
Philip IV (1605 - 1665) was crowned king of Spain in 1621.
Philip IV, 1605–65, king of Spain, Naples, and Sicily (1621–65) and, … king of Portugal (1621–40); son and successor of Philip III of Spain.
spain.br.com /king-philip-iv-of-spain.html   (571 words)

  
 Sly's Fourteenth Century Timeline
Philip IV of France has Grand Master Jacques de Molay of the Knights Templars arrested, and forces the pope to suppress the order of Knights Templars.
Philip IV of France dies, the infant John of France becomes king, with Philip V (called The Tall) as regent.
Philip VI of France dies and his son John II of France is crowned.
www.edwardsly.com /1300-99.html   (1323 words)

  
 MSN Encarta - Multimedia - Philip IV (of France)
Philip IV, king of France, is known for his struggle with the Roman Catholic church that first arose from his attempt to tax the clergy.
After Pope Boniface VIII issued a statement declaring papal supremacy in 1302, Philip had him imprisoned.
In 1305 Philip secured the election of one of his adherents as Pope Clement V, who moved the papacy from Rome to Avignon, France, in 1309 and came under Philip’s control.
encarta.msn.com /media_461528984/Philip_IV_(of_France).html   (81 words)

  
 PHILIP IV. (FRANCE) - LoveToKnow Article on PHILIP IV. (FRANCE)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
The election was ultimately determined by the diplomacy and the gold of Philip's agents, and the new pope, Clement V., was the weak-willed creature of the French king, to whom he owed the tiara.
Odo or Eudes IV., duke of Burgundy, was married to Jeanne, Philip's daughter, and received the county of Burgundy as her dower.
Philip was a lover of poetry, surrounded himself with Provencal poets and even wrote in Provencal himself, but he was also one of the most hard-working kings of the house of Capet.
www.1911ency.org /P/PH/PHILIP_IV_FRANCE_.htm   (2760 words)

  
 The Bailey Family   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Philip I (of France) (1052-1108), king of France (1060-1108), the eldest son of Henry I, king of France.
Philip IV King Of FRANCE was born in 1268 in Fontainebleau, Seine-et-Marne, France.
Philip Prince Of FRANCE was born on 29 Aug 1116 in Rheims, Marne, France.
bailey.aros.net /jsbailey/d88.htm   (4325 words)

  
 Sly's Thirteenth Century TimeLine
Philip II of France continues Arthur's fight with England, and within the next three years increases his domain by annexing Normandy, Maine, Brittany, Anjou, Touraine, and Poitou.
Philip III of France fails an attempt at annexing the kingdom of Aragon.
Philip III of France dies, and his son Philip IV of France (called The Fair) is crowned.
www.edwardsly.com /1200-99.html   (1628 words)

  
 Christian History Handbook: Early Modern: Lecture Two   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
He carefully placated the angry French, lifted the excommunication of the Philip IV and dropped charges against those involved in the attempt to kidnap Boniface VIII except for the ringleaders.
Clement V meekly allowed Philip IV to savagely exterminate the Knights Templars and appropriate their wealth because he feared the alternative might result in even more damage to the Papacy.
Meanwhile the pronouncements of Boniface VIII against the French king in Salvator mundi were withdrawn and France was officially excluded from the claims of Unam sanctam.
www.sbuniv.edu /~hgallatin/ht34633e02.html   (4331 words)

  
 Council of Vienne
Philip IV of France, the king who had opposed Boniface VIII so bitterly, had so much power over Clement V that he seems to have been able to change the whole state of ecclesiastical affairs at will.
Meanwhile in March 1312 Philip IV held a general assembly of his kingdom in Lyons, his object being to disturb and steamroller the minds of the council fathers and of the pope himself.
The king of France made for Vienne on 20 March, and after two days Clement V delivered to the commission of cardinals for approval the bull by which the order of Templars was suppressed (the bull Vox in excelso).
mb-soft.com /believe/txs/vienne.htm   (15822 words)

  
 Bernard Saisset
as papal legate to King Philip IV of France to protest the king's anticlerical measures.
Philip asked Boniface to depose Saisset; the pope replied by asking that Saisset be sent to Rome for trial by an ecclesiastic court.
Philip IV, king of France - Philip IV (Philip the Fair), 1268–1314, king of France (1285–1314), son and successor...
www.factmonster.com /ce6/people/A0843166.html   (178 words)

  
 World History 1300- 1400
Philip's main purpose in convening this group was to garner support against Pope Boniface, whose bull 'Unam Sanctum' proclaimed Papal supremacy over national leaders.
At the same time, Edward III contested Philip's legitimacy based on the fact that his mother was the daughter of Philip IV.
Under its terms, John II of France was ransomed and Edward III renounced his claim to the French throne.
www.multied.com /dates/1300ad.html   (903 words)

  
 Philip IV --  Encyclopædia Britannica
The grandson of Louis XIV of France and great-grandson of Philip IV of Spain, Philip V gained his throne through the War of the Spanish Succession (1701–14) and founded the Bourbon Dynasty in Spain.
The grandson of Philip III and the nephew of Philip IV, Philip VI is important because his accession to the throne had serious consequences for both France and England.
The grandson of Philip I, Philip II believed that his mission in life was to win worldwide power for Spain and the Roman Catholic church.
www.britannica.com /eb/article-9059662   (791 words)

  
 MSN Encarta - Search Results - Philip II (of France)
Philip II (of France) (1165-1223), king of France (1180-1223), one of the most powerful European monarchs of the Middle Ages.
Third Crusade, role of Philip II of France
In the years between the failure of the Second Crusade and 1170, when the Muslim prince Saladin came to power in Egypt, the Latin States were on the...
ca.encarta.msn.com /Philip_II_(of_France).html   (223 words)

  
 Conflicts with Philip IV of France. (from Boniface VIII) --  Britannica Concise Encyclopedia - The online ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Philip IV countered or even forestalled the publication of Clericis Laicos with an order forbidding all export of money and valuables from France and with the expulsion of foreign merchants.
Meanwhile in France, Philip IV's councillor Guillaume de Nogaret had taken Flotte's place as the leader of an actively anti-papal royal policy.
Philip was supported in this policy by other enemies of the Pope, including the legate whom Boniface had dispatched to France in these critical months and who betrayed his master, the French cardinal Jean Lemoine (Johannes Monachus).
www.britannica.com /ebc/article-8310?tocId=8310   (1092 words)

  
 TemplarSword Shadow
I was there when Jacques de Molay cursed Philip IV of France and Pope Clement V. I was there as he burned at the stake, bound by my orders to bring this history to you.
The object is to suppress heretics in southern France.
He orders that their property be handed over to the Knights Hospitaller except for lands in Iberia, which the church retains possession and property in France, which goes to Philip IV.
members.aol.com /TemplrSwrd/TemplarShadows.html   (1479 words)

  
 philipboniface   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
In the fourteenth century, Pope Boniface VIII and Philip IV of France clashed over two basic issues, both crucial to the ability of the Church to have an independent voice in France.
Philip claimed that anyone breaking secular law should be tried in a secular court, but Boniface disagreed, feeling that the Church could not be independent if its personnel could be arrested at any time by secular officials.
As we discussed in lecture, Philip's intimidation of Boniface, as well as political turmoil in Rome, was one of the largest reasons that his successor, Clement V, moved his church to Avignon, France.
www.d.umn.edu /~aroos/philipboniface.html   (890 words)

  
 Timeline for France, 1300-1500   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Robert of Flanders cedes to France the castellanies of Lilli, Douai, and Béthune in lieu of the indemnity promised in 1305
Philip of Burgundy inherits the Duchies of Brabant and Limburg
Philip of Burgundy acquires the Duchy of Luxemburg by purchase
history.boisestate.edu /hy309/France/timelinefrance.htm   (2422 words)

  
 HWC, Crisis in the Church   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
In order to be strong at home, Philip had to exercise control over the clergy in France.
Moreover, the popes were at the same time claiming exemptions for clerics from royal law and were increasing obligations by laymen to obey church law.
In one notorious incident, he kicked a royal envoy in the head as the man bowed at the papal throne, because he was angry with him.
history.boisestate.edu /hy309/papacy/conflict.htm   (374 words)

  
 Philip I - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Philip I of Navarre and IV of France (1268–1314).
Philip I of Portugal and II of Spain (1526–1598).
This is a disambiguation page: a list of articles associated with the same title.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Philip_I   (91 words)

  
 I6548: Phoebe ( - )   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Charles IV _Louis IX _ _Philip III _
Philip withdrew from Guienne and Edward withdrew from Flanders,
Philip II (of France) (1165-1223), king of France (1180-1223), one of
www.oblevins.com /Blevins/D0000/G0000077.html   (1268 words)

  
 Friday the 13th - Crystalinks
Some also say that the arrest of Jaques de Molay, Grand Master of the Knights Templar, and 60 of his senior knights on Friday, October 13, 1307 by King Philip IV of France is the origin of this superstition.
King Philip IV of France was known as an uncommonly handsome man. He was called Philip le Bel, the Beautiful, an ironic epithet for a king of Gothic pitilessness.
In retaliation for France's new fiscal arrangements, the pope issued a dictum forbidding the taxation of the clergy.
www.crystalinks.com /friday13th.html   (1462 words)

  
 1200 - 1300
Louis IX of France signs the Treaty of Corbeil, relinquishing to the kingdom of Aragón all French claims to Barcelona and Roussillon, in return for which the Aragonese renounced their claims to parts of Provence and Languedoc.
A judgement called Mise of Amiens is passed by Louis IX, King of France, who is called into arbitrate between Henry III and the barons.
Between 1294 and 1296, Philip IV of France (called The Fair) seizes Guienne (in southwest France) from Edward I of England.
www.medievaltymes.com /courtyard/1200_-_1299.htm   (1795 words)

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