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Topic: Pope Deusdedit


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  ST. DEUSDEDIT   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-24)
Pope Deusdedit had his hands full taking care of his Roman flock, for disaster struck hard at the city on the Tiber.
Pope Deusdedit was especially fond of his secular clergy and seems to have leaned on them rather than on monks for support.
Deusdedit died in November 618 and was buried in St. Peter's.
www.cfpeople.org /Books/Pope/POPEp68.htm   (364 words)

  
  Pope Adeodatus I - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Adeodatus I (also called Deusdedit I) (died November 8, 618) served as Pope from 615 to 618.
According to tradition, he was the first pope to use lead seals (bullae) on papal documents, which in time came to be called "papal bulls".
This biography of a Pope is a stub.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Pope_Adeodatus_I   (135 words)

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Bulls and Briefs
Pope Sylvester II we find some few words added in shorthand or "Tyronian notes." In other cases the BENE VALETE is followed by certain dots and by a big comma, by a S S (subscripsi), or by a flourish, all of which no doubt served as a personal authentication.
Not only in the case of the pope, but even in the case of the cardinals, the signatures appear not to have been their own actual handwriting.
Popes John V (685) and Sergius I (697), and which were accepted as genuine by Mabillion and his confrères.
www.newadvent.org /cathen/03052b.htm   (5282 words)

  
 [No title]
For the early popes the main written source is the "Liber Pontificalis." This account of the lives of the popes was begun probably early in the sixth century while the Ostrogoths ruled Italy.
Pope Sylvester sent two legates to represent him Vitus and Vincentius, and it seems that it was the Pope who suggested the term consubstantial to describe the relation of Christ's nature to the Father.
The pallium is a vestment of white wool which a pope wears as a symbol of the fullness of his apostolic power and an archbishop wears as a symbol of his participation in that power.
www.ewtn.com /library/CHRIST/POPES.TXT   (22289 words)

  
 Keeping Catholics Catholic Page XXV-The Timeline-The Seventh Century   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-24)
Pope St. Boniface IV holds a Synod to regulate life and discipline in monasteries, among those present were Mellitus, the Bishop of London.
Pope St. Martin I excommunicates Bishop Paul of Thessalonica for rejecting the decision of the Lateran Synod.
Pope Honorus was censored for not speaking Ex cathedra in regards to the Monothelites.
www.geocities.com /Athens/Ithaca/6461/7cent.html   (2609 words)

  
 Pope St. Deusdedit   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-24)
Date of birth unknown; consecrated pope, 19 October (13 November), 615; d.
He is said to have been the first pope to use leaden seals (bullæ) for pontifical documents.
One dating from his reign is still preserved, the obverse of which represents the Good Shepherd in the midst of His sheep, with the letters Alpha and Omega underneath, while the reverse bears the inscription: Deusdedit Papæ.
www.catholicity.com /encyclopedia/d/deusdedit,pope_saint.html   (139 words)

  
 Pope Boniface V
Boniface V (died October 25, 625) was pope from 619 to 625.
He was consecrated as pope on December 23, 619.
He did much for the Christianizing of England and enacted the decree by which churches became places of refuge for criminals.
www.starrepublic.org /encyclopedia/wikipedia/p/po/pope_boniface_v.html   (64 words)

  
 Saint Patrick's Church: Saints of November 8
Son of a subdeacon, Stephen, Deusdedit was consecrated pope on October 19, 615.
Pope Gregory the Great mentions an old church of the four crowned martyrs in Rome.
Pope Leo IV, in 841, repaired the church and translated the relics from the cemetery on the Lavican Way.
www.saintpatrickdc.org /ss/1108.htm   (1960 words)

  
 Caryana.org
Pope Boniface III decreed that no one may start any activity for election until three days after the burial of the Pope.
Pope Adeodatus, like the previous and future popes, took active part in promoting the monastic discipline, believing that the vitality of the Church is as good only as the vitality of the monastic life in the Church.
Pope St. Benedict II removed the onerous practice introduced by the emperor of confirming the election of popes.
www.caryana.org /brief/brief11.html   (369 words)

  
 St. Pope Deusdedit - Catholic Online
Pope from 615-618, also called Adeodatus I. He was the son of a subdeacon, Stephen, born in Rome.
Consecrated pope on October 19,615, he became known for his care of the poor.
He was the first pope to use bullae on documents.
www.catholic.org /saints/saint.php?saint_id=2875   (437 words)

  
 ipedia.com: Pope Boniface IV Article   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-24)
Boniface IV was pope from 608 to 615.
Pope Boniface IV Boniface IV was pope from 608 to 615.
He received from the Emperor Phocas the Pantheon at Rome, which was converted into a Christian church and renamed the church of St.
www.ipedia.com /pope_boniface_iv.html   (144 words)

  
 Popes & Patriarchs of Constantinople, Jerusalem, Alexandria, Antioch, etc.
To Roman Catholics, the Pope may be the holiest man on earth, the heir and keeper of the deepest truths of religion.
The Pope was not the ruler of that Church, but one of the Ecumenical Patriarchs, along with the Patriarchs of Jerusalem, Antioch, Alexandria, and Constantinople.
Popes from a similiar family, the Medici, are featured in the genealogy of the Medici given with the rulers of Tuscany.
www.friesian.com /popes.htm   (8673 words)

  
 Boniface V (618-625)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-24)
His character is indicated by the fact that he was called "the mildest of men." Boniface was consecrated pope on December 23, 619.
He also insisted that Pope Gregory had established Canterbury as the metropolitan see and forbade anyone to go against this.
Pope Boniface came to his aid by writing letters to the royal family.
www.boniface.demon.nl /who_6.html   (406 words)

  
 blah   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-24)
Date of birth unknown; consecrated pope, 19 October (13 November), 615; d.
He is said to have been the first pope to use leaden seals (bullæ) for pontifical documents.
One dating from his reign is still preserved, the obverse of which represents the Good Shepherd in the midst of His sheep, with the letters Alpha and Omega underneath, while the reverse bears the inscription: Deusdedit Papæ.
hismercy.ca /content/church_docs/listpopes/p50-99/p068-StDeusdedit.html   (131 words)

  
 Pope st deusdedit information online from popeinfo.info   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-24)
Kingdoms of Italy - Popes 314 - 336, St Sylvester I, First Bishop of Rome to use the title of Pope.
Anatine Timeline of the Dark Ages Pope becomes temporal ruler of Papal States (756) Pope St. Stephen II (III) (r.752 - 757)...
Pope Vitalian sent some of his relics to King Oswiu of Northumbria in the 7th century.
www.popeinfo.info /pope_st_deusdedit.html   (790 words)

  
 World of Quotes - Today in History for November 19
Anastasius II, Pope (496-9)8 (Dante Inferno XI, 8-9), dies
Pope Deusdedit/Adeodatus I elected to succeed Boniface IV Type:
Giulio de' Medici chosen as Pope Clemens VII
www.worldofquotes.com /history/11_19/1/index.html   (294 words)

  
 Patron Saints Index: Pope Saint Adeodatus I
Said to have been the first to use bullae or lead seals for pontifical documents; hence the term Papal Bull.
Many old Benedictine documents describe him as a Benedictine monk, but there is no outside evidence of it, and Deusdedit was known for his support of and dependance on the secular clergy.
November 618 in Rome, Italy of natural causes; buried in Saint Peter's Basilica
www.catholic-forum.com /saints/saintaaw.htm   (100 words)

  
 List of popes -- Facts, Info, and Encyclopedia article   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-24)
The term " (The head of the Roman Catholic Church) Pope" ((Any dialect of the language of ancient Rome) Latin: papa "father'") is used in several churches to denote their high spiritual leaders.
This title is used exclusively in Western Europe and the Latin-rite church by the supreme head of the (The Christian Church based in the Vatican and presided over by a pope and an episcopal hierarchy) Roman Catholic Church.
The pope's temporal title since 1929 is Sovereign in the State of the (The capital of the State of the Vatican City) Vatican City (Holy See).
www.absoluteastronomy.com /encyclopedia/l/li/list_of_popes.htm   (5519 words)

  
 Malcolm Bull's Calderdale Companion: Foldout   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-24)
The Pope is elected by the Sacred College of Cardinals.
When he was about 18 years old, he applied to enter Saint Albans Abbey, where his father had been a monk, but he was rejected because he had insufficient schooling to qualify for entrance, and he went abroad to study.
Pope Eugenius III made him Bishop and Cardinal and sent him on a mission to Scandinavia where he restored peace and order to the local churches and monasteries and set up two new archbishoprics.
members.aol.com /calderdale/kk_617.html   (2706 words)

  
 A Brief History of Celibacy in the RCC - www.ezboard.com
Peter, the first pope, and the apostles that Jesus chose were, for the most part, married men.
Fact: Priests and even popes still continued to marry and have children for several hundred years after that date.
The temper of [popes] Innocent III and Boniface VIII is still the leading influence in its policy, and the opportunity alone is wanting for it to revive in the twentieth century the all-pervading tyranny which it exercised in the thirteenth.
p098.ezboard.com /fxcatholicfrm2.showMessage?topicID=307.topic   (2356 words)

  
 AsiaFinest Discussion Forum > Cathelic Vs Christain
Again...Jesus set up the Church and set Peter as the first Pope of his church...that is specifically in the Bible..."And I say also to thee, That thou art Peter (Petros), and upon this rock (petra) I will build my church; and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it.
Catholicism is really a political movement in disguise by the Pope who wants Catholics to conquer lands and colonize people for the Pope.
But the Pope who commands his followers to kill and convert for their church or the many Priests who molest children, are basically the people who create the doctrine for their Church and thus anything that their followers learn come from that doctrine.
www.asiafinest.com /forum/lofiversion/index.php/t9120-0.html   (11690 words)

  
 June 16-18, 2000 THIS WEEKEND OVER THE PAST TWO MILLENNIUMS: (jun16eve.htm)
Though the Pope coronated Frederick, any benevolence between the two soon dissipated and for over a century there would be distrust and intrigue between the German kings and the Holy See.
1464 A.D. Pope Pius II becomes the first pope to lead a crusade, but his own personal crusade against Islam and the Koran never materializes as he died two months later, thus ending the last possible chance of an organized crusade.
The handwriting was on the wall for just under twelve years later the Papal States would be dissolved and Pius IX would imprison himself within the walls of the Vatican, never leaving what would become the Vatican City State in the Lateran Treaty on February 11, 1929.
www.dailycatholic.org /issue/2000Jun/jun16eve.htm   (550 words)

  
 Pope Adeodatus Biography   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-24)
Adeodatus reigned as pope from 672 to 676.
He was a monk of the Roman cloister of St Erasmus on the Coelian Hill, and he was active in improving monastic discipline, and in the repression of the Monothelitism.
He is sometimes referred to as Adeodatus II; his predecessor, Pope Deusdedit, is also sometimes known as Adeodatus I. Pope Adeodatus Resources
www.biographybase.com /biography/Adeodatus_Pope.html   (79 words)

  
 Today in History - June 16
He is sometimes known as Adeodatus II, because the form "Adeodatus" is used also for the name of a former pope Deusdedit (615-618).
It arose as a result of the Augsburg Interim and dealt with the emperor's demands that the Lutherans restore the Catholic mass, sacraments and authority of the Pope.
1983 Pope John Paul II visited his native Poland, remaining through June 23.
chi.lcms.org /history/tih0616.htm   (1130 words)

  
 Pope Adeodatus   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-24)
Adeodatus (also known as Adeodatus II) reigned as pope from 672 to 676.
He was a monk of the Roman cloister of St Erasmus on the Caelian Hill, and he was active in improving monastic discipline, and in the repression of Monothelitism.
He is sometimes referred to as Adeodatus II since an earlier Pope Deusdedit is sometimes known as Adeodatus I. History of the World History of the United States History of Europe Ancient History History Military History
www.worldhistory.com /wiki/P/Pope-Adeodatus.htm   (140 words)

  
 [No title]
310 Pope Eusebius, 31st Pope, deported to Sicily with anti-Pope Heraclius by Maxentius
537-555 Pope Vigilius, involved in death of Pope Silverius, conspired with Justinian and Theodora, excommunicated by N. African bishops in 550
Pope John Paul II, reaffirmed conservative moral traditions (The Splendor of Truth) and the forbidding of women in the priesthood
www.concordtx.org /chron2.htm   (6750 words)

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Pope St. Deusdedit
Home > Catholic Encyclopedia > D > Pope St. Deusdedit
He is said to have been the first pope to use leaden
One dating from his reign is still preserved, the obverse of which represents the
www.newadvent.org /cathen/04760a.htm   (156 words)

  
 Chronology of Christianity
Pope Eusebius, 31st Pope, deported to Sicily with anti-Pope Heraclius by
Pope Innocent VI Earliest extant documentation stating the existance of the Shroud of Turin
Pope Gregory XI Pope Urban VI Anti-Pope Clement VII
www.cwo.com /~pentrack/catholic/chron.html   (5758 words)

  
 November 19 Events in History
November 19, 1523 Giulio de' Medici chosen as Pope Clemens VII
November 19, 1367 League of Cologne goes against Danish king Waldemar IV November 19, 1302 Pope Boniface VIII delegates degree "Unam sanctam"
November 19, 615 Pope Deusdedit/Adeodatus I elected to succeed Boniface IV November 19, 498 Anastasius II ends his reign as Catholic Pope
www.brainyhistory.com /days/november_19.html   (1513 words)

  
 Saint Deusdedit --  Encyclopædia Britannica
also called Deusdedit I, or Adeodatus I born, Rome [Italy]
His pontificate is chiefly noteworthy for an unsuccessful resumption of the Byzantine war against the Lombards in Italy and for a reversal of the policy of popes Gregory I and Boniface IV, who favoured monks over the secular clergy.
"Deusdedit, Saint." Encyclopædia Britannica from Encyclopædia Britannica Premium Service.
www.britannica.com /eb/article-9030118?tocId=9030118   (67 words)

  
 Crossmap Christian Directory :: Saint Deusdedit I   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-24)
People > Saints > D > Saint Deusdedit I
Short biography of Pope St. Deusdedit I. http://users.erols.com/saintpat/ss/1108.htm#deus
Help build the largest human-edited directory on the web.
dir.crossmap.com /People/Saints/D/Saint_Deusdedit_I   (58 words)

  
 Magic City Morning Star: November 19 - Today in History   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-24)
0498 - Anastasius II dies, ending his reign as Catholic Pope
0615 - Pope Deusdedit/Adeodatus I elected to succeed Boniface IV - Pope Boniface VIII delegates degree "Unam sanctam"
1523 - Giulio de' Medici chosen as Pope Clemens VII
magic-city-news.com /article_584.shtml   (1159 words)

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