Councils of Narbonne were a series of provincial councils of the Catholic Church held in Narbonne, France. A council was supposedly held in Narbonne between...
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Narbonne (/nɑːrˈbɒn/ nar-BON, US also /-ˈbɔːn, -ˈbʌn/ -BAWN, -BUN, French: [naʁbɔn] ; Occitan: Narbona [naɾˈβunɔ]; Latin: Narbo [ˈna(ː)rboː]; Late Latin: Narbona)...
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Catholic diocese of Narbonne existed from early Christian times until the French Revolution. It was an archdiocese, with its see at Narbonne, from the year...
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Septimania (redirect from Duchy of Septimania)
administrative province of the central royal government and an ecclesiastical province whose metropolitan was the Archbishop of Narbonne. Originally, the Goths...
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Rusticus of Narbonne (in French Rustique) (d. 26 October perhaps 461 AD) was a monk of the Lérins Abbey and bishop of Narbonne and Catholic saint of Gaul...
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of the Albigenses, the reformation of clergy and people and the Catholic church's relation to the Jewish people. Along with the Councils of Narbonne in...
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The Third Council of Toledo, called by King Reccared I of the Visigoths, renounces Arianism and embraces Catholicism. The Council of Narbonne is held....
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The Palace of the Archbishops of Narbonne, or Palais des Archevêques de Narbonne, is a municipal building in Narbonne, Aude, southern France, standing...
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Catharism (redirect from The massacre of the Cathars)
("field of the burned") near the foot of the castle. The Church, at the 1235 Council of Narbonne, decreed lesser chastisements against laymen suspected of sympathy...
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Viscount of Narbonne from 1194 until his own death. He was a member of the House of Lara. Throughout his reign he had to navigate competing claims of suzerainty...
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the Buyyids. The death of Hezekiah ended the line of the Geonim, which had begun four centuries earlier. 1050 Council of Narbonne, France forbids Christians...
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The Council of Agde was a regional synod held in September 506 at Agatha or Agde, on the Mediterranean coast east of Narbonne, in the Septimania region...
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Raymond II Trencavel (category Viscounts of Albi)
and Berengar of Barcelona and confirmed by the Council of Narbonne in January 1211. Until the formal act of the council, the overlord of the Trencavel...
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Scottish Carmelite houses into a separate province from England at the Council of Narbonne in 1303, he opposed it. He was deposed and excommunicated, and subjected...
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Guillem Guifredo (redirect from William Wifred, Bishop of Urgell)
was Wifred II, Count of Cerdanya. Very little is known of his episcopate but he is known to have attended the Council of Narbonne in 1043.[citation needed]...
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Synods held at Troyes (redirect from Council of troyes)
Archbishop of Lyon Sigebodus, Archbishop of Narbonne Rostagnus, Archbishop of Arles Adalardus, Archbishop of Tours Teudericus Archbishop of Besançon Ottramnus...
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their distance from the general councils, Visigoth rulers began influencing the councils only after the conversion of Reccared I. As soon as they had...
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Visigothic Kingdom (redirect from List of Kings of the Visigoths)
defeat at the Battle of Narbonne in 436, but then in 439 at the Battle of Toulouse the Visigoths defeated the allied forces of Romans and Huns. By 451...
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Aude (redirect from Department of Aude)
is Carcassonne and its subprefectures are Limoux and Narbonne. As of 2019, it had a population of 374,070. Aude is a frequent feminine French given name...
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The Third Council of Toledo, called by King Reccared I of the Visigoths, renounces Arianism and embraces Catholicism. The Council of Narbonne is held....
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Yvette Chassagne (category Grand Officers of the Order of Merit of the Italian Republic)
1994, she served as advisor to the president of Club Med. She was elected to the municipal council for Narbonne in 2001. She married Jean Chassagne; the couple...
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boundary between the bishoprics of Toulouse and Carcassonne: the latter was given a large territory extending from Narbonne to Lerida. Guillaume Besse, Histoire...
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episcopal council in Narbonne in 1017. The council, fooled by the forgeries claiming that the tithes of Gurb belonged to the cathedral of Vic, confirmed...
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archdiocese of Toulouse on 17 October 1390, and then to Narbonne on 19 September 1391. As archbishop of Narbonne, he attended the Council of Pisa in 1409...
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Count of Toulouse, Duke of Narbonne and Marquis of Provence from 1222 until his death. Raymond was born at the Château de Beaucaire, the son of Raymond...
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Reims Richerius, Archbishop of Sens Rollandus, Bishop of Dol Dalmatius, Archbishop of Narbonne Bernard of Sédirac, Archbishop of Toledo and Legate in Spain...
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historically known Bishop of Maguelone, Boetius, assisted at the Council of Narbonne in 589. Maguelone was completely destroyed in the course of the wars between...
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lists by Jules Chevalier. Bishop Desideratus was present at the Council of Narbonne in 788: J.D. Mansi (ed.), Sacrorum conciliorum nova et amplissima...
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A Jewish Princedom in Feudal France (category History of Narbonne)
was established in Narbonne (Septimania) by the Carolingian king Pepin as a reward for Jewish cooperation in the Frankish conquest of the city in 759 CE...
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Louis XV (redirect from Louis XV of France)
de Narbonne-Lara (Colorno, 23 August 1755 – Torgau, 17 November 1813), called Comte de Narbonne-Lara. Colonel of the Army and Honorary Chamberlain of Princess...
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