concordat
101Concordat de 1817 — Cette page d’homonymie répertorie les différents sujets et articles partageant un même nom. Deux concordats ont été signés en 1817 : celui du 5 juin 1817, avec la Bavière ; celui du 11 juin 1817, avec la France. Catégorie : Homonymie …
102CONCORDAT, THE — a convention of July 15, 1801, between Bonaparte and Pius V., regulative of the relations of France with the Holy See …
103French Concordat of 1801, The — • This name is given to the convention of the 26th Messidor, year IX (July 16, 1802), whereby Pope Pius VII and Bonaparte, First Consul, re established the Catholic Church in France Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. French Concordat of… …
104French Concordat of 1801 — The French Concordat of 1801 † Catholic Encyclopedia ► The French Concordat of 1801 This name is given to the convention of the 26th Messidor, year IX (July 16, 1802), whereby Pope Pius VII and Bonaparte, First Consul, re established… …
105Basle Concordat — Basle Con‧cor‧dat [ˌbɑːl kɒnˈkɔːdæt ǁ kɑːnˈkɔːr ] noun BANKING the Basle Concordat an agreement between the Group of Ten leading industrialized countries in 1975, relating to the control by banks of their foreign branches. A new form of the… …
106Wormser Concordat — Wormser Concordat, s.u. Concordat I. A) …
107Worms, Concordat of — (1122) Compromise between Pope Calixtus II and Emperor Henry V (r. 1106–25) to settle the Investiture Controversy, reached at Worms, Germany. It marked the end of the first phase of conflict between Rome and what was becoming the Holy Roman… …
108Bologna, Concordat of — (1516) Treaty between Pope Leo X and King Francis I of France, settling several disputes between the French church and the papacy. The kings and higher clergy of France had long upheld the principle of Gallicanism, which recognized the general …
109Aschaffenburger Concordat — Aschaffenburger Concordat, s. Concordate …
1101801, Concordat of — ▪ French religious history agreement reached on July 15, 1801, between Napoleon Bonaparte and papal and clerical representatives in both Rome and Paris, defining the status of the Roman Catholic Church in France and ending the breach caused …