"The council of trent" Essays and Research Papers

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    Winter Break Assignment 1

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    --- Secularism --- Materialism 3. Desiderius Erasmus --- Thomas More --- Jan van Eyck 4. Ulrich Zwingli --- John Knox --- The Institutes of Christian Religion 5. Archbishop Cranmer --- Henry VIII --- Elizabethan Settlement 6. Pope Paul III --- Council of Trent --- Angela Merici 7. Huguenots ---Saint Bartholomew’s Day Massacre --- Edict of Nantes 8. Peace of Augsburg --- Thirty Years’ War --- Peace of Westphalia 9. Hernando Cortez ---Corregidores ---Mercantilism 10. Absolutism ---Cardinal Richelieu

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    st. jerome

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    critical edition of the Bible‚ but its acceptance by the Church was fortunate. As a modern scholar says‚ "No man before Jerome or among his contemporaries and very few men for many centuries afterwards were so well qualified to do the work." The Council of Trent called for a new and corrected edition of the Vulgate‚ and declared it the authentic text to be used in the Church. In order to be able to do such work‚ Jerome prepared himself well. He was a master of Latin‚ Greek‚ Hebrew and Chaldaic. He began

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    Part 2 Study Guide Middle Ages Dates: 450-1450 1. What was going historically during this era? What was life like? The era began with the disintegration of the Roman Empire and ended with the cultural reawakening of the Renaissance. The era whiteness a fairly unorganized Europe with lots of individual small towns‚ feudalism‚ the majority of people are uneducated and illiterate with the exception of the clergy and priests. At the end of the era universities were founded‚ towns grew and with

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    History Midterm Notes

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    Early Modern Period: Uniform and powerful Church (the Catholic Church) -> rise of heretics (those who believed something other than what the Church believed)‚ and religious fragmentation Feudal society -> states Feudalism= a defficult concept Feodum -> fief Lords have sovereignty over an area Kings still fight to achieve control over land and countries Social upheaval The Early Modern World (500-1300) 1) Crisis of the Western Church also known as the Great Schism 2) Hundred

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    The Protestant Reformation

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    Before the reformation‚ Europe was dominated by the Catholic Church. The church was very powerful both politically and spiritually. It was the most wealthy and powerful institution in Europe and owned about one third of the land in England. They controlled and influenced almost every aspect of life for the people. Social life was centered on worship services‚ prayer rituals‚ and religious festivals and ceremonies. Thousands of people lived in monasteries and were employed by the church. Bishops were

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    of Cath. - Jesuits 34. Who was the missionary that helped develop the importance of education in the reformation? - Johannes sturm 35. What exemplifies the Catholics reformation ultimate refusal to compromise? - Council of Trent 36. What was the purpose of the Council of Trent? -to resolve the religious differences created by the protestant revolt. 37. What protestant group was the minority in France? -Huguenots 38. Edict of

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    LAGOS ANGLICAN SEMINARY 17 BROAD STREET LAGOS   THE SIGNIFICANCE OF THE 16TH CENTURY REFORMATION IN EUROPE     WRITTEN BY: OSHISANYA JACOB         COURSE: THE REFORMATION         OCTOBER 2013   INTRODUCTION   The reformation was the 16th century radical movement to reform the religious practices in the Western Christendom. The major target of reformation was to restructure the Roman Catholic which as at then had dominated the political‚ religious and economic

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    The Great Schism Essay

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    The appointed pope returned to Avignon. This saw the church being placed in a worse state than it had been during the time of the Babylonian Captivity. The church was split into two allegiances‚ an event called the Great Schism‚ which produced two popes claiming universal sovereignty‚ while sending forth papal officers and raised the prices of taxes for Christians‚ which resulted in the excommunication of both popes. The Great Schism continued after the opposing popes died and replacements were designated

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    Filipino nationalism began with an upsurge of patriotic sentiments and nationalistic ideals in the 1800s Philippines that came as a consequence of more than three centuries of Spanish rule. This served as the backbone of the first nationalist revolution in Asia‚ the Philippine Revolution of 1896‚[1] and continues up to this day. These nationalistic sentiments have led to a wide-ranging campaign for political‚ social‚ and economical freedom in the Philippines. Background In the years before the

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    A RENEWED UNDERSTANDING of the CHURCH I. THE NATURE OF THE CHURCH (anchored on Her History) A. Her HISTORY 1. Jesus attracted bands of followers during his lifetime. His chosen group of apostles‚ and some others‚ particularly some women‚ traveled with him as he went about preaching the message of the kingdom of God throughout Judea and Galilee. 2. This little band of Jesus‟ followers would not have known the word „church‟ or the word „Christian.‟ The appellation „Christian‚‟ as we are told in the

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