- "Babylonian captivity" of the
Papacy (cf.
Italian cattività
avignonese, i.e. "
Avignonese captivity"). A
total of
seven popes reigned at Avignon, all French...
- [alɛksɑ̃dʁ də ʁɔd]; 15
March 1593 – 5
November 1660), also Đắc Lộ was an
Avignonese Jesuit missionary and
lexicographer who had a
lasting impact on Christianity...
-
under the
influence of the
French kings. This
period was
known as the "
Avignonese" or "Babylonian Captivity".
During this
period the city of
Avignon itself...
- was
discarded on
account of religion;
Northern England shared the same
Avignonese bias as the
Scottish court, on par with
Valois France and Castile, which...
- The
reasons for the
Avignonese attack are unknown, but all the
French sources and the
papal legate's
report agree that the
Avignonese were the instigators...
- an ****istance for
learning the language. The work was
continued by the
Avignonese Alexandre de Rhodes.
Building on
previous dictionaries by
Gaspar do Amaral...
- David's predecessor, Martin, also a Unitor, died in 1342
while visiting the
Avignonese curia. Pope
Clement VI
appointed John
David to
succeed him on 30 May 1343...
- A
romanisation of
Vietnamese was
codified in the 17th
century by the
Avignonese Jesuit missionary Alexandre de
Rhodes (1591–1660),
based on
works of earlier...
-
Regular of San
Frediano di Lucca, who
abandoned it
during the
period of the
Avignonese papacy.
Around 1370, Pope
Urban V ****igned
Santa Croce to the Carthusians...
- Rollo-Koster,
Joelle (2002). "From
Prostitutes to
Brides of Christ: The
Avignonese Repentises in the Late
Middle Ages".
Journal of
Medieval and
Early Modern...