-
Laudabiliter was a bull
issued in 1155 by Pope
Adrian IV, the only
Englishman to have
served in that office.
Existence of the bull has been
disputed by...
- fief,
granted to the
Plantagenet kings of
England by the Holy See, via
Laudabiliter. As the Lord of
Ireland was also the King of England, he was represented...
- was
legitimised by
reference to
provisions of the
alleged Papal Bull
Laudabiliter,
issued by an Englishman,
Adrian IV, in 1155. The do****ent apparently...
- Anglo-Normans
claimed the
invasion was
sanctioned by the
papal bull
Laudabiliter. At the time,
Gaelic Ireland was made up of
several kingdoms, with a...
- famously, in 1158
Adrian is
supposed to have
granted Henry the
papal bull
Laudabiliter,
which is
thought to have
authorised Henry to
invade Ireland.
Henry did...
- hand
against him.
Wikisource has
original text
related to this article:
Laudabiliter Wikisource has
original text
related to this article:
Privilege of Pope...
- thereof) have been used many
times to
exercise papal power. The bull
Laudabiliter in 1155
authorized King
Henry II of
England to
invade Ireland. In 1207...
- and
Ireland and the
Parliament of the
United Kingdom. The
papal bull
Laudabiliter of Pope
Adrian IV was
issued in 1155. It
authorized the
Angevin King...
- parti****ted in the
Norman conquest of
Gaelic Ireland, with the
issuing of
Laudabiliter (claiming to gift the King of
England the
title "Lord of Ireland") and...
- v t e
Major constitutional laws
affecting Ireland Pre-Union
Laudabiliter (1155) Poynings' Law (1495)
Crown of
Ireland Act (1542) Grattan's constitution...