- The jus
spolii (also
called jus
exuviarum or
rapite capite), the
Latin for
right of spoil, was a
claim of
succession to the
property of
deceased clerics...
-
Historisches Jahrbuch, XXV (1904), 1 sqq.; Idem, "Die
pseudoisidorische 'Exceptio
spolii' bei
Papst Nikolaus I" in
Historisches Jahrbuch, XXVI (1905), 275 sqq. Adler...
- bc.ub.leidenuniv.nl.
Archived from the
original on
April 13, 2008. De
spoliis templi Hierosolymitani in arcu
Titiano Romae con****uis
Liber singularis...
-
Henry seized his treasury—an
early example of the
application of the jus
spolii by a
German monarch.
Henry started appointing low-ranking men to
royal offices...
-
ecclesiastical princes by
announcing that he
would be
willing to give up the Jus
Spolii and the
right to
receive recurring earnings from
church lands during a period...
- feet of each newly-crowned pope. In 1716,
Adriaan Reland published his De
spoliis templi Hierosolymitani in arcu
Titiano Romae con****uis, in English: "The...
- that Stilicho's
victories forces were "Vandal spoils" (Vandalicis ...
spoliis) and so many
scholars believe Vandals were involved. Furthermore, there...
- King
Philip of
Germany reluctantly renounced it,
together with the jus
spolii to Pope
Innocent III in 1203.
Emperor Otto IV did the same in 1209. Emperor...
-
princes by
announcing that he
would be
willing to give up the
right of jus
spolii,
which had for
years been used
against Church lands.
Despite the high degree...
-
Marcantonio Colonna must have had some
Marinese around, "Scutum ex
Turcarum spoliis reportatum,"
because the
shield is
rather half than one. — Carlo Emilio...