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Monasticism and religious orders --- History --- 271 <420> "12/15" --- -Monasticism and religious orders --- -Monachism --- Monastic orders --- Monasticism and religious orders for men --- Monasticism and religious orders of men --- Orders, Monastic --- Religious orders --- Brotherhoods --- Christian communities --- Brothers (Religious) --- Friars --- Monks --- Superiors, Religious --- Kloosterwezen. Religieuze orden en congregaties. Monachisme--Engeland--?"12/15" --- -England --- Church history --- -Kloosterwezen. Religieuze orden en congregaties. Monachisme--Engeland--?"12/15" --- -271 <420> "12/15" --- Monachism --- Orders, Religious --- England --- Monasticism and religious orders - England. --- Monasticism and religious orders - History - Middle Ages, 600-1500.
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"The need for an educated parochial clergy had been seen from early times and during the Middle Ages was articulated by popes, councils and generations of canonists. Uneducated parish priests, it was frequently said, were like the blind leading the blind, both in peril of falling into the pit. Various efforts were made to remedy this problem, culminating in 1298 with the decretal of Pope Boniface VIII Cum ex eo, which allowed non-priest rectors of parish churches to absent themselves for up to seven years to attend university. When their studies were completed, they had to become priests within one year. This study set out to examine how this decretal was implemented over the next fifty years in the diocese of Lincoln, the largest in England. The bishops' registers, however, revealed a much wider practice. In addition to dispensations granted by virtue of Cum ex eo, a substantial number of licences to study were also granted to rectors who were already priests, particularly after 1320. In total, over twelve hundred rectors of Lincoln diocese received permissions to study during this half-century period. A comparison with two other dioceses shows that the granting of such permissions was not peculiar to Lincoln diocese and occurred elsewhere at similar rates. This is suggestive of a wider English phenomenon."-- Publisher description.
Education, Higher --- Education, Medieval --- History --- Catholic Church --- 266.2*24 --- 27 <420> "04/14" --- Education --- Medieval education --- Seven liberal arts --- Civilization, Medieval --- Learning and scholarship --- College students --- Higher education --- Postsecondary education --- Universities and colleges --- Vorming van lokale clerus --- Kerkgeschiedenis--Engeland--Middeleeuwen --- Catholic Church. --- Lincoln (England : Diocese : Catholic Church) --- 266.2*24 Vorming van lokale clerus --- Education, Higher - England - Lincoln Region - History - Middle Ages, 600-1500 - Sources --- Education, Medieval - England - Lincoln Region - Sources
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27 "04/14" --- Histoire de l'Eglise--Middeleeuwen --- Church history --- Christianity --- Middle Ages, 600-1500 --- Christian church history --- anno 500-1499 --- Eglise --- Histoire
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Christian church history --- anno 500-1499 --- Church history --- 27 "04/14" --- Christianity --- Kerkgeschiedenis--Middeleeuwen --- Middle Ages, 600-1500
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Archbishop Simon Sudbury's register is something of a rarity. Of the eleven archbishops of Canterbury in the fourteenth century the registers of only seven have survived, and of these only two have been published: a portion of theregister of Robert Winchelsey (1295-1313) and the register of the brief episcopate of Simon Langham (1366-68).Sudbury became archbishop of Canterbury in 1375 while England was at war with France and while the church was about to split in two by schism. His register reveals all of this, but much more. There is the day-to-day administration of the church: clergy ordained, parishes filled, disputes settled, wills proved and much else. It shows Sudburyas a conscientious pastor animarum and an able administrator, as well as a skilled canon lawyer, who tried to steer a smooth course against the monetary demands of the crown, which were to lead to the Peasants' Revolt and to his own assassination on Tower Hill.This volume is a calendar edition of Archbishop Sudbury's register: it contains an English-language summary of each entry, including every place name and personal name and date. An introduction records the making of the register and a summary of its contents; notes elucidate particular points; and a full index allows easy access to references.
Church records and registers --- Sudbury, Simon, --- Simon, --- Catholic Church. --- History --- England --- Church history --- Church of England. --- Sources. --- Great Britain --- Visitations, Ecclesiastical --- Ecclesiastical visitations --- Church discipline --- Visits of state --- Church registers --- Ecclesiastical records and registers --- Ecclesiastical registers --- Parish registers --- Registers of births, etc. --- Church archives --- Theobald, Simon, --- Angleterre --- Anglii︠a︡ --- Inghilterra --- Engeland --- Inglaterra --- Anglija --- England and Wales --- Thebaud, Simon, --- Church records and registers - England - Canterbury --- Sudbury, Simon, - Archbishop of Canterbury, - 1316-1381 --- Simon, - of Sudbury, - 1317-1381 --- England - Church history - 14th century - Sources
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Excommunication. --- Church and state --- Church and state --- Church history --- History --- History --- England --- Church history
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