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    • Spondent quas non exhibent

      • Spondent quas non exhibent (sometimes referred to as Spondent pariter) is a papal decretal promulgated in 1317 by Pope John XXII forbidding the practice of alchemy.
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  2. Spondent quas non exhibent (sometimes referred to as Spondent pariter) is a papal decretal promulgated in 1317 by Pope John XXII forbidding the practice of alchemy. [1] [2] The rationale provided for the ban in the decretal is not a specifically theological one, [3] but instead a moral condemnation, with the Pope expounding how fraudulent ...

  3. In 1317 Pope John XXII issued a decree against the alchemists De Crimine Falsi Titulus VI. I Joannis XXII. [circa annum 1317 Avenioni] Back to transmutations . The Crime of Falsification. Alchemies are here prohibited and those who practise them or procure their being done are punished.

  4. None. Pope John XXII ( Latin: Ioannes PP. XXII; 1244 – 4 December 1334), born Jacques Duèze (or d'Euse ), was head of the Catholic Church from 7 August 1316 to his death, in December 1334. He was the second and longest-reigning Avignon Pope, elected by the Conclave of Cardinals, which was assembled in Lyon. Like his predecessor, Clement V ...

    • 23 December 1312, by Clement V
    • 4 December 1334
  5. Mar 28, 2023 · Footnote 5 Pope John XXII’s decretal against alchemy in 1317, which was aimed at alchemical practices throughout Western Christendom, was arguably the most famous and influential: “Alkimiae hic prohibentur, et puniuntur facientes et fieri procurantes: quoniam tantum de vero auro et argento debent inferre in publicum, ut pauperibus erogetur ...

  6. 1317 |Pope John XXII's Papal Bull against alchemical counterfeit Spondet quas non exhibent. Cistercians ban alchemy. 1318 |The monk Adolf Meutha driven from the Cistercian Monastery at Walkenried for practising alchemy 1319 | 1320 |John Dastin, the alchemist, writes his alchemical letters to Pope John XXII 1321 | 1322 |

  7. 1313 – Friars Minors’ Constitution Generales Antique forbade the friars to practice alchemy. 1317 – Pope John XXII’s Papal Bull against alchemical counterfeit Spondet quas non exhibent. Cistercians ban alchemy. 1318 – The monk Adolf Meutha driven from the Cistercian Monastery at Walkenried for practising alchemy.

  8. Not only the Spirituals, but also the adherents of Michael of Cesena and William Occam, protested against this decree, whereupon in 1324 the pope issued a new Bull, confirming his former decision, setting aside all objections to it, and declaring those who opposed this decision heretics and enemies of the Church.

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