Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. v. t. e. The Gonfalonier of the Church or Papal Gonfalonier ( Italian: Gonfaloniere della Chiesa, "standard-bearer"; Latin: Vexillifer Ecclesiæ) was a military and political office of the Papal States. Originating from the use of the Papal banner during combat, the office later became largely ceremonial and political.

  2. Gonfalonier Gereja atau Gonfalonier Kepausan (bahasa Italia: Gonfaloniere della Chiesa, "pembawa bendera"; bahasa Latin: Vexillifer Ecclesiæ) adalah sebuah jabatan militer dan politik Negara Gereja. Berasal dari pemakaian bendera Kepausan pada masa perang, jabatan tersebut kemudian lebih bersifat seremonial dan politis.

  3. People also ask

  4. Gonfalone of Boniface VIII. The Banner of the Holy Roman Church ( Latin: Vexillum; Italian: Gonfalone di Santa Romana Chiesa, occasionally Vessilio di San Pietro, "Standard of Saint Peter") was the battle standard of the Papal States during the Renaissance and a symbol of the Catholic Church.

  5. Il Gonfaloniere della Chiesa o Gonfaloniere Papale (in latino Vexillifer Ecclesiæ) fu una carica politica e militare dello Stato Pontificio, affidata ad un personaggio di altissimo rango. Nato dall'impiego del gonfalone in ambito bellico, diventò in seguito un titolo cerimoniale e politico.

    Durata
    Ritratto
    Nome
    Pontefice
    1059 – ?
    Papa Niccolò II (1059-1061)
    [4]
    ca. 1118
    Con Pier Leoni liberò Papa Gelasio II da ...
    ca. 1296
    Papa Bonifacio VIII (1294-1303)
    Re di Aragona e Valencia; Gonfaloniere, ...
    1372 – ?
    Papa Gregorio XI (1370-1378)
    Comandante delle Armate Papali contro ...
  6. The Gonfalonier of the Church or Papal Gonfalonier was a military and political office of the Papal States. Originating from the use of the Papal banner during combat, the office later became largely ceremonial and political. At his nomination, the gonfalonier was given two banners, one with the arms of the Church and another with the arms of the reigning pope . The gonfalonier was entitled to ...

  7. The captain general of the Church ( Italian: Capitano generale della Chiesa) was the de facto commander-in-chief of the armed forces of the Papal States during the Middle Ages. The post was usually conferred on an Italian or other noble with a professional military reputation or (later) a relative of the pope. The parallel office of gonfalonier ...

  8. In seguito codesti gonfalonieri, unitamente ai Buonomini, costituirono a Firenze i cosiddetti collegi, che insieme coi priori delle Arti formavano quell'organo centrale di governo che fu la Signoria. Il gonfaloniere di giustizia, nella costituzione fiorentina poi imitata in altri comuni, cominciò l'anno 1289, come capitano di mille armati "a ...

  1. People also search for