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  1. Constance of Greater Poland (also known as of Poznań) (Polish: Konstancja wielkopolska (poznańska)) (1245/46 – 8 October 1281) was a princess of Greater Poland, a member of the House of Piast, and by marriage a Margravine of Brandenburg–Stendal.

  2. Abstract. This chapter examines the role of the Council of Constance in addressing not only the threat posed at both ends of Europe by the Wycliffite and Hussite heresies, but also the pent-up demand for reform in the Roman Catholic Church that had been mounting in urgency for at least a century and a half.

  3. Jadwiga. Przemysł I (4 June 1221 [1] – 4 June 1257), a member of the Piast dynasty, was Duke of Greater Poland from 1239 until his death, from 1241 with his brother Bolesław the Pious as co-ruler. He was able to re-acquire large parts of Greater Poland, ruling as Duke of Poznań and Gniezno from 1247 and, upon several inheritance conflicts ...

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  5. Oct 28, 2014 · It was precisely this Pisan pope (Baldassarre Cossa, c. 1370-22 December 1419), eventually buried in the Florentine Baptistery of San Giovanni in an elegant tomb monument by Michelozzo, who eventually called for a church council at Constance.

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  6. The Council of Constance (Latin: Concilium Constantiense; German: Konzil von Konstanz) was an ecumenical council of the Catholic Church that was held from 1414 to 1418 in the Bishopric of Constance (Konstanz) in present-day Germany.

  7. The repercussions of the Gdańsk townspeople’s uprising (1416) at the Council of Constance The immediate causes of the Gdańsk uprising against the Teutonic Order can be traced back to the fiscal policy of the Order’s leadership, who lacked the means to compensate Poland and Lithuania for war damages after the so-called Great War (1409–1411).

  8. Constance of Greater Poland - Wikidata ... Polish princess

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