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  1. 4 days ago · The archbishop's power to divide prebends in order to increase the number of canons was confirmed by pope Nicholas IV in 1289. His powers of visitation, however, were restricted by an agreement between archbishop John le Romeyn and the chapter in 1290.

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  3. 1 day ago · In 1291 Pope Nicholas IV. granted a faculty to the prior and convent of Southwick to wear caps or amices on their heads in church, which were to be removed at the gospel and the elevation. The taxation of this date gave the annual value of the temporalities of the priory in the archdeaconry of Winchester at £27 17s. 8d.

  4. 5 days ago · The Franciscans were settled here before 1290, for on 27 November of that year Pope Nicholas IV granted an indulgence of one year and forty days of enjoined penance to penitents visiting the church of the Friars Minors at Grantham on the four feasts of the Virgin, and those of St. Francis, St. Anthony, and St. Clare. The convent was in the ...

  5. 4 days ago · It is not mentioned in the Taxation of Pope Nicholas IV, and in the valuation of 1534 the prioress was said to have a few houses and rents in Cambridgeshire, Rutland, Northamptonshire, and tithes from the parishes of St. John, St. Peter and St. Michael.

  6. 2 days ago · The Western Schism, also known as the Papal Schism, the Great Occidental Schism, the Schism of 1378, or the Great Schism[1] (Latin: Magnum schisma occidentale, Ecclesiae occidentalis schisma), was a split within the Roman Catholic Church lasting from 20 September 1378 to 11 November 1417, in which bishops residing in Rome and Avignon simultaneou...

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › TengrismTengrism - Wikipedia

    3 days ago · The name Mongke Tengri ("Eternal Tengri") is at the top of the sentence in this letter to Pope Nicholas IV, in accordance with Mongolian Tengriist writing rules. The words "Tngri" (Tengri) and "zrlg" (zarlig, decree/order) are still written with vowel-less archaism:

  8. 2 days ago · The Fourth Crusade (1202–1204) was a Latin Christian armed expedition called by Pope Innocent III. The stated intent of the expedition was to recapture the Muslim-controlled city of Jerusalem, by first defeating the powerful Egyptian Ayyubid Sultanate.

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