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  1. 2 days ago · The Fourth Crusade (November 10, 1202 - April 13, 1204) [2] 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.

  2. 2 days ago · Pope Innocent III, who excommunicated John in 1209. When the Archbishop of Canterbury, Hubert Walter, died on 13 July 1205, John became involved in a dispute with Pope Innocent III that would lead to the King's excommunication. The Norman and Angevin kings had traditionally exercised a great deal of power over the church within their territories.

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  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › CatharismCatharism - Wikipedia

    1 day ago · Pope Innocent III then declared de Castelnau a martyr and launched the Albigensian Crusade in 1209. The nearly twenty-year campaign succeeded in vastly weakening the movement; the Medieval Inquisition that followed ultimately eradicated Catharism.

  5. 4 days ago · Recognizing their zeal for the Faith, the Pope of the time, Innocent III, sent them to preach, not among the distant heathens, but among the heretics of their own lands. A man of encounter. Shortly after their return to France, Bishop Diego died, and Dominic was left alone to confront the growing heresy.

  6. 4 days ago · The emperor agreed in 1188 to the sultan's request to build a new mosque (and not just use an existing one) in Constantinople. Its construction is mentioned by Pope Innocent III in a letter of 1210 to the Latin Patriarch of Constantinople, Tommaso Morosini.

  7. 4 days ago · The period was certainly tumultuous, moving from King John’s submission to Pope Innocent III and the subsequent Magna Carta crisis, through the minority of Henry III, and then into the fraught and tempestuous decades of his majority, culminating in the challenge of Simon de Montfort and the constitutional experiments of 1258–63, with the ...

  8. 5 days ago · Pope Innocent III on 26 May, 1204, confirmed the possessions of the priory, including the churches of Hawkinge and Alkham. In 1294 a grant of protection was made to the prior while going beyond the seas.

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