The concile national of 1811 was, among, the greatest flashpoints in the struggle that pitted the Napoleonic Empire against the papacy. The concile deserves to be situated within more recent historiographical trends. This incident reveals much about the nature of Napoleonic imperialism and the Church’s distrust for the power of the state. This article puts forward the view that the failure of the concile national was not strategic but tactical. Several bishops were frustrated with the pope’s recalcitrance over episcopal investiture and fearful of schism. Their initial openness to neo-conciliarism turned to hostility when confronted with the state’s intolerance
In the wake of the French Revolution, Napoleon Bonaparte, First Consul of France, and Pope Pius VII ...
The Catholic Church\u27s attitude toward the French Revolution remained hostile throughout the ninet...
The French Revolution sought to erect an edifice which would bridge the chasm between ancien regime ...
In 1815, Napoleon Bonaparte and Pope Pius XVII signed an agreement called the Concordat, which was a...
The recent bicentennial commemorations of the Napoleonic empire have witnessed a proliferation of ne...
From the French Revolution, 1798, right through the nineteenth century and into the 20th Century, in...
About the author Justin Butler is a junior history major at Kentucky Christian University. He hopes...
‘Revolution’ as an historical category has received continuous academic interest and scrutiny, where...
Bernard Plongeront, The Resistance oh the Former Constitutional Bishops to the Concordat (1801) Whi...
While the struggle between Boniface VIII and Philip IV of France may have marked the decline of papa...
The conquest of history. Napoleon, Galileo and the Archive de l’Empire – While Napoleon’s empire was...
This paper describes the way Napoleon Bonaparte used propaganda to influence nations to fight the en...
This study examines the attitude of Catholics, represented by their newspapers lad bishops, towards ...
Abstract — The close association of Christianity with the late Bourbon monarchy’s style of governanc...
On 17th of May 1809, Rome is officially annexed to the French Empire. At that moment, Rome was alrea...
In the wake of the French Revolution, Napoleon Bonaparte, First Consul of France, and Pope Pius VII ...
The Catholic Church\u27s attitude toward the French Revolution remained hostile throughout the ninet...
The French Revolution sought to erect an edifice which would bridge the chasm between ancien regime ...
In 1815, Napoleon Bonaparte and Pope Pius XVII signed an agreement called the Concordat, which was a...
The recent bicentennial commemorations of the Napoleonic empire have witnessed a proliferation of ne...
From the French Revolution, 1798, right through the nineteenth century and into the 20th Century, in...
About the author Justin Butler is a junior history major at Kentucky Christian University. He hopes...
‘Revolution’ as an historical category has received continuous academic interest and scrutiny, where...
Bernard Plongeront, The Resistance oh the Former Constitutional Bishops to the Concordat (1801) Whi...
While the struggle between Boniface VIII and Philip IV of France may have marked the decline of papa...
The conquest of history. Napoleon, Galileo and the Archive de l’Empire – While Napoleon’s empire was...
This paper describes the way Napoleon Bonaparte used propaganda to influence nations to fight the en...
This study examines the attitude of Catholics, represented by their newspapers lad bishops, towards ...
Abstract — The close association of Christianity with the late Bourbon monarchy’s style of governanc...
On 17th of May 1809, Rome is officially annexed to the French Empire. At that moment, Rome was alrea...
In the wake of the French Revolution, Napoleon Bonaparte, First Consul of France, and Pope Pius VII ...
The Catholic Church\u27s attitude toward the French Revolution remained hostile throughout the ninet...
The French Revolution sought to erect an edifice which would bridge the chasm between ancien regime ...