The life of pope Pius the seventh [ed. by T.W. Allies].London, 1875 - 374 Seiten |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Ancona answer Austria authority Bernier Bigot Bishop of Nantes Bonaparte Bull Cæsar canonical Caprara Cardinal Fesch Catholic cause Chabrol Charlemagne Church clergy concession Concordat conscience consent constitutional bishops Consul coronation Council Court of Rome crown curés declared decree dioceses divine ecclesiastical Elisa Bonaparte Emery Emperor Europe evil faithful favour feel Fontainebleau France French French Empire Gallican Gallican Church Government heart Histoire de Pie Holy Father honour imperial impossible Italy Jansenists Joachim Murat Joseph L'Eglise Romaine Legate letter liberty Majesty marriage matters Mémoires de Consalvi Minister Miollis Naples Napoleon nation nomination Organic Articles ourself Pacca palace Papal Paris peace Pius VII Pope Pope's Portalis possessed prelate Premier Empire present priests Prince prisoner Protestant prove question refused reign religion religious remained render reply Rome Sacred College Savona Sovereign Pontiff Spina spiritual suffering Talleyrand temporal power things tion Tuileries Vicar wish words worship
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 91 - Seek ye therefore first the Kingdom of God and His justice, and all these things shall be added unto you.
Seite 59 - Republic recognizes the fact that the Catholic, Apostolic, and Roman religion is the religion of the great majority of French citizens.
Seite 211 - But that we may not scandalize them, go to the sea, and cast in a hook : and that fish, which shall first come up, take : and when thou hast opened its mouth, thou shalt find a stater : take that, and give it to them for me and thee.
Seite 350 - Oh quante volte, al tacito morir d'un giorno inerte, chinati i rai fulminei, le braccia al sen conserte, stette, e dei di che furono l'assalse il sovvenir! E ripensò le mobili tende, ei percossi valli, e il lampo de' manipoli, e l'onda dei cavalli, e il concitato imperio, e il celere ubbidir.
Seite 367 - ... the quaint costume of days gone by. But high in air, beneath the canopy, and upon the estrade, or small platform borne aloft, is the crowning object of the entire procession. Upon a faldstool, richly covered, stands the golden Monstrance, as it was anciently called in England, that contains the holiest object of Catholic belief and worship ; and behind it the Pontiff kneels, with his ample embroidered mantle, embracing the faldstool before him.