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Relics of Hermann in Altshausen, Germany Salve Regina of Herman de Reichenau sung by Les Petits Chanteurs de Passy. Blessed Hermann of Reichenau or Herman the Cripple (18 July 1013 – 24 September 1054), also known by other names, was an 11th-century Benedictine monk and scholar.
The Catholic pope uses various titles by tradition, including Summus Pontifex, Pontifex Maximus, and Servus servorum Dei. Each title has been added by unique historical events and unlike other papal prerogatives, is not incapable of modification. [3] Hermannus Contractus may have been
It was added to the series of prayers said at the end of Low Mass by Pope Leo XIII. [5] The Salve Regina is traditionally sung at the end of a priest's funeral Mass. It is typically sung immediately after the Dismissal. [8] As a prayer, it is commonly said at the end of the rosary. [9]
Hermannus Contractus, Alma Redemptoris Mater said to have been written by him. Tommaso da Celano, Dies Irae; Orlando de Lassus, late Renaissance composer polyphonic masses and sacred music. Guillaume de Machaut, medieval French composer. Cristobal de Morales, Renaissance Spanish composer of sacred music.
Christopher was driven from the antipapacy by Pope Sergius III (904–911). Hermannus Contractus contends that Christopher was compelled to end his days living as a monk. [3] However, the historian Eugenius Vulgarius says he was strangled in prison. [4]
As "Conclave" shows, those ballots are sewn together with a needle and thread, and then burned with a chemical to send either black smoke, meaning a stalemate, or white, signifying "habemus papam ...
Berthold was a disciple and friend of Hermannus Contractus.When Hermannus saw death approaching, he entrusted to Berthold all the wax tablets that contained the writings which he had not yet committed to parchment and commissioned Berthold to peruse them and, after careful revision, to copy them on parchment.
The contractus trinus, contractus triplex, or simply triple contract, is a set of contracts used by European bankers and merchants in the Middle Ages, notably by the Fugger family, as a method of circumventing the canon law prohibition of usury.