Ad
related to: pope sixtus v encyclopedia of law and order
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Sixtus V died on 27 August 1590 from malaria. The pope became ill with a fever on 24 August which intensified the following day. As Sixtus V lay on his deathbed, he was loathed by his political subjects, but history has recognized him as one of the most important popes. On the negative side, he could be impulsive, obstinate, severe, and autocratic.
In 1586, Pope Sixtus V had mandated that the maximum number of cardinals be seventy. [4] Of these, the College of Cardinals had sixty-nine total members at the time of Clement VIII's death. [ 5 ] [ 6 ] Following Leo's election, Girolamo Agucchi had also died on 27 April, the same day as Leo, reducing the total number of cardinals in the College ...
The Sixtine Vulgate or Sistine Vulgate (Latin: Vulgata Sixtina) is the edition of the Vulgate—a 4th-century Latin translation of the Bible that was written largely by Jerome—which was published in 1590, prepared by a commission on the orders of Pope Sixtus V and edited by himself. It was the first edition of the Vulgate authorised by a pope.
Immensa aeterni Dei ("The immeasurable [wisdom of] the eternal God") is an apostolic constitution in the form of a papal bull issued by Pope Sixtus V on 22 January 1588. The constitution reorganized the Roman Curia , establishing permanent congregations of cardinals to advise the pope on various subjects.
After Pope Martin V had instituted a large number of offices in the Cancellaria, Pope Sixtus V placed many of them in the class of "vacabili", i. e. venal offices (a practice also of secular courts, e. g. those of France, even under the absolutist King Louis XIV).
Hugues Loubenx de Verdalle, O.S.Io.Hieros., Grand Master of Order of St. John of Jerusalem – cardinal-deacon of S. Maria in Portico (received the title on 15 January 1588), † 4 May 1595; Federico Borromeo – cardinal-deacon of S. Maria in Domnica (received the title on 15 January 1588), then cardinal-deacon of SS. Cosma e Damiano (9 ...
Pope Clement V addressed escalating measures against Venice after the 1308 capture of Ferrara; [4] and later in the War of Ferrara of the 1480s Pope Sixtus IV laid an interdict on Venice, an erstwhile ally. In 1509 Pope Julius II placed Venice under interdict, during the War of the League of Cambrai, to further the papal cause in warfare in the ...
In 1587, Sixtus V established the special congregation to draw up a new ecclesiastical code. The printed work was submitted to Clement VIII in 1598 for his approbation, which was refused. A new revision undertaken in 1607-08 had a similar fate, the reigning pope Paul V declining to approve the Liber Septimus as the obligatory legal code of the ...