A Companion to Sardinian History, 500–1500
The Sardinian Church 191 Partly as a result of the bidding of Gregory VII, the special relationship be- tween the Pisan and Sard ...
192 Turtas 4.5 The Fight for Investiture in Sardinia Although the date of the concession of legateship is not known, the circum- ...
The Sardinian Church 193 of the congregation in Sardinia. All that could be obtained from Montecassino in 1065 was the dispatch ...
194 Turtas condition that the Cassinese send “at least three or four monks sufficiently well trained that they could be promoted ...
The Sardinian Church 195 fearsome than that of its archbishop: the commune of Pisa, the progress of which would mark the ineluct ...
196 Turtas Costantine judge of Arborea preferred this solution, which allowed him to de- mand that the prior be a person appreci ...
The Sardinian Church 197 easy garb.”58 The abbot had full jurisdiction over everyone belonging to the monastery—monks, ecclesias ...
198 Turtas In contrast, there is abundant documentation of the conflicts between the bishops and clergy of the cathedrals, on th ...
The Sardinian Church 199 As for the canons, it should be remembered that they also had to respect one of their reforms by adopti ...
200 Turtas with the consent of the abbot or prior, cumbersait-se (became cumbersu) abandoned the world to live alongside the mon ...
The Sardinian Church 201 penetration of the island by Pisa, which the Genoese found unacceptable. This would lead to continuous ...
202 Turtas His successors were no more successful in this: Honorius III (1216–1227), Gregory IX (1227–1242), and Innocent IV (12 ...
The Sardinian Church 203 he could be protected from simony and the interference of the lay world. It fol- lowed that laypeople w ...
204 Turtas 5.9 The Church Patrimony We know from the Liber censuum that each of the three archbishops was re- quired to pay to t ...
The Sardinian Church 205 from their monastery in Pisa in 1284.77 There was one feature that the new or- ders had in common, whic ...
206 Turtas and then vicarii ad nutum, still very few at that time. Later on, given the already established custom of paying the ...
The Sardinian Church 207 Another glimpse of religious practices in Sardinia during the Aragonese era comes from Cagliari. During ...
208 Turtas considered to insufficiently guarantee both the liberty of the married couple and the certainty that no impediments t ...
The Sardinian Church 209 Although the archbishop of Pisa retained the title of primate of Sardinia and Corsica, he no longer had ...
210 Turtas profited by issuing a decree in 1329 reserving the nomination of all bishops for the Holy See; Clement VI renewed thi ...
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