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Laudabiliter - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Taken from A History of Ireland by Eleanor Hull ... Volume One, Appendix I ... "ADRIAN, bishop, servant of the servants of God, to his most dearly beloved son in Christ, the illustrious king of the English, greeting and apostolical blessing.[1]
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Laudabiliter - History of Laudabiliter from A Dictionary of British History at Encyclopedia.com.
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Laudabiliter - History of Laudabiliter from The Oxford Companion to British History at Encyclopedia.com ... Laudabiliter, c.1155–60. The authenticity of this papal bull, granted by Adrian IV and recognizing Henry II as lord of Ireland, has been much debated.
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Laudabiliter was a papal bull purported to have been issued by Adrian IV, the only Englishman ever to serve as pope of the Catholic Church, claiming to give ...
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Laudabiliter 1155. Another reason King Henry invaded Ireland was because Pope ... Doubts were cast on Laudabiliter in the 19th century, but its effect was ...
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Laudabiliter Laudabiliter , c. 1155-60. The authenticity of this papal bull, granted by Adrian IV and recognizing Henry II as lord of Ireland, has ... In addition to Laudabiliter and the letters Alexander a number of authors have examined the character of Giraldus Cambrenis and the account of John of Salisbury,
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THE PAPAL BULL LAUDABILITER: ADRIAN IV APPROVES THE INVASION OF IRELAND BY HENRY II, 1155-115 ... 1. The source for all known copies of Laudabiliter is Gerald of Wales' Expugnatio. Copies appear in other of Gerald's works, as well as in the work of his near contemporaries: Ralph Diceto, Roger Wendover, Peter of Blois,
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The subjugation of Ireland by the English Crown was sanctioned in advance [in the bull Laudabiliter] by an incumbent of the Papal office who was perhaps unable to forget that, before he became Pope Hadrian IV, he had been the Englishman Nicholas Breakspear [...], but this case seems to be exceptional.
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In addition to Laudabiliter and the letters Alexander a number of authors have examined the character of Giraldus Cambrenis and the account of John of Salisbury, in addition to challenging each other.[19] McCormick's The Pope and Ireland is very much a challenge to James G. Maguire's Ireland and the Pope:
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