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The Concordat of Nablus

The Journal of Ecclesiastical History, 1982
On 23 January 1120, in the ancient town of Nablus in Samaria, Patriarch Warmund of Jerusalem and King Baldwin II of Jerusalem held a famous assembly of the highest dignitaries of the clergy and nobility. It has become known as the Council of Nablus, although it was not, strictly speaking, a church synod.
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The Second Adriatic Concordat

Blackfriars, 1937
The recent attempt to settle the relations between the Catholic Church and the Kingdom of Jugoslavia has been attended by tumult in the streets of Belgrade and in the minds of some religious publicists in this country who have seen in it an example of Roman Catholic aggression.
Ceslas Novak, Thomas Gilby
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The Concordat of 1801

1974
Since 1099 the Catholic Church has entered into some 150 concordats with various sovereign states. As signatories of these concordats, the universal Church, personified by the Holy See, and a sovereign state, as distinct from a particular ruler or government, have negotiated bilateral agreements regulating various religio-political matters. The diverse
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The Hungarian Concordat

This chapter focuses on Maria Theresa's bold use of spectacle, diplomacy, and emotional appeal to secure Hungarian loyalty amid Austria's political and military collapse. Palffy's advice inspired a lavish procession to Pressburg, using grandeur and Hungarian symbolism to impress a proud and independent people.
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Negotiation of the Concordat

1974
Once Bonaparte concluded that an accord with Rome might be indispensable for his plans, he followed up the previous contacts he had made with the Holy See and took the necessary initiatives to institute an entente with the Papacy. His preparations for the negotiations and a synopsis of the actual negotiations must be summarized here in order to clarify
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Laïcité et concordat

Revue d'Histoire de l'Eglise de France, 2001
Ces deux termes, souvent charges d'une signification polemique, voire passionnelle, possedent l'un et l'autre leur histoire. Laicos, laicus fut utilise des l'Antiquite, chemina au Moyen Age, pour aboutir a la politique agressive de « laicisation » de la Troisieme Republique. Evolution aussi de la notion de Concordat, meme si le mot lui-meme ne date que
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Legal aspects of the Concordat

Academic Digest
The Concordat is a constitutional agreement signed this year between the Apostolic Autocephalous Orthodox Church of Georgia and the state. It remains disputed due to legal norms inconsistent with the Constitution and technical or content issues. Nevertheless, this is why it stands out as one of the most intriguing documents, stirring interest not only ...
Ekaterine Abashidze, Meri Lomia
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Concordats for health

Quality of Ageing, 2001
Edward Peck, Helen Bowers
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“Town and gown concordat?”

2018
This paper examines the development of Notre Dame University in Fremantle Western Australia, in light of Sharon Haar’s work on the regeneration of the city of Chicago through its various university campuses. A nineteenth century port city and now heritage precinct, the West End of Fremantle has been gradually re-made since the early 1990s ...
Lewi, Hannah, Murray, Andrew
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