Academic literature on the topic 'Diocese of Saint-Flour (France)'
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Journal articles on the topic "Diocese of Saint-Flour (France)"
Rist, Rebecca. "The papacy, Inquisition and Saint Guinefort the Holy Greyhound." Reinardus / Yearbook of the International Reynard Society 30 (December 31, 2018): 190–211. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/rein.00020.ris.
Full textCherygova, Anastasiia. "Henri-Dominique Lacordaire in the Canadian ultramontane philosophy." DIALOGO 7, no. 2 (June 30, 2021): 147–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.51917/dialogo.2021.7.2.12.
Full textSoetaert, Alexander. "Catholic refuge and the printing press: Catholic exiles from England, France and the Low Countries in the ecclesiastical province of Cambrai." British Catholic History 34, no. 04 (October 2019): 532–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/bch.2019.24.
Full textBock, Michel. "L’évêque Scollard et la question canadienne-française. Le diocèse de Sault-Sainte-Marie au coeur du conflit franco-irlandais (1904-1934)." Cahiers Charlevoix 10 (April 5, 2017): 13–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1039290ar.
Full textGlade, Nicolas, and Angélique Stéphanou. "XXXIVth Seminar of the French-Speaking Society for Theoretical Biology: Saint-Flour (Cantal), France, 26–28 May, 2014." Acta Biotheoretica 63, no. 3 (July 28, 2015): 237–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10441-015-9268-6.
Full textGlade, Nicolas, and Angélique Stéphanou. "Proceedings of the XXXIInd Seminar of the French-Speaking Society for Theoretical Biology; Saint-Flour (Cantal), France, 10–13 June, 2012." Acta Biotheoretica 61, no. 3 (September 2013): 289–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10441-013-9201-9.
Full textGlade, Nicolas, Ibrahim Cheddadi, and Sergiu Ivanov. "Proceedings of the XXXVIIIth Seminar of the French-Speaking Society for Theoretical Biology; Saint-Flour (Cantal), France, 11–13 June, 2018." Acta Biotheoretica 68, no. 1 (February 24, 2020): 1–3. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10441-020-09378-9.
Full textNISSAN, EPHRAIM. "Family Background and Humour in the Writings of Rinaldo De Benedetti, with an Interdisciplinary Analysis of “Racconto occitano” about Castelmagno in the Alps around 1910." Philology 4, no. 2018 (January 1, 2019): 439–525. http://dx.doi.org/10.3726/phil042019.18.
Full textJones, Michael. "Albert Rigaudière, Saint-Flour, ville d’Auvergne au bas moyen âge. Étude d’histoire administrative et financière. Paris, Presses Universitaires de France, 1982. 2 vols." Nottingham Medieval Studies 29 (January 1985): 123–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1484/j.nms.3.129.
Full textA. Orban, Myriam. "Des huguenots en Provence orientale (1558-1594)." Revue d'histoire du protestantisme 5, no. 2-3 (December 18, 2020): 181–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.47421/rhp5_2-3_181-196.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "Diocese of Saint-Flour (France)"
Venon, Fabien. "Les nouveaux territoires de l'Eglise catholique : maillage paroissial et gestion du patrimoine religieux." Clermont-Ferrand 2, 2005. http://www.theses.fr/2005CLF20001.
Full textCharbonnel, Marie. "Materialibus ad immaterialia : Peinture murale et piété dans les anciens diocèses de Clermont, du Puy et de Saint-Flour du XIIe au XVe siècle." Thesis, Clermont-Ferrand 2, 2012. http://www.theses.fr/2012CLF20005.
Full textWall-painting is viewed as a material medium of communication deeply linked to the places of worship and devotion that are churches. As a part of this place et by its monumental character, it forms a privileged way of spread for messages which addressees belong to terrestrial and celestial spheres. Those religious places and spaces, which wall painting is a good part, should consequently be viewed by taking account of its function and attendance. This dissertation proposes to envisage medieval religious practices through the prism of wall painting of the former dioceses of Clermont, Le Puy and Saint-Flour (1317). At first, the political and religious frameworks, historiography of the studies on wall painting and the problematic are exposed. Secondly, questionings induced by murals linked to spaces used by believers and clerical communities are developed. Thirdly, questionings inherent to murals inserted in material environment of the pious foundation, which serve as setting for liturgical or non liturgical prayers, and which are included in an individual and/or family context, are treated. The aim of this study is to consider iconographic and epigraphic expressions within private and community frameworks. Indeed, issues are very different, notably at levels as signs of identity and iconographic themes as portrait
Demange, Camille. "Le développement de l'architecture gothique à Saint-Georges de Sélestat au XIIIe siècle : une démonstration du pouvoir municipal ?" Thesis, Strasbourg, 2020. http://www.theses.fr/2020STRAG041.
Full textSélestat is at first a priory under the tutelage of monks from Conques, who have a church dedicated to Sainte-Foy. The political structure of the locality is changed when it gets equipped with a judiciary shared between the Emperor and the priory in 1217. Shortly after this date, the construction of the new parish church Saint-Georges. Due to a lot of written evidences, the rivalry between the clergies of the two churches throughout the Middle Ages is well informed. The eastern parts of Saint-Georges reuses the new solutions from the cathedral of Toul (near Nancy) and of the churches from burgundy, whereas the nave is characterized by a Romanesque inspiration involved in a understated recovery of the Gothic
Bouziat, Quentin. "La place des prieurés conventuels dans la vie économique, politique et religieuse du diocèse de Genève-Annecy aux XVIe, XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles." Thesis, Lyon 2, 2012. http://www.theses.fr/2012LYO20007/document.
Full textIn the 10th century, the Church from Savoy is in a very poor state. Weakened by various invasions, the secular clergy struggles to recover. Monks from major abbeys are sent by the episcopate influencing the creation of priories on the diocesan land. These religious houses settle permanently and play an important role in the life of the parishes hosting them. While regular priories had to face different fates, some of them are still conventual in the modern era. The different bishops count five conventual priories, but only four of these were founded around the 10th century. These are the priories of Bellevaux en Bauges, Peillonnex, Talloires and Contamine. This study focuses on the role of these institutions in the context of the Catholic Reformation introduced in the diocese during the last decades of the 16th century. The study is based on three main points. The first point traces back the evolution of the priories from their foundation until the introduction of the Reform movement in Geneva. The second part concentrates on the story of the monasteries over three centuries under the Ancien Regime. The last part is more thematic as it outlines how the conventual priories influence the political, religious and economic life of the Annecy-Geneva's diocese in the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries
Péricard, Jacques Lauranson-Rosaz Christian. "Le diocèse de Bourges au Haut Moyen Age de saint Ursin à Audebert." Lyon : Université Lyon3, 2006. http://thesesbrain.univ-lyon3.fr/sdx/theses/lyon3/2005/pericard_p.
Full textTrébaol, Céline. "L’abbaye de Saint-Sulpice et ses dépendances : l’expérience monastique au féminin dans le diocèse de Rennes, XIIe – XVIIIe siècles." Thesis, Rennes 2, 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017REN20003.
Full textFounded in the early years of 12th Century in the heart of a movement of monastic renewal, the Benedictine abbey of Saint-Sulpice quickly grew thanks to its founder, hermit Raoul de la Futaie, and to the support of the Dukes of Brittany, thus getting at the head of about forty priories by the 13th Century. The rigorist principles of hermits can be recognized in the abbey church’s architecture, whose partitioned spaces and bare, sober decoration favour a conventual life based on meditation. Originally meant as a double monastery, the insubordination of the male friars lead to their disappearance in the course of the 16th Century, leaving Saint-Sulpice as a fully women’s abbey. Led by their vocation, the nuns enter into a restricting life whose landmark is their strict enclosure. The Rule of Saint Benedict and the monastery’s Constitutions bind the nuns’ environment so that they can only find comfort in their own submissiveness and self-abnegation. At the helm of her community, the abbess rules with discretio and guides the girls towards perfection. The priories, remote from the mother house, progressively gain some independence, increased still by the reception of their own novices from the 17th Century on. The rise of conventual priories against the decline of rural houses leads to a dichotomy of this network by the end of the 18th Century
Lunven, Anne. "Construction de l’espace religieux dans les diocèses de Rennes, Dol et Alet/Saint-Malo : Approches historique et archéologique de la formation des territoires ecclésiastiques (diocèse, paroisse et cadres intermédiaires) entre le Ve et le XIIIe siècle." Thesis, Rennes 2, 2012. http://www.theses.fr/2012REN20010.
Full textOur work aimed to understand the formation of ecclesiastical territories of Rennes, Dol and Alet/Saint-Malo dioceses between the fifth and thirteenth centuries. Our focus on these three dioceses of Haute Bretagne is justified by thecrossroads between two theorised systems of ecclesiastical organisation. On the one hand, the Episcopal see of Rennes originated from gallo-frankish tradition and, on the other hand, Episcopal sees of Alet/Saint-Malo and Dol which evolved until ninth century due to the Celtic Church, in the framework of Breton emigration west of the Vilaine. In the first model, ecclesiastical structures were inherited from antique civil districts, contrary to the second model where the Church wasestablished following criteria that were more based on community than territory. Based on textual analysis and archaeology, especially from funeral sites and religious buildings, we intend to show that Church, in the Breton zone as in the Frankish zone, did not always have the same relationship to space. It was only between the eleventh and twelfth centuries, in the context of Gregorian Reform that Church emerged as a temporal institution, dedicated to taking charge of population. The creation of parishes, diocese, archdeaconries and deaneries followed the same dynamics: the affirmation of bishop as an autonomous power, who, as holder of sacredness, have exerted a spiritual authority beyond that exerted by churches or clerics dependents on his jurisdiction
Gicquel, Samuel. "Prêtres de Bretagne : les carrières ecclésiastiques dans les diocèses de Saint-Brieuc et de Vannes (1801-1905)." Rennes 2, 2006. http://www.theses.fr/2006REN20031.
Full textAs early as the end of Restoration, the profusion of priests in the Breton dioceses of Saint-Brieuc and Vannes resulted in the blocking of clerical careers, especially in Upper Brittany. It led to a diversification of the trajectories a priest could aspire to. A wide erudition, the management of charities, or holding several offices were other ways leading to clerical notability. Benefiting from favourable circumstances, bishops increased their hierarchical control of the clergy. Given the amount of competition, a priest aspiring to a successful career had no choice other than to abide by his bishop's decisions and to become the all round clergyman, unless he could rely on family connections, his own cultural capital or a dense social network. In both dioceses, ecclesiastical careers were markedly influenced by cultural borders. Memories of former dioceses remained vivid for several decades before fading out in the second half of the century when the new diocesan framework settled in
Portelli, Martine. "Recherches sur les manuscrits du XII° siècle provenant de la bibliothèque de l'abbaye bénédictine de Saint-Cyran dans le diocèse de Bourges." Dijon, 2001. http://www.theses.fr/2001DIJOL016.
Full textTurpin, Éric Bernard. "L'Église catholique et les pouvoirs dans le diocèse de Saint-Denis de la Réunion de 1911 à 1981." Thesis, La Réunion, 2010. http://www.theses.fr/2010LARE0017/document.
Full textThe decree of February 6th 1911 applies the law of December 9th 1905 to separate the Church and the State in the French colonies of Martinique, Guadeloupe and Reunion. This complete separation gives to the religious institution its freedom since it is not under the financial and juridic dependence of public authority anymore. Even if the issues of retirement and inventory of goods take place quite quickly and without any major incident, except in Saint-Gilles-les-Hauts, the retribution of personal properties and real estates belonging to the ecclesiastical establishments will only be solved during the Vichy Administration and in the beginning of the 4th Republic.After the time of passion linked to the application of the law will come the time of cordial Agreement right after the World War 1 during the episcopate of his Lordship de Beaumont. The Church, which was supposed to be the Absente would then be present in the colonial on to the postcolonial society, on a mutual respect basis. During this period, the Church made a bold act (the fight against fraud for the elections of April 1936), a support going to the dishonest compromise with the Vichy Administration, and the struggle against Communism, especially after World War 2. The sixties and the seventies would be the time of Assertion (the fight against electoral fraud, the struggle for natural birth regulation, criticism of the economic and social project and model but also alternative propositions) and also a time of Emancipation not without any domestic tearing, often linked to Society, and finally a time for the check of all sorts of manipulations, whether old ones (the right wing) or new ones (the Communist Party of Reunion).In the 70s, his Lordship Gilbert Aubry, the actual bishop, finishes off the process of emancipation of the Church that had started ten years before. From 1911 to 1981 the Catholic Church in Reunion Island would go from the Separation with the State to Emancipation
Books on the topic "Diocese of Saint-Flour (France)"
Chassang, Pierre. Les évêques de Saint-Flour dans leur diocèse sous l'Ancien régime: (1567-1801). Aurillac: Gerbert, 2001.
Find full textChassang, Pierre. Les évêques de Saint-Flour dans leur diocèse sous l'Ancien régime: (1567-1801). Aurillac: Gerbert, 2001.
Find full textChassang, Pierre. Les évêques de Saint-Flour dans leur diocèse sous l'Ancien régime: 1567-1801. Aurillac: Gerbert, 2001.
Find full textSources hagiographiques de l'histoire de Gorze, Xe siècle: Vie de saint Chrodegang, panégyrique et miracles de saint Gorgon. Paris: Picard, 2010.
Find full textBarbier, Pierre. Le Tregor historique et monumental: Etude historique et archeologique sur l'ancien eveche de Treguier. Bouhet: La Decouvrance, 2005.
Find full textVuillermoz, Daniel. Pierre de La Baume: Dernier évêque de Genève, abbé de Saint-Claude. Lons-le-Saunier: Aréopage, 2006.
Find full textVuillermoz, Daniel. Pierre de La Baume: Dernier eveque de Geneve, abbe de Saint-Claude. Lons-le-Saunier: Areopage, 2006.
Find full textPierre, Blet. Le clergé de France, Louis XIV et le Saint Siège de 1695 à 1715. Città del Vaticano: Archivio vaticano, 1989.
Find full textBlet, Pierre. Le clergé de France, Louis XIV et le Saint-Siège de 1695 à 1715. Città del Vaticano: Archivio Vaticano, 1989.
Find full textBook chapters on the topic "Diocese of Saint-Flour (France)"
Goudot, Grégory. "L’introduction et la diffusion des Minimes dans le diocèse de Clermont : enjeux, dynamique et réseaux (xvie-xviie siècles)." In Saint François de Paule et les Minimes en France de la fin du XVe au XVIIIe siècle, 333–49. Presses universitaires François-Rabelais, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pufr.2691.
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