「Avignon」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

Avignon

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  • Armenia began a conversation with the pope in Avignon about religious affairs and sent former Catho
  • A total of seven popes reigned at Avignon; all were French, and all were increasingly u
  • Sporting Olympique Avignon also known as Avignon XIII or SO Avignon are
  • t Europe, particularly the Alberti bankers in Avignon, although the interdict was ignored by many,
  • et's father was a prosperous silk merchant of Avignon, an amateur violinist who recognized his son'
  • Six more cardinals remained in Avignon, and Jean de la Grange was absent as well.
  • He spent most of his life alternately in Avignon and Rome.
  • e diocese was divided between the Dioceses of Avignon and Digne.
  • He went to Avignon and cleared himself of this charge before Pop
  • novice, he did paintings in the Cathedral of Avignon and the Sodality Chapel.
  • Marshal Brune was killed in Avignon, and General Jean-Pierre Ramel was assassinat
  • After World War II, Masereel lived in Avignon and Nice, France.
  • In 1264 he was transferred to the see of Avignon, and in 1266 to the metropolitan see of Arles
  • been Petrarch's confessor during his stay in Avignon, and Petrarch wrote three letters to him.
  • He was later named papal legate to Avignon, and made by Henry III of France a knight of
  • to take action in the matter of the schism of Avignon, and Castile decided in favour of the antipop
  • of the French king, the cardinals returned to Avignon and in 1378 elected a French pope, Clement VI
  • It is the most populous suburb of the city of Avignon, and lies adjacent to the north side of the c
  • nt and went on to serve the Jacobite court at Avignon and to be its ambassador to Spain and then Pr
  • h a certain Almodis of Caseneuve not far from Avignon and near also to Les Chapelins, possibly the
  • he popes in the 14th century, still encircled Avignon and they are one of the finest examples of me
  • He passed some time at Avignon, and it was while at the papal court that he
  • lla, the daughter of Boso, count of Arles and Avignon and margrave of Tuscany; she mistreated Adela
  • nounced the decline of popes Benedict XIII of Avignon and Gregory XII of Rome, and elected pope Ale
  • served as the rector of the Jesuit college of Avignon and then of Lyons where he received the Jesui
  • as made during his visit to Pope John XXII at Avignon and which was very much disliked by Edward II
  • resulted in Alexander VII's temporary loss of Avignon and his forced acceptance of the humiliating
  • Western Schism he joined the obedience of the Avignon Antipope Clement VII.
  • European summit in Perpignan, to convince the Avignon Antipope Benedict XIII to resign his office a
  • 1978, Bouchex was appointed archbishop of the Avignon Archdiocese retiring on June 21, 2002.
  • classified along with the historic center of Avignon, as a UNESCO World Heritage Site, under cultu
  • e Antipope Robert of Geneva, then reigning at Avignon as Clement VII.
  • Boniface IX and to recognise Benedict XIII of Avignon as Pope (or, at least, to wait for his death
  • He died at Avignon, at the age of ca.
  • and an important member of the papal curia at Avignon, at the time of the Western Schism.
  • ngs espoused their relative's quarrel, seized Avignon, Benevento and Pontecorvo, and united in a pe
  • Persian berry, also called Avignon berry or French berry, is the fruit of the Av
  • Evidently he was acquainted with Avignon bishop Giuliano della Rovere, for when the bi
  • ated to the ars subtilior which flourished in Avignon, Bologna and other regions held by the antipo
  • He was consecrated at Avignon by Cardinal Peter, Bishop of Ostia.
  • as summoned to Prague from the papal court of Avignon by Charles IV to lead works on the newly foun
  • as crowned in the church of the Dominicans in Avignon by Raymond Guillaume des Farges, protodeacon
  • laration was then taken to the papal court at Avignon by bishop Kininmund, Sir Adam Gordon and Sir
  • Quarton, known to be working in Avignon by 1447, painted two pictures there in the ea
  • ry 1337 at the orders of Pope Benedict XII at Avignon by Annibald de Ceccano, bishop of Tusculum.
  • elay of two years, Zouche was consecrated, at Avignon, by Pope Clement VI on 7 July 1342.
  • except to maintain parity of members with the Avignon cardinals; and that within three months he wo
  • stical orders, since when he was hired in the Avignon chapel in that year he was called "clericus."
  • ry argument in favor of the legitimacy of the Avignon claimants.
  • From 2009, he plays in Avignon club ,they are in Division 1 in France.
  • h those following Antipope Benedict XIII from Avignon, convened the Council of Pisa, of which Cossa
  • Quietly withdrawing to Lyon and later to Avignon, de Billy devoted himself, for a period, enti
  • Michaelis was vice-inquisitor in Avignon during the 1580s and was involved in a number
  • tile to Pope Urban VI, Allarmet joined him at Avignon, either having been sent by the Duke of Burgu
  • Eighteen cardinals present in Avignon entered the conclave on December 29.
  • The Avignon Exchange was one of the first foreign exchang
  • cal Estelle Bright premiered in France at the Avignon Festival in 2005.
  • Prix de l'Humour" at the Avignon Festival in 1993 and is known for working acr
  • The Festival d' Avignon, or Avignon Festival, is an annual arts festi
  • Avignon Film Festival - Avignon, France
  • Screenings at the Avignon Film Festival, Munich Film Festival and the K
  • The club was renamed Avignon Foot 84 in 2003.
  • Avignon Football 84 (France)
  • t is an author, composer, and singer, born in Avignon, France in 1945.
  • He was born in Avignon, France and studied music locally and at the
  • He was born in Avignon, France and died in Los Angeles, California.
  • period during which the papacy was located in Avignon, France (the so-called Babylonian Captivity)
  • Benoit Richaud (born January 16, 1988 in Avignon, France) is a French ice dancer.
  • Jonathan Lacourt (born August 17, 1986 in Avignon, France) is a French footballer who plays for
  • Fabrice Soulier (born April 23, 1969 in Avignon, France) is a professional poker player with
  • red at the Haute-Provence Observatory east of Avignon, France, on September 29, 1981.
  • rt's inaugural World Championships in 1989 in Avignon, France, by more than a minute.
  • nt a great deal of time at the papal court in Avignon, France.
  • chbishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Avignon, France.
  • He also purchased the sovereignty of Avignon from Queen Joan I of Naples, for 80,000 crown
  • anon lawyer, papal vice-legate, and bishop of Avignon from 1240 to about 1261.
  • Pope John XXII, in Avignon, gave orders to stop them.
  • reminiscent both of the ars subtilior of the Avignon group of composers of the late 14th century,
  • At Avignon he established a community of nuns similar to
  • e British Isles, because while returning from Avignon he was kidnapped.
  • For example, during the siege of Avignon, he performed only the minimum service of 40
  • Seriously wounded during the siege of Avignon, he was unable to take up his appointment as
  • ever, while returning from a papal embassy to Avignon, he was captured by a Jean de Lamouilly, and
  • 660 AD) was a bishop and governor of Avignon, his native city.
  • Benedict XII king Philip VI of France sent to Avignon his eldest son with the task to support the c
  • s an Oxford University theologian who came to Avignon in 1323.
  • and also a writer, while his mother was from Avignon in France.
  • elected Pope Urban V and named him bishop of Avignon in December 1362.
  • Born in Avignon in 1964, he took to the seas at age 16 where
  • y the same pontiff to the See of Vaison, near Avignon in France.
  • , the first payment of which was delivered to Avignon in 1363 by Walter's proctor.
  • From 1305 to 1378, the Popes lived in Avignon, in what is now France, and were under the in
  • Following his success at the Battle of Avignon in 737 Charles Martel besieged Narbonne, but
  • is known to have worked at the Papal court at Avignon in the 1370s; his ballade, Par les bons Gedeo
  • f the Sacred College in June 1323 and died in Avignon in November of that same year.
  • assadors sent by King Robert I of Scotland to Avignon in 1320.
  • caused his first visit to the Papal Court at Avignon in 1334.
  • tic school of composers and poets centered on Avignon in southern France developed; the highly mann
  • at Ferrara was reminiscent of the activity at Avignon in the late 14th century, which produced a mu
  • 1305-14), removed the papal seat from Rome to Avignon, inaugurating the period sometimes known as t
  • He was born in Carpentras, near Avignon, into a family with an artistic bent and rece
  • ean-Christophe Ravier (born April 10, 1979 in Avignon) is a French racing driver.
  • Jeremie Azou (born 2 April 1989 in Avignon) is a French rower.
  • Paul Cattier (born 1 May 1986 in Avignon) is a French professional football (soccer) g
  • Bruno Savry (born 11 March 1974 in Avignon) is a French professional football defender w
  • 2001, and the Best Soloist title at the 2005 Avignon Jazz Festival.
  • ing (two races, premier and finale), but when Avignon lost their race EuroSpeedway also hosted two
  • ed include Music Biennale Zagreb, Tanglewood, Avignon, Miami, Cagliari, KlangSpectrum (Austria), Vi
  • He was received with great enthusiasm at Avignon, Montpellier and other cities, held a synod a
  • 1386 he provided four panel paintings to the Avignon office of the merchant Francesco di Marco Dat
  • He is currently a defenceman and coach on the Avignon Olympic Hockey Club squad.
  • first to the archbishop of Pisa, and then at Avignon on 25 August 1330 to John XXII, who absolved
  • e in the Papal Bull Ad ea ex quibus issued in Avignon on 14/15 March 1319.
  • Main article: Avignon Papacy
  • lais des Papes, the place of residence of the Avignon papacy during most of the 14th century.
  • During this period, known as the Avignon Papacy, the city of Avignon and the adjacent
  • Castile, Aragon, and England, support for the Avignon Papacy, and matrimonial alliance.
  • 1390, Catherine accepted the authority of the Avignon Papacy, under Antipope Clement VII and became
  • He was a major figure in the Avignon papacy, and also a diplomat engaged in the ne
  • which the Kingdom of Scotland sided with the Avignon Papacy, Avignon Pope Clement VII made Walter
  • kills and workshops had diminished during the Avignon Papacy, when the sources of patronage were re
  • he area by Roman cooks during the time of the Avignon Papacy, it can be considered a type of white
  • 8) was a French Cardinal in the period of the Avignon papacy.
  • nued to work at Freiburg for the curia of the Avignon Papacy.
  • Florence, which contributed to the end of the Avignon Papacy.
  • and immediately preceded the beginning of the Avignon Papacy.
  • me seventh ant the last Pope of the period of Avignon Papacy.
  • On 8 July 1342 in Avignon, pope Clement VI appointed him Archbishop of
  • He then went over to the camp of Avignon Pope Clement VII, for whom he acted as legate
  • and appointed to the bishopric of Glasgow by Avignon Pope Benedict XIII on July 9, 1408, and not b
  • A letter from Avignon Pope Benedict XIII in late summer 1400 provid
  • However, in 1379 Avignon Pope Clement VII commissioned the bishop of S
  • In 1380, Avignon Pope Clement VII provided Thomas with the Arc
  • t devoted to Chiaffredo dates from 1387, when Avignon Pope Clement VII granted indulgences to those
  • t of learning were confirmed by a bull of the Avignon Pope Benedict XIII, dated 28 August 1413.
  • t its first establishment, he was provided by Avignon Pope Benedict XIII as Bishop of Orkney 15 Nov
  • On 1 February 1388, a letter from Avignon Pope Clement VII to the official of the dioce
  • It was on 17 August 1398, that Avignon Pope Benedict XIII provided Waghorn to the va
  • The last Avignon pope, Benedict XIII, had fled to Perpignan in
  • house in Picardy, he attached himself to the Avignon popes Clement VII and Benedict XIII.
  • This started a second line of Avignon popes, though these are not now regarded as l
  • , 1352), born Pierre Roger, the fourth of the Avignon Popes, was pope from May 1342 until his death
  • Durrell's 1982 novel,"Constance", part of his Avignon Quintet, there is reference to a painter call
  • Benedict XIII (1394-1423), the rival Pope at Avignon, renounce all claim to the Papacy, he also wo
  • Born in Avignon, Rousset grew up in Aix-en-Provence and devel
  • Christian Audigier was raised in Avignon, southern France.
  • i Papas in Occitan) is a historical palace in Avignon, southern France, one of the largest and most
  • Jean Duprat, a silk merchant elected mayor of Avignon the previous June, was suspected of having pa
  • aps identical with Kansi, copied, in 1406, at Avignon, the Mishneh Torah of Maimonides.
  • Concordat of 1801 and added to the Diocese of Avignon; the cathedral became a church.
  • onstruction of a permanent papal residence in Avignon, the Palais des Papes, did the major Italian
  • A main venue of the 60th (2006) Avignon Theatre Festival staged at the Popes' Palace,
  • In decisions of an Avignon theological tribune he headed in 1354, Joanne
  • This allows trains not stopping at Avignon to pass through at full speed, but away from
  • Walter travelled to Avignon to receive consecration from Pope John XXII,
  • He was born in Avignon to a large family of artists, including his u
  • Thornbury set out for Avignon to secure Papal confirmation; tragically the
  • panied Catherine in her journeys, and went to Avignon to act as an intermediary between her and Pop
  • t Mac Keen Jeans, who travelled from Paris to Avignon to meet with him.
  • r Pons recognising the right of the Bishop of Avignon to land in Beauvezer, for which they owed two
  • egory XI, who in January, 1377, had gone from Avignon to Rome, sent on 22 May five copies of his bu
  • It is located a few kilometres south of Avignon town centre.
  • He was educated at Avignon under a Protestant tutor, and had begun the s
  • honourable imprisonment in the papal palace, Avignon until his death in October 1333.
  • Avignon was the first legal body to regulate fiduciar
  • the schism of the time, his appointment from Avignon was contested, by Francesco Moricotti Prignan
  • 1315/1320, Grizac - d. April 13, 1388, Avignon) was a French Cardinal, and the younger broth
  • 1243 - 22 December 1316, at Avignon), was an archbishop of Bourges who was famed
  • - 1348 or 1349 at the Priory of Montaud, near Avignon) was a French Cardinal, theologian, and canon
  • f the Palace of the Popes and the churches of Avignon were created primarily by artists from Siena.
  • It took five weeks for Grimoard to reach Avignon, where he was crowned as Urban V.
  • In 1337 he was again compelled to visit Avignon, where he remained till 1344.
  • He studied medicine in Avignon, where in 1667 he obtained his medical degree
  • The most prosperous quarter of the city of Avignon, where the bankers settled, became known simp
  • she moved to France and settled in Montclar, Avignon, where she studied French and Spanish.
  • f the Fratres Pontifices founded by Beneic in Avignon, where he died.
  • Following his election, he travelled to Avignon, where the Pope John XXII was residing, to ge
  • he took a job as a salesman at a boutique in Avignon where he was able to boost denim sales throug
  • 1309 moved his court to the papal enclave at Avignon, where it remained for the next 68 years.
  • 27, abandoned the See of Toulouse and went to Avignon where he died in 1348.
  • Avignon, which at the beginning of the 14th century w
  • in Amiens Cathedral,, and his actual tomb in Avignon, which is an early example of a transi or cad
  • f Shakespeare, a bookstore and arts center in Avignon which resolutely refuses the separation of "c
  • , she turned to the Antipope Benedict XIII of Avignon who was recognized in France as the rightful
  • r the pressure of the Antipope Clement VII of Avignon, who wished to have Otto of Brunswick at his
  • is Hebrew learning in a public disputation at Avignon with the chief rabbi Benetrius.
  • episcopal palace of Carpentras (north-east of Avignon), with 23 of the 24 eligible cardinals presen