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CAPITULARY

  • Capitulary
  • Edicts of the Frankish Empire

    A capitulary (medieval Latin capitulare) was a series of legislative or administrative acts emanating from the Frankish court of the Merovingian and Carolingian

    Capitulary

    Capitulary

    Capitulary

  • Capitulary of Ver
  • 9th century Frankish administrative instrument

    The Capitulary of Ver was issued by Carloman II in 884 and is often known as the last Carolingian capitulary. It deals with issues including Viking attacks

    Capitulary of Ver

    Capitulary_of_Ver

  • Capitulary of Herstal
  • The Capitulary of Herstal, or Capitulare Haristalense, was a capitulary issued during the reign of Charlemagne which was intended to organize the functioning

    Capitulary of Herstal

    Capitulary_of_Herstal

  • Carolingian Empire
  • Frankish empire in Europe (800–887)

    purpose of capitularies. Some historians argue that the capitularies were nothing more than a 'royal wish-list' while others argue for capitularies representing

    Carolingian Empire

    Carolingian Empire

    Carolingian_Empire

  • Capitulary of Soissons
  • The Capitulary of Soissons is a record of the council held in Soissons on 2 or 3 March 744 under the aegis of Pippin III, the mayor of the palace for Neustria

    Capitulary of Soissons

    Capitulary of Soissons

    Capitulary_of_Soissons

  • Capitularies of Charles the Bald
  • Series of acts implemented by King Charles

    The Capitularies of Charles the Bald represent a series of acts implemented by King Charles to decide and promulgate laws governing public affairs. Capitularies

    Capitularies of Charles the Bald

    Capitularies_of_Charles_the_Bald

  • Capitulary of Quierzy
  • Edict passed by Emperor Charles II in 877

    The Capitulary of Quierzy (pronounced [kjɛʁzi]) was a capitulary of Emperor Charles II that had a series of measures to safeguard the administration of

    Capitulary of Quierzy

    Capitulary_of_Quierzy

  • Capitulary of Le Mans
  • The Capitulary of Le Mans, or the Capitulare in pago Cenomannico datum, is a capitulary traditionally ascribed to Charlemagne and dated to the year 800

    Capitulary of Le Mans

    Capitulary_of_Le_Mans

  • Capitulatio de partibus Saxoniae
  • Legal code issued by Charlemagne

    variously translated as 'Ordinances concerning Saxony' or the 'Saxon Capitularies' or 'Capitulary of Paderborn') was a legal code issued by Charlemagne and promulgated

    Capitulatio de partibus Saxoniae

    Capitulatio_de_partibus_Saxoniae

  • Capitulary of Servais
  • The Capitulary of Servais was the implementation of an agreement between Charles the Bald and his half-brother Lothar to maintain the peace. In a conference

    Capitulary of Servais

    Capitulary_of_Servais

  • Lex Saxonum
  • Series of laws issued to subdue the Saxon nation (782–803)

    later than the conquest of Saxony by Charlemagne. It is preceded by two capitularies of Charlemagne for Saxony: the Capitulatio de partibus Saxoniae (A. Boretius

    Lex Saxonum

    Lex_Saxonum

  • Francia
  • Western European kingdom (c. 481–843)

    officials trained to remember it and pass it on. The Merovingians adopted the capitulary as a tool for the promulgation and preservation of royal ordinances. Its

    Francia

    Francia

    Francia

  • Capitulary for the Jews
  • Legal prescriptions in the Carolingian Empire

    The Capitulary for the Jews (Latin: Capitula de Iudaeis, lit. 'chapters on the Jews') is a set of six short legal prescriptions concerning Jews in the

    Capitulary for the Jews

    Capitulary for the Jews

    Capitulary_for_the_Jews

  • Charlemagne
  • Carolingian emperor from 800 to 814

    requiring that all free men take an oath of loyalty to Charlemagne. The capitulary reformed the institution of the missi dominici, officials who would now

    Charlemagne

    Charlemagne

    Charlemagne

  • Admonitio generalis
  • known as a capitulary issued by Charlemagne in 789, which covers educational and ecclesiastical reform within the Frankish kingdom. Capitularies were used

    Admonitio generalis

    Admonitio generalis

    Admonitio_generalis

  • Alfred the Great
  • King of Wessex (871 – c. 886); King of the Anglo-Saxons (c. 886 – 899)

    historian Patrick Wormald to speculate that Alfred had in mind the legatine capitulary of 786 that was presented to Offa by the papal legate George of Ostia

    Alfred the Great

    Alfred the Great

    Alfred_the_Great

  • Libri Carolini
  • Four books on the command of Charlemagne

    The Libri Carolini ("Charles' books"), more correctly Opus Caroli regis contra synodum ("The work of King Charles against the Synod"), is a work in four

    Libri Carolini

    Libri Carolini

    Libri_Carolini

  • Lambert of Italy
  • Emperor in Italy from 891 to 898

    Spoleto and Ageltrude, born in San Rufino. He was the last ruler to issue a capitulary in the Carolingian tradition. Lambert was crowned king in May 891 at Pavia

    Lambert of Italy

    Lambert of Italy

    Lambert_of_Italy

  • Lovage
  • Species of flowering plant

    2015-07-28. Moncorgé, Marie Josèphe. "Of imperial lands and imperial courts Capitulary of Charlemagne". www.oldcook.com. Archived from the original on 2016-06-24

    Lovage

    Lovage

    Lovage

  • Celery
  • Species of edible plant

    meadows of violet and wild celery surrounding Calypso's Cave. In the Capitulary of Charlemagne, compiled c. 800, apium appears, as does olisatum, or alexanders

    Celery

    Celery

    Celery

  • Council of Frankfurt
  • Synod in 794

    published in the form of a capitulary written in Medieval Latin. This Capitulary of the Council (also known as the Frankfurt Capitulary) does not survive in

    Council of Frankfurt

    Council of Frankfurt

    Council_of_Frankfurt

  • Gerhard Schaffran
  • Papal consistory[clarification needed] and Auxiliary bishop of Görlitz, Capitulary vicar [de] of Breslau for the see of Görlitz and Bishop of Dresden-Meissen

    Gerhard Schaffran

    Gerhard Schaffran

    Gerhard_Schaffran

  • Chancellor of Germany
  • Head of government of Germany

    The chapel's college acted as the emperor's chancery issuing deeds and capitularies. Eventually, the office of imperial archchancellor was given to the archbishops

    Chancellor of Germany

    Chancellor of Germany

    Chancellor_of_Germany

  • Sodomy
  • Anal or oral sex with people, any sex with an animal, non-procreative sex

    around 850 CE by the Pseudo-Isidorian fabrications. Three Carolingian capitularies, fabricated under the pseudonym Benedictus Levita, referred to sodomy:

    Sodomy

    Sodomy

    Sodomy

  • Magdeburg
  • Capital city of Saxony-Anhalt, Germany

    mentioned for the first time in a documentary record as "Magadoburg" in the Capitulary of Diedenhofen by Charlemagne in 805. Otto I, the Holy Roman Emperor and

    Magdeburg

    Magdeburg

    Magdeburg

  • Padua Cathedral
  • Cathedral in Padua, Italy

    Padua Cathedral, or Basilica Cathedral of Saint Mary of the Assumption (Italian: Duomo di Padova; Basilica Cattedrale di Santa Maria Assunta), is a Catholic

    Padua Cathedral

    Padua Cathedral

    Padua_Cathedral

  • Advocatus
  • Medieval officeholder

    Charlemagne; henceforward the advocatus ecclesiæ in the medieval sense. A Capitulary of about 790 ordained that the higher clergy, "for the sake of the church's

    Advocatus

    Advocatus

    Advocatus

  • Capitulare de villis
  • Medieval Latin text

    ever) correspond to reality. The Capitulare de villis is one of several capitularies issued by Carolingian royalty to address the organization and administration

    Capitulare de villis

    Capitulare de villis

    Capitulare_de_villis

  • Botanical garden
  • Garden used for scientific study, conservation and public display

    viridarium or orchard. Such gardens were given impetus by Charlemagne's Capitulary de Villis, which listed 73 herbs to be used in the physic gardens of his

    Botanical garden

    Botanical garden

    Botanical_garden

  • Engelram, Chamberlain of France
  • is indicated as being count somewhere in the third missicatum in the Capitulary of Servais of November 853 which included “the counties of Engelram.”

    Engelram, Chamberlain of France

    Engelram,_Chamberlain_of_France

  • Sword
  • Long bladed weapon

    regardless of whether the men were Goth or Roman. A number of Charlemagne capitularies made ownership of a sword mandatory, for example, those who owned a warhorse

    Sword

    Sword

  • Capitularia missorum specialia
  • Two 802 acts of Charlemagne

    Capitulare missorum generale ("General capitulary on legates") and Capitularia missorum specialia ("Special capitularies on legates"), both issued in 802,

    Capitularia missorum specialia

    Capitularia_missorum_specialia

  • Placitum
  • Public Judicial Assemblies in the Middle Ages

    whereat military and legislative matters, such as the promulgation of capitularies, predominated over judicial functions. The nature of these assemblies

    Placitum

    Placitum

  • Carolingian minuscule
  • Form of writing

    standard. Further adoption was encouraged by the issuance of imperial capitularies, with the script continuing to spread throughout the Holy Roman Empire

    Carolingian minuscule

    Carolingian minuscule

    Carolingian_minuscule

  • Farrier
  • Specialist in equine hoof care

    not recorded until closer to the end of the millennium. Carolingian Capitularies, legal acts composed and published by Frankish kings until the ninth

    Farrier

    Farrier

    Farrier

  • Vercelli Book
  • Manuscript Old English poetic codex

    dates back to the late 10th century. The manuscript is housed in the Capitulary Library of Vercelli, in northern Italy. The Vercelli Book consists of

    Vercelli Book

    Vercelli Book

    Vercelli_Book

  • Ingelger
  • 9th century Frankish nobleman & founder of House of Anjou

    877, he inherited his father Tertullus' lands in accordance with the Capitulary of Quierzy, which Charles the Bald had issued. His father's holdings from

    Ingelger

    Ingelger

  • Soap
  • Substance used for cleaning

    century, soap-making was well known in Italy and Spain. The Carolingian capitulary De Villis, dating to around 800, representing the royal will of Charlemagne

    Soap

    Soap

    Soap

  • Paladin
  • Legendary knights of Charlemagne's court

    maintained by the Carolingian sovereigns (reigned 751–987). A Frankish capitulary of 882 and Hincmar, archbishop of Reims, writing about the same time,

    Paladin

    Paladin

    Paladin

  • Quierzy
  • Commune in Hauts-de-France, France

    questions of predestination were published, and Gottschalk condemned. The Capitulary of Quierzy was promulgated in June 877 by the emperor Charles the Bald

    Quierzy

    Quierzy

    Quierzy

  • Acts of Peter
  • Early Christian apocryphal Acts of the Apostles

    earliest manuscript of the Vetus Latina. This codex is preserved in the Capitulary Library of the Vercelli Cathedral. The chapters describing Peter's crucifixion

    Acts of Peter

    Acts of Peter

    Acts_of_Peter

  • Royal household under the Merovingians and Carolingians
  • Household of the early kings of the Franks

    the far reaches of the kingdom to promulgate royal doctrine. See the Capitulary of Servais for a listing of the bishops, abbots and counts that supported

    Royal household under the Merovingians and Carolingians

    Royal_household_under_the_Merovingians_and_Carolingians

  • Arab raid against Rome
  • 846 military incursion

    bishops and by Emperor Lothar I and King Louis II of Italy. It issued a capitulary, which survives. With contingents from Francia, Burgundy and Provence

    Arab raid against Rome

    Arab raid against Rome

    Arab_raid_against_Rome

  • Missus dominicus
  • Administrator commissioned by the Frankish king or Holy Roman Emperor

    orphans and the poor, and to all the people." Presumably the same year the capitulary usually known as the Capitulare missorum generale was issued, which gives

    Missus dominicus

    Missus_dominicus

  • Meginhere
  • Frankish count and nobleman (died after 811)

    believed to be the same as identified as the count of Missaticum 4 in the Capitulary of Servais implemented by Charles the Bald in 853. Turner, Samuel Epes

    Meginhere

    Meginhere

  • Theodulf of Orléans
  • Writer, poet and the Bishop of Orléans

    (798–818), Theodulf wrote two important capitularies. Capitula ad presbyteros parochiae The first capitulary was a reminder to the priests of his diocese

    Theodulf of Orléans

    Theodulf of Orléans

    Theodulf_of_Orléans

  • Carolingian church
  • Christianity in the Frankish kingdoms under Carolingian rule (751-888)

    Capitulare missorum generale (“General capitulary on legates”) and the Capitulare missorum specialia (“Special capitularies on legates”) reaffirmed the roles

    Carolingian church

    Carolingian_church

  • Just war theory
  • Doctrine about when a war is ethically just

    property, also began to appear in ecclesiastical texts, as well as some capitularies (laws or ordinances) issued by Charlemagne and other rulers, anticipating

    Just war theory

    Just war theory

    Just_war_theory

  • Gau (territory)
  • German term for a region within a country

    further divided into vici (villages or farmsteads). Charlemagne, by his capitulary legislation, adopted the comitatus subdivision and appointed local rulers

    Gau (territory)

    Gau (territory)

    Gau_(territory)

  • Vercelli
  • Comune in Piedmont, Italy

    and Bernardino Lanino, who were natives of Vercelli. The cathedral's Capitulary Library contains valuable manuscripts. Its religious texts include the

    Vercelli

    Vercelli

    Vercelli

  • Casa de la Independencia Museum
  • Museum in Asunción, Paraguay

    can be seen in one of the yard corners. Capitulary Saloon Crossing the yard, there is a replica of the Capitulary Saloon of the old Cabildo de Asunción

    Casa de la Independencia Museum

    Casa de la Independencia Museum

    Casa_de_la_Independencia_Museum

  • Forest
  • Dense collection of trees covering a relatively large area

    denoting "open wood", Carolingian scribes first used foresta in the capitularies of Charlemagne, specifically to denote the royal hunting grounds of the

    Forest

    Forest

    Forest

  • Guy III of Spoleto
  • Emperor in Italy from 891 to 894

    his reign. He did try to maintain the Carolingian tradition and issue capitularies as former emperors had. In 891, he demanded the traditional service in

    Guy III of Spoleto

    Guy III of Spoleto

    Guy_III_of_Spoleto

  • Ancient Order of Freesmiths
  • Secret society

    viewed as pagan. During the reign of Charlemagne, the order was given a capitulary to serve as lay judges in Francia. After Charlemagne's death, the Vehmic

    Ancient Order of Freesmiths

    Ancient_Order_of_Freesmiths

  • Viking sword
  • as exclusive as during the Merovingian period, and in Charlemagne's capitularies, only members of the cavalry, who could afford to own and maintain a

    Viking sword

    Viking sword

    Viking_sword

  • Indiculus superstitionum et paganiarum
  • Latin collection of capitularies

    (Small index of superstitions and paganism) is a Latin collection of capitularies identifying and condemning superstitious and pagan beliefs found in the

    Indiculus superstitionum et paganiarum

    Indiculus superstitionum et paganiarum

    Indiculus_superstitionum_et_paganiarum

  • Edict of Pîtres
  • 864 act by West Frankish king Charles the Bald creating a cavalry force

    The Edict of Pîtres (Medieval Latin: Edictum Pistense) was a capitulary promulgated at Pîtres on 25 June 864. It is often cited by historians as an example

    Edict of Pîtres

    Edict of Pîtres

    Edict_of_Pîtres

  • Religion in ancient Rome
  • University Press, 2000), pp. 105–137. Indiculus superstitionum et paganiarum, capitulary condemning amulets, divination, and magical practices, c. 8th century

    Religion in ancient Rome

    Religion in ancient Rome

    Religion_in_ancient_Rome

  • Benefice
  • Reward for services or future services

    later his empire through a series of published statutes called capitularies. The Capitulary of Herstal (AD 779) distinguished between his vassals who were

    Benefice

    Benefice

  • History of hospitals
  • Midwifery and the Secret Instrument. Norman Publishing. ISBN 9780930405205. Capitulary Duplex, 803, chapter iii Smith, L. M. (Lucy Margaret) (1920). The early

    History of hospitals

    History_of_hospitals

  • Pseudo-Isidore
  • 9th-century Carolingian-era author and forger

    consists of a collection of forged capitulary legislation ascribed to Charlemagne and Louis the Pious. These False Capitularies, which consist mostly of excerpts

    Pseudo-Isidore

    Pseudo-Isidore

  • Medieval law
  • Law of the European Middle Ages

    Rothari promulgated by the Lombard king Rothari in 643, and the various capitularies issued by the Frankish rulers. Separate mention should be made of the

    Medieval law

    Medieval law

    Medieval_law

  • Christian monasticism
  • Christian religious way of life

    remains a part of the Catholic, Eastern Orthodox and Anglican faiths. The capitulary of 789 reads: "Let every monastery and every abbey have its school, in

    Christian monasticism

    Christian monasticism

    Christian_monasticism

  • Benedict Levita
  • Pseudonym attached to a forged collection of ninth-century capitularies

    Benedict the Deacon, is the pseudonym attached to a forged collection of capitularies that appeared in the ninth century. The collection belongs to the group

    Benedict Levita

    Benedict_Levita

  • Childeric III
  • King of the Franks from 743 to 751

    Bishop Gauziolenus [fr] of Le Mans confirming his immunities. Since the Capitulary of Soissons of 3 March 744 is already dated to Childeric's second year

    Childeric III

    Childeric III

    Childeric_III

  • Shaven women
  • Derogatory WW II term for women who had a relationship with a German soldier

    the Bible, in ancient Germany, among the Visigoths, in a Carolingian capitulary dating to 805 and against adulterous women in the Middle Ages. After the

    Shaven women

    Shaven_women

  • Hunfrid of Prüm
  • Frankish-German Benedictine monk (died 871)

    within royal administrative networks during Charles the Bald's reign. The Capitulary of Quierzy (857) survives in a luxury manuscript now held at the Beinecke

    Hunfrid of Prüm

    Hunfrid of Prüm

    Hunfrid_of_Prüm

  • Abbess
  • Female superior of a community of nuns, often an abbey

    persists in church administrative control into the modern era: Thus, in the Capitularies of Charlemagne, mention is made of certain Abbesses, who contrary to

    Abbess

    Abbess

    Abbess

  • Reginar Longneck
  • Lotharingian noble (c. 850–915)

    Bertha, Irmgard, and Gisela are candidate names). In an 877 charter in the Capitulary of Quierzy, he possibly already appears as "Rainerus", alongside his probable

    Reginar Longneck

    Reginar_Longneck

  • Councils of Aachen
  • early Middle Ages. In the mixed council of 798, Charlemagne proclaimed a capitulary of eighty-one chapters, largely a repetition of earlier ecclesiastical

    Councils of Aachen

    Councils_of_Aachen

  • Metz Cathedral
  • Catholic cathedral in Metz, France

    This system was formally adopted by other Frankish cathedrals under the Capitulary of Aix-en-Chapelle of 816. This first cloister, on the south side of the

    Metz Cathedral

    Metz Cathedral

    Metz_Cathedral

  • Fish pond
  • Man-made body of standing water used for pisciculture

    early Middle Ages. "The idealized eighth-century estate of Charlemagne's capitulary de villis was to have artificial fishponds but two hundred years later

    Fish pond

    Fish pond

    Fish_pond

  • Charles the Bald
  • King of West Francia from 843 to 877 and Carolingian Emperor from 875 to 877

    Charles (876–877) First Bible of Charles the Bald Crown of Charlemagne Capitularies of Charles the Bald Engelram, Chamberlain of France He is retroactively

    Charles the Bald

    Charles the Bald

    Charles_the_Bald

  • Mexico City Metropolitan Cathedral
  • Catholic church building in Mexico City

    large, ornate altars, a sacristy, a choir, a choir area, a corridor and a capitulary room. Fourteen of the cathedral's sixteen chapels are open to the public

    Mexico City Metropolitan Cathedral

    Mexico City Metropolitan Cathedral

    Mexico_City_Metropolitan_Cathedral

  • Foucher de Limoges
  • Limoges and started minting his own coinage. The promulgation of the Capitulary of Quierzy the following year simultaneously freed the lords up from royal

    Foucher de Limoges

    Foucher de Limoges

    Foucher_de_Limoges

  • Morelia Cathedral
  • Church in Morelia, Mexico

    marble as the tomb of archbishops. There are several rooms such as the capitulary and the sacristy, where you can find old paintings and furniture from

    Morelia Cathedral

    Morelia Cathedral

    Morelia_Cathedral

  • Louis II's campaign against Bari (866–871)
  • Frankish victory in southern Italy

    that year he issued a capitulary in northern Italy summoning an army to gather at Lucera in the spring of 866. The capitulary calls for more than an

    Louis II's campaign against Bari (866–871)

    Louis II's campaign against Bari (866–871)

    Louis_II's_campaign_against_Bari_(866–871)

  • Blaj Pronouncement
  • of Justice initiated public proceedings against the signatories (the capitulary provost Basiliu Rațiu, the Greek-Catholic Metropolitan Alexandru Sterca-Șuluțiu

    Blaj Pronouncement

    Blaj Pronouncement

    Blaj_Pronouncement

  • Pavia
  • Comune in Lombardy, Italy

    from 822 to 850, paid attention to schools when in 825 he issued his capitulary by means of which he prescribed that students from many towns of north

    Pavia

    Pavia

    Pavia

  • Michael Glatthaar
  • German scholar

    headings in the manuscript. He has argued for the authenticity of the 716 capitulary of Pope Gregory II which invested three papal legates with the organization

    Michael Glatthaar

    Michael_Glatthaar

  • Leudesamium
  • Oath of loyalty in Merovingian times

    the role of the oath was reinforced and generalized. Charlemagne's capitularies, beginning in 786, affirmed that oaths were necessary for governance

    Leudesamium

    Leudesamium

  • Emirate of Bari
  • c. 847 – 871 Islamic State in Apulia

    always uncomfortable with a Muslim state in Italy's midst, issued a capitulary calling upon the fighting men of northern Italy to gather at Lucera in

    Emirate of Bari

    Emirate of Bari

    Emirate_of_Bari

  • Carolingian schools
  • 8th and 9th-century educational programs

    educational conditions throughout the empire. In 787 he issued the famous capitulary which has been styled the "Charter of Modern Thought", addressing himself

    Carolingian schools

    Carolingian_schools

  • Wielkopolska Chronicle
  • Polish anonymous medieval chronicle

    created between 1283 and 1296 and its author was the curator of the Poznań capitulary, Godzisław Baszko. A second edition was completed between 1377 and 1384

    Wielkopolska Chronicle

    Wielkopolska Chronicle

    Wielkopolska_Chronicle

  • Marchfield (assembly)
  • Public Assemblies in the Middle Ages

    accused of high treason. It was also an occasion for kings to issue capitularies. The Marchfield appears to have been instituted in Lombard Italy in the

    Marchfield (assembly)

    Marchfield_(assembly)

  • Hemming Halfdansson
  • Hemming were responsible for the defence of Frisia from the Vikings, as a capitulary of 821 refers to "the counts who are responsible for coastal defence"

    Hemming Halfdansson

    Hemming_Halfdansson

  • Jacques Sirmond
  • French scholar and Jesuit (1559–1651)

    Maurus (1647) Rufinus and Loup de Ferrières (1650) his edition of the capitularies of Charles the Bald (Karoli Calvi et successorum aliquot Franciae regum

    Jacques Sirmond

    Jacques Sirmond

    Jacques_Sirmond

  • Synods of Aachen (816–819)
  • addressed which Benedict of Aniane had collated. According to the imperial capitulary in which the results were published, the discussion took place in the

    Synods of Aachen (816–819)

    Synods of Aachen (816–819)

    Synods_of_Aachen_(816–819)

  • Münster Cathedral
  • Church in Münster, Germany

    Friedensaal of the City Hall. The panels display the arms of former capitularies, who were all appointed from the nobility until the beginning of the

    Münster Cathedral

    Münster Cathedral

    Münster_Cathedral

  • Trial by combat
  • Method of settling accusations within Germanic law by dueling

    besides forfeiting their claim to the land is required to pay a fine. Capitularies governing its use appear from the year 803 onwards. Louis the Pious prescribed

    Trial by combat

    Trial by combat

    Trial_by_combat

  • Evangeliary
  • Book containing portions of the Gospel for public prayer in Catholicism

    Sundays and Holy Days on which they are to be read is typically known as a Capitulary (capitularium), but may also be called an Evangelistary (evangelistarium)

    Evangeliary

    Evangeliary

  • Raganar (Frankish count)
  • are uncertain but are known to have been south of Thérouanne. In the Capitulary of Servais, part of District (Missaticum) 4 is identified as "the counties

    Raganar (Frankish count)

    Raganar_(Frankish_count)

  • Ottoman Empire in World War I
  • action). The American ambassador expressed the Great Power view: The capitulary regime, as it exists in the Empire, is not an autonomous institution of

    Ottoman Empire in World War I

    Ottoman Empire in World War I

    Ottoman_Empire_in_World_War_I

  • Pontoon bridge
  • Type of floating bridge

    decisively against the Slavic Obotrites. Tenth-Century German Ottonian capitularies demanded that royal fiscal estates maintain watertight, river-fordable

    Pontoon bridge

    Pontoon bridge

    Pontoon_bridge

  • Carloman of Bavaria
  • King of Bavaria from 876 to 879

    Italy—his brother and successor Charles being the other—who did not issue a capitulary at the beginning of his reign in order to proclaim his legitimacy and

    Carloman of Bavaria

    Carloman of Bavaria

    Carloman_of_Bavaria

  • County of Toulouse
  • Feudal monarchy in southern France (778–1271)

    7th centuries. In 877, Charles the Bald had to give in: he signed the Capitulary of Quierzy, which allowed counts to be succeeded by their sons when they

    County of Toulouse

    County of Toulouse

    County_of_Toulouse

  • Treaty of Coulaines
  • 843 treaty in West Francia

    back from an unsuccessful campaign against Brittany, in the form of a capitulary. In its chapters, the treaty delimits the spheres of power of the church

    Treaty of Coulaines

    Treaty_of_Coulaines

  • Regular clergy
  • Clerics in the Catholic Church who follow a rule of life

    Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 12. New York: Robert Appleton Company. cf. capitularies (n. 69 circa 810, n. 138 of 818, 819, ed. Alf. Boretii) Martène, Anecdot

    Regular clergy

    Regular_clergy

  • History of Toulouse
  • that of the sixth and seventh centuries. Charles the Bald signed the 877 Capitulary of Quierzy, allowing counts to be succeeded by their sons, before his

    History of Toulouse

    History_of_Toulouse

  • Saxon Wars
  • Campaigns and insurrections of 772–804

    leap to accomplish when compelled by fear." One of Charlemagne's famed capitularies outlined part of the religious intent of his interactions with the Saxons

    Saxon Wars

    Saxon Wars

    Saxon_Wars

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CAPITULARY

  • Capitulary
  • a.

    Relating to the chapter of a cathedral; capitular.

  • Capitulary
  • n.

    A collection of laws or statutes, civil and ecclesiastical, esp. of the Frankish kings, in chapters or sections.

  • Capitular
  • a.

    Of or pertaining to a chapter; capitulary.

  • Capitularies
  • pl.

    of Capitulary

  • Capitulary
  • n.

    The body of laws or statutes of a chapter, or of an ecclesiastical council.

  • Capitulary
  • n.

    A capitular.