Site banner
.
Home Forums Blogs Articles Photos Videos Contact FAQ                    
.
.
Wisdom Archive
Body Mind and Soul
Faith and Belief
God and Religion
Law of Attraction
Life and Beyond
Love and Happiness
Peace of Mind
Peace on Earth
Personal Faith
Spiritual Festivals
Spiritual Growth
Spiritual Guidance
Spiritual Inspiration
Spirituality and Science
Spiritual Retreats
More Wisdom
Buddhism Archives
Hinduism Archives
Sustainability
Theology Archives
Even more Wisdom
2012 - Year 2012
Affirmations
Aura
Ayurveda
Chakras
Consciousness
Cultural Creatives
Diksha (Deeksha)
Dream Dictionary
Dream Interpretation
Dream interpreter
Dreams
Enlightenment
Essential Oils
Feng Shui
Flower Essences
Gaia Hypothesis
Indigo Children
Kalki Bhagavan
Karma
Kundalini
Kundalini Yoga
Life after death
Mayan Calendar
Meaning of Dreams
Meditation
Morphogenetic Fields
Psychic Ability
Reincarnation
Spiritual Art, Music & Dance
Spiritual Awakening
Spiritual Enlightenment
Spiritual Healing
Spirituality and Health
Spiritual Jokes
Spiritual Parenting
Vastu Shastra
Womens Spirituality
Yoga Positions
Site map 2
Site map


Dream Sharing Forum

at Global Oneness Community.
Share your dreams and let others help you with the interpretation!
Dream Sharing Forum





Bookmark and Share
.

596

A Wisdom Archive on 596

596

A selection of articles related to 596

596

ARTICLES RELATED TO 596

596: Encyclopedia II - History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Dark Ages 476 AD – 850 AD

History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates. 480: St Benedict begins his Monastic Rule, setting out regulations for the establisment of monasteries. 496: Clovis I pagan King of the Franks, converts to the Catholic faith. 502: Pope Symmachus ruled that laymen should no longer vote for the popes and that only higher clergy should be considered eligible. 590: Pope Gregory the Great. Reforms church structure and administration. Establishes Gregori ...

See also:

History of the Roman Catholic Church, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Prologue: The ministry of Jesus of Nazareth c. 4 BC – AD 33, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Early Catholic Church 34 AD – 313 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Roman Empire 313 AD – 476 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Dark Ages 476 AD – 850 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Middle Ages 800 AD – 1499 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Renaissance 1500 AD – 1629 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Age of Reason 1630 AD – 1799 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - 19th Century Catholic Church 1800 AD – 1899 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - 20th Century Catholic Church 1901 AD – 2000 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - 21st Century Catholic Church 2001 AD – PRESENT, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates

Read more here: » History of the Roman Catholic Church: Encyclopedia II - History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Dark Ages 476 AD – 850 AD

596: Encyclopedia II - History of the Roman Catholic Church - Early Catholic Church 34 AD – 313 AD

History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key dates. c. 50: Council of Jerusalem c. 55 - 67 AD: The ministry of Paul of Tarsus , a convert who proclaimed himself "Apostle to the Gentiles" equal to the 12 apostles in the immediate circle of Jesus, in opposition to James the Just in Jerusalem and the Jewish Christians. He travelled the Eastern Mediterranean preaching and proselytizing. 69 AD: The first organized Persecution of Christians at Rome, under Nero; ...

See also:

History of the Roman Catholic Church, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Prologue: The ministry of Jesus of Nazareth c. 4 BC – AD 33, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Early Catholic Church 34 AD – 313 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Roman Empire 313 AD – 476 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Dark Ages 476 AD – 850 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Middle Ages 800 AD – 1499 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Renaissance 1500 AD – 1629 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Age of Reason 1630 AD – 1799 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - 19th Century Catholic Church 1800 AD – 1899 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - 20th Century Catholic Church 1901 AD – 2000 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - 21st Century Catholic Church 2001 AD – PRESENT, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates

Read more here: » History of the Roman Catholic Church: Encyclopedia II - History of the Roman Catholic Church - Early Catholic Church 34 AD – 313 AD

596: Encyclopedia II - Bede - Life

Almost all that is known of his life is contained in a notice added by himself to his Historia (v.24), which states that he was placed in the monastery at Wearmouth at the age of seven, that he became deacon in his nineteenth year, and priest in his thirtieth, remaining a priest for the rest of his life. It is not clear whether he was of noble birth. He was trained by the abbots Benedict Biscop and Ceolfrid, and probably accompanied the latter to Jarrow in 682. There he spent his life, finding his chief pleasure in being always occupi ...

See also:

Bede, Bede - Life, Bede - Work, Bede - Historia Ecclesiastica, Bede - Other historical and theological works, Bede - Vernacular poetry

Read more here: » Bede: Encyclopedia II - Bede - Life

596: Encyclopedia II - History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Dark Ages 476 AD – 850 AD

History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates. 480: St Benedict begins his Monastic Rule, setting out regulations for the establisment of monasteries. 496: Clovis I pagan King of the Franks, converts to the Catholic faith. 502: Pope Symmachus ruled that laymen should no longer vote for the popes and that only higher clergy should be considered eligible. 590: Pope Gregory the Great. Reforms church structure and administration. Establishes Gregori ...

See also:

History of the Roman Catholic Church, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Prologue: the ministry of Jesus of Nazareth c 4 BC – 33 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Early Catholic Church 34 AD – 313 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Roman Empire 313 AD – 476 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Dark Ages 476 AD – 850 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Middle Ages 800 AD – 1499 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Renaissance 1500 AD – 1629 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Age of Reason 1630 AD – 1799 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - 19th Century Catholic Church 1800 AD – 1899 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - 20th Century Catholic Church 1901 AD – 2000 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - 21st Century Catholic Church 2001 AD – PRESENT, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates

Read more here: » History of the Roman Catholic Church: Encyclopedia II - History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Dark Ages 476 AD – 850 AD

596: Encyclopedia II - History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Roman Empire 313 AD – 476 AD

History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates. 313: The Edict of Milan declares the Roman Empire neutral towards religious views, in effect ending the persecution of Christians. 321: Granting the Church the right to hold property, Constantine donates the palace of the Laterani to Bishop Miltiades, with its Basilica of San Giovanni for his episcopal seat. c 325: The Arian controversy erupts in Alexandria, causing widespread violence and disruptions among Chri ...

See also:

History of the Roman Catholic Church, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Prologue: The ministry of Jesus of Nazareth c. 4 BC – AD 33, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Early Catholic Church 34 AD – 313 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Roman Empire 313 AD – 476 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Dark Ages 476 AD – 850 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Middle Ages 800 AD – 1499 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Renaissance 1500 AD – 1629 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Age of Reason 1630 AD – 1799 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - 19th Century Catholic Church 1800 AD – 1899 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - 20th Century Catholic Church 1901 AD – 2000 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - 21st Century Catholic Church 2001 AD – PRESENT, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates

Read more here: » History of the Roman Catholic Church: Encyclopedia II - History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Roman Empire 313 AD – 476 AD

596: Encyclopedia II - History of the Roman Catholic Church - Early Catholic Church 34 AD – 313 AD

History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key dates. c. 50: Council of Jerusalem c. 55 - 67 AD: The ministry of Paul of Tarsus , a convert who proclaimed himself "Apostle to the Gentiles" equal to the 12 apostles in the immediate circle of Jesus, in opposition to James the Just in Jerusalem and the Jewish Christians. He travelled the Eastern Mediterranean preaching and proselytizing. 69 AD: The first organized persecution of Christians at Rome, under Nero; ...

See also:

History of the Roman Catholic Church, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Prologue: the ministry of Jesus of Nazareth c 4 BC – 33 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Early Catholic Church 34 AD – 313 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Roman Empire 313 AD – 476 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Dark Ages 476 AD – 850 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Middle Ages 800 AD – 1499 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Renaissance 1500 AD – 1629 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Age of Reason 1630 AD – 1799 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - 19th Century Catholic Church 1800 AD – 1899 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - 20th Century Catholic Church 1901 AD – 2000 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - 21st Century Catholic Church 2001 AD – PRESENT, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates

Read more here: » History of the Roman Catholic Church: Encyclopedia II - History of the Roman Catholic Church - Early Catholic Church 34 AD – 313 AD

596: Encyclopedia II - Pope Gregory I - Servus servorum Dei

Gregory, among the first to assert the primacy of the papal office, though he did not employ the term "pope", summed up the responsibilities of the bishop of Rome in his official appellation, as "servant of the servants of God". As Benedict of Nursia had justified the absolute authority of the abbot over the souls in his charge, so Gregory expressed the hieratic principle that he was responsible directly to God for his ministry. Gregory's pontificate saw the development of the concepts of penance that became institutionalized in the l ...

See also:

Pope Gregory I, Pope Gregory I - Confrontation with Eutychius, Pope Gregory I - Gregory as pope, Pope Gregory I - Lombards, Pope Gregory I - Servus servorum Dei, Pope Gregory I - Works, Pope Gregory I - Bibliography

Read more here: » Pope Gregory I: Encyclopedia II - Pope Gregory I - Servus servorum Dei

596: Encyclopedia II - General Motors streetcar conspiracy - The case against the conspiracy

This belief has been questioned by urban studies professor Sy Adler who points out, among other things, that GM was not convicted of buying up urban trolley systems but rather merely of forcing bus companies owned by General Motors to use General Motors buses, and that trolley ridership peaked in the year 1920 before GM's actions. The trolley industry's problems largely predated GM's interest. Many transportation historians note that the conversion to buses would likely have occurred anyway, and that s ...

See also:

General Motors streetcar conspiracy, General Motors streetcar conspiracy - The legal case, General Motors streetcar conspiracy - The case for the conspiracy, General Motors streetcar conspiracy - The case against the conspiracy, General Motors streetcar conspiracy - Framing the arguments

Read more here: » General Motors streetcar conspiracy: Encyclopedia II - General Motors streetcar conspiracy - The case against the conspiracy

596: Encyclopedia II - Pope Gregory I - Confrontation with Eutychius

In Constantinople, Gregory attracted attention in controversy with Patriarch Eutychius of Constantinople, who had published a dissertation on the corporeality of the imminent general resurrection, in which bodies would be incorporeal, to which Gregory contrasted the corporeality of the risen Christ. The heat of argument drew the emperor in as judge, Gregory using an interpreter, for he never learned the rudiments of Greek during his stay. Eutychius' treatise was condemned, and suffered the normal fate of non-orthodox texts, of being publicly burnt. On Gregory's return to Rome he acted as fi ...

See also:

Pope Gregory I, Pope Gregory I - Confrontation with Eutychius, Pope Gregory I - Gregory as pope, Pope Gregory I - Lombards, Pope Gregory I - Servus servorum Dei, Pope Gregory I - Works, Pope Gregory I - Bibliography

Read more here: » Pope Gregory I: Encyclopedia II - Pope Gregory I - Confrontation with Eutychius

596: Encyclopedia II - Giotto mission - Results

Images showed Halley's nucleus to be a dark peanut-shaped body, 15 km long, 7 to 10 km wide. Only 10% of the surface was active, with at least three outgassing jets seen on the sunlit side. Analysis showed the comet formed 4.5 billion years ago from volatiles (mainly ice) that had condensed onto interstellar dust particles. It had remained practically unaltered since its formation. Of the volume of material ejected by Halley: 80% was water, 10% carbon monoxide, and 2.5% a mix of methane and ammonia. Other hydrocarbons, iron, and sodium were detected in trace amounts. Halley's nucleus was blacker than soot, which suggests t ...

See also:

Giotto mission, Giotto mission - Mission, Giotto mission - The craft, Giotto mission - Timeline, Giotto mission - Results, Giotto mission - External link

Read more here: » Giotto mission: Encyclopedia II - Giotto mission - Results

596: Encyclopedia II - Pope Gregory I - Works

Gregory is the only pope between the 5th and the 11th centuries whose correspondence and writings have survived enough to form a comprehensive corpus. "His character strikes us as an ambiguous and enigmatic one," Norman F. Cantor observed (Cantor, 1993, p. 157). "On the one hand he was an able and determined administrator, a skilled and clever diplomat, a leader of the greatest sophistication and vision; but on the other hand, he appears in his writings as a superstitious and credulous monk, hostile to learning, crudely limited as a t ...

See also:

Pope Gregory I, Pope Gregory I - Confrontation with Eutychius, Pope Gregory I - Gregory as pope, Pope Gregory I - Lombards, Pope Gregory I - Servus servorum Dei, Pope Gregory I - Works, Pope Gregory I - Bibliography

Read more here: » Pope Gregory I: Encyclopedia II - Pope Gregory I - Works

596: Encyclopedia II - General Motors streetcar conspiracy - The case for the conspiracy

It is argued that Alfred P. Sloan, Jr., long-time president of GM in the early 20th century, developed a business strategy to expand auto sales and maximize profits by eliminating streetcars. In 1922, according to GM's own files, Sloan established a special unit within the corporation which was charged, among other things, with the task of replacing the United States' electric railways with cars, trucks, and buses. For instance, between 1926 and 1936 GM acquired New York Railways. Bad service reduced reliability and thus actively crea ...

See also:

General Motors streetcar conspiracy, General Motors streetcar conspiracy - The legal case, General Motors streetcar conspiracy - The case for the conspiracy, General Motors streetcar conspiracy - The case against the conspiracy, General Motors streetcar conspiracy - Framing the arguments

Read more here: » General Motors streetcar conspiracy: Encyclopedia II - General Motors streetcar conspiracy - The case for the conspiracy

596: Encyclopedia II - Giotto mission - Timeline

The mission was given the go-ahead by ESA in 1980, and launched on an Ariane 1 rocket (flight V14) on 1985 July 2 from Kourou. The Russian Vega 1 starts returning images of Halley on 1986 March 4, and the first ever of its nucleus, and made its flyby on March 6, followed by Vega 2 making its flyby on March 9. Giotto passed Halley successfully on 1986 March 14 at 600 km distance, and surprisingly survived despite being hit by some small particles. One impact sent it spinning off its stablised spin axis so that its antenna no lon ...

See also:

Giotto mission, Giotto mission - Mission, Giotto mission - The craft, Giotto mission - Timeline, Giotto mission - Results, Giotto mission - External link

Read more here: » Giotto mission: Encyclopedia II - Giotto mission - Timeline

596: Encyclopedia II - History of the Church of England - Protestant Influences

Despite separation from Rome, the Church of England under Henry VIII remained essentially Catholic rather than Protestant in nature. Pope Leo X had earlier awarded to Henry himself the title of fidei defensor (defender of the faith), partly on account of Henry's attack on Lutheranism. Some Protestant-influenced changes under Henry included a limited iconoclasm, the abolition of pilgrimages, and pilgrimage shrines, and the extinction of many saints' days. However only minor changes in liturgy occurred during Henry's reign, and he carried through th ...

See also:

History of the Church of England, History of the Church of England - The Augustinian Mission, History of the Church of England - Medieval consolidation, History of the Church of England - Separation from Papal Authority, History of the Church of England - Protestant Influences, History of the Church of England - Brief reunion with Rome, History of the Church of England - The second schism, History of the Church of England - Puritanism and the Restoration, History of the Church of England - 18th century, History of the Church of England - 19th century, History of the Church of England - Recent history

Read more here: » History of the Church of England: Encyclopedia II - History of the Church of England - Protestant Influences

596: Encyclopedia II - History of the Church of England - Separation from Papal Authority

The English Church remained in union with Rome until the reign of Henry VIII. The first break with Rome (subsequently reversed) came when Pope Clement VII refused, over a period of years, to annul Henry's marriage to Catherine of Aragon, not purely as a matter of principle, but also because the Pope lived in fear of Catherine's nephew, Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor, as a result of events in the Italian Wars. Henry first asked for an annulment in 1527. After various failed initiatives he stepped up the pressure on Rome, in the summer o ...

See also:

History of the Church of England, History of the Church of England - The Augustinian Mission, History of the Church of England - Medieval consolidation, History of the Church of England - Separation from Papal Authority, History of the Church of England - Protestant Influences, History of the Church of England - Brief reunion with Rome, History of the Church of England - The second schism, History of the Church of England - Puritanism and the Restoration, History of the Church of England - 18th century, History of the Church of England - 19th century, History of the Church of England - Recent history

Read more here: » History of the Church of England: Encyclopedia II - History of the Church of England - Separation from Papal Authority

596: Encyclopedia II - History of the Church of England - Medieval consolidation

The Synod of Whitby in 664 forms a significant watershed in that King Oswiu of Northumbria decided to follow Roman rather than Celtic practices. As in other parts of medieval Europe, tension existed between the local monarch and the Pope about civil judicial authority over clerics, taxes and the wealth of the Church, and appointments of bishops, notably during the reigns of Henry II and John. ...

See also:

History of the Church of England, History of the Church of England - The Augustinian Mission, History of the Church of England - Medieval consolidation, History of the Church of England - Separation from Papal Authority, History of the Church of England - Protestant Influences, History of the Church of England - Brief reunion with Rome, History of the Church of England - The second schism, History of the Church of England - Puritanism and the Restoration, History of the Church of England - 18th century, History of the Church of England - 19th century, History of the Church of England - Recent history

Read more here: » History of the Church of England: Encyclopedia II - History of the Church of England - Medieval consolidation

596: Encyclopedia II - History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Roman Empire 313 AD – 476 AD

History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates. 313: The Edict of Milan declares the Roman Empire neutral towards religious views, in effect ending the persecution of Christians. 321: Granting the Church the right to hold property, Constantine donates the palace of the Laterani to Bishop Miltiades, with its Basilica of San Giovanni for his episcopal seat. c 325: The Arian controversy erupts in Alexandria, causing widespread violence and disruptions among Chri ...

See also:

History of the Roman Catholic Church, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Prologue: the ministry of Jesus of Nazareth c 4 BC – 33 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Early Catholic Church 34 AD – 313 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Roman Empire 313 AD – 476 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Dark Ages 476 AD – 850 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Middle Ages 800 AD – 1499 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Renaissance 1500 AD – 1629 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Age of Reason 1630 AD – 1799 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - 19th Century Catholic Church 1800 AD – 1899 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - 20th Century Catholic Church 1901 AD – 2000 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - 21st Century Catholic Church 2001 AD – PRESENT, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates

Read more here: » History of the Roman Catholic Church: Encyclopedia II - History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Roman Empire 313 AD – 476 AD




Bookmark and Share
Search the Global Oneness web site
Global Oneness is a huge, really huge, web site. Almost whatever you are searching for within health, spirituality, personal development and inspirationals - you will find it here!
Google
 
 

Rate this archive!

Please rate this archive with 10 as very good and 1 as very poor.

.



Bookmark and Share

  » Home » » Home »