Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Amalrician> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 63 of
63
with 100 triples per page.
- Amalrician abstract "The Amalricians were a pantheist, free love movement named after Amalric of Bena. The beliefs are thought to have influenced the Brethren of the Free Spirit.The beginnings of medieval pantheistic Christian theology lie in the early 13th century, with theologians at Paris, such as David of Dinant, Amalric of Bena, and Ortlieb of Strassburg, and was later mixed with the millenarist theories of Gioacchino da Fiore.Fourteen followers of Amalric began to preach that \"all things are One, because whatever is, is God.\" They believed that after the age of the Father (the Patriarchal Age) and the age of the Son (Christianity), a new age of the Holy Spirit was at hand. The Amalricians, who included many priests and clerics, succeeded for some time in propagating their beliefs without being detected by the ecclesiastical authorities.In 1210, Peter of Nemours, Bishop of Paris, and the Chevalier Guérin, an adviser to the French King Philip II Augustus, obtained secret information from an undercover agent called Master Ralph. This intelligence gathered laid bare the inner workings of the sect, enabling authorities to arrest its principals and proselytes. That same year, a council of bishops and doctors from the University of Paris assembled to take measures for the punishment of the offenders. The ignorant converts, including many women, were pardoned. Of the principals, four were condemned to imprisonment for life. Ten members were burned at the stake.Almaric was posthumously subjected to the persecution. Besides being included in the condemnation of his disciples, a special sentence of excommunication was pronounced against him in the council of 1210, and his bones were exhumed from their resting-place and cast into unconsecrated ground. The doctrine was condemned again by Pope Innocent III in the Fourth Lateran Council (1215) \"as insanity rather than heresy\", and in 1225 Pope Honorius III condemned the work of Johannes Scotus Eriugena, De Divisione Naturæ, from which Amalric was supposed to have derived the beginnings of his heresy.The movement survived, however, and later followers went even further, arguably evolving into the Brethren of the Free Spirit.".
- Amalrician thumbnail Supplice_des_Amauriciens.jpg?width=300.
- Amalrician wikiPageID "2064178".
- Amalrician wikiPageLength "3841".
- Amalrician wikiPageOutDegree "34".
- Amalrician wikiPageRevisionID "701195089".
- Amalrician wikiPageWikiLink Amalric_of_Bena.
- Amalrician wikiPageWikiLink Brethren_of_the_Free_Spirit.
- Amalrician wikiPageWikiLink Category:13th_century_in_France.
- Amalrician wikiPageWikiLink Category:Christian_denominations_established_in_the_12th_century.
- Amalrician wikiPageWikiLink Category:Christian_mysticism.
- Amalrician wikiPageWikiLink Category:Heresy_in_medieval_Christianity.
- Amalrician wikiPageWikiLink Christian.
- Amalrician wikiPageWikiLink Christianity.
- Amalrician wikiPageWikiLink Churchyard.
- Amalrician wikiPageWikiLink David_of_Dinant.
- Amalrician wikiPageWikiLink Death_by_burning.
- Amalrician wikiPageWikiLink Excommunication.
- Amalrician wikiPageWikiLink Fourth_Council_of_the_Lateran.
- Amalrician wikiPageWikiLink Free_love.
- Amalrician wikiPageWikiLink God.
- Amalrician wikiPageWikiLink God_the_Father.
- Amalrician wikiPageWikiLink Holy_Spirit.
- Amalrician wikiPageWikiLink Joachim_of_Fiore.
- Amalrician wikiPageWikiLink John_Scotus_Eriugena.
- Amalrician wikiPageWikiLink Millenarianism.
- Amalrician wikiPageWikiLink Ortlieb_of_Strassburg.
- Amalrician wikiPageWikiLink Pantheism.
- Amalrician wikiPageWikiLink Patriarchal_age.
- Amalrician wikiPageWikiLink Philip_II_of_France.
- Amalrician wikiPageWikiLink Pope_Honorius_III.
- Amalrician wikiPageWikiLink Pope_Innocent_III.
- Amalrician wikiPageWikiLink Posthumous_trial.
- Amalrician wikiPageWikiLink Roman_Catholic_Archdiocese_of_Paris.
- Amalrician wikiPageWikiLink Son_of_God.
- Amalrician wikiPageWikiLink Theology.
- Amalrician wikiPageWikiLink University_of_Paris.
- Amalrician wikiPageWikiLink File:Supplice_des_Amauriciens.jpg.
- Amalrician wikiPageWikiLinkText "Amalrician".
- Amalrician wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Christian-theology-stub.
- Amalrician wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Citation_needed.
- Amalrician wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Expand_German.
- Amalrician wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Amalrician subject Category:13th_century_in_France.
- Amalrician subject Category:Christian_denominations_established_in_the_12th_century.
- Amalrician subject Category:Christian_mysticism.
- Amalrician subject Category:Heresy_in_medieval_Christianity.
- Amalrician hypernym Pantheist.
- Amalrician type Denomination.
- Amalrician type Movement.
- Amalrician type Organization.
- Amalrician type Organization.
- Amalrician comment "The Amalricians were a pantheist, free love movement named after Amalric of Bena.".
- Amalrician label "Amalrician".
- Amalrician sameAs Q453374.
- Amalrician sameAs Amalrikaner.
- Amalrician sameAs Amauriciens.
- Amalrician sameAs Amalrycjanie.
- Amalrician sameAs m.025s3vn.
- Amalrician sameAs Q453374.
- Amalrician wasDerivedFrom Amalrician?oldid=701195089.
- Amalrician depiction Supplice_des_Amauriciens.jpg.
- Amalrician isPrimaryTopicOf Amalrician.