Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q4780698> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 47 of
47
with 100 triples per page.
- Q4780698 subject Q7020178.
- Q4780698 abstract "Apostolic poverty is a Christian doctrine professed in the thirteenth century by the newly formed religious orders, known as the mendicant orders, in direct response to calls for reform in the Roman Catholic Church. In this, these orders attempted to live their lives without ownership of lands or accumulation of money, following the precepts given to the seventy disciples in the Gospel of Luke (10:1-24), and succeeding to varying degrees. The ascetic Pope Paschal II's solution of the Investiture Controversy in his radical Concordat of 1111 with the Emperor, repudiated by the cardinals, was that the ecclesiastics of Germany should surrender to the imperial crown their fiefs and secular offices. Paschal proved to be the last of the Gregorianist popes.The provocative doctrine was a challenge to the wealth of the church and the concerns about ensuing corruption it brought: rejected by the hierarchy of the Church, it found sympathetic audiences among the disaffected poor of the 12th, 13th, and 14th centuries.The doctrine of apostolic poverty was condemned as heresy in 1323, but it continued to be a source of debate.".
- Q4780698 wikiPageExternalLink 12324a.htm.
- Q4780698 wikiPageWikiLink Q117850.
- Q4780698 wikiPageWikiLink Q124831.
- Q4780698 wikiPageWikiLink Q131463.
- Q4780698 wikiPageWikiLink Q131479.
- Q4780698 wikiPageWikiLink Q1352704.
- Q4780698 wikiPageWikiLink Q1484704.
- Q4780698 wikiPageWikiLink Q15407657.
- Q4780698 wikiPageWikiLink Q154764.
- Q4780698 wikiPageWikiLink Q159583.
- Q4780698 wikiPageWikiLink Q160598.
- Q4780698 wikiPageWikiLink Q160609.
- Q4780698 wikiPageWikiLink Q165005.
- Q4780698 wikiPageWikiLink Q165568.
- Q4780698 wikiPageWikiLink Q170859.
- Q4780698 wikiPageWikiLink Q177826.
- Q4780698 wikiPageWikiLink Q1845.
- Q4780698 wikiPageWikiLink Q188063.
- Q4780698 wikiPageWikiLink Q188619.
- Q4780698 wikiPageWikiLink Q1891.
- Q4780698 wikiPageWikiLink Q199991.
- Q4780698 wikiPageWikiLink Q201620.
- Q4780698 wikiPageWikiLink Q2061186.
- Q4780698 wikiPageWikiLink Q227967.
- Q4780698 wikiPageWikiLink Q28653.
- Q4780698 wikiPageWikiLink Q290720.
- Q4780698 wikiPageWikiLink Q302.
- Q4780698 wikiPageWikiLink Q312939.
- Q4780698 wikiPageWikiLink Q326307.
- Q4780698 wikiPageWikiLink Q3437.
- Q4780698 wikiPageWikiLink Q348611.
- Q4780698 wikiPageWikiLink Q39939.
- Q4780698 wikiPageWikiLink Q40304.
- Q4780698 wikiPageWikiLink Q43746.
- Q4780698 wikiPageWikiLink Q43936.
- Q4780698 wikiPageWikiLink Q44091.
- Q4780698 wikiPageWikiLink Q57161.
- Q4780698 wikiPageWikiLink Q676555.
- Q4780698 wikiPageWikiLink Q692799.
- Q4780698 wikiPageWikiLink Q7020178.
- Q4780698 wikiPageWikiLink Q892057.
- Q4780698 wikiPageWikiLink Q90.
- Q4780698 wikiPageWikiLink Q9592.
- Q4780698 comment "Apostolic poverty is a Christian doctrine professed in the thirteenth century by the newly formed religious orders, known as the mendicant orders, in direct response to calls for reform in the Roman Catholic Church. In this, these orders attempted to live their lives without ownership of lands or accumulation of money, following the precepts given to the seventy disciples in the Gospel of Luke (10:1-24), and succeeding to varying degrees.".
- Q4780698 label "Apostolic poverty".