Search for: Horses
8161 Ecclesiastical Empire, p. 287.3 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)
… the horse’s tail, which serves you for a standard, the cross of Jesus Christ. We also prohibit you from forming any alliance with the infidels; and when you conclude …
8162 Ecclesiastical Empire, p. 310.1 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)
… of horses for the chase; and of having turned the papal palace into a brothel:” with yet more shameful things.
8163 Ecclesiastical Empire, p. 329.2 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)
… race horses in the stables, and in sallying forth with a numerous escort of armed horsemen. Prelates should, on the contrary, set an example for the purity of …
8164 Ecclesiastical Empire, p. 368.1 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)
… Norman horse poured into the streets, but the Romans fought at advantage, from their possession of the houses, and their knowledge of the ground. They were …
8165 Ecclesiastical Empire, p. 387.3 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)
… his horse, ascended the steps of St. Peter, approached the pope, who was encircled by the cardinals, by many bishops, by the whole clergy and choir of the Church …
8166 Ecclesiastical Empire, p. 389.1 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)
… his horse and wounded; and would have certainly lost his life, had not one of his nobles given to him his own horse. By this sacrifice, the nobleman himself was …
8167 Ecclesiastical Empire, p. 417.1 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)
… and horses were led into the churches to carry off the spoil. A prostitute mounted the patriarch’s throne, and sang, with indecent gestures, a ribald song. The …
8168 Ecclesiastical Empire, p. 444.2 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)
… stalking-horse in preying upon the community.
8169 Ecclesiastical Empire, p. 459.1 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)
… pale horse: and his name that sat on him was Death, and Hell followed with him. And power was given unto him over the fourth part of the earth, to kill with sword …
8170 Ecclesiastical Empire, p. 480.1 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)
… of horse and foot, with which, in 1181, he fell upon the territories of the viscount of Beziers, and laid siege to the stronghold of Lavaur, where the viscountess …
8171 Ecclesiastical Empire, p. 509.2 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)
… white horse, on which the pope, clothed in his pontifical ornaments and wearing his tiara, was mounted.
8172 Ecclesiastical Empire, p. 510.1 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)
… his horse, and in the tumult a large diamond of considerable value was stolen from his tiara. His brother, Gaillard de Got, was instantly killed, with the duke …
8173 Ecclesiastical Empire, p. 522.1 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)
… of horses commanded general admiration. The life of Clement was a constant succession of ecclesiastical pomps and gorgeous receptions and luxurious …
8174 Ecclesiastical Empire, p. 526.2 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)
… “noble horses of the cardinals” would “in a few days be reduced to draw wagons, or to toil before the plow.” This dire consideration put an end to that cardinal’s …
8175 Ecclesiastical Empire, p. 527.2 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)
… pope’s horse from the castle of St. Angelo to St. Peter’s Church, and performed the office of deacon to the pope, in the service at St. Peter’s. But Urban did not …
8176 Ecclesiastical Empire, p. 536.2 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)
… sorry horse to his speed. Urban, suspecting that he sought to escape, in his fury ordered him to be killed; his body was left unburied on the road. With the rest …
8177 Ecclesiastical Empire, p. 538.1 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)
… , oxen, horses, or grain. The officers were as skillful in these arts as himself. His auditors would hold twenty expectatives, and receive the first fruits. The …
8178 Ecclesiastical Empire, p. 543.2 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)
… a horse, I would set out on foot with my staff.” But his very first act betrayed the hypocrisy of all these professions: he wrote a letter to Benedict XIII, addressed …
8179 Ecclesiastical Empire, p. 553.1 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)
… thousand horses were fed, and thirty thousand beds were provided by the city.
8180 Ecclesiastical Empire, p. 655.1 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)
… cardinals, horses, vases, costly rings, and other gifts in most lavish expenditure. By this or some other dark influence, Huss’s case was removed from the second …