Royals' ability to control appointment of members to Catholic church in the Spanish Empire
Papal primacy, supremacy and infallibility
Overview
Primacy of Peter & Papal primacy
Papal supremacy
Papal infallibility
First Vatican Council § Papal infallibility
Patriarchs compared to popes
Papal primacy
Episcopal see § Catholic Church
Apiarius of Sicca § Appeal to the bishop of Rome
Pentarchy § After the East–West Schism
Pope John XIX § Life
Gregory II Youssef § First Vatican Council
Ravenna Document
Eastern Orthodox opposition to papal supremacy
Ecumenical councils compared to popes
Conciliarity
Conciliarism § Modern conciliarism
Ecumenical council § Acceptance of the councils
To the Christian Nobility of the German Nation § The Third Wall: Authority to Call a Council
Ultrajectines
Catholic episcopal councils compared to popes
Febronianism
Christus Dominus § Controversy
The Ratzinger Report
Political rulers compared to popes
Gallicanism
Patronato real
Josephinism
Febronianism
Cisalpinism
Appointment of Catholic bishops § Centralization of papal power
Concordat § List
Papal deposing power
Existing dogma compared to popes
Development of doctrine
Cum ex apostolatus officio
Pascendi Dominici gregis
Objections and controversy
Ecclesiastical differences between the Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox Church § Papal authority
Ignaz von Döllinger § Papal authority
Ultramontanism § Position of other apostolic churches
Papal infallibility § Objections
Old Catholic Church § First Vatican Council, Old Catholic Union of Utrecht
Sedevacantism
Josip Juraj Strossmayer § Catholic diplomacy
Ultrajectine
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The patronato (lit.'patronage') system in Spain (and a similar padroado system in Portugal) was the expression of royal patronage controlling major appointments of Church officials and the management of Church revenues, under terms of concordats with the Holy See. The resulting structure of royal power and ecclesiastical privileges, was formative in the Spanish colonial empire. It resulted in a characteristic constant intermingling of trade, politics, and religion.[1] The papacy granted the power of patronage to the monarchs of Spain and Portugal to appoint clerics because the monarchs "were willing to subsidize missionary activities in newly conquered and discovered territories."[2]
^Gustav Voss, "Early Japanese Isolationism" The Pacific Historical Review14.1 (March 1945:13–35).
^John F. Schwaller, "Patronato real" in Encyclopedia of Latin American History and Culture, vol. 4, p. 323. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1996.
for the administration and maintenance of a religious benefice. The patronatoreal has its foundation in canon law, which recognized the right of laymen...
and often reduced the mission population by more than one-half. The PatronatoReal, or Royal Patronage, was a series of papal bulls constructed in the...
Look up patronato in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Patronato may refer to: Club Atlético Patronato, an Argentine football club Patronatoreal, an arrangement...
of indigenous peoples. With the 1508 papal grant to the crown of the Patronatoreal, the crown, rather than the pope, exercised absolute power over the...
absolute in its overseas possessions through the papacy's grant of the Patronatoreal, and "Catholicism was indissolubly linked with royal authority." Church-State...
rules governing the cooperation of the two entities was set in the PatronatoReal de las Indias, a combination of law and jurisprudence that governed...
they came with the intention of establishing Catholicism under the Patronatoreal of the kings of Spain. After the conquistadores brought the Filipinos...
attacks of Ultramontanism; rejection of the Society of Jesus; claim to the real property of the Church The 1889 Declaration of Utrecht states the Union of...
powers over the Catholic Church in its overseas territories, and via the Patronatoreal, a grant by the papacy to the crown to oversee the Church in all aspects...
of chivalry to other persons Royal patronage in arts, commerce, etc. Patronatoreal Padroado Category:Organizations with royal patronage This disambiguation...
The Ratzinger Report Political rulers compared to popes Gallicanism Patronatoreal Josephinism Febronianism Cisalpinism Appointment of Catholic bishops...
the government relinquished its right under the patronato nacional (the successor to the patronatoreal) to mediate in church affairs. No longer could...
threat to the Catholic Church and the papacy through the 19th century was real, and the church’s reaction to that threat was understandable. Indeed, the...
Spanish monarch (and the crown of Portugal) broad concessions termed the PatronatoReal or Royal Patronage, giving the monarch the power to appoint candidates...
The Ratzinger Report Political rulers compared to popes Gallicanism Patronatoreal Josephinism Febronianism Cisalpinism Appointment of Catholic bishops...
authorities rebuffed them under the pretext of the PatronatoReal. The impetus for a review of how the PatronatoReal administered the seminary came when Bishop...
1970s, some historians have viewed regalism as being rooted in the PatronatoReal, the crown’s power of appointment of ecclesiastics to Church offices...
the site with rivals Sevilla two years later. In 1918, Real Betis moved to the Campo del Patronato Obrero, with the first game at the ground coming against...
The Ratzinger Report Political rulers compared to popes Gallicanism Patronatoreal Josephinism Febronianism Cisalpinism Appointment of Catholic bishops...
The Ratzinger Report Political rulers compared to popes Gallicanism Patronatoreal Josephinism Febronianism Cisalpinism Appointment of Catholic bishops...
The Ratzinger Report Political rulers compared to popes Gallicanism Patronatoreal Josephinism Febronianism Cisalpinism Appointment of Catholic bishops...
an almost universal practice except where, in virtue of the Spanish Patronatoreal and the Portuguese Padroado, the appointment of Catholic bishops remained...
The Ratzinger Report Political rulers compared to popes Gallicanism Patronatoreal Josephinism Febronianism Cisalpinism Appointment of Catholic bishops...
1700–1808. Oxford: Blackwell Publishers 1989, p. 21. Schwaller, John F., "PatronatoReal" in Encyclopedia of Latin American History and Culture vol. 4, pp. 323–24...
In return for the granting by the Vatican of the "royal patronage" (Patronatoreal, the historical privilege of Spanish kings to appoint clerical figures)...
we are witnessing what may be the biggest decline of papal authority in real terms ever seen in history. Catholic priest August Bernhard Hasler (d. 3...
The Ratzinger Report Political rulers compared to popes Gallicanism Patronatoreal Josephinism Febronianism Cisalpinism Appointment of Catholic bishops...