This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Pope Gelasius. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article.
PopeGelasius I was the bishop of Rome from 1 March 492 to his death on 19 November 496. Gelasius was a prolific author whose style placed him on the...
PopeGelasius II (c. 1060/1064 – 29 January 1119), born Giovanni Caetani or Giovanni da Gaeta (also called Coniulo), was head of the Catholic Church and...
PopeGelasius can refer to: PopeGelasius I, in office 492–496 PopeGelasius II, in office 1118–1119 This disambiguation page lists articles associated...
a Latin text traditionally thought to be a decretal of the prolific PopeGelasius I, bishop of Rome from 492 to 496. The work reached its final form in...
modern-day Israel (Pope Peter, Pope Evaristus, and Pope Theodore I) 3 from Africa Proconsularis (Pope Victor I, Pope Miltiades, PopeGelasius I) 2 from Dalmatia...
addition of the celebration was not due to PopeGelasius at all.[citation needed] Moreover, when Gelasius addressed Andromachus, he did not try to use...
thought for almost a millennium. Gelasius expressed a distinction between two principles governing the world, which Gelasius called the "sacred authority...
schismatic sects, which had been inspired, according to a letter of PopeGelasius I, by a favourite of Emperor Anthemius named Philotheus, who espoused...
"fiction" in the third book of his fourth-century Church History, and PopeGelasius I included it in his list of heretical books in the fifth century. The...
ceremonies, dating back to the time of PopeGelasius I (492–496) with modifications and additions made by Pope Gregory the Great (590–604). It is reasonable...
February 2017. ad viles trivialesque personas, abiectos et infimos. (Gelasius) Gelasius, Epistle to Andromachus, quoted in Green (1931), p. 65. Green, William...
This article lists the popes who have been canonised. A total of 83 out of 265 deceased popes have been recognised universally as canonised saints, including...
his election as pope, Gelasius II was attacked and imprisoned by the Frangipani faction, supporters of the Holy Roman Emperor. Gelasius managed to escape...
feast of St. Valentine on February 14 was first established in 496 by PopeGelasius I, who included Valentine among all those "... whose names are justly...
February. In the Roman Catholic Church, especially since the time of PopeGelasius I (492–496) who in the fifth century contributed to its expansion, the...
six saints. Pope Paschal II canonized four saints. PopeGelasius II did not canonize any saints Pope Callixtus II canonized five saints Pope Honorius II...
historicity, via their publications in Bibliotheca Hagiographica Graeca. PopeGelasius I stated in 494 that George was among those saints "whose names are...
linked the book to PopeGelasius I, apparently based on Walafrid Strabo's ascription of what is evidently this book to the 5th-century pope. The sacramentary...
which PopeGelasius opposed" and observes that "it is regrettable that more details" about the situation are not available. A letter from Pope Zacharias...
Caetani, a member of the Caetani family which had also produced PopeGelasius II and Pope Boniface VIII. The Farnese family had prospered over the centuries...
Felix III or Gelasius I and so there was a large schism between the churches. Upon the death of Gelasius I, Anastasius II was named pope largely with...
the seat of the Archbishop of Genoa. The cathedral was consecrated by PopeGelasius II in 1118 and was built between the twelfth century and the fourteenth...
Christianity quite seriously, as indicated by her correspondence with PopeGelasius I and mention of her in Ennodius's Panegyric of Theoderic. Her name...
in a letter of PopeGelasius I of 496. Cappelletti XVIII, pp. 213-215. Lanzoni, p. 563. Opilio is mentioned in a letter of PopeGelasius I of 496. Cappelletti...
restoring affairs in France and Germany, he reached Rome on 3 June 1120. PopeGelasius II was in exile from Rome, which was in the hands of the Emperor Henry...
Christ appears in the 5th century, in a synod of bishops to refer to PopeGelasius I. The theological connotations of the title got a pastoral sense, evoking...