Quantum redactiones paginae "Robertus de Cursone" differant

Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
Linea 1:
'''Robertus de Cursone''' (natus annis circiter 1160/1170; mortuus [[1219]]) fuit eruditus [[Anglia|Anglicus]] et ab anno [[1212]] cardinalis Ecclesiae Catholicae Romanae.
 
Nativus [[Derbiensis comitatus]], alumnus fuit scholarum [[Oxonia]]e necnon [[Lutetia]]e; ibi contubernius fuit [[Innocentius III|Lotharius Signinus]] (qui papa fuerit Innocentius III) et discipulus . in hac urbe [[Index cancellariorum Parisiensium|cancellarius]] fuisse censetur anno [[1211]]. Anno [[1213]] [[legatus a latere]] pro [[expeditio sacra in Albigenses|expeditione in Albigenses]] praedicavit, sed anno [[1215]] inquisitionem conduxit de erroribus in [[Universitas Parisiensis|universitatem Parisiensem]] praevalentibus, de quo [[rescriptum]] "[[Nullus legat Parisius]]"<ref>Denifle (1889) [http://archive.org/stream/chartulariumuniv01univuoft#page/78/mode/2up no. 20]</ref> mandavit. Ad conclave in quo [[Honorius III]] papa electus est adfuit; mox Honorii legatus cum [[quinta expeditio sacra|quinta expeditione sacra]] ad Orientem properavit, ibique ad [[Obsidio Damiettae (1218)|obsidionem Damiettae]] mortuus est.
<!-- In 1213, he was appointed [[legate a latere]] to preach the crusade, and in 1215 was placed at the head of a commission to inquire into the errors prevalent at the University of Paris. He participated in the [[Papal election, 1216|papal conclave of 1216]], which elected [[Pope Honorius III]].<ref name=bios1212curzon/><ref name=schofieldsSkinner2007p27/>
 
== FontesNotae ==
accompanied the army of the [[Fifth Crusade]] into Egypt as legate of Pope Honorius III.
<div class="references-small"><references /></div>
 
== Bibliographia ==
He died during the siege of Damietta in 1219, and was buried in Damietta.<ref name=Princes173>{{Harvnb|Bellenger|Fletcher|2001}}, ''Princes of the Church'', p. 173.</ref>
; Documenta
* [[Henricus Seuse Denifle|H. Denifle]], E. Chatelain, edded., ''Chartularium Universitatis Parisiensis'' vol. 1 (Lutetiae: Delalain, 1889) pp. 72-73, 78-80 [http://archive.org/details/chartulariumuniv01univuoft Textus apud archive.org]
 
; Biographica
==Works==
 
He is the author of several works, including a ''Summa'' devoted to questions of canon law and ethics and dealing at length with the question of [[usury]].
 
His interference in the affairs of the University of Paris, in the midst of the confusion arising from the introduction of the Arabian translations of Aristotle, resulted in the proscription (1215) of the metaphysical as well as the physical treatises of the Stagyrita, together with the summaries thereof (''Summæ de eiusdem''). At the same time, his rescript (Denifle, "Chartul. Univ. Paris", I, 78) renews the condemnation of the Pantheists [[David of Dinant]] and [[Amaury of Bene]], but permits the use, as texts, of [[Aristotle's Ethics]] and the logical treatises. The rescript also contains several enactments relating to academic discipline. -->
 
== Fontes ==
* [[Henricus Seuse Denifle|H. Denifle]], E. Chatelain, edd., ''Chartularium Universitatis Parisiensis'' vol. 1 (Lutetiae: Delalain, 1889) pp. 72, 78 [http://archive.org/details/chartulariumuniv01univuoft Textus apud archive.org]
 
== Bibliographia ==
* "[[:s:en:Catholic Encyclopedia (1913)/Robert of Courçon|Robert of Courçon]]" in {{CathEnc}}
* Dominic Aidan Bellenger, Stella Fletcher, ''Princes of the Church: a history of the English cardinals''. Stroud: Sutton, 2001. ISBN 0-7509-2630-9
Line 31 ⟶ 25:
[[Categoria:Participes quintae expeditionis sacrae]]
[[Categoria:Cardinales]]
[[Categoria:Innocentius III]]
 
[[de:Robert von Courson]]