Thus far Gallicanism had remained an ecclesiastical affair, but in 1594 Pierre Pithou brought it into the secular political arena. |
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Given the language used by the Gallicans cited above, 15 of the Fathers of the Council were clearly trying to defeat Gallicanism. |
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While the Jansenists leaned towards Gallicanism, the episcopacy leaned towards ultramontanism. |
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Louis was still determined though to suppress the Jansenists, even at the price of turning his back on Gallicanism, another severe mistake. |
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It successfully eliminated the remnants of the Conciliar Movement and crushed ecclesiastical nationalism in the form of Gallicanism and its counterparts in several nations. |
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The young seminarian did not seem to be interested in the controversy surrounding Jansenism, Gallicanism, or Cartesianism. |
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Gallicanism and Jansenism had left their mark on the theology of the time. |
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The development of Gallicanism on the Continent also reinforced the idea of separation of church and state. |
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This view gained momentum during controversies of the Reformation and continued through the struggles against Gallicanism and Josephinism. |
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The shift from Gallicanism to Ultramontanism during the nineteenth century may partly result from the demise of the French monarchy. |
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Steeped in the Gallicanism inherited from the century of Louis XIV, it was Napoleon's intention to have the Church serve the greatness of his politics, but without being held back by the reactions of the pope. |
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At a historical time marked by doctrinal tensions such as Jansenism and Gallicanism, our Founder did not enter into theoretical discussion, but his concern was that children and young people achieve salvation. |
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Though the articles were condemned at Rome by Alexander VIII in 1690 and were revoked in France by Louis XIV in 1693, they remained the typical expression of Gallicanism. |
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Looking at the development of political thought against the backdrop of Gallicanism leads Perreau-Saussine to a number of surprising and compelling conclusions. |
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