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Legatine councils were also held in the German Empire during the 12th-century.
English provincial and legatine constitutions continually assailed simony.
It was not only on the question of legatine authority that Anselm went further, and was more explicit, than Lanfranc.
When taken before Innocent, the papal decision went against the chapters, as the power was alleged to lie in Romanus' legatine authority.
Innocent employed him on many legatine missions to Germany, Spain, Sicily, and France.
Later that year, he returned equipped with new legatine power by Pope Innocent III.
He was relieved from asserting, against Armagh, the legatine authority of Wolsey by the latter's fall (October, 1529).
Under his legatine authority, the bishop held legatine councils of the church at Gloucester and Westminster in 1190.
Responsively he sent Ansfrid and Halitgar, Bishop of Cambrai, to Constantinople as ambassadors with legatine authority.
Many councils in the Middle Ages were legatine councils, including the council held by Hugh of Die at Autun in 1077.
On his first legatine visit Guy was present for the foundation of the Confraternity of Belchite by the Navarro-Aragonese king Alfonso the Battler.
There really was a legatine conference in Westminster in 1138 led by Alberic of Ostia, a Benedictine monk and cardinal-bishop of Ostia.
May to July - Wolsey presides over a legatine court at Blackfriars, London to rule on the legality of Henry's marriage to Catherine of Aragon.
With his provision by Pope Leo X on 14 May 1516, he received a Bull exempting him from the metropolitan and legatine jurisdiction of the Archbishop of St Andrews.
He established the legatine seat in Torres, and excommunicating Comita - for oppressing the people and warring against Pisa - and transferring to Gonario the supreme secular authority on the island and personal authority in Arborea.
It was on his advice that Mary in 1557 forbade the landing of the Pope's messenger sent to confer legatine power on William Peto instead of Pole; he was responsible for receiving the first Russian ambassador to England.
He was given legatine authority over the orders of friars as part of his commission to preach the plenary indulgence to all those who fought alongside Charles of Valois for the Crown of Aragon against Peter III.
Before the reign of Edward I, when convocation assumed substantially its present form, there were convened in London various diocesan, provincial, national and legatine synods; during the past six centuries, however, the chief ecclesiastical assemblies held there have been convocations of the province of Canterbury.
On 8 July 1524 he was provided to the archbishopric of Glasgow by Pope Clement VII, granting at the same time exemption from the primatial and legatine jurisdiction of the Archbishopric of St Andrews, Primate of All Scotland.
We shall see that in writing this letter Anselm was concerned to safeguard the privileges of Canterbury against the claims of legatine authority; but he was also inspired by a traditional respect for royal authority, and the common-sense view that in fact nothing could be accomplished without help from the king and his officials.