In Louis XII by explicit declaration renewed the enforcement of the sanction. Leo X effected its annulment by means of a Concordat made with Francis I in A new diet was held for further discussion of the matter in March, , at Mainz , and this diet also accepted a series of the Basle decrees of reform with modifications in individual cases.
The diet reserved to itself the right to make other changes, and at a convenient time the council was to pass decisions on such points. This is the substance of the "Instrumentum acceptationis" of 26 March, The designation pragmatic sanction is, however, misleading, for it was not confirmed by the emperor.
The Pragmatic Sanction of the Emperor Charles VI This edict, issued by the last German male member of the House of Hapsburg regulating the succession to his hereditary lands, was read 19 April, , before the ministers and councillors, but was temporarily kept secret.
The law ordained that all the Austrian hereditary lands should always remain united, and that on the failure of male descendants they should pass to the daughters that might be born to the emperor; and not until their descendants died out should the right of succession revert to the daughters of his brother, the Emperor Joseph I , and to their male and female descendants.
This pragmatic sanction was accepted by the estates of the Austrian lands in ; then in the course of time it was also recognized and guaranteed by the Powers of Europe , so that after the death of Charles VI his daughter Maria Theresa could succeed. The pragmatic sanction that he issued 6 Oct.
As earlier treaties forbade the union of Spain and Naples , he transferred Naples and Sicily to his third son Ferdinand. Up to Ferdinand's sixteenth year Naples was to be administered by a regency. The eldest son, Philip, was weak-minded; the second son Charles was to receive Spain. Charles III also provided that in case Ferdinand's line should become extinct his brothers Philip and Louis were to have the succession.
The union of Naples and the Two Sicilies was expressly forbidden in the edict. APA citation. Pragmatic Sanction. In The Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. Please verify that you are not a robot. Would you also like to submit a review for this item? You already recently rated this item. Your rating has been recorded. Write a review Rate this item: 1 2 3 4 5. Preview this item Preview this item. Picard et fils, Series: Archives de l'histoire religieuse de la France.
Church and state -- France -- History -- 15th century. View all subjects More like this Similar Items. Allow this favorite library to be seen by others Keep this favorite library private.
Save Cancel. Find a copy in the library Finding libraries that hold this item Paris, A. Reviews User-contributed reviews Add a review and share your thoughts with other readers. Be the first. Add a review and share your thoughts with other readers. Pragmatische Sanktion von Bourges. All rights reserved. While this did result in a loss of papal power in France , the movement of conciliarists itself was divided.
In , the Council of Basel was dissolved and the Concilliar Movement suffered a nearly fatal blow. The popes, especially Pius II lobbied for the repeal of the Pragmatic Sanction; and the French crown used promises of repeal as an inducement to the papacy to embrace policies favoring its interests. The Pragmatic Sanction eventually was superseded by agreements made between the French crown and Rome, especially the Concordat of Bologna. The decree also confirmed the Council s assertion of the liberties of the Gallican Church, restricting the … Universalium.
Pragmatic sanction of bourges — Legislation issued by King Charles VII in the French Estates General of , defining the Gallican French Church as an autonomous unit within the total Catholic church and giving only nominal recognition to the pope as head of the church.
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