Rerum novarum (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Rerum novarum" in English language version.

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britannica.com

  • "Rerum Novarum". Encyclopaedia Britannica Online. 9 May 2025 [20 July 1998]. Retrieved 14 May 2025.

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gazzettadimodena.it

  • Melchioni, Maria Vittoria (16 December 2018). "Castelfranco commemora monsignor Tarozzi a cento anni dalla morte". Gazzetta di Modena. Retrieved 14 May 2025. [Then he moved to Rome, where he spent 17 years in the Vatican, from 1886 to 1902, in the service of Pope Leo XIII, author of the encyclical 'Rerum Novarum' with which the Catholic Church prepared itself to face the challenges of modernity and which earned the pontiff the nickname 'Pope of Workers'. Leo XIII made use of the great culture and sensitivity of Monsignor Tarozzi in drafting the text, who recalls those days in his diaries.]

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  • Cannavò, Salvatore (9 May 2025). "Americano, non trumpiano". Jacobin Italia (in Italian). Retrieved 14 May 2025. [Prevost has an evident sensitivity for Bergoglian themes, and the choice of the name Leo, referring to the writer of Rerum Novarum, the first great encyclical of social doctrine of the Church, seems to present a program of social openness.]
  • Montefusco, Antonio; Potestà, Gian Luca (13 October 2020). "L'enciclica dell'ultimo dei No Global?". Jacobin Italia (in Italian). Retrieved 14 May 2025. [An encyclical is a circular letter, generally – but not always – addressed by a pope primarily to churches and episcopates. Among the encyclicals, some are conveniently defined as 'social', as they concern the state of the world rather than the doctrinal teaching of Christian doctrine. The most famous remains Rerum novarum, in which Leo XIII at the end of the nineteenth century opened the eyes of the Church to the world of work, claiming a space for analysis and intervention in competition with the impetuous growth of socialist movements and trade unions. The subsequent 'social' encyclicals were mainly published on the occasion of anniversaries: forty years later (Quadragesimo anno), eighty years later (Octogesima adveniens), one hundred years later (Centesimus annus)...]
  • Poggi, Stefano; Bartolini, Stefano (4 March 2025). "Il nuovo corporativismo della Cisl". Jacobin Italia (in Italian). Retrieved 14 May 2025. [In 1891, with the encyclical Rerum novarum, Leo XIII laid the foundations of the 'social doctrine' of the Catholic Church, in response to the challenges posed by the modern world. After having naturalized, and therefore legitimized, social inequalities as a necessary and unavoidable 'natural' fact, the then Pope argued in favor of the need for harmony so that everyone could cooperate for the common good under the aegis of the state, he railed against conflict between classes, demonized strikes, defined as 'serious disorder', and indicated that medieval guilds of arts and crafts, to be remodeled according to the times, were the main instrument through which to remove conflict and achieve cooperation and harmony between classes within them. But already in the following years these ideas, aimed at the future while looking at the past, showed their limits, with an activism of the white leagues that, while advocating harmony between classes, actually practiced conflict.]

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newadvent.org

  • Ryan, John A. (1911). "Rerum Novarum". The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 12. New York: Robert Appleton Company. Retrieved 5 October 2016 – via New Advent.

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observer.co.uk

  • Dyja, Thomas (11 May 2025). "Opinion: intimate and humane, Pope Leo is a true son of Chicago". The Observer. ISSN 0029-7712. Retrieved 14 May 2025. There were different ways to be Catholic, and those who heard the call of Rerum Novarum ('of new things'), the encyclical issued by Pope Leo XIII in 1891 and considered by many conservative Roman Catholics to be extremely progressive, had a radical side befitting the city of the Haymarket riot – a 19th century protest in favour of an eight-hour workday – and the 1968 Democratic convention.

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archive.thetablet.co.uk

  • "Rerum novarum". The Tablet. Vol. 77, no. 2663. 23 May 1891. p. 5. Archived from the original on 26 February 2014. Retrieved 21 February 2014.

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treccani.it

  • "Rerum novarum". Dizionario di Storia (in Italian). Rome: Italian Encyclopedia Institute. 2011. Retrieved 14 May 2025 – via Treccani.

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