Roman Catholic Diocese of Soissons (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Roman Catholic Diocese of Soissons" in English language version.

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  • "Hincmar". Bibilia. Retrieved October 15, 2023.

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  • Société académique de Laon (1864). "Bulletin de la Société académique de Laon". Bibliothèque nationale de France. Retrieved 8 March 2024. Procès des Templiers" "Nicolas de Celles; Gauthier de Villesavoye; Etienne de Compiègne; Robert de Montreuil-aux-Lions, pètre; Guillaume de Roy; Geoffroy de Cère; Eloi de Pavant; Raoul et Pierre de Compiègne, Pierre d'Anizy défendront tous l'Ordre.

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  • Bon Louis Henri Martin; Paul Lacroix (1837). Histoire de Soissons (in French). Vol. I. Paris: Silvestre. pp. 89–98. Compare: Arnold Hugh Martin Jones; John Robert Martindale; J. Morris (1971). The Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire: V. 1 A.D. 260-395. Vol. I. Cambridge University Press. p. 766. ISBN 978-0-521-07233-5. "He is most probably a fictitious character since there was no persecution of Christians in N. Gaul; this area was subject to the Caesar Constantius."
  • Alain Demurger (2019). "Guillaume de Roy". The Persecution of the Knights Templar: Scandal, Torture, Trial. Retrieved 8 March 2024. Seven of these nine Templars are also on the list of brothers who came from Gisors on 26 February 1310: Henri Zappellans or Chapelain, Anceau de Rocheria, Enard de Valdencia, Guillaume de Roy, Geoffroy de Cera or de La Fere-en-Champagne, Robert Harle or de Hermenonville, and Dreux de Chevru; the two others, Robert de Mortefontaine and Robert de Monts-de-Soissons, perhaps appear under different names. We don't know the reasons why those nine Templars were not taken back to Gisors. They are catalogued as 'non-reconciled': that is, they had not been absolved and reconciled with the Church by a diocesan commission. They attended neither the Council of Sens nor that of Reims in May 1310. They were from different dioceses: Toul, Sens, Chalons-en-Champagne, Treves but also Soissons (Guillaume de Roy), Laon (Geoffroy de La Fere) and Senlis (Robert Harle).
  • De Philippe Antoine Grouvelle (1805). "Les Templiers". Mémoires historiques sur les Templiers, ou Éclaircissemens nouveaux sur leur histoire, leur procès, les accusations intentées contr'eux, et les causes secrètes de leur ruine. Retrieved 8 March 2024. Noms des Frères rassemblés le 28 mars 1310, devant les Commissaires charges par le Pape de l'Enquête sur les griefs imputés à l'Ordre du Temple en général... 184. Guillaume De Roy
  • Mercurius subscribed to the Canons of the Concilium Agrippinense (Cologne) of 346. He attended the Council of Sardica in 347. Jacques Sirmond (1789). Conciliorum Galliae tam editorum quam ineditorum collectio (in Latin). Vol. Tomus primus. Paris: P. Didot. pp. 112, 124.
  • Manasses of Soissons (there was also a contemporary Manasses of Châtillon and a Manasses of Reims) had previously been Bishop of Cambrai. He was present as Bishop of Soissons at the Council of Troyes in April 1104. Hardouin, Jean; Rigaud, Claude (1714). Acta conciliorum et epistolae decretales, ac constitutiones summorum pontificum: Ab anno MLXXXVI, ad annum MCCXV (in Latin). Vol. Tomus sextus, pars II. Paris: Typographia Regia. p. 1874. Fisquet, p. 44. Gams, p. 633.
  • Born in Paris, Le Blanc entered the Canons Regular of Sainte-Geneviève. He studied theology in their house in Soissons, and became Novice master in Paris. He took the constitutional oath in 1791, and was given a parish in Paris by the Constitutional Bishop Gobel. He was imprisoned from June to August 1793. He returned to parish life, and on 14 December 1799 was elected Constitutional Bishop of Seine-Inférieure (Rouen); he was consecrated bishop on 18 January 1800 by Constitutional Bishop Royer. He submitted his resignation to Cardinal Caprara, the Papal Legate, on 15 October 1801. On 9 April 1802 he was appointed by arrêt of First Consul Bonaparte to the diocese of Soissons, but on 16 April, at a meeting of several constitutional bishops with Cardinal Caprara, he refused to sign a statement disavowing his past conduct. On 29 June 1804 he wrote to Pope Pius VII proclaiming his submission and his regrets for the past. On 5 July 1804 he was named to the Legion of Honor. He was later named Bishop of Arles 1820, † 1825. Fisquet, pp. 104-108. Paul Pisani (1907). Répertoire biographique de l'épiscopat constitutionnel (1791-1802) (in French). Paris: A. Picard et fils. pp. 168–169.

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