their Councils abrided. 375 Reg. Ital. An. I 106. Helmolel. Hft. Sclay. c. 3 a. Sigebert An. .t It o6. Albert. Xrantz. Haft. Sax. li. 5. c. so, ti, 22, 2 3, 24. compared. As alto how his Body was digged up out of hisGrave,. and kept five years bybisunnatural Son in an unconfecrated place, and after buried. Thus ended one that had fought ( as Hiftorians lay ) with honour,Sixty two Battels (more than Cie- far had done) a Man (had he duly mattered his youthful lull ) credibly dc- fcribed as of laudable endowments, and one that fhewed much zeal for the .Clergy, though he was not willing to be abfolutely their Subjedt. . 4 r 19. CCCLXXXV. Of the Councils that were in Pafchal's days, the firfl was atRome, An. t t oz. where the oldEmperor Henry the 4.th.was again Excommunicate, and a formof Anathematifm made againft all Herefies , and in fpecial againft that Herefie that then troubled the Church,which was [That the Churches Anathema's and Bonds are not to be regarded.] It was time for Pope and Prelates to call that a Herefie, when byCurling they had got their Dominions, and conquered fo many Emperors and Kings: But it's, a wonder that whenTibi dabs Claves, would not keep up the credit of the Curlers. that Curling again fhould be able to do it. TwoCouncils at London , partly againft the Clergies Incontinence, and againft Sodomy, and partly to depofe feveral married Priefts, I pats by. t ao. CCCLXXXXVI. Fluentius, Bifhop of Florence,publifhed that Anti- chrift was come. Whether he told them who he was .I know not : But An. t t os. ACouncil of 340Bifhops was there called, tò try him for that dange- rous doétrine ; and finding that Prodigies andCalamities drew him to believe it, they chid hini as a weak Man, and warned him to talk fò dangeroufly no more, ( you may know why. ) § 12,1. CCCLXXXVII. When the young Henry began his Rebellion againft his Father, he called An. Ito5. a Council at 'uintilineburg, where he folemnly called God and Angels to witnef, that it was not out of define to Reign that he didwhat he did, nor to depofe his Father, but to rettore them to the Obedience of the Church, lamenting his Father'sobftinacy againft it : And he profeft his Obedience to the Pope, and drew divers revolted Arch- bithops to do the like. § í2a.. CCCLXXXVIII. An. 3't c6. A Council with the Nobility or Princeswas called by. Henryjunior at Mentz,where the old Emperor was again . . Excommunicated, and forced to refign his Scepter to his Son ; and this by thofePrinces, Prelates and Nobles,that had fworn Allegiance to him,fuppofing themfelves abfolved from all their Oaths by the Pope. Now it was that the threeArchbifhops violently divefted him. When heasked them, what was his fault, and they laid, Simony,.in the Collation of Bifhopricks.a_nd Abbies, he adju- red them ( the Bifhópsof Mentz, and Celen, with theBifhop of /Formes) by tte name of the Eternal God, to fay whatever he' took of any of them : And they Paid, Nothing. He thanked God that fo far their own tongues juflified him, when their Bifhopricks might have brought him no fmali,Sum. 4 r 2 3. CCCLXXXIX. The Pope in a Council at Waftallis inLombardy, took in Tome fubmitting Bithops. § t.24, to
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