Four Gallican Articles

E644856

The Four Gallican Articles were a 1682 declaration by the French clergy asserting the limits of papal authority and the traditional liberties of the Gallican (French) Church.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Four Gallican Articles canonical 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (48)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Gallicanism document
ecclesiastical declaration
historical document
theological statement
approvedBy Assembly of the French clergy of 1682 NERFINISHED
asserts limits of papal authority
traditional liberties of the Gallican Church
concerns relationship between papal authority and episcopal authority
relationship between papal authority and temporal power of kings
context conflict between Louis XIV and the papacy
countryOfOrigin France
date 1682
field canon law
ecclesiology
followedBy partial retraction by French bishops under papal pressure
hasAlternativeName Declaration of the French Clergy of 1682 NERFINISHED
hasAuthor Assembly of the French clergy NERFINISHED
hasImpactOn French Church–State relations
debates on papal infallibility before First Vatican Council
historicalPeriod reign of Louis XIV
influenced French Catholic theology
Gallican Church law NERFINISHED
influencedBy Conciliarism NERFINISHED
Council of Basel NERFINISHED
Council of Constance NERFINISHED
Pragmatic Sanction of Bourges NERFINISHED
language French
Latin
laterCondemnedBy Pope Alexander VIII NERFINISHED
Pope Alexander VIII constitution Inter multiplices (1690) NERFINISHED
numberOfArticles 4
opposedBy Pope Innocent XI NERFINISHED
placeOfPublication Paris NERFINISHED
preservedIn collections of Gallican documents
promulgatedBy Louis XIV of France NERFINISHED
relatedTo Declaration of the Clergy of France of 1682 NERFINISHED
Gallican Liberties NERFINISHED
Ultramontanism NERFINISHED
religiousTradition Roman Catholicism
surface form: Roman Catholic Church
states that papal authority is limited by canons and customs of the Church
that papal judgments are not irreformable without consent of the Church
that popes have no authority in temporal matters over kings
theologicalCurrent Gallicanism NERFINISHED
topic authority of ecumenical councils
papal infallibility
papal jurisdiction
rights of bishops
rights of kings in ecclesiastical matters

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.