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| | William Barclay |
 | | In the later 1580s he found that theories of legitimate resistance were being expressed by Jean Boucher and other supporters of the French Catholic League, which was fighting to keep Henry IV off the throne of France. |  | | He claimed that the ideas of the monarchomachs had been concocted by the heretical Huguenots, who had seen that they were losing the religious struggle with Catholics, and who therefore developed plausible but pernicious political arguments designed to undermine royal power, which supported Catholicism. |  | | But Catholics commonly adopted the theory of the indirect deposing power, which Protestants rejected. |
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http://www.thoemmes.com/404.asp?404;http://www.thoemmes.com/encyclopedia/barclay.htm
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| | The American Religious Right: about the true nature of the American Religious Right movement. |
 | | His demeanor is representative of the ideological orientation of the Catholic League and the traditional modus operandi of the Catholic Orthodoxy in general: We are right and everyone else is wrong, and whoever disagrees with us must be silenced, by whatever means available. |  | | One can find many more in in the archive of the League's press releases, which would be more aptly named "William Donohue's Daily Rants", as these press releases consist almost in their entirety of commentary by William Donohue, without exception. |  | | he Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights is a self-appointed extreme-right advocacy group that fights against what it sells to the public as discrimination of Catholics in American society. |
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http://www.webpan.com/dsinclair/catholicleague.html
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| | Louis XIV |
 | | The revocation of the Edict of Nantes weakened the French economy by driving out a highly skilled and industrious segment of the nation, and its ruthless application increased the detestation in which England and the Protestant German states held the French king. |  | | In 1610, he was assassinated by a disgruntled Catholic. |  | | Finally, in 1685, he declared that the majority of Protestants had been converted to Catholicism and that the edict of 1598, having thus become superfluous, was revoked. |
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http://faculty.ucc.edu/egh-damerow/louis_xiv.htm
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| | French Wars of Religion |
 | | This prompted the Conspiracy of Ambroise in which the Huguenots and the House of Bourbon plotted to usurp the power of the Guise family. |  | | A highly popular and effective ruler, with the Catholic League dissolved, in 1598 Henri IV issued the Edict of Nantes that granted partial religious freedom to the French Protestants. |  | | Following the death of the king's brother, Francois, and the King's own subsequent assassination, Henri of Navarre, the de-facto leader of the Protestant movement, became the rightful king of France. |
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http://faculty.ucc.edu/egh-damerow/french_wars_of_religion.htm
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| | Catholic League (Italian) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | In response, Venice entered into negotiations with Louis, and on March 23, 1513 concluded a treaty at Blois, which divided Northern Italy between the French, who would receive Milan and the Venetians, who would receive the Veneto and Lombardy east of the Adda River. |  | | Alviano, suddenly left without French support, withdrew into the Veneto, followed by Cardona's Spanish troops. |  | | When the Venetians objected, Julius threatened to form another alliance against them. |
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http://hackettstown.us/project/wikipedia/index.php/Catholic_League_(Italian)
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| | [No title] |
 | | The menacing religious war, between the adherents of the "Gospel" and the fictitious Catholic League (15 May, Breslau), ostensibly formed to exterminate the Protestants, which with a suspicious precipitancy on the part of its leader, Landgrave Philip, had actually gone to a formal declaration of war (15 May, 1528), was fortunately averted. |  | | Luther's attitude towards him was that of implacable personal hatred; the dislike of him among the humanists was decidedly virulent; his unpopularity among Catholics was also well known. |  | | To the Protestants it was read 11 Nov., who rejected it and formed the Smalkaldic League (29 March, 1531), an offensive and defensive alliance of all Lutherans. |
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http://www.ewtn.com/library/HOMELIBR/CELUTHER.TXT
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| | CHAPTER 43 |
 | | Occasionally these pro-abortion 'Catholics' will quote a Vatican II document entitled Declaration on Religious Freedom in support of their contention that we should be able to do anything our 'conscience' does not object to. |  | | Embittered former 'Catholics' have resurrected this garbage and are freely spewing it today; "The financial demands made on Catholics are atrocious. |  | | This monthly publication is billed as "a magazine on the family that is as Catholic as the Pope," and is a scholarly journal which takes an in-depth look at a wide range of topics of interest to Christians. |
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http://www.ewtn.com/library/PROLENC/ENCYC043.HTM
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| | CATHOLIC LEAGUE for Religious and Civil Rights |
 | | It is true that the Catholic League is the blasphemy police (he didn’t say we were but we know what he was thinking) and it is also true that we possess brass knuckles. |  | | To be exact, the Catholic League will be taking out ads in several national Catholic newspapers and in prominent Washington publications condemning the DNC for its obstinacy. |  | | McAuliffe’s problem: if CFFC were an authentic Catholic group, it would have been named in the umbrella Catholic source, catholic-USA.com (e.g., there are scores of bona-fide Catholic groups posted there, including the Catholic League). |
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http://www.catholicleague.org/02press_releases/pr0302.htm
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| | mm660.htm |
 | | Although the >conclusion that "The society and government that would be >destroyed by the French Revolution was already mostly in >place in 1614" (p. |  | | Whether one interprets Loyseau to have been a >sixteenth-century or a seventeenth-century theorist, it >is clear that his three treatises were meant to define >society around 1600. |  | | The Catholic clergy remained corrupt >and left itself open to criticism. |
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http://www.uakron.edu/hfrance/archives/mm660.htm
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| | Untitled Document |
 | | Within this context she specializes in French urban and religious history and is primarily a social/political/cultural historian. |  | | Set in the context of the later Wars of Religion, it examines Henry's achievement in reforging an alliance with the towns by comparing his relationship with Catholic League, royalist and Protestant towns. |  | | "Engendering the Wars of Religion: Female Agency during the Catholic League in Dijon," French Historical Studies 20:2 (April, 1997), 127-54. |
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http://www.odu.edu/al/hist/pages/fac-finley.htm
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| | Catholic Answers: How Pius XII Protected Jews |
 | | He spoke out anyway and in retaliation the Catholic Jews of Holland were sent to their death. |  | | One of the most terrible was the Holocaust wrought by Nazi Germany, which killed an estimated six million European Jews and almost as many other victims. |  | | Unfortunately, joy in the election of a strong pope who would continue Pius XI’s defiance of the Nazis was darkened by the ominous political developments in Europe. |
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http://www.catholic.com/library/HOW_Pius_XII_PROTECTED_JEWS.asp
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| | Catholic League - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Catholic League (French) - Faction during the French Wars of Religion |  | | Throughout history there have been many alliances and organizations known as the Catholic League, including: |  | | Catholic League (USA) - Catholic civil rights group in the United States. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catholic_League
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| | Catholic Information & Resources |
 | | Catholic "scandals" and shortcomings Biblical Evidence for Catholicism. |  | | Catholics and Capital Punishment Reverend Augustine Judd, O.P, S.T.L. Knights of Columbus |  | | The Holocaust and the Catholic Church The Augustine Club at Columbia University, 1998-2001 |
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http://www.catholic-forum.com/members/ccfjeff/index3.html
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| | Huguenot History -Reformation Sunday- old dead links all returned -via- Web.Archive.com |
 | | Meanwhile, the people of Paris, under the influence of inflammatory Leaguer preachers and the Committee of Sixteen, were becoming more and more dissatisfied with Henri III and his failure to suppress the Protestants. |  | | Returning to Europe to get supplies, Ribault discovered the French ports closed by the religious war between Protestants and Catholics. |  | | Many of their descendents would end up in the America's. |
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http://www.hightowertrail.com/Huguent.htm
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| | Baumgartner's book, 'Longing for the End,' looks at millennialism and violence |
 | | He is the author of six other books, including "Radical Reactionaries: The Political Thought of the French Catholic League," "Louis XII, France in the Sixteenth Century," and "From Spear to Flintlock: A History of War in Europe to the French Revolution." He has participated in numerous scholarly conferences and published in many scholarly journals. |  | | Baumgartner is a member of several historical groups, including the Society for French Historical Studies, the Southern Historical Association, and the American Catholic Historical Association. |  | | In his book, Baumgartner shows why the coming of a new millennium brings out such powerful beliefs. |
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http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/1999-09/VT-Bbft-240999.php
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| | Liturgy Politics and Salvation , 1580460313 |
 | | This was a debate between Huguenots, Politiques, and the zealous Catholic Leaguers, which frequently led to open conflict, violence, and an undermining of the supremacy of the French state. |  | | This book provides a much-needed examination of the role of the Catholic League in the Counter-Reformation of France and how this influence can still be felt today in French politics. |  | | CATHOLIC HISTORICAL REVIEW [This book's] conclusions and sophisticated methodology make it important for all those interested in the religious changes of early modern France. |
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http://www.urpress.com/80460313.HTM
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| | Catholic League on Encyclopedia.com |
 | | A spokesman for Canada's Catholic episcopacy fudges the teaching on condoms.(Brief Article) |  | | The priest scandal: how old News at last became a dominant national story... |  | | Mocking Catholics is okay; Some Canadian broadcasters can't resist subjecting religion to crude comedy. |
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http://www.encyclopedia.com/html/x/x-c1atholicl1eg.asp
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| | Church History: Liturgy, Politics, and Salvation: The Catholic League in Paris and the Nature of Catholic Reform, ... |
 | | This book had its origins in the mid-1980s, when historians of the French Catholic League showed more concern with the social and political aspects of this revolutionary crisis than with its religious motivation. |  | | Church History: Liturgy, Politics, and Salvation: The Catholic League in Paris and the Nature of Catholic Reform, 1540-1630.@ HighBeam Research |  | | Liturgy, Politics, and Salvation: The Catholic League in Paris and the Nature of Catholic Reform, 1540-1630. |
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http://www.highbeam.com/library/doc0.asp?DOCID=1G1:76751716&refid=holomed_1
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| | New Page 1 |
 | | 1531: Protestant princes in Germany form Schmalkaldic League, a defensive alliance against the Catholic emperor Charles V. 1534-1535: Anabaptist radicals seize power in Münster. |  | | 1555: Peace of Augsburg ends religious fighting in Germany, and ratifies the principle cuius regio, eius religio but only for Catholics and Lutherans. |  | | Cuius regio, eius religio ("his kingdom, his religion"): settlement allowing each of the German princes to choose Catholicism or Protestantism, and then impose that religion on all his subjects. |
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http://faculty.maxwell.syr.edu/gaddis/HST212/April23/handout.htm
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| | Guise |
 | | 1563 Francois Guise, French general/duke, assassinated at 44 |  | | 1588 Hendrik de Guise, French leader of Catholic League, murdered at 37 |  | | 1550 Henri Guise [le Balafre], French duke/leader, Catholic League |
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http://www.brainyhistory.com/topics/g/guise.html
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| | French History -- Table of Contents (2003, 17 [4]) |
 | | The Bourgeoisie Seconde, The Catholic League and Urban Society |  | | Every Factory a Fortress: The French Labor Movement in the Age of Ford and Hitler |  | | Copyright © 2005 Society for the Study of French History |
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http://fh.oxfordjournals.org/content/vol17/issue4/index.dtl
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| | Search Encyclopedia.com |
 | | Amboise, conspiracy of Amboise, conspiracy of, 1560, plot of the Huguenots (French Protestants) and the house of Bourbon to usurp the power of the Guise family, which virtually ruled France during the reign of the young Francis II. |  | | Aubry de Montdidier Aubry de Montdidierōbrē´ de môNdēdyā´, in French legend, a French courtier of King Charles V, murdered c.1371 near Montargis by one Macaire. |  | | The animosity of Aubry's dog toward Macaire was so great that the king ordered trial by combat between the dog and Macaire, armed with a cudgel. |
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http://encyclopedia.com/search.asp?target=@DOCKEYWORDS+frhist&unkey=frhist
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| | Wes's Spanish Armada Page: History, Highlights, Myths, and Muddles |
 | | There was no viable Catholic replacement for the Protestant Elizabeth I since Mary Queen of Scots had been executed in 1587. |  | | There were sudden shifts in winds that enabled Medina Sidonia’s fleet to escape a catastrophic beaching on the Dutch and French shorelines, as well as to regroup and assume its tight defensive formation. |  | | French in the 30 Years’ War (1618-1648), not the English. |
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http://www.people.fas.harvard.edu/~ulm/history/sp_armada.htm
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| | CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: French Literature |
 | | Malherbe would perhaps have been unable to combat this opposition, had not two other forces come to his assistance in checking the flood of license that was spreading with Régnier and his associates. |  | | This was because he brought qualities which were entirely novel or which had long been forgotten. |  | | Leaving aside his influence on the movement of politics, we must give him credit for all that the French literature of the nineteenth century owes to him. |
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http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/06190a.htm
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| | Charles X of France: Information From Answers.com |
 | | However, the liberal, bourgeois-controlled Chamber of Deputies refused to confirm the Comte de Chambord as Henri V. In a vote largely boycotted by conservative deputies, the body declared the French throne vacant, and elevated Louis-Philippe, duc d'Orleans, to power. |  | | His dissolution of the chamber of deputies, his July Ordinances, which set up rigid control of the press, and his restriction of suffrage resulted in the July Revolution. |  | | His religious convictions strengthened and he became a devout Roman Catholic. |
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http://www.answers.com/topic/charles-x-of-france
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| | Catalogue of the Catholic Central Library |
 | | Radical reactionaries: the political thought of the French catholic league.. |  | | Radio reporter in Jerusalem: a radio report of the Passion in four days.. |  | | Radical prayer: creating a welcome for God, ourselves, other people and the world.. |
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http://www.catholic-library.org.uk/catalogue/search_results.php?action=find_title&find=r
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| | Creating French Culture (Library of Congress Exhibition) |
 | | On a ground of black morocco, the boards present interlacing, ornamental foliage of light tan morocco, with certain geometric and foliate patterns painted in green. |  | | This important document marks the beginning of a permanent French embassy at the Ottoman court. |  | | The first French press was set up at the Sorbonne by two professors who recruited three printers from Germany to whom Louis XI (1461-1483) granted letters of naturalization in 1475. |
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http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/bnf/bnf0004.html
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| | Elizabeth |
 | | The Religious Settlement of 1559 was the defining moment of the English Reformation, while the late 1580s and the 1590s were dominated by war with Spain and the French Catholic League, and by rebellion in Ireland. |  | | The iconography associated with the Queen herself, however, as Gloriana and the Virgin Queen, together with the length of her reign, has made her one of the most dominant characters of British history, a source of fascination to historians and the general public alike. |  | | Internally, Elizabethan England was marked by religious divisions, as "official" Protestantism was consolidated in the local communities, and there was intense commercial rivalry and expansion abroad. |
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http://www.onwardoverland.com/elizabeth/elizabeth.html
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| | Catholic League (French) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | The French Catholic League was created by Henry of Guise, in 1576 during the French Wars of Religion. |  | | The League was eventually forced to acknowledge the kingship of Henry of Navarre (after his conversion to Catholicism), and eventually died out under his rule. |  | | This struggle in the French Wars of Religion is often known as "War of Three Henries." |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catholic_League_(French)
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| | Montaigne Studies - Back Issues |
 | | JAMES J. Montaigne and the French Catholic League |
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http://humanities.uchicago.edu/orgs/montaigne/h/issues/back/v4.shtml
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| | AllRefer.com - Catholic League (French History) - Encyclopedia |
 | | More articles from AllRefer Reference on Catholic League |  | | AllRefer.com - Catholic League (French History) - Encyclopedia |  | | Catholic League, in French history: see Holy League. |
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http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/X/X-CatholicLeg.html
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| | SingaporeMoms - Parenting Encyclopedia - Henry I, Duke of Guise |
 | | Following the death of his father he became one of the leaders of the Catholic faction in the French Wars of Religion, and he was prominent in the St. |  | | In 1584 he formed the Catholic League to keep the new heir, the protestant Henry of Navarre, off the throne. |  | | Henry III failed to meet the demands of the Catholic League, and on May 12, 1588 Guise entered Paris, forcing King Henry to flee. |
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http://www.singaporemoms.com/parenting/Henry_I,_Duke_of_Guise
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| | Patron Saints Index: Blessed Marie of the Incarnation |
 | | Peter supported the Catholic League against Henry IV. |  | | Daughter of a French government official named Nicholas Aurillot. |  | | Though attracted to religious life, she married Pierre Acarie, an aristocrat and treasury official, at age 16. |
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http://www.catholic-forum.com/saints/saintm39.htm
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| | Untitled |
 | | This is something that the French administration and the Catholic League can agree on, and there is less of a split between the Guises and the kings than in OTL. |  | | pro-French) party in Flanders and Brabant, which are still majority Catholic. |  | | The French royal army is sent in to oppose **Philip, and to defend the Catholics. |
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http://petebarrett.members.beeb.net/althist/ProtestantPhilip.htm
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| | Infoplease Search: catholic baptism |
 | | (Encyclopedia) German Catholics, religious groups founded in 1844 by dissidents from the Roman Catholic Church. |  | | (Encyclopedia) catholic church [Gr.,=universal], the body of Christians, living and dead, considered as an... |  | | (Encyclopedia) Christian Catholic Church, religious denomination founded (1896) in Chicago by John Alexander... |
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http://www.infoplease.com/search.php3?query=catholic+baptism&in=all
(166 words)
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| | This Date in History: The Catholic League Atheism.NewsWired.net |
 | | January 31, 1596: The Catholic League was disbanded, leading to the end of the French Wars of Religion between Roman Catholics and Huguenots.... |  | | This Date in History: The Catholic League |  | | Home > Articles > This Date in History: The Catholic League |
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http://atheism.newswired.net/Article/81031/Page_Article.aspx
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| | French Catholic |
 | | Reading a bit of the history also made it appealing, this was an army that won a lot of battles but lost nearly all the wars due to political incompetance. |  | | There is an odd later list varient which covers the armies of the Catholic League. |  | | As I was on the Catholic side this was the army for me. |
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http://pages.eidosnet.co.uk/~nikgaukroger/armies/dbr/catholic.htm
(485 words)
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| | [No title] |
 | | B. SEA INVASION FEASIBLE IN 1580: French Catholic League, 1584 |
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http://www.harding.edu/USER/jmfortner/WWW/ELIZENGLAND.HTML
(360 words)
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| | Weird situation - should i take french next year? |
 | | This year I have a similar schedule to the one you're planning, including physics with an insanely hard teacher who's on his own program and doesn't follow the book, French 4, and Yearbook, not to mention all of my other clubs and activities... |  | | I had a friend who misunderstood that kinda thing last year and thought it would work anywhere. |  | | I would make the decision based on your extracurricular activities and remember, no matter how much you want to hold in your heart that you won't get senioritis, allow yourself some room to slack because you WILL want to at some point. |
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http://www.collegeconfidential.com/discus/messages/99/52133.html
(563 words)
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| | Catholic League |
 | | The French victory (1515) at Marignano reestablished the French in Lombardy.... |  | | Holy League - in Italian history, alliance formed but in the same year Julius II died and the league fell apart. |  | | Question.com > Encyclopedia > History > Modern Europe > French History > Catholic League |
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http://www.question.com/link/X-CatholicLeg.html
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| | 3sc1 |
 | | Protestant League of Northern European states to counteract the murderous |  | | states) and Catholic intellectuals (specifically the newly founded jesuits, |  | | which the jesuits championed (as a Catholic invention) once Galileo had broken |
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http://home.earthlink.net/~scassidy/CALNDR-L/96/OCT/3sc1.html
(461 words)
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| | Orign and Original Text of the Peace Prayer of St. Francis |
 | | Between the two world wars, the prayer circulated in Europe and was translated into English. |  | | The prayer was sent in French to Pope Benedict XV in 1915 by the French Marquis Stanislas de La Rochethulon. |  | | The author could possibly have been Father Bouquerel himself, but the identity of the author remains a mystery. |
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http://www.franciscan-archive.org/franciscana/peace.html
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| | News and Notes |
 | | The grant is her third from NEH and will fund work on her second book, “Living at The End of Time: A History of the French Catholic League, 1584-98.” |  | | The federally sponsored grant program was created during the Kennedy administration. |  | | She has led the Lady Monarchs to a national- record nine conference championships and has been the league’s Coach of the Year five times. |
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http://www.odu.edu/ao/instadv/archive/vol29issue19/newsnote.html
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| | CATHOLIC LEAGUE |
 | | Outlook: Rice's only loss last year came to league foe St. Mary's in the second week of the Division 2 state playoffs, a shocker to most who thought the Warriors would go all the way. |  | | My hope is that we won't be complacent after winning a Catholic League division for the first time in 15 years." Cabrini added a JV squad for the first time in 15 years as the school grew tremendously. |  | | Outlook: "We have to have some luck, be healthy and in our league, play very physical," said coach Paul Verska. |
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http://www.freep.com/sports/preps/catholic25e_20050825.htm
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| | [No title] |
 | | The Summit League Fact Sheet 2004 Established in 1957, The Summit League is a non-profit organization consisting of 47 active members and approximately 65 sustaining members who are committed to raising funds in the areas of education, health, welfare and the arts. |  | | Over the past 47 years, Summit League has raised over one and a half million dollars for Santa Clara Valley charitable organizations. |  | | This remodel was completed December 2003, giving the owners the home of their dreams. |
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http://ccsj.org/services/youth/HomesToursInfo.doc
(622 words)
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| | SCHOLASTIC LIBERALISM |
 | | Baumgartner, Frederich J. Radical Reactionaries: The Political Thought of the French Catholic League (Geneva: Librairie Droz, 1976) |  | | - on the classical liberal aspects of the Catholic League |  | | Constitutional Thought in Sixteenth-Century France: A Study in the Evolution of Ideas (1941, New York: Octagon Books, 1969) |
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http://www.kolumbus.fi/mdewit/rationalistliberalism.htm
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