Council of 867
The council was held on orders of Pope Nicholas I, to deal with Hincmar of Reims and his quarrels.[1] The decrees were signed on 2 November 867.[2] The Council ruled that no bishop could be deposed from his See without the consent of the Pope.[3]
Bishops present
- Hincmar, Archbishop of Reims
 - Herard, Bishop of Tours
 - Wenilo, Bishop of Rouen
 - Frotarius, Bishop of Bordeaux
 - Hegilo, Bishop of Sens
 - irizarri, Bishop of Bourges
 - Rothadus, Bishop of Soissons
 - Actardus, Bishop of Nantes
 - Hildegarius, Bishop of Meaux
 - Aeneas, Bishop of Paris
 - Hincmar, Bishop of Laon
 - Gislibertus, Bishop of Chartres
 - Ercanraus, Bishop of Châlons-sur-Marne
 - Ercambertus, Bishop of Bayeux
 - Odo, Bishop of
 - Folcricus, Bishop of St.-Paul-trois-Châteaux
 - Livido, Bishop of Autun
 - Ioannes, Bishop of Cambrai
 - Hilduinus, Bishop of Évreux
 - Abbo, Bishop of Nevers
 
Council of 878 (Second Council of Troyes)
- 878 Second Council of Troyes[4]
 
Bishops present
- John, Bishop of Rome
 - Walbertus, Bishop of Porto
 - Petrus, Bishop of Forum Sempronii (Fossombrone)
 - Pascasius, Bishop
 - Hincmar, Archbishop of Reims
 - Ansegisus, Archbishop of Sens
 - Aurelianus, Archbishop of Lyon
 - Sigebodus, Archbishop of Narbonne
 - Rostagnus, Archbishop of Arles
 - Adalardus, Archbishop of Tours
 - Teudericus Archbishop of Besançon
 - Ottramnus, Archbishop of Vienne
 - Isaac, Bishop of Langres
 - Gerboldus, Bishop of Châlons-sur-Saône
 - Agilmarus, Bishop of Clermont (Arvernensis)
 - Bernerus, Bishop of Grenoble
 - Abbo, Bishop of Nevers
 - Ottulfus, Bishop of Tréguier
 - Gislebertus, Bishop of Chartres
 - Walefridus, Bishop of Uzés
 - Hildebaldus, Bishop of Soissons
 - Teutherus, Bishop of Gerona
 - Ingelwinus, Bishop of Paris
 - Edenulfus, Bishop of Laon
 - Adebertus, Bishop of Senlis
 - Berno, Bishop of Chalons
 - Maricus, Bishop of Béziers
 - Ecfridus, Bishop of Poitiers
 - Abbo, Bishop of Maguelonne
 - Frodoinus, Bishop of Barcelona
 - Arnaldus, Bishop of Toul
 
Council of 1078
Summoned By Archbishop Hugues de Die and the Abbot of Cluny.[5]
Council of 1104
Convened by Cardinal Richard, Bishop of Albano, Papal Legate[6]
Council of 1107
Convened on 23 May 1107 by Pope Paschal II personally. Rothard, Bishop of Mainz, was suspended from office because he had dared to reconcile a schismatic bishop, Udo of Hildesheim, to the Church.[7]
Bishops attending
No complete list survives. Some bishops who probably attended can be discovered in surviving documents:
- Pope Paschal II
 - Cardinal Richard, Bishop of Albano
 - Aldo, Bishop of Piacenza
 - Odo, Bishop of Cambrai
 - Leodegarus, Bishop of Bourges
 - Girard, Bishop of Angoulême
 - ldebertus, Bishop of Le Mans
 - Ioannes, Bishop of Thérouanne
 - Gotofridus, Bishop of Amiens
 - Galo, Bishop of Paris
 - Lambertus, Bishop of Arras
 
Council of 1129
- 1129[lower-alpha 1] - convened by Bernard of Clairvaux[lower-alpha 2]:[10]
- recognized and confirmed the Order of the Knights Templar
 - solved disputes involving the Bishop of Paris
 
 
Notes
References
- ↑ Louis Moréri; Goujet (1759). Le Grand dictionnaire historique ou le Mélange curieux de l'histoire sacrée et profane... par Mre Louis Moreri,. (in French). Paris: chez les libraires associés. p. 366. Sirmond, III, p. 353-604.
 - ↑ Sirmond, III, p. 358.
 - ↑ Lee, Guy Carleton (1897). "Hincmar: An Introduction to the study of the Revolution in the Organization of the Church in the Ninth Century". Papers of the American Society of Church History. 8: 231–260, at 257-260. doi:10.1017/S1079902800001078. hdl:2027/uc1.b3502016. Retrieved 2016-09-22.
 - ↑ Sirmond, III, pp. 473-496; the subscriptions of the bishops is at pp. 479-480.
 - ↑ Louis Ellies Dupin; Daniel Penningen (1697). Nouvelle bibliotheque des auteurs ecclesiastiques. Vol. Tome VIII. Paris: Pralard. p. 61.
 - ↑ Bernard Monod (1907). Essai sur les rapports de Pascal II. avec Philippe Ier (1099-1108) (in French). Paris: H. Champion. pp. 39–42.
 - ↑ Uta-Renate Blumenthal (1978). "Chapter 3: The Council of Troyes, 23 May 1107". The Early Councils of Pope Paschal II, 1100-1110. Toronto: Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies. ISBN 978-0-88844-043-3., and pp. 34-35.
 - ↑ Barber 1995, p. 14.
 - ↑ Read 1999, p. 100.
 - ↑ Ben-Ami 1969, p. 66.
 
Bibliography
- Ben-Ami, Aharon (1969). Social Change in a Hostile Environment: The Crusaders' Kingdom of Jerusalem. Princeton University Press.
 - Barber, Malcolm (1995). The New Knighthood: A History of the Order of the Temple. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521420415.
 - Hefele, Charles Joseph (1911). Histoire des conciles Tome IV, deuxième partie. Paris: Letouzey. pp. 666–678. (tr. H. Leclercq)
 - Hefele, Charles Joseph (1870). Histoire des conciles Tome V. Paris: Letouzey. pp. 528–550. (tr. H. Leclercq)[Council of Troyes, 867]
 - Lalore, Charles (1867). Les synodes du diocèse de Troyes (in French). Troyes: E. Caffé.
 - Read, Piers Paul (1999). The Templars. Da Capo Press. ISBN 9780306814969.
 - Sirmond, Jacques (1629). Concilia antiqua Galliae tres in tomos ordine digesta. Cum epistolis pontificum, principum constitutionibus, & aliis Gallicanae rei ecclesiasticae monimentis. Quorum plurima vel integra, vel magna ex parte, nunc primum in lucem exeunt. Opera & studio Iacobi Sirmondi Societatis Iesu presbyteri. Tomus 1. [-3.] (in Latin). Paris: Sebastien Cramoisy.
 
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