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Woman, Church, and State: Woman, Church, and State

Woman, Church, and State
Woman, Church, and State
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table of contents
  1. Preface
  2. I. The Matriarchate
  3. II. Celibacy
  4. III. Canon Law
  5. IV. Marquette
  6. V. Witchcraft
  7. VI. Wives
  8. VII. Polygamy
  9. VIII. Woman And Work
  10. IX. The Church Of To-Day
  11. X. Past, Present, Future

[←88]

The first abbess, PetrouvilIe, becoming involved in a dispute with the Powerful bishop of Angers, summoned him before the council of Chateraroux and Poicters, where she pleaded the cause of her order and won her case. In 1349 the abbess Théophegénie denied the right of the seneschal of Poiton to judge the monks of Fontervault, and gained it for herself. In 1500, Mary of Brittany, in concert with the pope’s deputies, drew up with an unfaltering hand the new statutes of the order. Legouvè.--Moral History of Women.

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