Council of Soissons
There have been several Catholic Church synods called the Council of Soissons:
- March 744: Presided over by Saint Boniface. Attended by Hartbert, bishop of Sens. Appointed Abel bishop.
- 13 November 833: Presided over by Ebbo, archbishop of Rheims. Held at the church of St Mary. Deposed Louis the Pious and forced him to confess to various crimes.
- 853: Declared the acts of Ebbo during his second episcopate invalid.[1]
- 18 August 866: Attended by Wenilo, archbishop of Rouen.
- 1092-1093: Presided over by Renaud du Bellay, archbishop of Rheims. Condemned Roscellin's form of nominalism as a heretical tritheism. Its acts do not survive.[2]
References
- This is called Suessionense II in J.-D. Mansi (ed.), Sacrorum conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio editio novissima XIV (Venice 1769), pp. 977-996. The Council met at the Abbey of Saint Medard in Soissons, beginning on 22 April 853, in the presence of King Charles the Bald; fifty-two bishops, led by Hincmar of Reims, participated. The Council produced thirteen canons. C.J. Hefele, Histoire des conciles Tome V (Paris: Adrien Leclerc 1870), pp. 388-392.
- Cunningham (1836), p. 312, n. 6.
Bibliography
- Cunningham, Francis (1836), Text-book of Ecclesiastical History by J.C.I. Gieseler, II (3rd ed.), Philadelphia: Carey, Lea, & Blanchard [A translation of the original German version]. (in English) & (in Latin)
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