词条 | Scimus Fili |
释义 |
Scimus Fili (Latin for "We know my son") [1] was a Papal Bull issued by Pope Boniface VIII on June 27, 1299. The Bull was issued as a reply to a letter sent to him by the Scottish Parliament. King Robert the Bruce had called the Scottish Parliament (Robert the Bruce was not King of Scotland in 1299. He was a joint Guardian of Scotland along with John Comyn), which sat at Arbroath Abbey, to gain Papal support for Scotland in its ongoing war against English aggression and condemned King Edward I of England's invasion and occupation of Scotland.[2] Stating instead it belonged to the Holy See. The English king sought the advice of William of Sardinia, a former Dean of Arches to the Archbishop, as to what his response should be, and was presented with various options set out in a letter preserved in the National Archives. The English prepared a letter rejecting the contents of the bull, but this was never sent. Barons' Letter of 1301 . References1. ^Michael Brown, The Wars of Scotland 1214-1371 (Edinburgh, 2004), pg192 and pg280 2. ^Geoffrey Barrow, Robert the Bruce and the Community of the Realm of Scotland, (Edinburgh, 1988), pg61 8 : 1299 works|13th-century papal bulls|Christianity in medieval England|1290s in Scotland|1299 in England|England–Scotland relations|Documents of Pope Boniface VIII|England–Holy See relations |
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