Council of Constance
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Council of Constance
Summary
Council of Constance is an ecumenical council[1]. It draws 1,311 Wikipedia views per month (ecumenical_council category, ranking #5 of 21).[2]
Key Facts
- Council of Constance is in the country of Germany[3].
- Council of Constance's instance of is recorded as ecumenical council[4].
- Council of Constance followed Council of Vienne[5].
- Council of Constance was followed by Council of Florence[6].
- Council of Constance took place at Konzilgebäude Konstanz[7].
- Council of Constance's Commons category is recorded as Council of Constance[8].
- Council of Constance comprises Conclave - 1417[9].
- Council of Constance began on November 5, 1414[10].
- Council of Constance ended on April 22, 1418[11].
- Council of Constance's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 47.663333333333, 'lon': 9.1769444444444}[12].
- A participant in Council of Constance was Pierre d'Ailly[13].
- Among those involved in Council of Constance was Benedict XIII[14].
- A participant in Council of Constance was Branda da Castiglione[15].
- Among those involved in Council of Constance was Manuel Chrysoloras[16].
- Among those involved in Council of Constance was Zawisza the Black[17].
- Among those involved in Council of Constance was Guillaume Fillastre[18].
- A participant in Council of Constance was Frederick IV, Duke of Austria[19].
- Among those involved in Council of Constance was Frederick I, Elector of Brandenburg[20].
- Among those involved in Council of Constance was Jean Gerson[21].
- A participant in Council of Constance was Gregory XII[22].
- A participant in Council of Constance was Robert Hallam[23].
- Among those involved in Council of Constance was Gottfried de Hegghe[24].
- Among those involved in Council of Constance was Jerome of Prague[25].
- A participant in Council of Constance was Jan Hus[26].
- A participant in Council of Constance was John XXIII[27].
Body
Identity
Council of Constance followed Council of Vienne[5]. It was followed by Council of Florence[6].
Brands and Namesakes
Things named for Council of Constance include Constance Council Prize[28], an award[29].
Why It Matters
Council of Constance draws 1,311 Wikipedia views per month (ecumenical_council category, ranking #5 of 21).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 27 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[30] It is known by 20 alternative names across languages and contexts.[31]
Entities named for it include Constance Council Prize[28], an award[29].