- Shame! Queen Elizabeth signs same-sex “marriage” into law
- The Marquis of Anglesey died July 13 – The Telegraph
- Heredity in Traditional Elites
- July 16 – Alfonso VIII of Castile crushes the Moors at Las Navas de Tolosa
- July 18 – A soldier of hell who became a soldier of the living God
- July 18 – “Don’t drink water, drink beer” said the bishop
- July 19 – Her whole family became saints
- July 19 – The knight who was afraid of water, but not afraid of martyrdom
- July 19 – Penitent Nobility
- July 20 – Carolingian Reformer
Shame! Queen Elizabeth signs same-sex “marriage” into law
Posted: 17 Jul 2013 10:15 PM PDT
by Hilary White LONDON, July 17, 2013 (LifeSiteNews.com) – Queen Elizabeth II has today given Royal Assent to the coalition government's bill creating gay "marriage," after the House of Commons approved minor amendments on Tuesday. The law will come into effect mid-2014. All three of the main parties in Parliament supported the bill, though there [...]
The Marquis of Anglesey died July 13 – The Telegraph
Posted: 17 Jul 2013 10:14 PM PDT
According to The Telegraph: The 7th Marquis of Anglesey…died July 13 2013. His father, …a farmer and sportsman, had served …as Lord Chamberlain to Queen Mary. Henry Paget was educated at Eton… His first task on coming into his inheritance was to clear a massive bill for death duties amounting to some £2.5 million of [...]
Heredity in Traditional Elites
Posted: 17 Jul 2013 10:11 PM PDT
There is, before all else, a natural fact linked to the existence of traditional elites that needs to be remembered, namely heredity. "The nature of this great and mysterious thing that is heredity—the passing on through a bloodline, perpetuated from generation to generation, of a rich ensemble of material and spiritual assets, the continuity of [...]
July 16 – Alfonso VIII of Castile crushes the Moors at Las Navas de Tolosa
Posted: 17 Jul 2013 10:10 PM PDT
The Almohads, the new dynasty of Moroccan fanatics who had subdued all the Moslems in al Andalus, launched an all-out attack on the Christians by moving a huge army north into south central Spain. The impetuous Alfonso VIII of Castile, without waiting for reinforcements, attempted to bar the way at Alarcos. On July 18, 1195, [...]
July 18 – A soldier of hell who became a soldier of the living God
Posted: 17 Jul 2013 10:09 PM PDT
Godfrey of Bouillon Duke of Lower Lorraine and first King of Jerusalem, son of Eustache II, Count of Boulogne, and of Ida, daughter of Godfrey the Bearded, Duke of Lower Lorraine; born probably at Boulogne-sur-Mer, 1060; died at Jerusalem, 18 July, 1100 (according to a thirteenth-century chronicler, he was born at Baisy, in Brabant; see [...]
July 18 – “Don’t drink water, drink beer” said the bishop
Posted: 17 Jul 2013 10:08 PM PDT
Saint Arnulf of Metz Statesman, bishop under the Merovingians, born c. 580; died c. 640. His parents belonged to a distinguished Frankish family, and lived in Austrasia, the eastern section of the kingdom founded by Clovis. In the school in which he was placed during his boyhood he excelled through his talent and his good [...]
July 19 – Her whole family became saints
Posted: 17 Jul 2013 10:07 PM PDT
St. Macrina the Younger Born about 330; died 379. She was the eldest child of Basil the Elder and Emmelia, the granddaughter of St. Macrina the Elder, and the sister of the Cappadocian Fathers, Sts. Basil and Gregory of Nyssa. The last-mentioned has left us a biography of his sister in the form of a [...]
July 19 – The knight who was afraid of water, but not afraid of martyrdom
Posted: 17 Jul 2013 10:06 PM PDT
Blessed Hroznata of Bohemia Founder of the Monasteries of Teplá and Chotěšov, born (c) 1170, died July 14, 1217. In the happy reign of Premysl, – also called Ottacar, – king of Bohemia, among the other magnates of the kingdom the first place at court, next to the king's magnificence, was held by Hroznata, the [...]
July 19 – Penitent Nobility
Posted: 17 Jul 2013 10:05 PM PDT
St. Arsenius Anchorite; born 354, at Rome; died 450, at Troe, in Egypt. Theodosius the Great having requested the Emperor Gratian and Pope Damasus to find him in the West a tutor for his son Arcadius, they made choice of Arsenius, a man well read in Greek literature, member of a noble Roman family, and [...]
July 20 – Carolingian Reformer
Posted: 17 Jul 2013 10:04 PM PDT
St. Ansegisus Born about 770, of noble parentage; died 20 July, 833, or 834. At the age of eighteen he entered the Benedictine monastery of Fontanelle (also called St. Vandrille after the name of its founder) in the diocese of Rouen. St. Girowald, a relative of Ansegisus, was then Abbot of Fontanelle. From the beginning [...]
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Postcommunio Súmpsimus. Dómine, sacridona mystérii, humíliter deprécantes, ut, quae in tui commemoratiónem nos fácere praecepísti, in nostrae profíciant infirmitátis auxílium: Qui vivis.
"RECUAR DIANTE DO INIMIGO, OU CALAR-SE QUANDO DE TODA PARTE SE ERGUE TANTO ALARIDO CONTRA A VERDADE, É PRÓPRIO DE HOMEM COVARDE OU DE QUEM VACILA NO FUNDAMENTO DE SUA CRENÇA. QUALQUER DESTAS COISAS É VERGONHOSA EM SI; É INJURIOSA A DEUS; É INCOMPATÍVEL COM A SALVAÇÃO TANTO DOS INDIVÍDUOS, COMO DA SOCIEDADE, E SÓ É VANTAJOSA AOS INIMIGOS DA FÉ, PORQUE NADA ESTIMULA TANTO A AUDÁCIA DOS MAUS, COMO A PUSILANIMIDADE DOS BONS" –
[PAPA LEÃO XIII , ENCÍCLICA SAPIENTIAE CHRISTIANAE , DE 10 DE JANEIRO DE 1890]