Nobility Newsletter: "Heredity’s role in the making of General Douglas MacArthur" and other posts
- Heredity’s role in the making of General Douglas MacArthur
- He pledged on his honor to return to prison, and amazingly, he did
- Scottish independents voice disdain for hereditary head of state
- The Family and Intermediary Associations
- September 5 – Unashamed to beg alms even from his noble family
- September 6 – Blessed Thomas Tsuji
- September 7 – The Outrage of Anagni
- September 7: Richard the Lionheart defeats Saladin at Arsuf – Video
- September 7 – Grandson of Queen St. Clotilda
- September 8 – The Davidic ancestry of Mary
- Knights of the Cross
- September 8 – He added the Agnus Dei to the Mass
Posted: 04 Sep 2013 10:16 PM PDT
The story behind General Douglas MacArthur—what makes his gallant stand in World War II one of the great fighting epics of history—is told here for the first time. There are more than a thousand years of Fighting MacArthurs in his blood. One of the oldest proverbs in Scotland is: "There is nothing older, unless the [...]
Posted: 04 Sep 2013 10:15 PM PDT
According to the Metro: Capt Robert Campbell wrote to Kaiser Willhelm II during World War I begging to be released so he could see his mother, Louise, for the final time. The German leader granted him two weeks' compassionate leave as long as he kept his word as an officer to go back to the [...]
Posted: 04 Sep 2013 10:14 PM PDT
According to the Daily Express: Some 63 per cent of voters called for a ballot on Scotland’s next head of state in the event of separation, with only 22 per cent saying the royals should be retained without question. …repeated demands for an independent Scotland to become a republic have obviously shaken confidence in the [...]
Posted: 04 Sep 2013 10:11 PM PDT
Leo XIII speaks of the family as a social matrix when he states that "the family may be regarded as the cradle of civil society, and it is in great measure within the circle of family life that the destiny of the States is fostered."(1) Hence, we see the spirit of the family mirrored in [...]
Posted: 04 Sep 2013 10:10 PM PDT
St. Laurence Justinian, Bishop and Confessor, First Patriarch of Venice Bishop and first Patriarch of Venice, born in 1381, and died 8 January, 1456. He was a descendant of the Giustiniani, a Venetian patrician family which numbered several saints among its members. Lawrence's pious mother sowed the seeds of a devout religious life in the [...]
Posted: 04 Sep 2013 10:08 PM PDT
Born to the Japanese nobility in Sonogi on the island of Kyushu about the year 1571. Educated by Jesuits at Arima, he joined the Society of Jesus in 1587. He traveled all over Japan and became known for his eloquent, persuasive preaching. After the publication of an edict banning Catholic priests, he followed eighty of [...]
Posted: 04 Sep 2013 10:07 PM PDT
It had been the practice to speak of the spiritual and temporal powers in terms of pope and emperor, and it was long before it was realized, at least on the papal side, that the civil power, defeated as emperor, had returned to the attack with more aggressive vigour as the Monarchy and the State. [...]
Posted: 04 Sep 2013 10:06 PM PDT
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Posted: 04 Sep 2013 10:05 PM PDT
St. Cloud, Confessor A.D. 560. St. Cloud, called in Latin Chlodoardus, is the first and most illustrious saint among the princes of the royal family of the first race in France. He was son of Chlodomir, king of Orleans, the eldest son of St. Clotilda, and was born in 522. He was scarcely three years [...]
Posted: 04 Sep 2013 10:04 PM PDT
As we celebrate the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary, let us recall her Davidic ancestry. St. Luke (2:4) says that St. Joseph went from Nazareth to Bethlehem to be enrolled, "because he was of the house and family of David". As if to exclude all doubt concerning the Davidic descent of Mary, the Evangelist [...]
Posted: 04 Sep 2013 10:01 PM PDT
Knights of the Cross (Ordo Militaris Crucigerorum cum Rubea Stella.) A religious order famous in the history of Bohemia, and accustomed from the beginning to the use of arms, a custom which was confirmed in 1292 by an ambassador of Pope Nicholas IV. The grand master is still invested with a sword at his induction [...]
Posted: 04 Sep 2013 10:01 PM PDT
Pope St. Sergius I (Reigned 687-701), date of birth unknown; consecrated probably on 15 Dec., 687; died 8 Sept., 701. While Pope Conon lay dying, the archdeacon Pascal offered the exarch a large sum to bring about his election as his successor. Through the exarch’s influence the archdeacon was accordingly elected by a number of [...]
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