It gave the Church the power to appoint bishops and other religious leaders
The Treaty called the Concordat of Worms (1122) gave the church sole power to appoint bishops and abbots in the Holy Roman Empire. It resolved the Investiture Controversy, a power struggle between the papacy and secular rulers over the appointment of church officials.
elect and invest bishops with spiritual authority.
Concordat of worms
yes because it gave the church the right to appoint bishops
yes because it gave the church the right to appoint bishops
The Concordat of Worms was an agreement between the Church and the Holy Roman Empire, signed in the City of Worms, in Germany, in 1122. It brought an end to the Investiture Controversy and recognized the right of the Church to appoint its own bishops. It was an important step toward the idea of separation of Church and State, and was an blow to the belief in the divine right of kings.
The concordat or Worms, or Diet of Worms- nothing to do with eating habits, was in Germany. It impacted the Reformation, but had nothing to do with Italy.
September 23, 1122.
The lay investure or the practice whereby political rulers appointed many high church officials, such as bishops.
the hundred years' of war
the hundred years' of war
lay investiture
No