I'm not sure what it us your wanting to know here.
He stopped kings appointing unqualified church leaders.
Yes. As well as kings and nobles.
The Romans conquered Judah and renamed it Judea. They kept strict control over Judea. The Jews were allowed to have Jewish kings and religious leaders, but these kings and leaders were appointed by Rome.
in 63 b.c. the romans conqured judah ,which the romans called judea.T he jews were allowed to have jewish kings and religous leader, but these kings and leaders were appointed by rome.
in 63 b.c. the romans conqured judah ,which the romans called judea.T he jews were allowed to have jewish kings and religous leader, but these kings and leaders were appointed by rome.
Christ is a title that was applied to different leaders...priests, kings etc. It means one who has been annointed....appointed or approved
The problems between religious and political leaders lay in a matter of control. Very simplistically, some kings gave the Church a lot of latitude, including status of being free of taxation, having clergy exempt from secular trials, and allowing churches and monasteries to provide sanctuary to fugitives. Other kings wanted to limit these powers, and when they tried to do so, Church leaders naturally resented it and worked to maintain their power, which made monarchs and lords unhappy. The Church had jurisdiction over oaths, with were vitally important in medieval society, and a bishop or pope could nullify an oath, freeing people from feudal obligations. The political leaders resented this and sought to gain power over the Church by seeing to it that their own candidates were appointed. The church resented such interference. There were emperors and kings whose power was greatly reduced because of a conflict with a pope. But on the other hand, there were popes who lost much of their authority because of political moves by monarchs and kings.
The Maccabee victory affected the government of Judah because in 63 B.C, after the Maccabees had won ,Rome conquered Judah and called it Judea. Roman rulers kept strict control over Judea. The Jews were allowed to have Jewish Kings and religious leaders, but these kings and leaders were appointed by Rome.
no
Medieval kings were powerful because:taxes were paid to themthey assigned lands to nobles, who then owed then obediencethey commanded large numbers of fighting men when neededthe church said they were appointed by God to be the rulers
You seem to be asking about 'Papal Supremacy' which took the lead in appointing kings rather than they, themselves becoming king. It began with Charlemagne on Christmas Day, 800 AD.
the leaders were mostly queens not kings