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This transcription comprises the official acts and decrees of the First Plenary Council of China, convened in Shanghai in 1924 under the authority of the Apostolic Delegate, Archbishop Celsus Costantini, Titular Archbishop of Theodosia. The document records canonical legislation, administrative directives, and pastoral guidelines formulated by forty-six bishops, three apostolic prefects, and thirty-seven religious superiors for the governance of Catholic missions across China. It addresses ecclesiastical structure, sacramental discipline, clerical formation, missionary conduct, and relations with civil authorities and non-Christian traditions. Central themes include the establishment of quasi-parishes, regulation of Chinese rites, prohibition of superstition, promotion of indigenous clergy, and the integration of mission territories into universal canon law. The text also contains petitions to the Holy See concerning matrimonial dispensations, liturgical faculties, and the dogmatic definition of Mary as Mediatrix of All Graces, alongside procedural norms for matrimonial tribunals and educational institutions. As a foundational ecclesiastical record, it reflects the institutionalisation of the Catholic Church in early twentieth-century China within the framework of Roman centralisation and colonial-era mission policy.
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Contains transcription of the Papal Bull of Gregory XIII establishing the Catholic Diocese of Macau in 1576
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This is a scholarly transcription of a 1712 historical document: *A Sincere and True Account of the Lawful Defence of the Royal Prerogatives and Privileges of the Crown of Portugal in the City of Macau*, composed by Dr Dom Félix Leal de Castro in Macau on 4 February 1712 and printed in Xiangshan. The text constitutes a formal rebuttal to an anonymous 1712 Augustinian account concerning ecclesiastical jurisdictional conflicts arising from the presence in Macau of Cardinal Charles-Thomas Maillard de Tournon, Patriarch of Antioch and Apostolic Legate to China. It details the protracted dispute (1705–1712) between Portuguese civil and ecclesiastical authorities—including the Bishop and Captain-General of Macau, the Viceroy of Portuguese India, and the Primate Archbishop—over the Patriarch’s claim to exercise jurisdiction in Macau without presenting papal bulls formally ratified by the Royal Council of Portugal (*Conselho Ultramarino*) or obtaining prior royal consent. Central figures include the Patriarch; Captain-General Diogo de Lino Teixeira and his successor Francisco de Mello e Castro; Bishop of Macau; Vicar General of the diocese; Prior Fray Constantino del Espíritu Santo of the Augustinian Convent; and Provincial Father Francisco Pinto of the Society of Jesus. The document records key events: the Patriarch’s 1705 arrival and restricted activities in Macau; the 1707 council of the Three Estates affirming royal prerogatives (*regalias da Coroa*); the imposition and subsequent modification of the Patriarch’s custody; the 1708–1710 expulsions and arrests of religious loyal to the Patriarch—including Augustinians and Dominicans—and the renewal of prohibitions against their convents; the 1709 royal decrees (*cédulas*) confirming the Crown’s position; the Patriarch’s death in June 1710; and the 1712 handover of the Augustinian Convent to secular clergy. All assertions are grounded in archival instruments, official correspondence, canonical procedure, and juridical reasoning rooted in the Portuguese *regalia* and papal privileges granted to the Crown.
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Between 1700 and 1799
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Between 1710 and 1719
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- 1712 (1)
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Between 1800 and 1899
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Between 1860 and 1869
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- 1868 (1)
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Between 1860 and 1869
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Between 1900 and 1999
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Between 1920 and 1929
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- 1929 (1)
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Between 1920 and 1929
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