Humiliation at Canossa: Surrender of German Emperor

Holy Roman Emperor” Pays a Price

In 1077, the German emperor going by the name of Henry IV made a long winter journey with his family to Italy, passing in the snow and ice through the Alps all the way to Canossa in order to surrender to the pope. A dispute had broken out when the pope, who was elected by the people of Rome, introduced reforms concerning the investiture of clergymen. From now on, only the Italian clergy in the person of one of their own, namely the bishop of Rome, or pope, could decide which people were appointed in administrative church positions in Germany – and indeed in any country.

The Italians, by way of their papal system, had excommunicated and deposed Henry and given him one year to surrender, beyond which time the papal decree would become irrevocable thus excluding him from being able to reclaim his title of emperor. This was a high price to pay for disobeying the pope! A civil war was brewing in Germany as a result of Rome’s interference, and this is what led the emperor to surrender to his Italian masters. However, although the pope, on receiving Henry's personal submission at Canossa, revoked the excommunication, he did not reinstate Henry as holder of the imperial title, and consequently a civil war broke out in Germany. It so happened that Henry won, but by then his humiliation in Italy was irrevocable and had passed into history.

The humiliation of Canossa was a direct consequence of the Constitutum Constantini, presented through this link in our previous edition. 

The German Church

Readers at The Party are aware that my sister Angela had offered to do her work for the German Holy Mother and the German Church several years ago and that her offer was turned down, simply ignored. Instead they went east to Lodz, and perhaps the madness of the European Union run by the Italian “founding fathers” led them astray. But had they accepted her willingness to work, it would have implied by way of contract German recognition of Angela’s existing work for the English Child, and therefore the English Church, as was made very clear at the time at The Party. If political considerations and failed ambitions prevented the Germans from replying and accepting, it is not the Hun’s responsibility, neither of brother nor of sister.

We have both been in Serbia, and at the time, Angela told me not to go to Belgrade to be humiliated, this happened on several occasions, and each and every time we went to Valjevo instead. This is because my sister does not work on false promises and through humiliations. Hermana and brother Hun will never make a humiliating walk to Canossa, no matter what the Italians say, decide or decree. That’s how it went for Germany.

Mexico

Angela went to Mexico instead, and since then El Santo Padre Mexicano came to me in communion as described on Party space. He challenged the Italians who tried shutting Him out, and I Alejan opened the door for Him. They can forget Canossa, it will never happen!

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

𝕯𝖎𝖊 𝖂𝖎𝖗𝖙𝖘𝖈𝖍𝖆𝖋𝖙 - The Restaurant

Germany and the Cult of Guilt

When Angela Went to Greece

Mädel’s Table Talk in a Wirtschaft in Bavaria

Hypnotising Germany by Thread and by Needle

In Communion In and Out of England

Angela and the Kyivan Rus

The Serbian Church Either Won, or Lost

Das Rus Kind

A Combined Marriage to the Communist Khanate