- Sixto. Pope
Sixtus I (115/116–125) Pope
Sixtus II (257–258) Pope
Sixtus III (432–440) Pope
Sixtus IV (1471–1484) Pope
Sixtus V (1585–1590)
Sixtus of Reims...
- Church. For the
remainder of his pontificate,
Sixtus turned to
temporal issues and
dynastic considerations.
Sixtus IV
sought to
strengthen his
position by surrounding...
-
election to the
papacy on 24
April 1585, with the
title of
Sixtus V to
honour Pope
Sixtus IV, also a
Franciscan like himself. One of the
things that commended...
- The
Sixtus Affair (German:
Sixtus-Affäre, Hungarian:
Sixtus-ügy) was a
failed attempt by
Emperor Charles I of
Austria to
conclude a
negotiated peace with...
-
generally agreed to be his.
Sixtus II is
referred to by name in the
Roman Canon of the M****. The
Tridentine calendar commemorated Sixtus, Felicissimus, and Agapitus...
- Nicholas. "Pope St.
Sixtus III." The
Catholic Encyclopedia Vol. 14. New York:
Robert Appleton Company, 1912. 15
September 2017 ""St.
Sixtus III, Pope", Catholic...
- The
Vatican itself refers to the
building as the
Palace of
Sixtus V, in
honor of Pope
Sixtus V, who
built most of the
present form of the palace. The building...
-
popes of that name. Pope
Sixtus I was also the
sixth Pope
after Peter,
leading to
questions as to
whether the name "
Sixtus" is
derived from ****tus, Latin...
-
Sixtus (or San
Sisto in Italian) may
refer to the following: Pope
Sixtus I (d. 128) Pope
Sixtus II (d. 258),
martyr Pope
Sixtus III (d. 440)
Sixtus of...
-
According to Hincmar, a 9th-century
archbishop of Reims,
Sixtus was sent from Rome by Pope
Sixtus II to Gaul to ****ist in
Christianizing the region. Another...