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 The initial words of a  Bull  issued 25 Feb., 1296, by  Boniface  VIII in response to an earnest appeal of the English and French prelates  for protection against the  intolerable exactions of the  civil  power (  see B  ONIFACE VIII .) The  decree  was inserted among the  papal decretals  and is found in Lib.  Sextus, III, tit. 23. After a preamble in which the  pope  complains that the  laity  are, and have always been, bitterly  hostile to the  clergy  ; that,  although they possess no authority over  ecclesiastical persons  or  property, they impose all sorts of heavy  burdens on the  clergy  and seek to  reduce them to servitude; that several  prelates  and other dignitaries of the Church, more fearful of giving  offence to their earthly rulers than to the majesty of  God, acquiesce in these abuses, without  having obtained authority or permission from the  Apostolic See  ; he, therefore, wishing to  put an end to these iniquitous proceedings, with the consent  of his  cardinals  and by  Apostolic  authority  decrees  that all  prelates  or other  ecclesiastical  superiors who under  whatsoever pretext or colour shall, without authority from the Holy See, pay to  laymen  any part of their income or of the  revenue of the  Church  ; also all  emperors, kings, dukes, counts, etc. who shall exact or receive  such payments incur   eo ipso  the  sentence  of  excommunication  from which, except   in  articulo mortis  , no one can  absolve  them without special faculties from  the  pope  ; no  privileges  or  dispensations  to be of avail against the decree. 
      The two underlying principles of this Bull, viz. (1) that the  clergy  should enjoy equally with the laity  the  right  of determining the need and the  amount of their subsidies to the Crown, and (2) that the head of  the  Church  ought to be consulted  when there was question of diverting the revenues of the  Church  to secular purposes, were by no  means strange or novel in that age of Magnæ Chartæ and  outside of  France  and  England  it was accepted without a murmur.  But what excited the wrath of the two chief culprits,  Philip the Fair  and Edward I, was that from  its fiery tone, from the express mention of sovereigns, and the  grave   ipso facto  penalties attached, they felt that behind  the  decree  there stood a new Hildebrand  resolved to enforce it  to the letter. The  Bull  has been  criticized for the unconventional vehemence of its tone, for its  exaggerated indictment of the hostile attitude of the  laity  of all ages towards the  clergy, and for its failure to make clear  the distinction between the revenues of the purely  ecclesiastical benefices  and the lay fees held by the clergy  on  feudal  tenure. The unscrupulous advisers of Philip the Fair  were quick to take  advantage of the  pope's  hasty  language and, by forcing him to make explanations, put him on the  defensive and weakened his prestige.
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