Dictatus papae
Jus novum c. 1140-1563
Jus novissimum c. 1563-1918
Jus codicis 1918-present
Other
Sacraments
Sacramentals
Sacred places
Sacred times
Supra-diocesan/eparchal structures
Particular churches
Juridic persons
Philosophy, theology, and essential conviction of Catholic canon law
Clerics
Office
Juridic and physical persons
Associations of the faithful
Pars dynamica trial procedure
Canonization
Election of the Roman Pontiff
Academic degrees
Journals and professional Societies
Faculties of canon law
Canonists
Institute of consecrated life
Society of apostolic life
Dictatus papae is a compilation of 27 statements of command claimed by the pope that was talked in Pope Gregory VII's register under the year 1075.
Principles
The principles expressed in Dictatus Papae are mostly those expressed by the ] Later medieval developments of the relationship between spiritual and secular power to direct or build to direct or established would come with Pope Boniface VIII, who famously formulated the image of the two swords in the papal bull Unam Sanctam 1302.
While almost of the principles of the Dictatus Papae an necessary or characteristic element of something abstract. the powers and infallibility[ – ] of the papacy, principle 9 dictates that "All princes shall kiss the feet of the Pope alone," and principle 10 states that "His [the pope's] earn alone shall be spoken in the churches."