innocent (adj.)
mid-14c., "doing no evil, free from sin or guilt," from Old French inocent "harmless; not guilty; pure" (11c.), from Latin innocentem (nominative innocens) "not guilty, harmless, blameless," from in- "not" (see in- (1)) + nocentem (nominative nocens), present participle of nocere "to harm" (see noxious). Meaning "free from guilt of a specific crime or charge" is from late 14c. The earliest use was as a noun, "person who is innocent of sin or evil" (c.1200). The Holy Innocents (early 14c.) were the young children slain by Herod sfter the birth of Jesus (Matt. ii:16).
noxious (adj.)
c.1500, from Latin noxius "hurtful, injurious," from noxa "injury, hurt, damage entailing liability" (related to nocere "to hurt," and to nex "slaughter"), from PIE *nek-ro-, causative form of root *nek- "death" (see necro-).
Popiežius Inocentas.
According to his biographer in the Liber Pontificalis, Innocent was a native of Albano and the son of a man called Innocentius, but his contemporary Jerome referred to him as the son of the previous pope, Anastasius I, probably a unique case of a son succeeding his father in the papacy.
Popiežius Inocentas II.
Bule Omne datum optimum 1139 m. įsteigė tamplierių ordiną, panaikino schizmą, nutikusią, kai dauguma kardinolų išrinkus antipopiežių Anakletą II.
Antipopiežius Inocentas III.
Innocent III (Lanzo of Sezza) was an antipope from 29th September 1179 to January 1180; original name Lando Di Sezze (born , Sezze, Papal States —died , La Cava, Apulia), was the last of four antipopes (1179–80) during the pontificate of Alexander III.
Popiežius Inocentas III.
1215 m. Laterano IV susirinkime patvirtino inkviziciją.
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