Canonum De Ius Rex
Canons of Sovereign Law

one heaven iconII.   Sovereign

2.10 Anglo-Saxon Law Form

Article 116 - Iuris Canonum (Canon Law)

Canon 6340 (link)

Iuris Canonum, also known as the “Canon Law”, is a term first used by the Carolingians in the 8th Century upon their creation of the Catholic Church in the same period and the promulgation of its new laws following the first Constitorum (Consistory) in 742 CE.

Canon 6341 (link)

The word Canon in Latin means “rule, norm, measure, standard” and originates from the Ancient Greek κανών (kanón) meaning “measuring rod, standard”.

Canon 6342 (link)

Upon the creation of the Romanum Catholicus Ecclesia (Catholic Church), also known as the Catholicus Ecclesia (Catholic Church) by Charles Martel and his family in the 8th Century as an open rejection of the Imperial Christian Church of Antioch (Constantinople), the highest law was declared to be Canon Law (Iuris Canonum) published as Decretum (Decrees), followed by secular law as in the compilation of Capitulum (Ordinances) published as the Instatutum (Institutions).

Canon 6343 (link)

The first publication of Iuris Canonum (Canon Law) in the history of the Catholicus Ecclesia (Catholic Church) was in 742 CE and the Decretum Gratiarum or “the Decree of Graces (of God)” in which the equality of law, the seven sacraments being Honestus, Fidelis, Virtus, Iustus, Penitus, Caritas and Clementis and the supremacy of the church were expounded.

Canon 6344 (link)

Any reference in either a valid Convenia (Covenant) or Carta (Charter) to the phrase “By Grace of God” is a direct reference to the authority and validity of an instrument issued under the true original Decretum Gratiarum and Iuris Canonum (Canon Law) of the Catholicus Ecclesia (Catholic Church) first promulgated by the Carolingians in the 8th Century.

Canon 6345 (link)

The Decretum Gratiarum or “the Decree of Graces (of God)” as the original promulgation of Iuris Canonum (Canon Law) were later sabotaged and corrupted by the Venetian controlled Roman Death Cult by the mid 12th Century by calling them the Decretum Gratis (Decree of Nothing) and then by the 16th Century as Decretum Gratian claiming it to be the foundation of an alleged 12th Century writer “Gratian” who then contributed to the work known as Corpus Iuris Canonum (Body of Canon Law).

Canon 6346 (link)

Any claim that the word “canon” was used in association with any ecclesiastical law prior to the 8th Century CE is an absurd fraud and designed to hide the founders of the Catholicus Ecclesia (Catholic Church) and the first and true publications of Canon Law.

Canon 6347 (link)

In 1234, Ugolini di Conti, also known as Pope Gregory IX published the first canon laws dedicated for the Roman Death Cult known as Decretum Gregorii Noni (Decree of Gregory IX) whereby he solidified the Satanic practices of the Roman Death Cult and proclaimed Venetian-Roman supremecy over the true and apostolic successors of the original Frankish founders of the Catholicus Ecclesia (Catholic Church).

Canon 6348 (link)

As the Venetians and Roman Death Cult openly repudiated the founding and true Iuris Canonum (Canon Law) of the Romanum Catholicus Ecclesia (Catholic Church) in favor of creating their own fraudulent canons, no edicts, ordinances, statements or claims issued by the Vatican, also known as the Holy See, also claiming to be the Roman Catholic Church have any force or effect, are heretical to the Catholic faith and Christian faith, illegal, unlawful and therefore null and void ab initio (from the beginning).

Canon 6349 (link)

As these canons known as Corpus Iuris Divini Canonum and the Living Body of Divine Canon Law are the true successors and continuation of Iuris Canonum (Canon Law) first founded by the Carolingians in the 8th Century CE, these canons are therefore the one and only true canons of the Romanum Catholicus Ecclesia (Catholic Church) also known as the Roman Catholic Church, also known as the Holy See and no other.