Amatus describes the Norman sieges of Bari and Salerno, the conquest of Sicily, and the career of Robert Guiscard, as well as the Gregorian Reforms seen from the papal point-of-view, interspersed with reports of miracles and prophecies.
Gregorian calendar | Reform Act 1832 | Reform Judaism | Pontifical Gregorian University | Gregorian chant | Reform Party of Canada | United States House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform | Gregorian | Reform Party of the United States of America | Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now | Tax Reform Act of 1986 | land reform | Gregorian reform | Federal Agriculture Improvement and Reform Act of 1996 | Democratic Reform British Columbia | Union for Reform Judaism | Progressive Reform Party | Land reform in Zimbabwe | Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act | Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 | Health care reform in the United States | Gregorian Reform | Gregorian Chant | Gregorian Calendar | Gregorian (band) | Civil Service Reform Act of 1978 | Wendell H. Ford Aviation Investment and Reform Act for the 21st Century | Vartan Gregorian | tort reform | Reform School Girls |
When Pope Urban II, the greatest of the Gregorian reformers after Gregory, travelled through Languedoc and Provence, visiting Montpellier, Nîmes, Saint-Gilles, Tarascon, Avignon, Aix, Cavaillon, and other cities, preaching the First Crusade at the Council of Clermont in 1095, he had to avoid Arles, where the deposed bishop was still in power.
Valerie Flint (1975) associates its compilation with the 11th-century Reform of English monasticism.
Libertas ecclesiae ("freedom of the Church" in Latin) is the notion of freedom of ecclesiastical authority from secular or the temporal power, which guided the Reform movement which began in the 11th century.
Hudson, Benjamin T., "Gaelic Princes and Gregorian Reform", in Benjamin T. Hudson and Vickie Ziegler (eds.), Crossed Paths: Methodological Approaches to the Celtic Aspects of the European Middle Ages, (Lanham, 1991), pp.