Citations:basileolatry


 * 1850, Dr Augustus Neander [aut.] and Joseph Torrey [tr.], General History of the Christian Religion and Church, volume 3, table of contents, page xvii, summary of pages 233–243
 * Declarations concerning the miracles said to be wrought by means of images; concerning the confirmation of image-worship given in dreams; concerning the worship of saints — against the Byzantine Basileolatry — against the guiding of a council by a woman.
 * 1938, Robert Briffault, The Decline and Fall of the British Empire (Simon and Schuster), pages 114–115
 * Before the Reform Bill anything resembling the neurosis of English Basileolatry was even more completely unknown […]
 * 2011 May 15th (1:45pm), “ David” (user name), alt.talk.royalty (Usenet newsgroup), “Re: New Scottish Government Affirm First Loyalty is to People of Scotland!”, Message ID: 
 * Neologism failure! If Ludovicus intends to mean “worship paid to a king in the manner of a god” (something that is blasphemous in most religions) then he should know that (1) the constructive stem of the Latin word for “king” (rex) is reg-, not regio- (regius means “royal”; regia is a palace or royal court); and (2) since -latry comes from Greek -latreia, the first part of the compound should be Greek as well – presumably **basileolatry. Which is, of course, still blasphemous and profoundly offensive.