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"collectanea" Definitions
  1. collected writings
"collectanea" Antonyms

205 Sentences With "collectanea"

How to use collectanea in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "collectanea" and check conjugation/comparative form for "collectanea". Mastering all the usages of "collectanea" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Monte's most interesting text, Exercitiorum Atque Artis Militaris Collectanea, or "Collected Martial Arts and Exercises," also known as Collectanea, is particularly useful to fight historians because it included his writing on fitness as well as martial arts techniques.
Collectanea Anglo-Premonstratensia, volume 2, p. 172, no. 356. The number was the same three years laterGasquet, F. A. (ed.) (1906). Collectanea Anglo- Premonstratensia, volume 2, pp.
Collectanea Anglo- Premonstratensia, volume 1, p. 171, no. 90. George Littleport had been sent the Dale in September 1489 by the previous provincial chapter,Gasquet, F. A. (ed.) (1904). Collectanea Anglo-Premonstratensia, volume 1, p. 166, no. 89.
Collectanea Anglo-Premonstratensia, volume 2, pp. 184—5, no. 371. It is likely that he later became abbot.
Collectanea Anglo-Premonstratensia, volume 2, pp. 178—9, no. 364. before rising to 16 in 1491.Gasquet, F. A. (ed.) (1906). Collectanea Anglo-Premonstratensia, volume 2, p. 180, no. 366. The convent then remained at what seems its regular complement of 15 canons and the abbot from 1494 to 1500,Gasquet, F. A. (ed.) (1906). Collectanea Anglo-Premonstratensia, volume 2, pp. 182—5, nos. 369—71. although in the last of these years four were novices and low numbers were attributed to the plague.
C. R. Smith, "The Faussett Collection", Collectanea Ant., iii. 179–192.Gentleman's Magazine, new ser. vol. 42 (1854), p. 605.
Petrus likely began his Collectanea in c. 1515, when he was still a young monk, as a personal notebook. From c.
Collectanea Anglo-Premonstratensia, volume 1, pp. 173—4, no. 92. Some abbots of Dale had a wider impact on the order.
Collectanea Anglo-Premonstratensia, volume 1, pp. 230—5, nos. 139—41. William of Horsley was soon compelled to write excusing his failure to attend the general chapter that year: "reason turns away from and nature would abhor" such a course of action, he maintained.Gasquet, F. A. (ed.) (1904). Collectanea Anglo-Premonstratensia, volume 1, pp. 58—60, no. 33.
The name Coelogyne was first published as Caelogyne in 1921 by John Lindley.Lindley, J. 1821. Collectanea Botanica, ad pl. 33 and pl.
Collectanea topographica et genealogica, vol. 7 (London, 1841), p. 357: Norman Egbert McClure, Letters of John Chamberlain, vol. 2 (Philadelphia, 1939), p.
Thomas Corser (1793–1876) was a British literary scholar and Church of England clergyman. He was the editor of Collectanea Anglo-Poetica.
He left several works, but only the collectanea to the Pentateuch have been published. A few of his responsa have survived in citations.
Gasquet, F. A. (ed.) (1906). Collectanea Anglo-Premonstratensia, volume 2, p. 176, no. 361. and 13 in 1488,Gasquet, F. A. (ed.) (1906).
Collectanea Anglo-Premonstratensia, volume 1, p. 176, no. 92. By 1500 he was back at Dale, acting as cantor.Gasquet, F. A. (ed.) (1906).
Lorenzo Alessandro Zaccagni (1652 -1712) was an Italian librarian and Patristic scholar and author. His main contribution is a collection of texts relating to early controversies in Christianity, Collectanea monumentorum veterum Ecclesiæ græcæ et latinæ,Collectanea monumentorum veterum Ecclesiæ græcæ et latinæ, by Lorenzo Alessandro Zaccagni, Rome (1698). published by the Vatican in 1698 with the approval of the Congregation of Propaganda Fide.
Collectanea Mathematica is indexed in Current Contents (Physical Chemical and Earth Sciences) and ISI Web of Science, MathSciNet, Zentralblatt MATH, Scopus, and Google Scholar.
659Two hitherto unpublished documents by Prof. Font i Quer. N.B. second re. Solanaceae and detailed account of genus Atropa) Collectanea Botanica (Barcelona) 26, 2003 pps.
340 (Internet Archive). In 1300 Ralph made some provision for John's brother William Greystok.'Greystoke', in 'Additions to Dugdale's Baronage', Collectanea Topographica et Genealogica Vol.
Gasquet, F. A. (ed.) (1906). Collectanea Anglo-Premonstratensia, volume 2, p. 8, no. 173. The relics of Mary and Catherine of Alexandria are otherwise unknown.
Adam wote back, threatening excommunication if they did not immediately pay their dues.Gasquet, F. A. (ed.) (1904). Collectanea Anglo-Premonstratensia, volume 1, pp. 4—5, no. 4.
However, two of the canons were found guilty of sexual "incontinence."Gasquet, F. A. (ed.) (1906). Collectanea Anglo- Premonstratensia, volume 2, pp. 182—3, no. 368—9.
Collectanea Hibernica was a history journal published annually by the Franciscan Province of Ireland between 1958 and 2006. It published sources on Irish history and guides to manuscript materials.
8vo): — Historia abbatis Caivi-Montis, in Acta Sanctorum, vol. iii (1701): — De Collectanea, in Mason, Hist. de la republique des Lettres, vol. ii, viii: — Trias dissertationum criticarum (Leyden, 1717, 8vo).
Zamia angustifolia is a species of plant in the family Zamiaceae. It is found in the Bahamas and Cuba.Jacquin, Nicolaus Joseph von. 1791. Collectanea ad botanicam 3: 263Carabia, José Perez. 1941.
Gasquet, F. A. (ed.) (1904). Collectanea Anglo-Premonstratensia, volume 1, pp. 29—30, no. 17. The conflict between Prémontré and the king was settled largely in the latter's favour, in 1316.
The Collectanea satis copiosa (Latin: ‘The Sufficiently Abundant Collections’) was a collection of scriptural, historical, and patristic texts that was compiled to provide royal propagandists with arguments justifying Henry VIII's personal and England's provincial independence from Rome. Likely compiled around 1530-1531 by a group of men including Thomas Cranmer and Edward Foxe, the Collectanea supplied the ideology behind the Royal Supremacy. As evidence that Kings of England historically had no superior on Earth—including the Pope—the Collectanea cited scripture, conciliar decrees, Anglo-Saxon laws, and numerous historical works, including texts by Bede, Matthew Paris, William of Malmesbury, and Geoffrey of Monmouth. Henry VIII's numerous annotations in the surviving manuscript show his direct engagement with the text and the arguments contained therein.
McLeod 2004: 76. The following is Skene's versions of the genealogy attributed to the chiefs of Clan Macfie in the manuscript; first as in Collectanea de Rebus Albanicis secondly as in Celtic Scotland. According to Skene in Collectanea de Rebus Albanicis, the Donald first mentioned may be the Donald MacDuffie who is recorded as witnessing a charter by John, Earl of Ross and Lord of the Isles in 1463.The Iona Club 1847: 54–55, 62.
Collectanea Anglo-Premonstratensia, volume 2, p. 131, no. 312. His case was remitted to the provincial chapter of the following year, which transferred him permanently to Sulby Abbey.Gasquet, F. A. (ed.) (1904).
C.E.L., 'Church Notes for Hampshire: South Warnborough', in J.G. Nichols (ed.), Collectanea Topographica et Genealogica VIII (J.B. Nichols and Sons, London 1843), pp. 132–39; Monumental Brass Society Portfolio Vol. III, Plate 3.
He was buried in Nunhead Cemetery. Obituaries were published in the Gentleman's Magazine and Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries. Smith memorialised Corner in the sixth volume of his Collectanea Antiqua, published 1868.
On 21 October 1628 Lawrence married, Amy, daughter of Sir Edward Peyton, of Iselham, Cambridgeshire. They had seven sons and six daughters. cites Waters Chesters of Chicheley, i. 243 ; Nichols, Collectanea, iii. 311.
However, his own convent interceded and had the punishment suspended to allow time for him to mend his ways.Gasquet, F. A. (ed.) (1906). Collectanea Anglo-Premonstratensia, volume 2, pp. 177—8, no. 363.
Walter Devereux died sometime after March 1383.Collectanea Topographica & Genealogica, Volume III. (London: John Bowyer Nichols and Son, 1834). Page 100, 101 Provided is an excerpt from Mansions and Manors of HerefordshireCharles Robinson.
Lebor Gabála Érenn, Part V, page 501; by Robert Macalister. In "Collectanea de rebus hibernicis, Volume 1", Charles Vallencey identifies "Dairbre" as Iveragh, Co. Kerry.Collectanea de rebus hibernicis, Volume 1. edited by Charles Vallencey.
Schechter gives the commentaries to Avot de- Rabbi Nathan in his edition.Solomon Schechter, Abot de-Rabbi Nathan, Vienna, 1887; 27 et seq. Emendations were made by Benjamin Motal.In his collectanea, called Tummat Yesharim (Venice, 1622).
First there was mass in the chapel, followed by the ceremony itself in the Queen's Great Chamber. Perkin Warbeck's widow Lady Catherine Gordon was also present.Leland, John, De Rebus Britannicis Collectanea, .., ed., Hearne, Thomas, vol.
'Greystoke', in 'Additions to Dugdale's Baronage', Collectanea Topographica et Genealogica Vol. V (John Bowyer Nichols and Son, London 1838), pp. 313-17 (Google), citing a fine dated 29 Edward I concerning the manor of Coniscliffe.
He collected materials for a history of his parish of Jarrow, which he never finished; his work on the subject is to be found in Archæologia Æliana, i. 112, and Collectanea Topographica, i. 66, &c.; ii.
NB: this also appeared as a chapter in Zeitlyn's PhD which is online: Mambila Traditional Religion, and in a revised form in: Zeitlyn, David. 1994. Sua in Somié. Mambila Traditional Religion. Vol. 41, Collectanea Instituti Anthropos.
London Marriage Allegations. Will of Josias Beacham, Rector of Seaton (Rutland) (P.C.C. 1675/76).S.H.C., 'Extracts from the Parish register of Seton, Co. Rutland, relative to the family of Sheffield', Collectanea Topographica et Genealogica I (J.
In 2003, Martin Stääf founded the musical collective Subnatura together with Marckus Andersson. Subnatura released 12 digital Ep's and were featured on net label Monotonik and the video DVD Collectanea: First Course, released by Escapi Music.
His main areas of interest are Arabic Christianity, Syriac monasticism, medieval Christian-Muslim encounters and ecumenical and interfaith dialogue. He serves on the advisory board of the journal Collectanea Christiana Orientalia, and gives guest lectures at prestigious institutions.
Peter des Roches went on to found another Premonstratensian house, Titchfield Abbey in Hampshire. This was colonised with canons from Halesowen and given the same dedication as Halesowen.Gasquet, F. A. (1906) Collectanea Anglo-Premonstratensia Vol.3, p. 123.
A copy of the Magna glossatura The Collectanea, or Magna glossatura as it came to be known, is a collection of commentaries on the Psalms and the Pauline Epistles written by Peter the Lombard between 1139 and 1141.
The king suspected this was a stratagem for extracting a subsidy and sent a copy of his prohibition to both Dale and Langdon on 7 May 1311.Gasquet, F. A. (ed.) (1904). Collectanea Anglo- Premonstratensia, volume 1, p.
They assembled copies or clippings of existing material and filed it away in file cabinets. They housed this compilation in an office near the New York Public Library, and it soon became known as The Morton Collectanea in academia.
Two Bookes of Epigrammes and Epitaphs. London, 1639, in Collectanea anglo-poetica: or, a bibliographical and descriptive catalogue of a portion of early English poetry, Part I. Thomas Corser, ed. Manchester: Chetham Society, 1860. Chetham society Publications, old series, vol.
In 1833 he wrote the text of Henry Shaw's Illuminated Ornaments of the Middle Ages; and in 1850 he edited the English translation of Joseph Balthazar Silvestre's Paléographie universelle. He was one of the three contributors to Collectanea Topographica et Genealogica.
Petrus Olai (Peder Olsen, ca. 1490–ca. 1570) was a Danish Franciscan friar and historiographer. No details about his life are known. He refers to himself as Petro Olavo Saneropio Minoritano in a colophon of his Collectanea ad historiam danicam pertinentia.
Perlov is the author of the Sabbath hymn ' which begins and is still a part of the liturgy of the Ḥasidim. His ethical will and some collectanea are printed in the work of his grandson, Aaron ben Asher of Karlin.
It seems that he was kept in touch with developments by an agent called Hugh of Toft,Gasquet, F. A. (ed.) (1904). Collectanea Anglo-Premonstratensia, volume 1, pp. 53—6, no. 31. perhaps a canon of Dale deputed to gather intelligence.
However, there were clearly variations in reputation. When Redman wrote to Dale in 1474 announcing a visitation, he quoted and then referred to publica infame,Gasquet, F. A. (ed.) (1906). Collectanea Anglo- Premonstratensia, volume 1, pp. 187—8, no. 98.
"Leland, John, Collectanea, vol.1 part 2 (1770), p.510. John Leland's note of the Scalachronica: Sir Thomas Grey of Heton, Scalachronica, Edinburgh, (1836), p.318, French: "et lessa Hoel son neuew de la Peteit Bretaigne a Alclud en Escoz maladez.
Gasquet, F. A. (ed.) (1906). Collectanea Anglo-Premonstratensia, volume 3, pp. 89—92, no. 542. He then settled the former abbot at a manor belonging to the abbey, ensuring he had fowls and sheep for his sustenance, as well as a pension of 10 marks, and also arranged a room with comfortable and familiar surroundings at the abbey itself.Gasquet, F. A. (ed.) (1906). Collectanea Anglo-Premonstratensia, volume 3, pp. 92—5, no. 543. On 4 February 1346, along with the abbot of Newsham, he again received the king's licence to carry out visitations on behalf of the abbot of Prémontré.
Of the four works edited by Corser for the Chetham Society – Chester's Triumph (1844), Iter Lancastrense (1845), Richard Robinson's Golden Mirrour, and Collectanea Anglo-Poetica – the most important are the Iter and the Collectanea. The first is an account by Richard James, in verse, of his visit to Lancashire in 1636, illustrated by the editor's research and diligence. The second is an alphabetical account, with extracts from each author, and elaborate biographical and bibliographical notices of the editor's collection of early English poetry which he had begun to form at an early age. The first part was issued in 1860.
Margaret Tudor, the bride of King James IV of Scots, stayed here as the guest of the Earl of Morton before her formal entry to Edinburgh in 1503.Leland, John, De Rebus Britannicis Collectanea, .., ed., Hearne, Thomas, vol. 4, (1770), pp. 258-300.
Hadoard or Hadoardus was a priest and presumed librarian (custos librorum) in Corbie Abbey during the ninth century. He is known for two surviving collectanea, or anthologies of extracts. One of these (now Vatican Reg. lat. 1762) draws primarily from the philosophical works of Cicero.
Besides the extracts printed by Collier and in the Gentleman's Magazine (1840, i. 385–7), others are given in the "Shakespearean Repository" (ed. James Hamilton Fennell, January 1823), in "Select Poetry" (Parker Soc. ii. 450–1), and in Corser's "Collectanea Anglo-Poetica" (xi. 432–5).
He married Sonia Chadwick, also an archaeologist, in 1959.Collectanea antiqua: essays in memory of Sonia Chadwick Hawkes was published in 2007 They jointly edited Greeks, Celts and Romans: studies in venture and resistance, 1973. He was survived by his wife Sonia and son Nicholas.
Pliny, Epistulae 5.3.5, Latin text at The Latin Library. Caesar's Dicta Collectanea, a collection of his memorable quotations, is assumed to have contained quotations from his verse as well as prose works.Gian Biagio Conte, Latin Literature: A History (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1994), p.
This he did, requesting the two abbots present to ratify their decision. Once they had made due enquiries about William, they confirmed his election and certified that the canonical forms had been observed.Gasquet, F. A. (ed.) (1906). Collectanea Anglo- Premonstratensia, volume 3, p. 170.
In 1450, for example, the abbot of Dale, John Spondon, went with the abbot of Newsham to supervise an abbatial election at Welbeck. The canons decided not to exercise their right of election and asked the two abbots to make an appointment for them.Gasquet, F. A. (ed.) (1906). Collectanea Anglo-Premonstratensia, volume 3, pp. 168—71, no. 621. In July 1515 Abbot Richard Nottingham of Dale appended his seal to the election of Edmund Green as abbot of Halesowen Abbey, signifying that he had assisted the abbot of Welbeck at the election and approved the result.Gasquet, F. A. (ed.) (1906). Collectanea Anglo- Premonstratensia, volume 2, pp. 261—3, no. 447.
Gasquet, F. A. (ed.) (1906). Collectanea Anglo-Premonstratensia, volume 2, pp. 206—8, nos. 393—4. The matter dragged on for some years and was finally resolved when Abbot Adam gave plenary powers to the abbot of Newsham to resettle William and he was transferred to a house elsewhere — possibly Torre Abbey in Devon.Gasquet, F. A. (ed.) (1906). Collectanea Anglo-Premonstratensia, volume 2, pp. 208—9, nos. 395—6. Meanwhile, the abbot of Prémontré became involved in a bitter conflict with Edward II over the order's right to extract subsidies from the English houses, which had been prohibited by legislation under Edward I in 1306.
3 Roger Burnard was the Domesday tenant of Alrichesey and also held a manor in Rodedie hundred, Hampshire and the manors of Celdretone and Coteford in Wiltshire; all of which were held of William De Ow.Frederic Madden; Bulkeley Bandinel; John Gough Nichols, Collectanea Topographica Et Genealogica, Vol.
It was printed at the author's own press at Fersfield, acquired specially for the purpose. The second volume, consisting of a detailed history of Norwich, was begun in 1741 and completed by 1745. In 1751, Blomefield published his Cambridgeshire notes as a single volume entitled Collectanea Cantabrigiensia.
Collectanea Mathematica is a mathematical journal of the Institute of Mathematics of the University of Barcelona (IMUB), published by Springer since 2011, with a periodicity of three issues per year. It publishes original research papers of high quality in all fields of pure and applied mathematics.
Charles, the fourth son (1796–1822), a classical scholar of great promise, died at Glasgow on 17 December 1822 (Foster, Alumni Oxon.; Gent. Mag. 1823, pt. i.). Although Young's ripe scholarship was mainly utilised in his class- room, he contributed some valuable notes to Dalziel's "Collectanea Græca Majora" (1820).
In that year, the visitor general's conclusion was that: "we discovered good reputation, charity and peace, in head and limbs, and nothing criminal in need of correction by either us or the general chapter."Gasquet, F. A. (ed.) (1906). Collectanea Anglo- Premonstratensia, volume 2, pp. 173—4, no. 358.
Thomas Wakeman, On the Priory of Monmouth, in Collectanea archæologica, British Archaeological Association, 1862, pp.285-292 His second marriage, in about 1223/24, was to Agnes, the daughter of Walter de Muscegros. They had three sons: John, who became lord of Monmouth upon his father's death, Walter and Richard.
After a protracted illness he died at Exeter on 11 July 1824, aged 57. His wife and a numerous family survived him; he had eight children in 1806, some of whom are mentioned in Boase's 'Collectanea Cornub.,' p. 251\. Several letters by Flindell are in Jonathan Edwards Ryland's 'Kitto,' pp.
Printed as 336 in error. In August 1491 Redman discovered that discipline was suffering because of the "impotence and imbecility" of the abbot and found it necessary to forbid the canons to gamble or keep hounds.Gasquet, F. A. (ed.) (1906). Collectanea Anglo- Premonstratensia, volume 2, pp. 179—81, no. 365—6.
Edmund is described as "gent., of Gwipiswiche" in deeds of 1554 granting the rental of his properties of the Bear and the Dolphin Taverns, in Southwark.'VI: Abstract of sundry deeds relating to houses in the parishes of St. Saviour and St. Olave' (etc), Collectanea Topographica et Genealogica V (J.
Lycium schweinfurthii is a species of flowering plant in the family Solanaceae. The plant occurs in the south of the Mediterranean in Algeria, Tunisia, Libya, Egypt, Israel, Cyprus and southern Aegean (Crete, Karpathos, Rhodes) and Sicily and Pantelleria.Naomi Feinbrun: The genus Lycium in the Flora Orientalis region. In: Collectanea Botanica.
John Leland, Collectanea, vol. 1, p. 240. Osric was anxious for the Hwicce to gain their own bishop,Charter S 51, MS Cambridge, Corpus Christi College, 111, pp. 59-60 (s. xii2)S51 but it was Oshere whose influence was seen behind the creation of the see of Worcester in 679–680.
Frederic Madden, Collectanea Topographica Et Genealogica, vol. 7 (London, 1841), p. 355: Joseph Lemuel Chester, The Marriage, Baptismal, and Burial Registers of the Collegiate Church or Abbey of St Peter Westminster (London, 1876), p. 109. Accounts vary about the status of the marriage, some stating that Sir John's first wife was dead.
He published Disputatio … de celebri indicationum fundamento, Contraria contrariis curari, &c.;, Leyden, 1668, and contributed papers on morbid anatomy to the Philosophical Transactions, 1674, 1678, 1681, 1695. His account (1663) of Framlingham Castle is printed in Thomas Hearne's editions of John Leland's Collectanea. He edited Methodus Divinæ Gratiæ (1657) by Thomas Parker.
They had three daughters, two of whom survived him. Title page of Blomefield's Collectanea Cantabrigiensia, published in Norwich in 1751 As a boy, Blomefield began recording monumental inscriptions from churches he visited in Norfolk, Suffolk and later Cambridgeshire. Whilst at college, he also kept genealogical and heraldic notes relating to local families.
These duties might call them away from the abbey, so they were sometimes resident elsewhere, although only Heanor was beyond convenient walking distance. Unusually, the visitation of 1500 found a Richard Bredon acting as chaplain at Ockbrook,Gasquet, F. A. (ed.) (1906). Collectanea Anglo-Premonstratensia, volume 2, p. 184−4, no. 371.
But the faithful were to be privately warned against it.' An English translation of the text of the letter from Propaganda dated 6 January 1776 appeared in Collectanea Hibernica in 1968. The translator refers to the recipient as Bishop Troy of Ossory. However, Bishop Troy was not appointed until 16 December 1776.
The other three poems are composed in the Greater Asclepiad meter (like Sappho, Book III). Also in the third century BC, a hymn by Aristonous (Collectanea Alexandrina 162) is composed in glyconic- pherecratean stanzas, and Philodamus' paean to Dionysus (CA 167) is partly analyzable by Aeolic principles.M.L. West, Greek Metre, Oxford, 1982, p. 141.
The King granted a special dispensation to Dr Gwent to wear his bonnet in the royal presence, since he had certain infirmities in his head which made it dangerous for it to be uncovered.T. Hearne (ed.), Joannis Lelandi Antiquarii De Rebus Britannicis Collectanea Editio altera (Gul. & Jo. Richardson, London 1770), Vol. I Part II, p.
John of Horsley was one of those cited at the head of the summons, issued in November, presumably because he was one of the leading figures among the English abbots. After a renewed prohibition from the king on 10 November,Gasquet, F. A. (ed.) (1904). Collectanea Anglo-Premonstratensia, volume 1, p. 8, no. 8.
'John Gough Nichols (editor). Collectanea Topographica & Genealogica, Volume II. (London: John Bowyer Nichols and Son, 1835). Page 250 His coat of arms was described as "argent, fess and three roundels in chief gules" or "gules od un fesse d'argent ove turteaus d'argent en le chief."Thomas D. Tremlett, Hugh Stanford London, and Sir Anthony Wagner.
Although based on the Sefer Mitzvot Gadol, the work does not delve into the argument behind the legal decision. "Semaḳ" was "most favorably received" by the Ashkenazi communities (France and Germany). It has often been edited and annotated, with most editions contain lengthy commentaries. Isaac also published Liḳḳuṭim (collectanea), and several small compilations containing his ritual decisions.
After having long lain in oblivion, the works of Euthalius were published in Rome, in 1698, by Lorenzo Alessandro Zaccagni, Prefect of the Vatican Library. They are embodied in the first volume of his Collectanea Monumentorum Veterum Ecclesiæ Græcæ ac Latinæ. They can also be found in Gallandi (Biblioth. Pat., X, 197) and in Migne (Patrologia Graeca, LXXXV, 621).
The date is given in some sources, including Victoria County History, as 1222, but the convent's reply to a question from Bishop Redman on the subject was that the foundation date was 1231,Gasquet, F. A. (1906) Collectanea Anglo-Premonstratensia Vol.3, p. 125, no. 578. which agrees with the foundation charter, dated the 16th year of Henry III.
The Christening of Prince Edward' (from Leland's Collectanea, Hearne edition), in Gentleman's Magazine, New Series XVII: January to June 1842 (William Pickering/John Bowyer Nichols and Son, London 1842), pp. 161-65, at p. 165 (Google). He was a knight of the shire for Suffolk in 1539, and again in 1542, probably on both occasions with Sir Anthony Wingfield.
In 1310 John of Horsley was present at the provincial chapter that wrote to Abbot Adam of Prémontré, excusing the English abbots for the failure to attend the general chapter to render their subsidies, pointing out that they would be punished if they did so.Gasquet, F. A. (ed.) (1904). Collectanea Anglo-Premonstratensia, volume 1, pp. 1—2, no. 2.
The Abbots of Langdon and Sulby were ordered to publish the judgement of the general chapter and to collect the subsidies from their English peers, so they instructed the abbot of Newbo Abbey to convene a provincial chapter for the purpose.Gasquet, F. A. (ed.) (1904). Collectanea Anglo-Premonstratensia, volume 1, pp. 5—8, nos. 5—7.
As a consequence, coverage of Collectanea Mathematica by the Journal Citation Reports (JCR) began with the 2005 volume and 2007 was its first impact factor in JCR. In 2008 Rosa Maria Miró Roig became the current Chief Editor. In this period the journal has changed its editorial policy and Springer is the new publisher since 2011.
1150, reports it under the annal for 683, and John Leland, consulting the now lost Annals of Pershore, places the event around 689.John Leland, Collectanea, ed. Hearne, pp. 240-1. Patrick Sims-Williams suggests that the foundation by Oswald may also represent an oral tradition at Pershore, as its archives were probably destroyed in fires of 1002 and again in 1223.
"Nano Nagle", Conference of Presentation Sisters In April 1775, he was consecrated Bishop of Ardfert and Aghadoe, and translated in 1787 to Cork, to fill the vacancy caused by the defection of Lord Dunboyne. His appointment was supported by a petition signed by members of the regular clergy of Cork.Bolster, Evelyn. "The Moylan Correspondence in Bishop's House, Killarney: Part 1", Collectanea Hibernica, no.
The libel trial attracted widespread publicity. Even though Eastwood failed to convict The Athenaeum of libel, the result gave the appearance of endorsing the authenticity of his stock, and his sales increased. Roach-Smith reported on the trial in The Gentleman's Magazine, stating his theory the items were of 16th century origin. In 1861, he published volume five of his work, Collectanea antiqua.
It later passed to his grandson, Godfrey Faussett (1781–1853), Professor of Divinity at the University of Oxford. In August 1853 Godfrey Faussett's son Bryan offered his grandfather's collection of antiquities for sale to the British Museum, only for it to be declined by the trustees. Some outcry was raised in archaeological circles without effect.C. R. Smith, "The Faussett Collection", Collectanea Ant.
The genus Zeuxine was first formally described in 1826 by John Lindley who gave it the name Zeuxina but Zeuxine is the nom. cons. The description was published in the appendix of Collectanea Botanica. The name Zeuxine is derived from the Latin word zeuxis meaning "joining" or "yoking" in apparent reference to either the partly fused column or to the pollinia.
Illustration of Acampe rigida as Vanda multiflora from Lindley, John: Collectanea Botanica (1821) Acampe rigida is a robust species with an unbranched stem up to in length and in diameter. The leaves are disticious. The stem nodes are about apart and each bears a somewhat fleshy, upright leaf with sheathing base. The apices of the leaves are obtuse and unequally bilobed.
The Western tradition of the name Gaspar also derives from an early 6th century Greek manuscript, translated into the Latin "Excerpta Latina Barbari". A pseudo-Venerable Beda text, called "Collectanea et Flores", apparently continues the tradition of the name Caspar: "Secundus nomine Caspar" (P.L., XCIV, 541). This text is said to be from the 8th or 9th century, of Irish origin.
Collectanea Topographica et Genealogica is an eight volume miscellany of previously unpublished material related to genealogy collated by Sir Frederic Madden (1801-1873), Rev.Bulkeley Bandinel (1781-1861) and John Gough Nichols (1806–1873), that was published quarterly from 1834. The editors' own summary of the contents of all eight volumes appeared at the end of the final volume, page 457.
John wrote to the abbot of Easby or St Agatha's, near Richmond in Yorkshire, asking him to take on the case, as he had important business to transact for Dale in the presence of Walter Langton, bishop of Coventry and Lichfield. However, he was politely rebuffed.Gasquet, F. A. (ed.) (1906). Collectanea Anglo-Premonstratensia, volume 2, pp. 204—6, nos. 391—2.
Collectanea Mathematica was founded in 1948 by (it is the oldest mathematical journal in Spain ). Thanks to the contribution of some relevant mathematicians in Catalonia, like Ferran Sunyer Balaguer, and eminent international collaborators (Wilhelm Blaschke, Hugo Hadwiger, Gaston Julia or Ernst Witt), the journal reached a central role in the spanish scientific publications, under the direction of (1969-1971), who was also president of the , and specially with (1971-1986), president of the Societat Catalana de Ciències Físiques, Químiques i Matemàtiques (1968-1973). During the period 1987-2007, with Joan Cerdà as the Main Editor, the journal took several steps forward to further improve its scientific quality. In 2003, the recently created Institute of Mathematics of the University of Barcelona started to be in charge of its publication, providing Collectanea Mathematica with a stable economic and scientific support.
Littér, de la France,' xix. 432, ed. 1838 in DNB On leaving Paris he seems to have become a monk at Canterbury. Bale and Pits quote Leland's 'Collectanea' for the statement that he flourished in 1274, but the printed copies of Leland do not contain the passage; the name appears in a list of the monks of the priory of Canterbury under the year 1294.
He also wrote a preface to Archbishop Spottiswoode's History of the Church of Scotland, and translated into Latin the controversy between John Knox and Wolfram, sub-prior of St. Andrews. A critical letter of his on Scottish historians, which he addressed to the antiquarian David Buchanan, is inserted in Leyland's Collectanea; some of his poems have been printed in Bishop Forbes' Funerales (Aberdeen, 1635).
The Collectanea de Rebus Albanicis was written by members of the Iona Club of Edinburgh in the 19th century. It contains a transcription and translation of the MS 1467 (then known as MS 1450). The Iona Club was founded in 1833 by historian Donald Gregory and William Forbes Skene to "investigate and illustrate the History, Antiquities and early literature of the Highlands". The club is now defunct.
In 1814 Reuvens and his father returned to the Netherlands where they both found work as lawyers. Reuvens continued his childhood and teenage interest in the ancient world by studying and writing commentaries on Greek and Latin literature. These were published in 1815 under the title Collectanea litteraria. In 1816 Reuvens became a professor in Harderwijk, and in 1818 at Leiden University (see below).
On 27 September 1992, O'Brien and sixteen other Irish Catholic Martyrs, including Dermot O'Hurley, were beatified by Pope John Paul II.Fenning, Hugh. "The Last Speech and Prayer of Blessed Terence Albert O'Brien, Bishop of Emly, 1651", Collectanea Hibernica, no. 38, 1996, pp. 52–58. JSTOR A large backlighted portrait of him is on display in St. Michael's Church, Cappamore, Co. Limerick, which depicts him during The Siege of Limerick.
In 1501 he went to Brescia where he worked at the university and printed his first works in Latin, such as Observationum collectanea in primum Historiae naturali librum (1504-1506). In 1503 he published a panegyric to the Venetian Senate concerning the siege. He wrote commentaries on Cicero, Pliny the Elder and other classical philosophers. A couple of years later, he became a professor of rhetoric at the University of Padua.
Collectanea topographica et genealogica, Volume 6, ed. Frederic Madden, Bulkeley Bandinel, John G. Nichols (John B. Nichols & Sons, London, 1840), p. 265 The Conqueror's uncle, William of Arques, who had originally challenged Duke William's right to the duchy based on his illegitimacy, had been given the county of Talou by Duke William as a fief, but still defiant and on his own authority proceeded to build a strong castle at Arques.
His two published works were Perspectiva Communis (Nuremberg, 1542), a reprint of John Peckham's 1292 book on optics and Directorium (Nuremberg, 1554), a book on astrology. He also left Collectanea mathematica praeprimis gnomonicam spectania, 151 f. MS Vienna, Österreichische Nationalbibliothek, Quarto, Saec. 16 (1527–1528), an unpublished work on sundials and astrolabes that was translated by John Lamprey and published under the title of Hartmann's Practika in 2002.
Scaglia, 142. The Codex Hamilton, MS 254 in the Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin, was such an epigraphic collectanea. It was compiled, at least in part (folios 81-90), by Ciriaco d'Ancona, and based on one of his three visits to Athens (1436, 1437-8, and 1444). With the aid of a scribe and a draughtsman, Ciriaco created a portfolio of sketches of several ancient Greek ruins, most notably the Parthenon, for Pietro.
Later in 1467, Lachlann M'Fynwyn de Myschenys, witnessed a charter by the Lord of the Isles. According to the 17th century MacDonald manuscript, in a description of the Lord of the Isles' Council of the Isles, "MacFinnon was obliged to see weights and measures adjusted".Collectanea de Rebus Albanicis, pp. 296–297. The chief's crest is a boar's head erased, argent, holding in its mouth a deer's shankbone, proper.
Solomon ben Chaim Baruch Brück (, died ) was a Hebrew writer from Lemberg, Austria. He is the author of Ḥakirat ha-Emet (Altona, 1839), a volume of collectanea, including an English sermon which he delivered in England. His other work, Ḥezionei Layil, was published posthumously by his son. The work consists of a series of imaginary dream-visits to the other world, in which the manners and conduct of certain classes are severely criticized.
267 At Peterborough and Rochester, Ernulf had the old buildings torn down and erected new dormitories, refectories, chapter houses, etc. Ernulf is associated with the production of the Textus Roffensis (a large collection of documents relating to the early Church of Rochester which also included the early Kentish law code attributed to King Aethelberht); "Collectanea de rebus eccl. Ruffensis".Williams English and the Norman Conquest p. 156In Patrologia Latina, CLXIII, 1443 sqq.
She was the youngest of six daughters of Edward Bulstrode (d. 1598) of Hedgerley, Buckinghamshire, and Cecill Croke who married in London on 28 May 1571 at St Dunstan-in-the-West. The names of her siblings are recorded on her father's tomb at St Laurence's Church, Upton-cum-Chalvey.Frederic Madden, Collectanea Topographica Et Genealogica, vol. 5 (London, 1838), p. 213: George Lipscombe, The History and Antiquities of the County of Buckingham, vol.
Shropshire, Its Early History and Antiquities. by John Corbet Anderson. Willis and Sotheran, 1864, pp. 402–04, There was a castle at Whitchurch, possibly built by the same Earl of Surrey,Botfield, Beriah. Collectanea Archæologica: Shropshire Longman, Green, Longman and Roberts, 1862 p45-46 which would predate the birth of Ralph. The Domesday Book estimates that the property was worth £10 annually, having been worth £8 in the reign of Edward the Confessor (1042–1066).
It has the largest collection of Ethiopian manuscripts outside of Ethiopia; many donated in the early modern period. In addition, in the 1990s, private collections of considerable size have been published and acquired by the Vatican Library.O. Raineri, Catalogo dei rotoli protettori della collezione Sandro Angelini, Roma 1990; O. Raineri, “Inventario dei manoscritti etiopici ‘Raineri’ della Biblioteca Vaticana”, in Collectanea in honorem Rev.mi Patris Leonardi E. Boyle, O.P..., (Città del Vaticano, 1998) (Studi e testi 385).
Macphail, S R: History of the Religious House of Pluscardyn.1881 Edinburgh. p 193 The consequential legal charter, the Ordinale, provided the exact details of the liturgy, the obligations of office bearers and the conduct of the Order.Vermeer, P : 'Citeaux – Val des Choux', Collectanea Ord Cist Ref, 15, 1954, pp 35–44 The Ordinale contains rules that show close resemblances to CistercianChoisselet, D & Vernet, P: (eds) Les Ecclesiastica Officia Cisterciens du Xlleme siecle, Abbaye d'Oelenberg, F-68950 Reiningue.
Julia Francis McHugh Morton (April 25, 1912 - September 10, 1996) was an American author and botanist. She was research professor of biology, and director of the Morton Collectanea at the University of Miami. She was elected a Fellow of the Linnean Society of London in 1974. Well known as a lecturer on toxic, edible and otherwise useful plants, she wrote 10 books and 94 scientific papers, and contributed to an additional 12 books and 27 papers.
Cornelius Yate (some sources Yeate) (6 March 1651 – 12 April 1720) was an Anglican priest:Wiltshire Archives the Archdeacon of Wilts"Collectanea topographica et genealogica" Vol 5p349: London; John BOwyer Nicols & Son; 1838 from 9 April 1696 until his death. Yate was born in Evesham and educated at St Mary Hall, Oxford.Yaire-Yule Pages 1698-1706 Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714 He graduated B.A. in 1671; and M.A. in 1674. He served curacies at Charney Bassett and Denchworth.
The next year, William, Earl of Ross, granted the lands of Gairloch to Paul and his heirs by "Mary of Grahame", with remainder to the lawful heirs of Paul, for the annual payment of a silver penny in name of blench ferme, in lieu of all services, except forinsee service to the king if required. In 1372, the grant was confirmed by Robert II.Origines parochiales Scotiae: p. 406.Collectanea de Rebus Albanicis: p. 62 footnote 10.
In December 1507, the Aldine Press published Iphigenia in Audlis in an 80-page octavo with Erasmus's translation from Greek into Latin. With the success and accuracy of their first collaboration, Manutius agreed to publish the expanded version of the Adagiorum collectanea Erasmus was working on. Erasmus traveled to Venice, where he spent his first ten months working at the Aldine Press. He lived in Manutius and Torresani's home, where he shared a room with Girolamo Aleandro.
This information comes from Baldassare Zamboni, Collectanea de rebus Brixiae, Biblioteca Queriniana, Ms. H. III. M. 2. Tamagnino's six Caesars were relegated to the less frequented areas of the building - at the back and the south and west. The sixth bust was of poorer quality than the rest of the cycle, and it is surmised that Tamagnino aimed to taunt his clients who for the second time in Brescia had undervalued his ability and underestimating his work.
Vincent J. Burno (1996), The Parthenon: Illustrations, Introductory Essay, History, Archeological Analysis, Criticism (New York: W. W. Norton & Company), 114-23, does not claim to know when Ciriaco's portfolio was presented to Pietro. Bergstein, 857, dates it to 1437. For Pietro's collectanea and friendship with Ciriaco, see Theodor Mommsen (1883), "Über die Berliner Excerptenhandschrift des Petrus Donatus," Jahrbuch der königlich preussischen Kunstsammlungen, 4, 78. Pietro possessed an exemplary copy of the Chronicon of Eusebius in Jerome's translation.
In all my prayers I desire to hear of your > prosperity, which will come to pass, as I hope, when you give me your > gracious reply to what I have written above. As for myself, your son and > brother, know that I am well, as my health goes, though I should be even > better if I could have the pleasure of conversing with you and enjoying your > company. Valete.Gasquet, F. A. (ed.) (1906). Collectanea Anglo- > Premonstratensia, volume 2, pp.
Dr. Augustyn Jankowski, O.S.B.(1916-2005); awarded, published, reviewed. See: Sąd Ducha Świętego – Egzegeza i teologia J 16, 8-11 [Paraclete’s judgment – Exegesis and theology of John 16: 8-11], at: Collectanea Theologica’ 69(1999) pp. 5-21; [accessed: 15.07.2016]; Sens ironiczny określenia „Władca tego świata” w Ewangelii św. Jana [The ironic sense of ‘the ruler of this world’ in the Gospel According to John], in: ‘W Nurcie Franciszkańskim’ 8(1999) pp. 47-57 [accessed: 23.07.
Buber's method of dealing with the difficult undertaking was new to scientific literature; and both introduction and commentary received the unstinted praise of the scholarly world. The introduction was translated into German by August Wünsche, and published by him with his translation of the Midrash, Leipzig, 1884. Other midrashic works edited on a similar method and scale by Buber are: collectanea from Midrash Abkir, Vienna, 1883; Tobiah ben Eliezer's Midrash Lekhach Tob, Wilna, 1884; the original Midrash Tanchuma, Wilna, 1885; collectanea from Midrash Eleh ha- Debarim Zutta, Vienna, 1885; Sifre d'Agadta, short midrashim on the Book of Esther, Wilna, 1886; Midrash Tehillim, Wilna, 1891; Midrash Mishle, Wilna, 1893; Midrash Shmuel, Cracow, 1893; Midrash Agada, an anonymous haggadic commentary on the Pentateuch, Vienna, 1894; Midrash Zuṭṭa, on the Song of Solomon, the Book of Ruth, Lamentations, and Ecclesiastes, Berlin, 1894; Aggadat Esther, haggadic treatises on the Book of Esther, anonymous, Cracow, 1897; Midrash Ekah Rabbati, Wilna, 1899; Yalkut Makiri, on the Psalms, Berdychev, 1899; Menahem ben Solomon's Midrash Sekel Tob, on the books of Genesis and Exodus, ii. vol. 2, Berlin, 1900-02.
Clifford adds some verses of his own, including a Midnight Meditation among the Ruins of Tixall (also published separately 1813 ? 4to). In 1817 he was staying at Paris with his eldest brother, and while there published Collectanea Cliffordiana, in three parts, containing notices of the Clifford family and an historical tragedy on the battle of Towton; and A Topographical and Historical Description of the parish of Tixall in the county of Stafford. By Sir Thomas [Hugh] Clifford, Bart., and Arthur Clifford, Esq.
On 26 June 1397, Anne issued a lease to Sir John Drayton, of the manor of Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire, and rents and appurtences of the towns of Aylesbury and Burton.Worcestershire Record Office: Hampton (Pakington) of Westwood Park, Droitwich, Worcestershire, Catalogue Reference number:705:349/12946/492083 Dated "Tuesday next after The Feast of the Nativity of St. John The Baptist 21 Ric II 26 June 1397" Anne Welles died on 13 November 1397, around the age of 37.Collectanea Top. et Gen.
When World War II started, the Mortons returned to Canada, where Kendal planned to enter military service and edit a military camp newspaper. However he failed his physical examination due to a heart murmur, and was exempted from service. Rather than remain in Canada or the US as civilians, the Mortons chose to move to the Bahamas. They placed most of the Collectanea in storage, but took entries on tropical fruits with them to Nassau, believing them likely to be useful.
Despite its 8th-century date, the Prebiarum is disconnected from the intellectual and theological preoccupations of the Carolingian Renaissance and represents a more "primitive state of biblical learning". Its methods cannot be said to derive from the exegetical literature of 7th-century Ireland, nor from the Northumbrian tradition of Bede.McNally, SHM p. 156. As a collection of miscellaneous snippets from various sources (collectanea), the Prebiarum draws on patristic sources such as Jerome, Augustine and Gregory, as well as medieval writings of obscure origin.
He then led the still- hidden province as Minister Provincial until 1716, and again 1722-25. As such he assisted at the General Chapter of the Order held in Rome in May 1723. Parkinson's chief work is the Collectanea Anglo-Minoritica, or a Collection of the Antiquities of the English Franciscans, or Friars Minors, commonly called Gray Friars, in two parts, with an appendix concerning the English Poor Clares, published in quartos in London in 1726. There are also extant some unedited manuscripts.
Interested in antiquarian pursuits, Levett's lasting contribution was to the study of early Yorkshire history. Levett came into possession of the Chartulary of St. John of Pontefract Abbey, a collection of early documents of Yorkshire kept by the Cluniac abbey founded in 1090.Collectanea toporaphica et genealogica, Vol. II, Society of Antiquaries, John Bowyer Nichols and Son, London, 1835 The Chartulary was later published by the Yorkshire Archaeological Society, a publication which allowed historians a rare glimpse into medieval Yorkshire.
The Sanmicheli, according to the interpretation of the historical sources of the time, would be the designers and site managers of the facade of the sanctuary of Miracoli (see the former Historical Archive of Santa Maria dei Miracoli, today the Brunelli Archive in the parochial registry of Bassano Bresciano, not accessible, mazzo 1, n. 1, see Guerrini 1930, pp. 211–218 for a transcription); several works of the Loggia (Baldassarre Zamboni, Collectanea de rebus Brixiae, Queriniana Library, Ms. H. III. 2 M. ).
His main reservations were that some unauthorised ceremonial practices had crept in, which he ordered to be discontinued, and that the quality of the food needed to be improved if the abbot were to avoid grumbling by the canons. Some visitations provide evidence of personal crises, as well as serious infractions by particular canons. In 1482 John York had left the order but had been brought back "by the praiseworthy abbot's circumspection:"Gasquet, F. A. (ed.) (1906). Collectanea Anglo-Premonstratensia, volume 2, pp.
David Malcolm of Duddingston, who presented it to the Edinburgh Philosophical Society in 1738. Sometime later the Broad Book was likewise in the possession of the society and the two manuscripts were bound together in 1813. In 1847, the Iona Club printed a collection of papers, edited by Donald Gregor and Skene, titled Collectanea de Rebus Albanicis. This publication included a paper titled "Genealogies of the Highland Clans, extracted from Ancient Gaelic MSS", which included a transcription and translation of the manuscript, with notes by Skene.
Christian Høgel, "An early anonymous Greek translation of the Qurʻan. The fragments from Niketas Byzantios' Refutatio and the anonymous Abjuratio", Collectanea Christiana Orientalia 7 (2010), pp. 65–119; Kees Versteegh, "Greek translations of the Qurʻan in Christian polemics (9th century)", Zeitschrift der Deutschen morgenländischen Gesellschaft 141 (1991); Astérios Argyriou, "Perception de l'Islam et traductions du Coran dans le monde byzantin grec", Byzantion 75 (2005). The first fully attested complete translations of the Qurʻan were done between the 10th and 12th centuries into Classical Persian.
1522, he was employed by his order to write a chronicle about the Franciscans in Scandinavia. After the Reformation (in 1537) the order was dissolved in Denmark, but Petrus continued his work on Danish history until c. 1560, as Danorum Gesta. The manuscript of Collectanea ad historiam danicam pertinentia (AM 107 8°, 172 folia) is a notebook with complicated structure, extended by numerous extra pages and loose slips of paper, and numerous interlinear and marginal notes, and has never been edited in its entirety.
He left a hundred volumes of manuscript collectanea for the completion of his work. Later, the Antiquarian Society of Newcastle upon Tyne commissioned John Hodgson-Hinde to write an additional volume containing an introductory sketch of the history of the county, which was published in 1858. The parochial history, as Hodgson had planned it, remained unfinished; proposals were made in 1891 for securing its completion. The Northumberland County History Committee was set up, and produced over more than 30 years a 15-volume continuation.
In his 1548 account, Gast also mentions a personal meeting with Faust in Basel during which Faust provided the cook with poultry of a strange kind. According to Gast, Faust travelled with a dog and a horse, and there were rumours that the dog would sometimes transform into a servant. Another posthumous account is that of Johannes Manlius, drawing on notes by Melanchthon, in his Locorum communium collectanea dating to 1562. According to Manlius, Johannes Faustus was a personal acquaintance of Melanchthon's and had studied in Kraków.
Collectanea de Rebus Albanicis, pp. 56–67. According to the historian Donald Gregory the first authentic record of the clan is found in an indenture between John of Islay, Lord of the Isles and the Lord of Lorn, in 1354. In the indenture, Lorn agreed to hand over the Isle of Mull and other lands, if the castle of Cairn na Burgh, located on Cairn na Burgh Mòr in the Treshnish Isles, was not delivered into the keeping of any of Clan Finnon.Gregory, pp. 80–81.
Collectanea de Rebus Albanicis, p. 37. Archibald had only daughters and in turn was succeeded by his nephew Lachlan Og ("Lauchlane oig Macklauchlane his brothers sone"). Not long after assuming the chiefship, Lachlan Og was forced to resign some of his lands to the chief of the Lamonts, because of the murder of Robert Lamont of Silvercrags by Lachlan Maclachlan of Dunnamuch. Lachlan Og led the clan in the Archibald Campbell, 7th Earl of Argyll's campaign against Sir James Macdonald of Islay and his rebellion in 1615.
His Monument in Great Bedwyn Church consists of a chest tomb displaying heraldic escutcheons, surmounted by his recumbent effigy, fully dressed in armour with hands in prayer, his head resting on his helm from which projects the sculpted Seymour crest of a pair of wings. His feet rest on a lion and a sword lies by his side. On the wall above is fixed a tablet inscribed as follows:Text from: Frederic Madden, Bulkeley Bandinel, John Gough Nichols, (Eds.), Collectanea Topographica Et Genealogica, Vol.5, pp.
This was the second election of the year, as the elderly John of Horsley had resigned in May and his successor, John Woodhouse, had resigned after only 15 weeks. After celebrating the Mass of the Holy Spirit, the two abbots and the canons of Dale retired to the chapter house, where a warning was read that all excommunicates should leave the room. The Holy Spirit was invoked and the election proceeded per viam compromissiGasquet, F. A. (ed.) (1906). Collectanea Anglo-Premonstratensia, volume 2, pp.
2016]; Część II: Tradycje ze zbioru As-Sahih Al-Muslima (zm. 875). Wstęp historyczny, tłumaczenie i komentarz [Selected hadiths from the collections of the category ‘six books of Islam’, part II: Traditions from the collection of As-Sahih Al- Muslim (d. 875). Historical introduction, translation and commentary] in: ‘Collectanea Theologica’ 74(2004) pp. 148-154 [accessed: 10.07.2016]; Część III: Tradycje ze zbioru Al-Ğāmi‘ as-Sahih At-Tirmidīego(zm. 892). Wstęp historyczny, tłumaczenie i komentarz [Selected hadiths from the collections of the category al-kutub as-sitta –‘six books of Islam’, part III: Traditions from the collection of Al-Ğāmi‘ as-Sahih At-Tirmidī (d. 892). Historical introduction, translation and commentary], in: ‘Collectanea Theologica’ 74(2004) pp. 155-158 [accessed: 13.07.2016]; Chrześcijańskie wpływy na muzułmańską antropologię we wczesnym średniowieczu na przykładzie wybranych tradycji [The Christian influences on Muslim anthropology in the early Middle Ages on the some examples], in: ‘Folia Historica Cracoviensia’ 10(2004) pp. 221-226. \- the history of Islam (the history of Central Asia from the 6th to the 12th centuriesSee: Dzieje Azji Środkowej od VI do XII wieku [The History of Central Asia in the 6th–12th Centuries] in: Wielka historia Świata, vol.
Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1485–1492, p. 100. In the King's third year, at the coronation of Queen Elizabeth, Margaret Gainsford was present as one of the queen's Gentlewomen. Nicholas Gainsford was (with one Verney) one of the two Esquires of Honour who rode with the Lord Mayor (Sir William Horne) ahead of the queen's litter as she was borne from the Tower of London in procession through the City of London to Westminster.T. Hearne, Joannis Lelandi Antiquarii De Rebus Britannicis Collectanea, 2nd Edition (W & J Richardson, London 1770), IV, pp. 220, 233.
He exhibited several archeological finds to the Association, and published papers on them in the Association journal. Corner also showed a strong interest in the nearby Surrey Archaeological Society. Corner contributed to several other antiquarian journals, including: the Proceedings of the Surrey Archaeological Society, the Sussex Archaeological Collections, the South London Journal, The Gentleman's Magazine, and the Collectanea Topographica et Genealogica. He published two works: A Concise Account of the Local Government of the Borough of Southwark (Southwark: 1836) and The Rental of St. Olave and St. John (Southwark: 1838; 2 ed.
Quoted in Adby and Wiliams "A Catalogue of Hoards" Coinage and History pp. 15–16 The objects were acquired by W. H. Rolfe, a resident of Sandwich, Kent in two stages, a first acquisition of three items acquired before April 1844, and five more items procured soon after September 1844.Grierson "Canterbury (St Martin's) Hoard" Dark Age Numismatics p. 39 The first three items were first published in 1844 in Collectanea Antiqua, and when the five further items were obtained, that publication was amended to reflect the new items.
Miró-Roig has authored and co-authored three mathematics research volumes. Most recently, she co-authored On the Shape of a Pure O-sequence (American Mathematical Society 2012) with Mats Boij, Juan C. Migliore, Uwe Nagel, and Fabrizio Zanello. Previously, she authored the research text Determinantal Ideals (Birkhäuser 2007) and co-authored the monograph Gorenstein Liaison, Complete Intersection Liaison Invariants and Unobstructedness (American Mathematical Society 2001) with Jan O. Kleppe, Juan C. Migliore, Uwe Nagel, and Chris Peterson. Miró-Roig is the Chief Editor of the mathematics research journal Collectanea Mathematica (Springer).
In the early 19th century, Skene found and transcribed a 15th-century Gaelic manuscript which gave the genealogies of many Highland clans. He first published his transcriptions and translations of it in the early 19th century Collectanea de Rebus Albanicis, and later with revisions in the late 19th century—in his chief work Celtic Scotland. Today the manuscript, which Skene named MS 1450 and later MS 1467, is stored in the National Library of Scotland. The manuscript was written by Dubhghall Albanach mac mhic Cathail, in 1467 at Ballybothy, Co Tipperary.
Gaius Julius Solinus, Latin grammarian and compiler, probably flourished in the early 3rd century AD. Historical scholar Theodor Mommsen dates him to the middle of the 3rd century. He was the author of De mirabilibus mundi ('The wonders of the world') which circulated both under the title Collectanea rerum memorabilium ('Collection of Curiosities'), and Polyhistor; but the latter title was favoured by the author. The work is indeed a description of curiosities in a chorographical framework. Adventus, to whom it is dedicated, is identified with Oclatinius Adventus, consul 218.
This rested on a typological view of Christ and the Twelve Apostles, and more anciently, the Twelve Tribes of Israel. Moreover, it seems likely that the Premonstratensians did not count an abbey as fully established until there was an abbey church to consecrate. Finally, several of the later abbeys were dedicated not simply to Mary, mother of Jesus, but specifically, as at Dale (Stanley Park) Abbey ad festum Assumptionis — "for the Feast of the Assumption,"Gasquet, F. A. (1906) Collectanea Anglo-Premonstratensia Vol.2, p. 172, no. 357.
The name may be of Celtic origin (Lus and Tanus, "tribe of Lus"), or derive from Lucis or Lusis, an ancient people mentioned in Avienus's Ora Maritima (4th century AD, but drawing on the Massaliote Periplus of the 6th century BC), and Tan, from Celtic Tan (Stan), or Tain, meaning a region or implying a country of waters, a root word that formerly meant a prince or sovereign governor of a region. An Universal History From the Earliest Account of Time, 1747, p. 22.; Charles Vallancey, Collectanea de Rebus Hibernicis, Vvol. 6, pt.
Church of St Mary The Virgin, Great Bedwyn Seymour died on 21 December 1536. By royal custom, his daughter Queen Jane did not attend the funeral. He was first buried in the church of Easton Priory, but following the collapse of that building was reburied in 1590 by his grandson, Edward Seymour, 1st Earl of Hertford, in the church of Great Bedwyn, the parish church of Wulfhall, where survives his monument.For description of monument and transcript of inscription see: Collectanea Topographica Et Genealogica, Volume 5 edited by Frederic Madden, Bulkeley Bandinel, John Gough Nichols, pp.
Anne Holland had died childless sometime between 26 August 1467 and 6 June 1474.Cawley, Charles, Medieval Lands, Earls of Kent, Holand, sourced from Collectanea Topographica Genealogica, Vol. 1, XL, Harleian MS 1074, No. IV, p. 297\. retrieved on 28 August 2012 Cecily's marriage had been proposed and arranged by Queen Elizabeth Woodville, who, with assistance from King Edward, persuaded Cecily's stepfather and legal guardian, Baron Hastings, to agree to the marriage, despite the latter's dislike of Thomas and the opposition of her mother, Lady Hastings, to the match.
He has analyzed the theme of evil spirits in the Bible,See: Zło osobowe w Biblii. Egzegetyczne, historyczne, religioznawcze i kulturowe aspekty demonologii biblijnej [Personal evil in the Bible. Exegetical, historical, religious, and cultural aspects of biblical demonology], Kraków: Wydawnictwo M 2002, [accessed: 18.07.2016]. presented an exegesis of some fragments of the Gospel of John which has the term άρχων του̃ κόσμου τούτου (‘Lord of this world’).See: Sąd Ducha Świętego – Egzegeza i teologia J 16, 8-11 [Paraclete's judgment – Exegesis and theology John 16: 8-11], in: ‘Collectanea Theologica’ 69(1999) pp.
Sir William Whorne was Lord Mayor of London in 1487. He is sometimes also reported as William Horne or William Littlebury. William Whorne was Lord Mayor at the time of the coronation of Elizabeth of York as the queen of King Henry VII of England, and was knighted in the course of the preparations. He rode ahead of the queen's litter, in company with the two Esquires of Honour, Verney and Nicholas Gaynesford, in her procession from the Tower of London to Westminster.T. Hearne (ed.), Joannis Lelandi Antiquarii De Rebus Britannicis Collectanea, 2nd Edition (W & J Richardson, London 1770), IV, pp. 216-233.
One of Finscher's most important accomplishments was his editing, beginning in 1994, of the new edition of the encyclopaedia Die Musik in Geschichte und Gegenwart in 28 volumes, for which he wrote or updated some 40 articles. His extensive works on string quartets, chamber music and Joseph Haydn are regarded as musicological standards, as is the two-volume Music of the 15th and 16th centuries. Finscher contributed to the complete editions of the works of Christoph Willibald Gluck, W. A. Mozart, and Paul Hindemith. He was also co-editor of the Capellae Apostolicae Sixtinaeque Collectanea Acta Monumenta.
Their portraits were painted on the occasion of their 25th wedding anniversary by Frans Hals. Petrus Scriverius Most of his life was passed in Leiden, but in 1650 he became blind, and the last years of his life were spent in his son's house at Oudewater, where he died in 1660. He is best known as a scholar by his notes on Martial, Ausonius, the Pervigilium Veneris; editions of the poems of Joseph Justus Scaliger (Leiden, 1615), of the De re militari of Vegetius Renatus, the tragedies of Seneca (P. Scriverii collectanea veterum tragicorum, 1621), &c.
He is a member of the editorial board of the Publikationen der ungarischen Geschichtsforschung in Vienna, which was founded by his initiative and active collaboration based on the sample of the Collectanea Vaticana Hungariae in 2009. His studies were published in dignified Hungarian and international journals and annals. (For instance: Archivum Historiae Pontificiae, Quellen und Forschungen aus Italienischen Archiven und Bibliotheken, Römische Quartalschrift für Christliche Altertumskunde und Kirchengeschichte, Römische Historische Mitteilungen, Dall’Archivio Segreto Vaticano. Miscellanea di testi, saggi e inventari, Miscellanea Bibliothecae Apostolicae Vaticanae.) He participated in numerous Hungarian and international conferences (such as in Rome, Vienna, Madrid, Berlin and Prague).
The barrow then received a mention in George Payne's Collectanea Cantiana, published in 1893. Payne noted a folk tradition that stone avenues connected Coldrum to the Addington Long Barrow, although he commented that he was unable to discover any evidence of this feature. The earliest published photographs of the monument, taken by George Clinch, appeared in a 1908 volume of the Victoria County History series. In his 1924 publication dealing with Kent, the archaeologist O. G. S. Crawford, then working as the archaeological officer for the Ordnance Survey, listed the Addington Long Barrow alongside the other Medway Megaliths.
In 1883, both this site and Kit's Coty House were visited by the archaeologist Augustus Pitt Rivers. He communicated with the landowner, H. A. Brassey, who believed that both sites should be protected under the new Ancient Monuments Protection Act 1882. In 1897, the site was declared a protected monument, two years after Kit's Coty House had. Meanwhile, in 1893, the antiquarian George Payne mentioned the monument in his Collectanea Cantiana, describing it as a "fallen cromlech" and noting that there were various other megaliths scattered in the vicinity, suggesting that these were part of the monument or another like it, since destroyed.
Bartholomew fled south from Boroughbridge and, according to the "Livere de Reis", was captured in a small wood near Brickden and taken by the Earl of Mar to Canterbury. Alternative details appear in John Leland's "Collectanea", which states that "Syr Barptolemew Badelesmere was taken at Stow Parke yn the Manoyr of the Bishop of Lincoln that was his nephew." Stow Park is about 10 miles north-west of the centre of Lincoln, where the bishop was Henry Burghersh. Stow Park was one of the principal residences of the Bishop in that era but none of the medieval buildings still survive above ground.
Sedulius's most important works are his treatise De Rectoribus Christianis, a commentary on Porphyry's Isagoge, or introduction to the logic of Aristotle, and a scriptural commentary Collectanea in omnes beati Pauli Epistolas. The first of these is a noteworthy contribution to Christian ethics. It is the first, apparently, of a long line of treatises written during the Middle Ages for the instruction of Christian princes and rulers, a dissertation on the duties peculiar to that state of life, a Mirror for Princes, as such works came to be called at a much later period. While in Liège, Sedulius Scottus expanded his influence.
The Magna glossatura is a set of glosses written beside passages from the Latin Vulgate Bible. These glosses were written by Peter the Lombard during his teaching career and before he became the bishop of Paris (1159–1160). His gloss of Psalms and his gloss of the Pauline Epistles (referred to as the Collectanea) were compiled and became a part of the official gloss on the Bible. This collection of glosses would take on the name of Magna glossatura and would, during the 12th century, replace the Glossa ordinaria as the most frequently studied and copied exegetical gloss of the Bible.
Collectanea Anglo-Premonstratensia, volume 1, pp. 27—8, no. 16. The visitors made clear that they were not to be deterred and so were expelled from the abbey and refused accommodation, even at their own expense, at one of its granges or farms. Instead they travelled to Dale, where on the Nativity of Saint John the Baptist (24 June) they pronounced the excommunication of the abbot, prior, sub-prior, sacristan, precentor, cellarer and John of Gorscot, an offending canon: members of the order were not to communicate with them until absolved by the abbot of Prémontré.
The historian Alan Cobban observes that the two contemporary histories of the events differ in their allocation of blame; he considers that "given that propaganda and exaggeration were involved in these accounts, the whole truth may never be found." He identifies two sources of primary documentation, Oxford City Documents, Financial and Judicial, 1258–1665, edited by the historian Thorold Rogers in 1891, and Medieval Archives of the University of Oxford: Vol 1, edited by the historian the Rev Herbert Salter in 1920. The historian Jeremy Catto adds Collectanea, edited by Montagu Burrows of the Oxford Historical Society in 1896.
The Grand College of Rites (officially, the Grand College of Rites of the United States of America) is a Masonic organization. The Grand College of Rites was established by nine Master Masons in Washington, D.C. on May 12, 1932 for the purpose of controlling and preventing the resurrection of abandoned and unauthorized rituals in the United States. It collects these rituals from extinct organizations and prints them in an annual volume titled Collectanea, which is privately distributed to its own members. Among the rituals over which the Grand College claims jurisdiction are those of the Egyptian Masonic Rite of Memphis, Ancient, Free, and Accepted Architects, Ancient and Primitive Rite, and others.
The Commission for examination of ecclesiastical laws, as required by Act of Parliament, was issued on 12 February.Calendar of Patent Rolls, Edward VI, IV: 1550–1553 (HMSO 1926), p. 354. At this time Cheke, who had the books and papers of Martin Bucer, was attempting to build up the royal Library, and at the death of his friend and admirerSee Leland's appreciation of Cheke in his Encomia Illustrium Virorum, in T. Hearne (ed.), Joannis Lelandi Antiquarii De Rebus Britannicis Collectanea (Editio altera) 6 vols. (Gul et Jo. Richardson, London 1770), V, p. 148. John Leland the antiquary in April 1552 acquired his materials for the same purpose.
This included an article stating the items were crude, religious tokens, dating from the reign of Mary I of England, that had been imported from continental Europe as replacements for the devotional items destroyed during the English Reformation. Ironically, earlier volumes of the Collectanea antiqua had been among the scholarly reference works used by Smith and Eaton when creating their fakes. Meanwhile, the businessman, politician and antiquarian Charles Reed had renewed the investigation of the artefacts; although he may have been prompted by Roach-Smith's book. He made inquiries in the Shadwell Dock construction site, but could not find anyone that had sold items to Smith or Eaton.
He predeceased his father the 1st Earl of Hertford, and was succeeded in the courtesy title by his eldest son Edward Seymour, Lord Beauchamp (1586–1618), who also predeceased the 1st Earl, and it was thus his second son William Seymour, who in 1621 succeeded his grandfather as 2nd Earl of Hertford and in 1660 was restored as 2nd Duke of Somerset. His monumental brass inscription survives in Great Bedwyn Church (the parish church of Wulfhall and Tottenham Lodge), inscribed in Latin as follows:Frederic Madden, Bulkeley Bandinel, John Gough Nichols, (Eds.), Collectanea Topographica Et Genealogica, Vol.5, p.24 ::Bellocamp(o) eram, Graia genetrice, Semerus.
62) A second important figure in the later nineteenth century for the recovery of Eckhart's works was Heinrich Seuse Denifle, who was the first to recover Eckhart's Latin works, from 1886 onwards.Mention could also be made of Franz Jostes, Meister Eckhart und seine Junger, ungedruckte Texte zur Geschichte der deutschen Mystik (Collectanea Friburgensia, iv., Freiburg, 1895). During the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, much Catholic interest in Eckhart was concerned with the consistency of his thought in relation to Neoscholastic thought – in other words, to see whether Eckhart's thought could be seen to be essentially in conformity with orthodoxy as represented by his fellow Dominican Thomas Aquinas.
VI (London: J. B. Nichols and Son, 1840), p. 198 He, his wife Margaret and his son Odo were named in several charters of St. Neot's and in one there is a mention of a daughter, Magilia Burnard.Frederic Madden; Bulkeley Bandinel; John Gough Nichols, Collectanea Topographica Et Genealogica, Vol. VI (London: J. B. Nichols and Son, 1840), p. 199 Among the English who came north in the train of David I of Scotland were Burnards who settled in the County of Roxburgh and owned the considerable barony of Farningdoun (aka. Fairnington).Crannog to Castle; A History of the Burnett Family in Scotland, ed. Eileen A. Bailey (Banchory: Leys Publishing, 2000), pp.
Merrifield helped establish the Museum of London In 1975 the Guildhall Museum was amalgamated with the London Museum to become the Museum of London, and Merrifield became its senior keeper: he was promoted to the position of deputy director in 1977, and was responsible for designing the Museum's first Roman gallery. From 1976 to 1978 he also served as president of the London and Middlesex Archaeological Society. Merrifield retired in 1978, and a festschrift, entitled Collectanea Londiniensia: Studies in London Archaeology and History Presented to Ralph Merrifield, was published in his honour. Recognising his many years of service to the archaeological field, the University of London awarded him an honorary doctorate.
There is a possibility that Raffles MS no.18 version has developed from a genealogical king-list complete with the periods of reigns and dates. This king-list subsequently enlarged by various stories and historically relevant material which was inserted into it in suitable places, but at the same time it lost its dates. Unknown Malay texts titled Soelalet Essalatina or Sulalatu'l-Salatina, that referred by Petrus Van der Vorm and François Valentijn in their works Collectanea Malaica Vocabularia ("Collection of Malay Vocabulary") (1677) and Oud En New Oost Indien ("A short history of East Indies") (1726) respectively, could have existed in the form of a king-list.
As Prefect of the Vatican Library, Zaccagni had access to a copy of the Atti di Archelao by Hegemonius found at Monte Cassino with a version in the Vatican,Raccolta di dissertazioni di storia ecclesiastica in italiano o scritte, by Francesco Antonio Zaccaria, pages 216-217. as well as to the works of Euthalius. Such documents were among those included in his Collectanea. Zaccagni was buried in the church of San Giovanni Decollato and his inscription on the pavement stated that he was a man of honorable parts and practice, his books were celebrated by both Italians and foreigners, and had raised the scholarship of the Papal states.
His curial duties did not prevent him from taking an interest in letters and the sciences. He was on friendly terms and corresponded with the learned men of his day. Among those whom he encouraged most was Lorenzo Alessandro Zaccagni, whom he induced to publish a collection of materials for the ancient history of the Greek and Latin Churches, Collectanea monumentorum veterum Ecclesiæ græcæ et latinæCollectanea monumentorum veterum Ecclesiæ græcæ et latinæ, by Lorenzo Alessandro Zaccagni, Rome (1698). Amongst the library's possessions are 64 Greek codices (15 of them the gift of Casanate), and 230 Hebrew texts (rolls and books), among which are 5 Samaritan codices.
Tomblike memorial of Osric in Gloucester Cathedral, in Perpendicular Gothic, erected about 1530 Recumbent effigy Osric was a king of the Anglo-Saxon kingdom of the Hwicce in the late 7th century, perhaps reigning jointly with his presumed brother Oshere. Osric was probably a son of Eanhere, a previous King of the Hwicce, by Osthryth, daughter of Oswiu of Northumbria. The only marriage recorded for Osthryth is that to Æthelred of Mercia, but an earlier marriage to Eanhere would explain why Osric and his brother Oswald are described as Æthelred's nepotes — usually translated as nephews or grandsons, but here probably meaning stepsons.John Leland, Collectanea, vol. 1, p. 240.
Within the order as a whole, Dale was autonomous' represented by its own abbot not only in the provincial chapter, which regulated the affairs of the order in England, but also at the general chapter held at Prémontré Abbey in north-eastern France.Colvin, H. M. (1940). The External History of Dale Abbey, p. 59. Dale's abbots might serve on steering committee, the diffinitores, that did the real work of the provincial chapters, as did John Stanley at a chapter held at Leicester in 1479,Gasquet, F. A. (ed.) (1906). Collectanea Anglo-Premonstratensia, volume 1, p. 148, no. 84. and Richard Nottingham at Lincoln in 1495.Gasquet, F. A. (ed.) (1904).
This was published under the name of Thomas Lancton, or Lacton, perhaps an alias of Bourchier. Luke Wadding calls him, in his supplementary volume, 'Thomas Bourchier Gallice, Lacton vero Anglice, et Latinis Lanius, vel Lanio, Italis autem Beccaro' (an alternative form of Beccajo), and elsewhere exarkinson, the author of 'Collectanea Anglo- Minoritica,' consider them two distinct pepresses himself convinced of the identity of Lancton and Bourchier. Francis a S. Clara and Anthony Parkinson consider Bourchier and Lancton to be distinct. Another treatise by Bourchier, De judicio religiosorum, in quo demonstratur quod a sæcularibus judicari non debeant, is mentioned by Wadding as in his possession, but only in manuscript; this was written at Paris in 1582.
Two sides of the Blythburgh writing tablet The associations with King Anna were never fully forgotten, and continued to be repeated after the Reformation. John Leland (1503-1552) notices the battle and the burial: "King Anna was killed by Penda, king of the Mercians, in the 19th year of his reign but in anno Domini 654, and he is buried in the place which is called Blidesburg. There also his son Jurmin was buried...""Anna rex occisus a Penda, rege Merciorum, anno regni sui xix anno vero D. 654, et in loco qui Blidesburg nuncupatur, sepelitur. Illic etiam sepultus est Jurminus, ejus filius..." T. Hearne (ed.), Joannis Lelandi Antiquarii De Rebus Britannicis Collectanea, Editio Altera (Gvl.
Anthony Wood assigns some Latin works to Grocyn, but on insufficient authority. By Erasmus he has been described as "vir severissimae castissimae vitae, ecclesiasticarum constitutionum observantissimus pene usque ad superstitionem, scholasticae theologiae ad unguem doctus ac natura etiam acerrimi judicii, demum in omni disciplinarum genere exacte versatus", "A man of a most stern and moral life; most observant of the decrees of the Church almost to the point of superstition; learned to his very fingertips in scholastic theology; and also by nature of the keenest judgment; finally, exactly versed in every kind of learning" (Declarationes ad censures facultatis theoiogiae Parisianae, 1522). An account of Grocyn by M. Burrows appeared in the Oxford Historical Society's Collectanea (1890).
Title page of the 1508 edition The compiler, Erasmus Adagia (singular adagium) is the title of an annotated collection of Greek and Latin proverbs, compiled during the Renaissance by Dutch humanist Desiderius Erasmus Roterodamus. Erasmus' collection of proverbs is "one of the most monumental ... ever assembled" (Speroni, 1964, p. 1). The first edition, titled Collectanea Adagiorum, was published in Paris in 1500, in a slim quarto of around eight hundred entries. By 1508, after his stay in Italy, Erasmus had expanded the collection (now called Adagiorum chiliades or "Thousands of proverbs") to over 3,000 items, many accompanied by richly annotated commentaries, some of which were brief essays on political and moral topics.
He may have been named for Washington, County Durham. He entered the Benedictine order, and was one of the students regularly sent by the Benedictines of Durham to be educated at their house at Oxford, then known as Durham College and now part of Trinity College, Oxford. In 1398 he became bursar of Durham College, obtaining books for its use from the chapter at Durham, and writing in 1422 a treatise to prove that it should be exempt from the jurisdiction of the general ‘prior studentium’ at Oxford because the college existed before the appointment of the prior.This treatise, extant among the manuscripts of Durham Cathedral library, was printed in vol. iii. of the Oxford Historical Society's ‘Collectanea,’ 1896.
Historyczno-teologiczne aspekty dżihadu [The Holy War in Islam. The historical and theological aspects of jihad], in: ‘Polonia Sacra’ 9(2001) pp. 181-224. Author of the first Polish Concordance of the Qurʾān.See: Tematyczna konkordancja do Koranu [Thematic Concordance of the Qur’an], Kraków: UNUM 2006, [accessed: 10.07.2016). He has translated and commented on several Hadiths.)See: Wybrane hadisy ze zbiorów kategorii al- kutub as-sitta – „sześciu ksiąg islamu, Część I: Tradycje ze zbioru As-Sahih Al-Buhārīego (zm. 870) [Selected hadiths from the collections of the category ‘six books of Islam’, part I: Traditions from the collection of As-Sahih Al- Buhārī (d. 870), Historical introduction, translation and commentary], in: ‘Collectanea Theologica’ 74(2004) pp. 137-148 [accessed: 10.07.
Vallancey came to Ireland before 1770 to assist in a military survey of the island, and made the country his adopted home. His attention was strongly drawn towards the history, philology, and antiquities of Ireland at a time when they were almost entirely ignored, and he published the following, among other works: Collectanea de Rebus Hibernicis, 6 vols., between 1770 and 1804; Essay on the Irish Language, 1772; Grammar of the Irish Language, 1773; Vindication of the Ancient Kingdom of Ireland, 1786; Ancient History of Ireland proved from the Sanscrit Books, 1797; Prospectus of a Dictionary of the Aire Coti or Antient Irish, 1802. He was a member of many learned societies, was created an honorary LL.D., and became a fellow of the Royal Society in 1784.
Roger de Mowbray founded the house of Augustinian canons in 1142–3 for canons of Bridlington first in a temporary settlement at Hook before the community could move in 1145 to Newburgh on lands originally granted by William the Conqueror to Robert de Mowbray. The Mowbrays continued to support the priory, as Roger's grandson, William de Mowbray, was also a benefactor and was buried there in about 1222. Little more is known of the priory from its founding until the Dissolution of the Monasteries in 1538 by Henry VIII, except that Margaret Tudor stayed a night there on 17 August 1503 as a guest of the prior during her progress to meet her husband James IV of Scotland.Leland, John, Collectanea, Hearne, Thomas, ed.
Ezra Malki was rabbi of Rhodes in the seventeenth century; he was brother-in- law of Hezekiah de Silva, the author of "Peri Ḥadash." Malki was the author of "Malki ba-Ḳodesh" (Salonica, 1749). This work contains novellæ on the laws of Passover given in the Shulchan Aruch (Oraḥ Ḥayyim) and in the "Bet Yosef"; commentaries on the Pesaḥ Haggadah and on the parts of the Mishneh Torah which contain the laws concerning the Passover lamb, Rosh ha-Shanah, Yom Kippur, and lulav; novellæ on the Sefer Mitzvot Gadol; and collectanea. Malki also wrote "Shemen la-Ma'or" (Constantinople, 1760), novellæ on the first chapter of Baba Meẓi'a, in which he defends Zerahiah ha-Levi against the attacks of Naḥmanides; "'En Mishpaṭ" (ib.
Her father was King Cellach Cualann. Along with her brother Saint Comgan and her son Fillan she traveled to Scotland in the late 7th century AD. The early 20th century scholar Rev. A.M. Sinclair noted that the genealogy of the MacEacherns was given in the Collectanea de Rebus Albanicis as "Andrew, son of Colin, son of Macrath, son of Gilchrist, son of Macrath, son of Marceartach, son of Cormac, son of Seth, son of Ferchar, son of Finlay, son of Nichol, son of Maine, son of Murdoch, son of Ectigern, who was called In Gamor". Sinclair speculated that the "In Gamor" may stand for an gainnear, meaning "the archer"; though also noted that it could also stand for an ceannair, meaning "the driver".
In 1501 he was appointed Constable of Knaresborough Castle, Steward of the Lordship of Knaresborough, and Master Forester of Knaresborough Forest. On 1 April 1502 he was a commissioner of oyer and terminer for London; he was also constantly in the commission of the peace for various counties. Northumberland received the important appointment of warden of the east marches towards Scotland on 30 June 1503, and one of his first duties was to escort Princess Margaret to Scotland on her way to join King James IV of Scotland, and his splendid dress and numerous servants was said to have pleased the princess.Archbold states that an account of this progress was written by the Somerset Herald and printed in Leland's Collectanea, vol.
The only extant medieval manuscript of the Scalacronica is MS 133 held by Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, where it originally formed part of the bequest of Archbishop Matthew Parker, a former Master of the College and a collector of manuscripts. During the reign of King Henry VIII the antiquary John Leland prepared an abstract of the Scalacronica which he included in his Collectanea. This abstract has proven useful as the original manuscript currently lacks part of the material for the years 1339 and 1356, and all the material from 1340 to 1355, the years in which the author himself had direct experience of events. In addition, at some time before 1567, Nicholas Wotton, Dean of Canterbury, made numerous extracts from the Salacronica (BL MS Harley 902).
He was one of the three contributors to Collectanea Topographica et Genealogica. Macray in his Annals of the Bodleian LibraryMacray's Annals of the Bodleian Library recounts that Bandinel resigned his librarianship in 1860 "after forty-seven years of office as in the capacity of Head, and a total of fifty of work in the Library... At the age of seventy-nine the natural infirmities of age were felt by himself to incapacitate him for the duties which he had so long and so regularly discharged; while at the same time the continually increasing pressure of work and requirements of the Library made those duties much more onerous than they had been even a quarter of a century before." He gave way to his subordinate, Henry Octavius Coxe.
It is expected that the Yau–Tian–Donaldson conjecture should apply more generally to cscK metrics over arbitrary polarised varieties. After the resolution of the original conjecture related to Fano varieties, the YTD conjecture has come to refer to this more general problem: > New Yau–Tian–Donaldson conjecture: A polarised variety (X,L) admits a > constant scalar curvature Kähler metric in the class of c_1(L) if and only > if the pair (X,L) is K-polystable. As mentioned, the new Yau-Tian-Donaldson conjecture is known to be true in the Fano setting. It was proved by Donaldson in 2009 that the Yau-Tian-Donaldson conjecture holds for toric varieties of complex dimension 2.Donaldson, S. K. Interior estimates for solutions of Abreu’s equation Collectanea Math. 56 103-142 2005Donaldson, S. K. (2008).
M. G. Rathbone, 1951 # The Trowbridge woollen industry as illustrated by the stock books of John and Thomas Clark 1804–1824, ed. R. P. Beckinsale # Guild stewards book of the borough of Calne, 1561–1688, ed. A. W. Mabbs, 1953 # Andrews' and Dury's map of Wiltshire, 1773: a reduced facsimile, ed. Elizabeth Crittall, 1952 # Surveys of the manors of Philip Herbert, 5th Earl of Pembroke, 1631-2, ed. E. Kerridge, 1953 # Two sixteenth century taxation lists, 1545 and 1576, ed. G. D. Ramsay, 1954 # Wiltshire quarter sessions and assizes, 1736, ed. J. P. M. Fowle, 1955 # Collectanea, ed. N.J. Williams, 1956 # Progress notes of Warden Woodward for the Wiltshire estates of New College, Oxford, 1659–1675, ed. R. L. Rickard, 1957 # Accounts and surveys of the Wiltshire lands of Adam de Stratton, 1268–86, ed.
In 1872, James Fergusson referenced the site in his Rude Stone Monuments in All Countries; Their Age and Uses, referring to the presence of "two obelisks, known to country people as the coffin-stones—probably from their shape". In 1893, the antiquarian George Payne described the monument in his Collectanea Cantiana, noting that locally it was known as both the Coffin Stone and the General's Stone. Ashbee later suggested that Payne was actually confusing the Coffin Stone with the General's Stone, which was a separate megalith found several hundred metres away, in the same field as Kit's Coty House. In his 1924 publication dealing with Kent, the archaeologist O. G. S. Crawford, then working as the archaeological officer for the Ordnance Survey, listed the Coffin Stone alongside the other Medway Megaliths.
Tomb of John Seymour, grandfather of King Edward VI of England Sir John Seymour Memorial In the chancel is a memorial to Sir John Seymour (1474–1536), father of King Henry VIII's wife Jane Seymour, father to Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset, and grandfather of King Edward VI of England. Seymour's monument consists of a chest tomb displaying heraldic escutcheons, surmounted by his recumbent effigy, fully dressed in armour with hands in prayer, his head resting on his helm from which projects the sculpted Seymour crest of a pair of wings. His feet rest on a lion and a sword lies by his side. On the wall above is fixed a tablet inscribed as follows:Text from: Frederic Madden, Bulkeley Bandinel, John Gough Nichols, (Eds.), Collectanea Topographica Et Genealogica, Vol.
His literary activity covered the most varied domains. Although his poetical writings are of little importance, and his manuscript "Collectanea medicinalia" of no great value, nevertheless he attained a high reputation as a collector and, to some degree, as an editor of ancient and medieval manuscripts. Among other publications, he edited in 1511 L. Florus, in 1515 the "Libellus de lapidibus" of Marbod, and the medieval chronicler Otto of Freising. Important as a contribution to the study of ancient history is the publication which first appeared, after his death in 1553, namely, the "Fasti consulares", with which were united the "Chronicle" of Cassiodorus and the "Breviarium" of Faenius Rufus. Another valuable work of Cuspinian is the "History of the Roman Emperors", prepared during the years 1512-22 (in Latin, 1540, and in German, 1541).
Redman found that at Dale his conversation was "loose and irreligious" and sent him to join the chapter at Beauchief Abbey, a decision that was ratified by the next provincial chapter. Blackwall, who had remained at Dale after being found rebellious at the previous visitation, was found not to have reformed: he was placed last in the abbey's hierarchy and deprived of his vote and stall. The situation among the canons clearly worried Redman and it seems he induced Abbot John Stanley to resign, as two months later his pension and retirement were arranged.Gasquet, F. A. (ed.) (1904). Collectanea Anglo- Premonstratensia, volume 1, pp. 112—4, no. 65. Redman carried out another visitation in May 1494 and generally approved of the administration of the new abbot, Richard Nottingham.
See: Czy biblijna nauka o złych duchach jest zapożyczona z demonologii perskiej? [Is biblical demonology borrowed from Persian demonology?], in: ‘W Nurcie Franciszkańskim’ 10(2001) pp. 47-56 [accessed: 12.07.2016]. In addition to biblical demonology, he has conducted an exegesis of the Lord's Prayer and other fragments of the New Testament which were incorporated into the Muslim tradition.)See: „Modlitwa Pańska” w tradycji muzułmańskiej. Egzegetyczno – teologiczne studium porównawcze: Mt 6, 9-13 a hadis Abū Dāwūda, Tibb, 19 bāb: Kayfa ar–ruqa [The Lord’s Prayer in the Muslim tradition. The exegetical-theological comparative study Mt 6: 9-13 and hadis Abū Dāwūd, Tibb, 19 bāb: Kayfa ar–ruqa] in: ‘Collectanea Theologica’ 71(2001) pp. 119-127 [accessed: 13.07.2016]; review: ‘International Review of Biblical Studies’ 48(2001-2002) p.
Located in the centre, between the slope and the hedge, is an area of grassland on which several large, grey stones are scattered. In August 1889, two amateur archaeologists, George Payne and A. A. Arnold, came across the monument, which they noted was known among locals as the "Coldrum Stones" and "Druid Temple"; according to Payne, "the huge stones were so overgrown with brambles and brushwood that they could not be discerned". He returned the next year, noting that the brushwood had since been cut away to reveal the megaliths. In his 1893 book Collectanea Cantiana, Payne noted that although it had first been described in print in 1844, "since that time no one seems to have taken the trouble to properly record them or make a plan", an unusual claim given that a copy of Petrie's published plan existed in his library.
Besides the help he rendered Leibniz, of whom he edited the Collectanea Etymologica (1717) and prepared an affectionately respectful obituary (in Christoph Gottlieb von Murr, Journal für Kunstgeschichte, VII), he issued a number of independent works. His chief work, while professor at Helmsted, is his Historia studii etymologici linguae germanicae haetenus impensi Hanover, 1711), a literary and historical study of all works bearing on the investigation of the Germanic languages. At Hanover he compiled a Corpus historicum medii aevi (Leipzig, 1723), in two volumes; at Würzburg he published the Commentarii de rebus Franciae Orientalis et episcopatus Wirceburgensis (1729), also in two volumes. In 1725, Eckhart, along with Ignatz Roderick, in order of the Prince-Bishop of Würzburg Christoph Franz von Hutten, reproduced the hoax of their fellow academic Johann Beringer, at the University of Würzburg, in the "Lying Stones" affair.
Henry showed much interest in the idea when Gardiner and Foxe presented him this plan. It is not known whether the king or his new Lord Chancellor, Thomas More, explicitly approved the plan. Eventually it was implemented and Cranmer was requested to join the royal team in Rome to gather opinions from the universities.; Edward Foxe coordinated the research effort and the team produced the Collectanea Satis Copiosa ("The Sufficiently Abundant Collections") and The Determinations, historical and theological support for the argument that the king exercised supreme jurisdiction within his realm.. The full title is The Determinations of the most famous and most excellent Universities of Italy and France, that it is unlawful for a man to marry his brother's wife, that the Pope hath no power to dispense therewith and it is likely that Cranmer undertook the translation from Latin to English.
An early medieval Christian legend elaborates on the Gospel of Matthew's account of the birth of Jesus. According to the legend, attested to in a Greek document from the 8th century, of presumed Irish origin and translated into Latin with the title Collectanea et Flores, in addition to gold, frankincense, and myrrh, given as gifts by three "wise men from the east" (magi), ginger was the gift of one wise man (magus) who was unable to complete the journey to Bethlehem. As he was lingering in his last days in a city in Syria, the magus gave his chest of ginger roots to the Rabbi who had kindly cared for him in his illness. The Rabbi told him of the prophesies of the great King who was to come to the Jews, one of which was that He would be born in Bethlehem, which, in Hebrew, meant "House of Bread".
As far back as 1715 and 1745, self-constituted bodies of defensive local forces were formed in anticipation of Stuart invasions.Padraig O Snodaigh; THE IRISH VOLUNTEERS 1715–1793 – A list of the units, pg 88. Irish Academic Press, Dublin. For example, in 1744 with the declaration of war with France and in 1745 the landing of Prince Charles Edward in Scotland, a corps of 100 men was enrolled in Cork, known as "The True Blues", which formed one of the regiments of the "United Independent Volunteers". In 1757 and 1760 there were volunteer units formed due to the Seven Years' War and due to the French landing at Carrickfergus in 1760. The roll-call of the militia that marched on the French at Swinford listed in the "Collectanea politica", published in 1803, was titled "Ulster volunteers in 1760".Bigger, Francis Joseph; Ulster Volunteers in 1760, Ulster Journal of Archaeology, Second Series, Vol. 8, No. 4 (Oct. 1902).
A Copper Age grave group dating from 2500 to 2100 BC, found at Sittingbourne There is evidence of settlement in the area before 2000 BC, with farming and trading tribes living inland to avoid attack, yet close enough to access the sea at Milton Creek. In AD 43 the Romans invaded Kent, and to make access quicker between London and Dover, built Watling Street, which passed straight through Sittingbourne. As a point where sea access met road access, the port of Milton Regis became the Roman administrative centre for the area, with some 20 villas so far discovered, but Sittingbourne remained a minor hamlet throughout Roman times. Most Roman finds in this area were due to the efforts of 19th century brick makers who used topsoil to make bricks, and uncovered the finds; and preserved thanks to banker George Payne, who preserved or bought materials and published his works in 1893 in Collectanea Cantiana.
Front cover of August 1910 21 issue in Chinese and Tibetan Page of the Paper in Tibetan The Tibet Vernacular Paper (, ),Fabienne Jagou, Les traductions tibétaines des discours politiques chinois de Sun Yat-sen sur les « Trois principes du peuple » en tant qu’exemples de traductions modernes d’un texte politique, in Édition, Éditions: L'écrit Au Tibet, Évolution et Devenir, Volume 3 de Collectanea Himalayica, Anne Chayet, Éditeur Indus, 2010, , p. 169 also translated as The Tibetan Vernacular Paper, is the first newspaper to have been established in Tibet. Written in both Tibetan () and vernacular Chinese (Baihua ), it was founded in April 1909 by amban Lian Yu, and his deputy Zhang Yintang, in the final years of the Qing Dynasty. The first issue was lithographically printed, with a print-run fewer than 100 copies a day.Protection and Development of Tibetan Culture (White Paper), China Daily, 25-09-2008, p. 7: Old Tibet had only one lithographically printed newspaper in the Tibetan language in the last years of the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911), titled The Tibet Vernacular Newspaper, and its print-run was fewer than 100 copies a day.

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