Yahoo Canada Web Search

Search results

  1. Jude. Jude the brother of James, left a short epistle which is reckoned among the seven catholic epistles, and because in it he quotes from the apocryphal Book of Enoch it is rejected by many. Nevertheless by age and use it has gained authority and is reckoned among the Holy Scriptures. 5.

  2. De viris illustribus, título en latín para "Sobre hombres ilustres" (o famosos), representa uno de los tropos más comunes de la literatura romana, el exemplum, que fue revivido durante el Renacimiento italiano e inspiró la colección de una serie de retratos de hombres ilustres - y alguna veces, en el siglo XVI, de mujeres también - con el objetivo de fomentar la educación superior.

  3. Apr 22, 2024 · De Viris Illustribus (1) [Aurelius Victor] : De Viris Illustribus. Sections 1 - 49. This collection of very short biographies was at one time attributed to Aurelius Victor. It is now generally agreed that it cannot have been written by him; but it has often been combined with the De Caesaribus to create a brief summary of all ancient Roman history.

  4. De Viris Illustribus (Sobre hombres ilustres en latín) es una colección de ciento treinta y cinco pequeñas biografías, compiladas por el padre de la Iglesia latina del sigloIV, Jerónimo de Estridón, más tarde san Jerónimo. Él completó su trabajo en Belén el año 392-3. La obra consiste en un prólogo y ciento treinta y cinco ...

  5. Apr 5, 2021 · This article examines the revival of the de viris illustribus genre in the twelfth century. These catalogues of the most important Christian authors were modelled on a template created in late ...

  6. Both of these tendencies warrant further discussion. Sententiae: The sententiae in the De viris illustribus can be divided into. four categories: 1) comments aboutfortuna and its effects upon mankind; 2) reflections about human nature; 3) opinions about government; 4) miscellaneous general comments.4.

  7. Jerome's De viris illustribus in the semi-humanistic hand of Milo de Carraria, who was active as a scribe in Italy, Cologne, Bruges and London from 1437 to 1447 (see Duke Humfrey and English humanism in the Fifteenth century: Catalogue of an Exhibition held in the Bodleian Library Oxford (Oxford, 1970), p. 13).