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Autpert and Ambrose
Autpert Ambrose ( Ambroise ) () ( ca.
sh: Autpert Ambrose
* Autpert Ambrose ( c. 730 – 784 ), Frankish Benedictine monk who became abbot of San Vicenzo, Italy

Ambrose and monk
Cam., also referred to as Ambrose of Camaldoli, ( 1386 – October 20, 1439 ) was an Italian monk and theologian, who was a prime supporter of the papal cause in the 15th century.
Manuscripts, Nero A. II, in the British Museum ), written about the middle of the eighth century, probably by an Irish monk in France, is found perhaps the earliest attribution of the Milan use to St. Ambrose, though it quotes the authority of St. Augustine, probably alluding to the passage already mentioned: " Est et alius cursus quem refert beatus augustinus episcopus quod beatus ambrosius propter hereticorum ordinem dissimilem composuit quem in italia antea de cantabatur " ( There is yet another Cursus which the blessed Bishop Augustine says that the blessed Ambrose composed because of the existence of a different use of the heretics, which previously used to be sung in Italy ).
* St. Ambrose Traversari, also referred to as Ambrose of Camaldoli, ( 1386-1439 ), Italian monk and theologian

Ambrose and writer
It was the haunt of writer Ambrose Bierce, who admired its redwoods.
As a religious writer Ambrose has a vividness and freshness of imagination possessed by scarcely any of the Puritan Nonconformists.
* June 24 – Ambrose Gwinnett Bierce, American writer and satirist ( d. ca.
* Ambrose of Alexandria, Christian writer ( approximate date )
Pope had urged him to undertake this task in order to ridicule the Arcadian pastorals of Ambrose Philips, who had been praised by a short-lived contemporary publication The Guardian, to the neglect of Pope's claims as the first pastoral writer of the age and the true English Theocritus.
* In his Devil's Dictionary American journalist and writer Ambrose Bierce included his own version of the Decalogue in which the second commandment is, " No images nor idols make / for Robert Ingersoll to break.
Ambrose E. Gonzales, another writer of South Carolina planter-class background, also wrote original stories in 19th-century Gullah, based on Gullah literary forms.
* January 20 – Isaac Ambrose, Puritan writer ( born 1604 )
The short-story writer and satirist Ambrose Bierce was a Union recruit at the Battle of Philippi.
Mencken provided an outlet for McWilliams's early journalism and floated the idea for his first book, a 1929 biography of popular writer and sometime Californian Ambrose Bierce.
Carey's poem is a satire on fellow writer Ambrose Philips, who had written infantile poems for the young children of his aristocratic patrons.
* Theological development: Saint Ignatius of Antioch, Saint Justin Martyr, the first writer to describe the celebration in Rome of the Eucharist, Saint Ambrose, Saint Thomas Aquinas, the Council of Trent.
) Hazen's relationships with Custer and with his superiors in the post-war army were such that the writer Ambrose Bierce called him " The best hated man I ever knew ".
* Ambrose Bierce, journalist, writer
* B. Traven was the pseudonym of the American writer Ambrose Bierce, who went to Mexico in 1913 to take part in the Mexican Revolution and disappeared there without trace.
Ambrose King Yeo-chi, SBS, JP (; born 14 February 1935 ) is a Hong Kong sociologist, educator, writer and academician.
" An Inhabitant of Carcosa " ( also printed as part of “ Can Such Things Be ?” in the San Francisco Newsletter of December 25, 1886 ) is a short story by 19th-century journalist, short-story writer and occasional horror-story author, Ambrose Bierce.

monk and writer
Udo of Aachen ( 1200 – 1270 ) is a fictional monk, a creation of British technical writer Ray Girvan, who introduced him in an April Fool's hoax article in 1999.
* Aelred, Saint, English monk and spiritual writer
* Adémar de Chabannes, French monk, writer, historian, and musical composer
** Thomas à Kempis, German monk and writer ( d. 1471 )
** Thomas à Kempis, German monk and writer ( d. 1471 )
* Walafrid Strabo, Swabian monk and theological writer
* July 25 – Thomas à Kempis, German monk and writer ( b. 1380 )
* John Climacus, monk and writer ( approximate date )
* The Venerable Bede, English monk, writer and historian ( or 672 )
* November 28 – Yishan Yining, Zen monk and writer from China who taught in Japan ( b. 1247 )
* Bartholomeus Anglicus, English Franciscan monk and encyclopedia writer ( b. before 1203 )
* 1018-1087 Michael Psellos or Psellus a Byzantine monk, writer, philosopher, politician and historian.
François Rabelais (; c. 1494 – 9 April 1553 ) was a major French Renaissance writer, doctor, Renaissance humanist, monk and Greek scholar.
Asser, mentor of King Alfred the Great, and writer of his biography, was a monk at St David's before being called into Alfred's service.
* Claude Anshin Thomas, Zen Buddhist mendicant monk, decorated Vietnam War veteran, writer
Michael Psellos or Psellus ( Greek: Μιχαήλ Ψελλός, Mikhaēl Psellos ) was a Byzantine monk, writer, philosopher, politician and historian.
Another, later, source is the Vita Sancti Wilfrithi written by Eadmer, a 12th-century Anglo-Norman writer and monk from Canterbury.
Ceolfrith later became Abbot of Wearmouth-Jarrow during the time the medieval chronicler and writer Bede was a monk there.
During his long years at Gethsemani Merton changed from the passionately inward-looking young monk of The Seven Storey Mountain, to a more contemplative writer and poet.
Abbot Louis de Blois, O. S. B., ( October 1506 – 7 January 1566 ) was a Flemish monk and mystical writer, generally known under the name of Blosius.
** Thomas Merton, 20th cent., Cistercian monk, spiritual writer
The writer Sigmund Eisner concluded that the name Tristan comes from Drust, son of Talorc, but that the legend of Tristan as we know it, was gathered together by an Irish monk living in North Britain around the early eighth century.
Famous individuals connected with Edessa include: Jacob Baradaeus, the real chief of the Syriac Miaphysites known after him as Jacobites ; Stephen Bar Sudaïli, monk and pantheist, to whom was owing, in Palestine, the last crisis of Origenism in the 6th century ; Jacob, Bishop of Edessa, a fertile writer ( d. 708 ); Theophilus the Maronite, an astronomer, who translated into Syriac verse Homer's Iliad and Odyssey ; the anonymous author of the Chronicon Edessenum ( Chronicle of Edessa ), compiled in 540 ; the writer of the story of " The Man of God ", in the 5th century, which gave rise to the legend of St. Alexius, also known as Alexius of Rome ( because exiled Eastern monks brought his cult and bones to Rome in the 10th century ).

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