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Saint and Anselm
Alexander is known for reflecting the works of several other Middle Age thinkers, especially those of Saint Anselm, and Saint Augustine.
* Saint Anselm Abbey
* Saint Anselm College
Saint Anselm College, a traditional New England liberal arts college
In panic owing to serious illness in 1093, William nominated as archbishop another Norman-Italian, Saint Anselm of Canterbury — considered the greatest theologian of his generation — but this led to a long period of animosity between Church and State, Anselm being a stronger supporter of the Gregorian reforms in the Church than Lanfranc.
* Anselm, Saint, Abbot of Bec and Archbishop of Canterbury
* Saint Anselm, reputed founder of scholasticism and creator of the ontological argument
Saint Anselm may be
* Saint Anselm College-a Benedictine, Catholic liberal arts college in Goffstown, New Hampshire.
* Saint Anselm Abbey-a Benedictine Abbey of monks in Goffstown, New Hampshire
* Saint Anselm of Canterbury
* Saint Anselm of Lucca the Younger
* Saint Anselm, Duke of Friuli
* Saint Anselm of Canterbury
On June 3 and June 5, CNN teamed up with Saint Anselm College to sponsor the New Hampshire Republican and Democratic Debates.
Teleology was explored by Plato and Aristotle, by Saint Anselm around 1000 AD, and later by Immanuel Kant in his Critique of Judgment.
It is thought that Archbishop ( later Saint ) Anselm stayed in the manor house of St Mary's church.
* Anselm of Canterbury, later Saint Anselm, was stationed in Hayes by King William II in 1095
Anselm Weber took over construction on October 11, 1897, adopting the name Saint Michaels for the area ( from Navajo Tsʼíhootso: " Green Meadow ").
The town is home to Saint Anselm College ( and its New Hampshire Institute of Politics ) and the New Hampshire State Prison for Women.
Alumni Hall at Saint Anselm College near the Goffstown-Manchester-Bedford borders.

Saint and Canterbury
Ealdred encouraged Folcard, a monk of Canterbury, to write the Life Saint John of Beverley.
A Life of Saint Ælfheah in prose and verse was written by a Canterbury monk named Osbern, at Lanfranc's request.
The tales ( mostly written in verse although some are in prose ) are presented as part of a story-telling contest by a group of pilgrims as they travel together on a journey from Southwark to the shrine of Saint Thomas Becket at Canterbury Cathedral.
Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales recounts the tales told by pilgrims on their way to Canterbury and the shrine of Saint Thomas Becket.
He also ordained Saint Willibrord as bishop of the Frisians, and the Liber Pontificalis states he also ordained Berhtwald as Archbishop of Canterbury.
* Edmund of Abingdon, Saint, theologian, Archbishop of Canterbury
* Thomas Becket, Saint, Archbishop of Canterbury and Chancellor of England
* Saint Laurence becomes Archbishop of Canterbury.
* Saint Bregwin is appointed Archbishop of Canterbury.
* Saint Thomas Becket is buried at Canterbury and canonized.
* January 9 – Saint Adrian of Canterbury
* September 3 – Saint Honorius, Archbishop of Canterbury
Thomas Becket ( also known as Saint Thomas of Canterbury, Thomas of London, and later Thomas à Becket ; circa 1118 – 29 December 1170 ) was Archbishop of Canterbury from 1162 until his murder in 1170.
Edmund Rich ( also known as Saint Edmund or Eadmund of Canterbury, and as Saint Edmund of Abingdon ) ( 1175 – 1240 ) was a 13th century Archbishop of Canterbury in England.
* Marsala Dome ( XVII secolo ) dedicated to Saint Thomas of Canterbury and built on the Norman implant of 1176.

Saint and medieval
* On Saint Nicholas Day ( 6 December ), the Niklasmarkt ( Nicholas Market ) commemorates the Niklasspende, a medieval foundation for the poor.
Tradition relates that in 814, the body of Saint James the Greater was discovered in Compostela and that Alfonso was the first pilgrim to that famous medieval ( and modern ) shrine.
Saint Thomas Aquinas's aesthetic is probably the most famous and influential theory among medieval authors, having been the subject of much scrutiny in the wake of the neo-Scholastic revival of the late 19th and early 20th centuries and even having received the approbation of the celebrated Modernist writer, James Joyce.
File: British Museum Royal Gold Cup. jpg | Room 40-Royal Gold Cup or Saint Agnes Cup, c. AD 1370-80 ( generally agreed to be the outstanding surviving example of late medieval French plate )
The medieval universities of Western Christendom were well-integrated across all of Western Europe, encouraged freedom of enquiry and produced a great variety of fine scholars and natural philosophers, including Thomas Aquinas of the University of Naples, Robert Grosseteste of the University of Oxford, an early expositor of a systematic method of scientific experimentation ; and Saint Albert the Great, a pioneer of biological field research The University of Bologne is considered the oldest continually operating university.
Saint Thomas Aquinas, the greatest of the medieval scholastics, refused to admit the Immaculate Conception, on the ground that, unless the Blessed Virgin had at one time or other been one of the sinful, she could not justly be said to have been redeemed by Christ.
Poets in medieval Iceland even treated Christian themes using the traditional repertoire of kennings complete with allusions to heathen myths and aristocratic epithets for saints: Þrúðr falda “ goddess of headdresses ” = “ Saint Catherine ” ( Kálfr Hallsson: Kátrínardrápa 4 ).
Their cultural heritage was acquired and developed in medieval Bulgaria, where after 885 the region of Ohrid became a significant ecclesiastical center with the nomination of the Saint Clement of Ohrid for " first archbishop in Bulgarian language " with residence in this region.
During the medieval period Saint Dionysius the Areopagite and Saint Denis of Paris were considered to be the same " Dionysius " who had been converted by Saint Paul in Acts 17: 34.
The French names of pears grown in English medieval gardens suggest that their reputation, at the least, was French ; a favored variety in the accounts was named for Saint Rule or Regul ', Bishop of Senlis.
The Abbey library of Saint Gall is recognized as one of the richest medieval libraries in the world.
) Amerigo itself is an Italian form of the medieval Latin Emericus ( see also Saint Emeric of Hungary ), which through the German form Heinrich ( in English, Henry ) derived from the Germanic name Haimirich .< ref >
It is thus designated in several medieval texts mentioned by the Bollandists ( e. g. an old Missal of Augsburg has a Mass " De S. Veronica seu Vultus Domini ") of (" Saint Veronica, or the Face of the Lord "), and Matthew of Westminster speaks of the imprint of the image of the Savior which is called Veronica: " Effigies Domenici vultus quae Veronica nuncupatur " (" effigy of the face of the Lord which is called a Veronica ").
In the end of the 11th century, the village curled around a medieval castle and the Saint Julien church.
The position could be fraught with personal dangers in the violent political life of the medieval commune: in 1252 Milanese heretics assassinated the Church's Inquisitor, later known as Saint Peter Martyr, at a ford in the nearby contado ; the killers bribed their way to freedom, and in the ensuing riot the podestà was very nearly lynched.
The story of Little Saint Hugh became well known through medieval ballad poetry.
The national saint is St Vladimir and many sources claim it's Vladimir I of Kiev, but due to the Balkan likeness, the more appropriate would be Saint Jovan Vladimir, a ruler later proclaimed saint, prince of Duklja, the medieval state of Montenegro also occupying the Shkoder region in north Albania.
Saint Otto of Bamberg (, ; 1060 or 1061 – 30 June 1139 ) was a medieval German bishop and missionary who, as papal legate, converted much of Pomerania to Christianity.
During the later medieval period the town was also called St John's Toun or Saint Johnstoun by its inhabitants in reference to the main church dedicated to St John the Baptist.
During much of the later medieval period it was known colloquially by its Scots-speaking inhabitants as " St. John's Toun " or " Saint Johnstoun " because the church at the centre of the parish was dedicated to St. John the Baptist.
* Saint Sava, Serbian medieval prince turned monk ( 1176-1235 )
The Cathedral Basilica of Saint Denis (, or simply Basilique Saint-Denis, previously the Abbaye de Saint-Denis ) is a large medieval abbey church in the commune of Saint-Denis, now a northern suburb of Paris.

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