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breviary and from
In the list of more important bulls issued by him the famous bull " In Coena Domini " ( 1568 ) takes a leading place ; but amongst others throwing light on Pope Pius V's character and policy there may be mentioned his prohibition of quaestuary ( February 1567 and January 1570 ); the condemnation of Michael Baius, the heretical Professor of Leuven ( 1567 ); the reform of the breviary ( July 1568 ); the denunciation of the " dirum nefas " ( August 1568 ); the banishment of the Jews from the ecclesiastical dominions except Rome and Ancona ( 1569 ); the injunction of the use of the reformed missal ( July 1570 ); the confirmation of the privileges of the Society of Crusaders for the protection of the Inquisition ( October 1570 ); the dogmatic certainty of the Immaculate Conception of the Virgin Mary ( November 1570 ); the suppression of the Fratres Humiliati for profligacy ( February 1571 ); the approbation of the new office of the Blessed Virgin ( March 1571 ); the enforcement of the daily recitation of the Canonical Hours ( September 1571 ); and the purchase of assistance against the Turks by offers of plenary pardon ( March 1572 ).
The classic curved model is seen from the mid-15th century, for instance in a Spanish breviary ( GB-Lbl Add. 18851 ; fig. 1 available online ).
Historian Johann Huizinga writes, “ It is astonishing that the Church, which so rigorously repressed the slightest deviations from dogma of a speculative character, suffered the teaching of this breviary of the aristocracy ( for the Roman de la Rose was nothing else ) to be disseminated with impunity .”
They also state that by character it is an ordinary Catholic reader or breviary of the time, mostly containing paraphrases of New Testament texts ( primarily from the Gospels ), but also some non-Biblical material, like e. g. Seth returning to the gate of Paradise, or prayers to the Virgin Mary.
* liturgical works ( missals, breviaries, lectionaries ) of the Roman Catholic Church from Dubrovnik, 15th and 16th century ( the most famous is a printed breviary from 1520 )
In this moment of difficulty, Rosales recalled that a stampita ( holy picture ) dropped from his breviary ( liturgy of the hours ).
The Confessio is a breviary about " the true Philosophy ", it completes the earlier manifesto ( Fama Fraternitatis, 1614 ) and in some way it comes to justify it, defending it from the voices and accusations already launched to the mysterious Brothers of the " Fraternity of the Rose Cross ".
The third Council of Carthage in 397 forbade anything but Holy Scripture to be read in church ; this rule has been adhered to so far as the liturgical epistle and gospel, and occasional additional lessons in the Roman missal are concerned, but in the divine office, on feasts when nine lessons are read at matins, only the first three lessons are taken from Holy Scripture, the next three being taken from the sermons of ecclesiastical writers and the last three from expositions of the day's gospel ; but sometimes the lives or Passions of the saints, or of some particular saints, were substituted for any or all of these breviary lessons.
He demonstrated his fidelity to his faith by correctly identifying the day of week, from a steadfast following of his breviary, which he had been able to keep through all the years of his captivity.

breviary and Latin
Leaving Rome in 1540, Francis took with him a breviary, a catechism and a Latin book () written by the Croatian humanist Marko Marulić that had become popular in the counter-reformation.
The strepitus ( Latin for " great noise "), made by slamming a book shut, banging a hymnal or breviary against the pew, or stomping on the floor, symbolizes the earthquake that followed Christ's death, although it may have originated as a simple signal to depart.

breviary and is
In general, the word breviary may be used to refer to an abridged version of any text or a brief account or summary of some subject, but is primarily used to refer to the Catholic liturgical book.
Mary, Queen of Scots | Mary Stuart's personal breviary, which she took with her to the scaffold, is preserved in the National Library of Russia of St. Petersburg
The Roman breviary is now published under the title Liturgia Horarum.
A breviary is generally keyed to help the user navigate these overlays in the liturgy.
This book, the " soldier's Bible " ( or " breviary ," according to others ), as Henry IV called it, is one of many books of memoirs produced by the gentry of France at that time.
The psalter is also a part of either the Horologion or the breviary, used to say the Liturgy of the Hours in the Eastern and Western Christian worlds respectively.
In the breviary of 1974 Roman Catholic Liturgy of the Hours, Compline is divided as follows: introduction, an optional examination of conscience or penitential rite, a hymn, psalmody with accompanying antiphons, scriptural reading, the responsory, the Canticle of Simeon, concluding prayer, and benediction.
The typical book of hours is an abbreviated form of the breviary which contained the Divine Office recited in monasteries.
The book of hours is a form of breviary where the prayers are intended for recital at the canonical hours of the liturgical day.

breviary and liturgical
In the following year, 1956, while preparatory studies were being conducted for a general liturgical reform, Pope Pius XII surveyed the opinions of the bishops on the liturgical improvement of the Roman breviary.
By the 12th century this had developed into the breviary, with weekly cycles of psalms, prayers, hymns, antiphons, and readings which changed with the liturgical season.

breviary and book
The breviary and the book by Marulić accompanied Xavier on all of his voyages, and was used as source material for much of his preaching.
One biographer said, " The dictionary was no mere reference book to her ; she read it as a priest his breviary – over and over, page by page, with utter absorption.
One biographer said, " The dictionary was no mere reference book to her ; she read it as a priest his breviary – over and over, page by page, with utter absorption.
The papal condemnation met with a very mixed reception ; in some dioceses the order to prohibit the book was ignored, in others action upon it was postponed pending an independent examination, in yet others ( nine in all ) it was at once obeyed for political reasons, though even in these the forbidden book became the breviary of the governments.
Among these was the first book printed in modern Bulgarian, the breviary Abagar published in Rome in 1651 by Filip Stanislavov, bishop of Nikopol.

breviary and canonical
By the 14th century, the breviary contained the entire text of the canonical hours.
By the 14th century, the breviary contained the entire text of the canonical hours.

breviary and Psalms
Pope Pius X's reform of the breviary included radical changes in the office of Matins, reducing on all days the number of psalms or portions of psalms to nine and abandoning the tradition of reserving Psalms 1-108 for Matins.

breviary and for
The Franciscans sought a one-volume breviary for its friars to use during travels, so the order adopted the Breviarium Curiae, but substituting the Gallican Psalter for the Roman.
The Franciscans sought a one-volume breviary for its friars to use during travels, so the order adopted the Breviarium Curiae, but substituting the Gallican Psalter for the Roman.

breviary and use
Liturgie des Bisthums Augsburg ) to have remained in the diocese of Augsburg down to its last breviary of 1584, and according to Catena ( Cantù, Milano e il suo territorio, 118 ) the use of Capua in the time of St. Charles Borromeo had some resemblance to that of Milan.

breviary and by
" The portrait of the almoner " or " The breviary " ( 1886 ) by Jules-Alexis Muenier.
Cardinal Jiménez de Cisneros ( d. 1517 ) published in 1500 a Mozarabic missal, and two years later a breviary, both of which were formally approved by Pope Julius II.

breviary and bishops
After duly weighing the answers of the bishops, he judged that it was time to attack the problem of a general and systematic revision of the rubrics of the breviary and missal.

breviary and priests
He also edited and published the first printed editions of the missal ( in 1500 ) and the breviary ( in 1502 ) of the Mozarabic rite and established a chapel with a college of thirteen priests to celebrate the Mozarabic divine office and mass each day in the Cathedral of Toledo.

breviary and Divine
St. Bridget in the religious habit and the crown of a Bridgettine nun, in a 1476 breviary of the form of the Liturgy of the Hours | Divine Office unique to her Order

breviary and .
This word breviary ( Lat.
In many places, every diocese, order or ecclesiastical province maintained its own edition of the breviary.
The Holy See did not issue an official Roman breviary until the 11th century, as part of the reforms that were designed to bring all the variant usages of Christian churches in the West into conformity.
The Franciscans gradually spread this breviary throughout Europe.
Pope Nicholas III would then adopt the widely-used Franciscan breviary to be the breviary used in Rome.
* Le Bréviaire de Flamel ( Flamel's breviary ), manuscript BnF MS. Français 14765

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