Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Absolution" ¶ 25
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Assemani and their
Assemani and his brother between them laid the foundations of modern historical research with their work on publishing the correct editions of various early and Middle Age writers as well as their work on the decrees of the various general, national, and provincial councils.

Assemani and ),
* Assemani alluded to a title on the Borgian globe, Mughammid ( مغمد ), or Muliammir al Thurayya ( ملىمرٱلطرى ), the Concealer of the Pleiades, which, from its location, may be for this star.
Giuseppe Simone Assemani ( or Yusuf ibn Sim ' an as-Sim ' ani,, ), 1687 – 1768, was a Lebanese Maronite orientalist.
Stefano Evodio Assemani, ( 1707-circa 1782 ), Lebanese orientalist, nephew of Giuseppe Simone Assemani and Giuseppe Luigi Assemani, was the chief assistant of his uncle Giuseppe Simone in his work in the Vatican library.
Simone Assemani ( 1752 – 1820 ), grand-nephew of Giuseppe Simone Assemani, was born in Rome.
* Stefano Evodio Assemani ( 1709-1782 ), nephew of Joseph Simon
* Giuseppe Luigi Assemani ( 1710-1782 ), brother of Joseph Simon
* Simone Assemani ( 1752-1820 ), grandnephew of Joseph Simon

Assemani and also
His brother was Archbishop Giuseppe Simone Assemani whom he helped with his writings ; besides assisting his brother he also studied in Rome and was appointed by the Pope, firstly as the Professor of Syriac at the Sapienza and later as the Professor of liturgy by Pope Benedict XIV.
The Pope also made Assemani a member of the Academy for Historic Research which had just been established.

Assemani and have
He was credited by Joseph Simon Assemani with the authorship of the Zuqnin Chronicle, an anonymous eighth-century Syriac history, but this attribution is now known to have been mistaken.

Assemani and on
Giuseppe Simone Assemani was born on 27 August 1687 in Hasroun, Mount Lebanon.
* D. A. Morozov, E. S. Gerasimova, Carolus Rali Dadichi and the “ Bibliotheca orientalis ” by J. S. Assemani: A letter of the Oriental author on the popularization of Syriac literature in Europe ( in Russian ).
Giuseppe Luigi Assemani ( 1710 on Mount Lebanon Tripoli – February 9, 1782 in Rome ) was a Lebanese orientalist and a Professor of Oriental languages at Rome.

Assemani and .
* 1782 – Joseph Aloysius Assemani, Lebanese orientalist ( b. 1710 )
He dispatched Joseph Simeon Assemani to the East for the twofold purpose of continuing his search for manuscripts and presiding as legate over a national council of Maronites.
* February 9 – Joseph Aloysius Assemani, Syrian orientalist ( b. 1710 )
The date of Jacobus's consecrated is uncertain, but that given by Assemani ( AD 541 ) is probably correct.
i. 142ff., and cf Assemani, Bib.
He has left us an autobiography, to be found in Assemani, Biblioth.
In 1715 the Maronite scholar Joseph Simon Assemani discovered a manuscript ( now MS Vatican Syriac 162 ) in the monastery of Saint Mary of the Syrians ( Deir al-Suryani ) in the Nitrian Desert in Egypt, containing what he thought was a partial text of the Annals of Dionysius.
Some Lebanese sources, such as Giuseppe Simone Assemani and Maronite bishop Yusef al-Dibs believe he was buried Arethusa or modern-day al-Rastan along the Orontes River in Syria, while others like Jesuit priest Henri Lammens claim he is buried in Brad village to the north of Aleppo.
* Josephi Simoni Assemani De Syris monophysitis dissertatio.
* Josephi Simonii Assemani Quae hactenus typis prodierunt opera omnia.
* Nuova grammatica per apprendere agevolmente la lingua greca composta da monsignor Giuseppe Simonio Assemani.
Assemani came from a well known family of Lebanese Maronites that included several notable Orientalists.

Renaudot and their
The Renaudot jurors always pick an alternative laureate in case their first choice is awarded the Prix Goncourt.

Renaudot and ),
* Théophraste Renaudot ( 1586 – 1653 ), medical practitioner, inventor of French written press, journalist, philanthropist
To him too is due a useful edition of the very curious records of early Arab intercourse with China of which Eusèbe Renaudot had given but an imperfect translation ( Relation des voyages, etc., 1845 ), and various other essays illustrating the ancient and medieval geography of the East.
He published Parias ( Parias ), Lunes de Fiel ( adapted to film by Roman Polanski ) and Les voleurs de beauté ( The beauty stealers ) ( Prix Renaudot in 1997 ).

Renaudot and have
His episcopate is said to have lasted 37 years, and his life, according to Renaudot, 73 years.

Renaudot and on
He won the Prix Interallié in 2003 for his novel Windows on the World and the Prix Renaudot in 2009 for his book Un roman français.
The Prix Renaudot, while not officially related to the Prix Goncourt, is a kind of complement to it, announcing its laureate at the same time and place as the Prix Goncourt, namely on the first Tuesday of November at the Drouant restaurant in Paris.

Renaudot and .
Perec's first novel, Les Choses ( Things: A Story of the Sixties ) was awarded the Prix Renaudot in 1965.
For his work, Perec won the Prix Renaudot in 1965, the Prix Jean Vigo in 1974, the Prix Médicis in 1978.
The Prix Renaudot is announced at the same ceremony as the Prix Goncourt.
" The controversy was a heated and protracted one and while no settlement was arrived at, the later Oriental Orthodox claim the victory for Severus ( Renaudot, p. 129 ).
In literature, his first novel was Brûlebois ( 1926 ) and in 1929 La Table aux crevés won the Prix Renaudot.
Eusèbe Renaudot ( July 20, 1646 – September 7, 1720 ) was a French theologian and Orientalist.
Renaudot was born in Paris, and brought up and educated for a career in the church.
Les amitiés particulières is a 1943 novel by French writer Roger Peyrefitte, probably his best known work today, which won the coveted prix Renaudot.
He has won many literary awards for his work, including the Prix Apollo, the Prix Fénéon and the Prix Renaudot.
His novel Un roman français was awarded the Prix Renaudot in November 2009.
* L ' amour les yeux fermés ( Love With Closed Eyes ): This novel, which won the Renaudot Prize, is the account of the destruction of a city which has reached the peak of its development and refinement and which is suffering from an insidious evil.
The Prix Théophraste-Renaudot or Prix Renaudot () is a French literary award which was created in 1926 by ten art critics awaiting the results of the deliberation of the jury of the Prix Goncourt.
The prize is named after Théophraste Renaudot, who created the first French newspaper in 1631.
Théophraste Renaudot ( 1586 – 25 October 1653 ) was a French physician, philanthropist, and journalist.
Born in Loudun, Renaudot received a doctorate of medicine from the University of Montpellier in 1606.
In the 1610s, Richelieu became more powerful and Renaudot followed him to Paris.
Renaudot, a born protestant, converted to catholicism.
In 1630, Renaudot opened the bureau d ' adresse et de rencontre, where prospective employers and employees could find each other.
Renaudot opened the mont-de-piété, the first pawnshop in Paris, in 1637.

0.148 seconds.