Extractions: 4. Defuncto dehinc Arichiso, consilio habito Beneventanorum magnates legatos ad Karlum destinarunt, multi eum flagitantes precibus, ut iam fatum Grimoaldum, quem genitore obsidem iam pridem susceperat, sibi praeesse concedere dignaretur. Quorum petitionibus rex annuens, illic continuo praedictum contulit virum, simulque ius regendi. principatus largitus est, set prius eum sacramento huiusmodi vinxit, ut Langobardorum menium tonderi faceret, cartas vero nummosque sui nominis caracteribus superscribi semper iuberet. Accepta denique licentia repedandi, a Beneventi civibus magno cum gaudio exceptus est. In suos aureos eiusque nomine aliquamdiu figurari placuit, scedas vero similiter aliquanto iussit exarari tempore, reliqua autem pro nichil duxit observanda; mox rebellionis iurgium initiavit. 5. Hoc etiam tempestate idem Grimoalt neptem augusti Achivorum in coniugium sumpsit, nomine Wantiam; set nescitur, quam ob rem ad fructum minime pervenit. In tantum enim odium primus eorum avidus prorupit amor, ut sumta occasione Francorum circumquaque se repugnancium, more Hebreico sponte eam a se sequestraret; dato ei libello repudii, ad proprios lares eam vi transvexit. Hoc quidem callide licet egerit, efferitatem tamen supradictarum barbararum gentium sedare minime quivit; nam tellures Teatensium et urbes a dominio Beneventanorum tunc subtractae sunt usque in praesens, necnon et Nuceriae urbs tunc capta est, set celeriter a fato Grimoaldo acquisita est, apprehenso in ea Guinichiso duce Spolitensium cum omnibus bellatoribus inibi repertis.
IG Format. 21, LAST ANNOTATION UPDATE) ; DE GLOBIN V. ; OS PETROMYZON marinus (SEA LAMPREY). FT VARIANT 126 126 V G (IN DHONBURI/neapolis; UNSTABLE; ; FT BETA http://bmerc-www.bu.edu/examples/output/horsepeps.html
Dasypodius' Dictionary P Translate this page Item, Die statt in Italia / neapolis genant. Phoca, latinè uitulus marinus,Ein mehr kalb, piscis est. Phocæa, Ein statt in Phrygia. http://www.staff.ncl.ac.uk/jon.west/dasypodius/das_dicp_data.htm
Extractions: (b) a copy of this notice shall precede the work or the excerpt. Pabulum, Vichfu ter. Pabularis, e, Dz zu fu ter geho ret. Pabulor, aris, Ich samle fu ter. Item, Ich weyde. Pabulator, Ein fu tersamler . Pabulatio, Die fu tersamlung / oder weyde. Pachynus, uel Pachynum, Ein vorberg oder spitz Sicilie gegen Griechen land. illo paciscitur, Er macht mit dem ein anstall. Et Depaciscor compo. idem. Iam depacisci mortem cupio, Tere . Ich wo lte jetz lieber sterben. Paco, as, Ich miltere / befryde / versu ne. +1536a: Omni pacata Gallia, So gantz Gallien zu ru wen gestellet was. Togatam, oder dz Hertzogthu mb Meylandt vn tteren zu ehre. Aliquando pro Apolline. , Ein schimpff werck / oder lecherlich / kurtzweilige gedicht. ret werden. Aliquando significat, Ein eygen dienstman. Mancipium. Ped ei ei ei ei ber der kinden in leiblichen u bungen +1536a: Aliquando pro ludi magistro. tigkeyt / gestanck / wu st. geho ret geho ret us statt. Pagasa, Ein stat in Thessalia / bey welcher das schiff argo gemachet ist. Hinc Pagesus, a, um, Das dar zu geho ret.
Index Of Netherlanders In America 84072133 Dolton), Ill., 550 Dame, PK, 788 Danaher Holton Company (Min neapolis), 737 Danckaerts Iowa,502 Lyster family, 55 M Maas, JP, 895 Maas, marinus, 818, 823 http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/becites/genealogy/immigrant/84072133.idx.html
Extractions: Go to: A B C D ... Z A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q Quack, H. P. G., 17, 86, 591 Quakers, 19, 20, 21, 25, 27, 426 Quarles de Quarles, 962 Queens, N.Y., 832 Queens College, 40, 53, 62. See also Rutgers College Queen Wilhelmina Chair, Co- lumbia University, 885 Queen Wilhelmina Colony (Han- ford, Cal.), 655-656 Quick, Herbert, 56, 1007 Quintus, Jacob, 311, 419 R S T U V W Y Yakima, Wash., 862 Yakima Valley, Wash., 687-689 Yankee-Dutch, 917, 951-955, 1008 Yellowstone River Valley, 697, 698 Yff, Thomas, 892 (photo) Yntema, H., 860, 885 Yonkers, N.Y., 15 Yosemite Colony, Cal., 647 Young Calvinist, The, 932, 937 (photo) Young, Levi Edgar, 594 Young Men's Christian Associa- tion (Y.M.C.A.), 905 Ypma, Marten A., 128, 149, 211, 244, 250, 251, 257, 299, 313, 314, 361, 362, 371 Yzenbaard, John, xxxii Yzermans, H. W., 731-733, 735 Z Sources cited Table of Contents Catalog record and links to related information from the Library of Congress catalog
Extractions: Feasts and Saints Days The Saints of the Orthodox Church The Feasts of Saints Every day of the year the Church remembers and honors one or more of the holy men and women who dedicated themselves to the Lord with exemplary faith and perseverance. Besides the Theotokos and St. John the Baptist, whose several feasts dot the festal calendar, the Orthodox Church honors and venerates angels, martyrs, apostles, prophets, confessors, virgins, ascetics, bishops and other clergy. The festivals of the apostles and those called equal to the apostles, the great martyrs and the great teachers and bishops of the Church are more universally observed. The first recorded instance of a feast in honor of a saint comes to us from the middle of the second century. The primitive observance of feasts of saints consisted primarily of the remembrance of local martyrs and bishops; the feast was usually attached to their burial place. The placing of the relics of saints into consecrated Holy Tables stems from this ancient custom. The saints are the concrete evidence of the transfiguring power of the Gospel. They are the first fruits of the heavenly life, the forerunners of the Kingdom to come. These festivals bring into clear focus for every believer the true meaning of discipleship; "grant me no more than to be a sacrifice for God ... It is not that I want merely to be called a Christian, but actually to be one" (St. Ignatius of Antioch). According to an ancient liturgical custom, Orthodox parents name their newborn infants on the eighth day after birth. The name is traditionally chosen from the list of saints, as a sign of the child's entry into the unity of the Church and into the arena of the spiritual warfare which will commence in earnest with the sacrament of baptism.
Brooklyn Public Library /All Locations See marinus, 5th cent. 1 Marinos, ha-Shomroni, 5th cent. See marinus,5th cent. 1 Marinos, of neapolis, 5th cent. See marinus, 5th cent. http://catalog.brooklynpubliclibrary.org:90/kids/1899,1901/search/aMarino, Umber
Brooklyn Public Library /All Locations 198? 1 marinus, 5th cent. 4 entries 4 marinus, of Flavia neapolis See marinus,5th cent. 1 marinus, of Samaria, 5th cent. See marinus, 5th cent. http://catalog.brooklynpubliclibrary.org:90/kids/1899,1901/search/aMarino, Umber
Horace PER TOTAM DOMUM SPARGENS AVERNALIS AQUAS, HORRET CAPILLIS UT marinus ASPERIS ECHINUS MASCULAELIBIDINIS ARIMINENSEM FOLIAM ET OTIOSA CREDIDIT neapolis ET OMNE http://students.ou.edu/G/Ryan.D.Green-2/Horace.html
INDEX TO ROOTS AND LEAVES QUARTERLY 1989-1992; Record 4078 Mechling, JH 89 2 4715 Meckling, JH 89 2 4716 Medersen, marinus Valdemar 92 63 Eva 89 62, 69 5241 Neale, David 91 36 5242 neapolis, NE 90 http://searches.rootsweb.com/usgenweb/archives/ne/state/publications/roots/inxrl
GREEK PHILOSOPHY marinus (5th century AD) neapolis in Samaria succeeded Proclus in theheadship of the School. He wrote a Life of Proclus and distinguished http://fromdeathtolife.org/cphil/postar2.html
Extractions: Philo (2nd-1st century B.C.) [Larissa] was a disciple of Clitomachus. He was head of the Fourth or Very New Academy from about 110 B.C. to about 88 B.C. He lectured in Rome and was known to Cicero. He began with moderately skeptical position, held by his predecessors, Arcesilas and Carneades, he developed a position called "dogmatism," but which appears to have been an anticipation of "common sense realism," the view that we are able to perceive the external world directly, and that sense data either do not exist or play a subordinate role in perception. It was this position that characterized the Fourth Academy. His point seems to have been that skepticism can never be more than a methodological gambit, and behind it stands the eulogon , that is, the probable or the reasonable. Thus the mind has every possibility of being related to some truths. What is true with respect to knowledge holds also with respect to ethics. Positive moral principles may be discovered behind the facade of moral skepticism. Antiochus (?B.C.-68 B.C.) [Ascalon] was a disciple of Philo of Larissa whom he succeeded as head of the Fourth Academy, holding this position from 88 B.C. until his death in 68 B.C. The skepticism of the Second and Third Academies had by then dissipated, and Antiochus argued against skepticism that the intellect had in itself a sufficient test of truth. Antiochus related Plato and Aristotle in the manner of the middle Stoics, Panaetius and Posidonius. He was called by Cicero an eclectic Stoic.
The Proclus Page After Proclus. After him, his succession fell upon marinus, from Neapolisin Palestine. Truly, Proclus was afraid with the weakness http://www.goddess-athena.org/Encyclopedia/Friends/Proclus/Proclus_m.htm
Extractions: A fter this, he went to Alexandria, Egypt, where the rector Leonas made him his favorite pupil. There he showed a great gift towards the study of words. At the same time he studied the lessons of the grammarian Orion and made progresses in the study of Latin. But Greek, his maternal language, was the one of all his writings.
DPhA M marinus DENEAPOLIS, 79, MARIUS, - VICTOR (CLAUDIUS MARIUS-). 80, MARIUS (C. -), MARIUS(M. -), http://upr_76.vjf.cnrs.fr/Instruments_travail/Dict_philosophes/DPhA_M.html
Extractions: No Nom du philosophe -]MON MACARIUS MAGNES APOLOGETE MACEDO AMI D'AULU-GELLE MACEDO (CALPURNIUS COLLEGA -) MACEDONIUS DEDIC. DE JAMBLIQUE MACEDONIUS DE CYR MACHARIUS MACRINE MACROBIUS MACROBIUS (AMBROSIUS THEOD.-) MAECENAS (C. -) MECENE MAECIUS MAERCIANUS MAGES MAGNES MAGNILLA D'APOLLONIE (MYSIE) MAGNUS MAGNUS D'APOLLONIE (MYSIE) MAIANDRIOS DE MILET (?) MALCHION A ANTIOCHE MALCHOS MALION DE DARDANIE MALKOS MAMERCOS GEOMETRE MAMMARION MAMMERTUS (CLAUDIANUS) MANAICHMOS D'ALOPECONNESE MANDANIS GYMNOSOPHISTE MANDROLYTOS DE PRIENE DISC. DE THALES MANETHOS OU MANETHON DE SEBENNYTOS / DIOSPOLIS MANILIUS (M. -) ASTRONOME (COMP. RE M 18) MANIPPOS MARSIPOS MANLIUS MANLIUS TORQUATUS (LUCIUS -) FILS MANLIUS TORQUATUS (LUCIUS -) PERE MANLIUS VOPISCUS (P. -) POETE [Manilius?] MARAS DE BEROE (SYRIE) MARC DE BYZANCE (MARKOS) SOPHISTE MARC-AURELE (M. ANNIUS VERUS) MARCELLA EPOUSE DE PORPHYRE MARCELLINUS MARCELLUS (?) MARCELLUS (CLAUDIUS -) MARCELLUS (MARCUS CLAUDIUS -) DISC. DE CRATIPPE MARCELLUS (MARCUS CLAUDIUS -) NEVEU D'AUGUSTE MARCELLUS (NONIUS -) GRAMMAIRIEN MARCELLUS DE CARTHAGE (T. -)
Sichem Area marinus, stammte ausNeapolis in Palästina, das beim Berg mit Namen Argarizos erbaut ist ,auf http://members.aon.at/bjaros/SichemArea.htm
ECCLESIAE OCCIDENTALIS MONUMENTA IURIS ANTIQUISSIMA Lucius of neapolis in Pisidia (at C. of Constantinople 381) 2.4567.114. Marinusof Arles (at C. of Arles 314) 1.381.(2); 402.8; 396; 433.XVIII.4. http://www.creighton.edu/~pam44013/Index.htm
Extractions: ECCLESIAE OCCIDENTALIS MONUMENTA IURIS ANTIQUISSIMA ed. C.H. Turner (Oxford, 1899-1939) Index of Names by Philip R. Amidon, S.J. Creighton University amidon@creighton.edu There are two difficulties in the way to making an index to Ecclesiae Occidentalis Monumenta Iuris Antiquissima EOMIA ). One is the difference between the general plan of the work on the one hand, and the chronological sequence in which its several parts were published on the other. EOMIA is in two tomi , the first of which is divided into fasciculi , and those further into partes ; the second tomus is divided immediately into partes . The pagination throughout each tomus is consecutive, but the chronological order of publication of the several sections within each one does not always correspond to the general plan; thus, for instance, the section which bears the latest date of publication actually has its place in the middle of the first tomus . Those libraries which waited out the forty years between the appearance of the first section and that of the last, could finally bind the two tomi as two volumes, according to the editor's original plan and the order of pagination, but, alas, some of them simply bound the sections into a certain number of volumes in the chronological order in which they were received. The resulting disarrangement can easily be imagined.
Extractions: ... der Post, 20.00 S.: u.a. Symbol des Postscheckdienstes Estland 10.6.2002 10 Jahre eigenes Geld (Block, Abb. Banknoten) San Marino 3.6.2002 10 Jahre Vertrag von Maastricht Ägypten 15.5.2002 50 ... Dukat von 1285, genueser Genovino und florentinischer Fiorino von 1252 - Eurozeichen - Lire und 1-Euro-Münze) Aland 2.1.2002 Einführung Euro, 1 Wert, 0,60 St. Pierre und Miquelon 1.1 ... Entwicklungsbank, 360 $ Spanien 18.10.1999 Internationaler Kongress der Museen für Geld und Bankwesen, Abbildung Gemälde der Geldwechsler und seine Frau von Marinus Claesz van ... ... Aktion Kleingeld geht weiter: Noch immer treffen täglich in der MIVA-Zentrale in Stadl-Paura alte Schilling-Münzen aus Österreich, D-Mark, Lire, Peseten und andere Währungen aus vielen Ländern ein. Rund fünf Tonnen altes Geld im Wert von mehr als 120.000 Euro haben freiwillige Helferinnen und Helfer bisher sortiert. Die vielen Säcke und Schachteln mit Münzen und ...
Veilinghuis Postma Groningen Veiling 42 Wonderlijcke Op, ende Ondergang, van Tomaso Aniello, met de beroerten totNeapolis. In het Italiaans beschreven. JANSSEN, marinus. Rotterdam. http://www.postma.nl/veiling42.html
Extractions: maandag 10 mei vanaf 13.00 uur 1 SCHOOLPLAAT; KOEKKOEK, M.A. Te midden van sneeuw en ijs. Groningen-Djakarta, J.B. Wolters. Op karton. 2 PICARDT, J. Korte beschryvinge van eenige vergetene en verborgene antiquiteiten der provintien en landen gelegen tusschen de Noord-Zee, de Yssel, Emse en Lippe. Waar bevoegt zyn annales Drenthiae (...). 2e dr. Groningn, Joannes Cost, 1731. [XVI], 452, [XIIL] p. Cont. h.leer. (Voorplat iets los. Rug besch.). * Muller 809; Waller 616 4 PRIJSBAND; LENNEP, D.J. Hesiodi opera et dies (...). Amsterdam, J. Mueller, 1847. (XII), 94, 183 p. H.leer met voorplat en goudingelegd wapen van Amsterdam. 5 CIEGLERUS, G. Konst-spiegel der weereldlikke vermaken. Vertoondende het wonderlik gewoel der kaizeren, koningen, vorsten en geleerde lieden (...). Met gegr. titelp. en 14 gegr. platen (de meeste platen met smalle of in plaat afgesneden). Amsterdam, N. Franzen, 1652. [X], 621, [XXI] p. Cont. perk. 12mo. (p. 105-106 rechts onderin besch. met licht tekstverlies. Plaat op p. 504 ingescheurd en slecht gerep.).
Langobarden Translate this page magno imperatore eius filio anno quinto die secunda mensis iulii indictione hoctabaneapolis. iterum et alio leone qui dicitur sola, quamque marinus et petrus http://www.oeaw.ac.at/gema/lango_cavensis_12.htm
Extractions: Quellen zur Langobardengeschichte / Sources of Lombard History Codex cavensis diplomaticus Volume I Einleitung p.1-p. p.21-p.40 p.41-p.60 ... p.201-p.220 p.221-p.240 p.241-p.260 p.261-p.270 CLXXI. A.D.946 CLXXII. A.D.946 ... CLXXXV. A.D.954 p. CLXXI. A. D. 946. p. restaurare stetimus. si bero nos vel nostris eredibus quesierimus ec dibisionem contrare aut remobere, obligabimus per partes, ut qui taliter egere quesierint, componere illi qui in ista dibisione firmiter permanserit, centum auri solidos constantinos, et questio illius tacita exinde manere, et sortis ipse inter nos omni tempore firme et stabilis permanead. + ego romoaldus notarius per indicatione teohderici notarii genitori meo unc brebem scripsi + ego qui supra friderisi + ego iohannes notarius me subscripsi + ego theodericus notarius interfui.
Latein - Deutsch M - P See; neapolis=Neapel; neapolis in Palatinatu=Neustadt an der Weinstraße; neapolis http://www.hld-soft.de/latdeump.htm
The Mystery Of The Trinity-Part 6 Christian Biblical Church of God. Victorinus Circa 281/291370 A.D. The Bridge Between Greek and Latin Neoplatonism. A Trinitarian Syncretist. In Rome, Victorinus (d.c. A.D. immediate successor http://www.cbcg.org/mystery_trinity6.htm
Extractions: Christian Biblical Church of God Victorinus Circa 281/291-370 A.D. The Bridge Between Greek and Latin Neoplatonism A Trinitarian Syncretist In Rome, Victorinus (d.c. A.D. 370), an African by birth and a teacher of rhetoric, translated some of the works of the earlier Neoplatonists into Latin, then at last moved from Neoplatonism into Christianity (Jerome, Illustrious Men 101). Augustine (A.D. 354-430) read the translations of Victorinus and was deeply influenced by Neoplatonism as he likewise moved on (baptized in 387) into the Christian faith ( Confessions 8.2). He later declared that of all other philosophers none come nearer to us than the Platonists ( City of God 8.5). Likewise the Roman Christian theologian Boethius (c.A.D. 470-525), who wrote commentaries on works of Porphyry and translated Porphyrys Isagoge, reflects Neoplatonism in his own major work On the Consolation of Philosophy . Together Augustine and Boethius were mainly responsible for the introduction of Neoplatonic ideas into Latin Christianity. Nevertheless Roman Neoplatonism as a school was at end by the latter part of the sixth century (Finegan, , p. 184).