Biblio
TOTAL NUMBER OF BIBLIO IN CORPUS: 4854
Displaying 2501 - 2520 of 4854Nid | Author(s)/Editor(s) | Year | Title | Ref type |
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11141 | Petrus, Diaconus | 1965 |
Petrus, Diaconus, Liber de locis sanctis, in: Itineraria et alia geographica, Corpus Christianorum, Series Latina 175, edited by Fraipont, I. and Weber, R., Turnhout, 1965: 37–47; 93–103; 252–278.
♦ A guide to the Holy Land, compiled by Peter, a monk at Montecassino, in 1137. Based on Beda, LS (q.v.); on a complete MS of It. Eg. (q.v.); and on a third, unidentified source. |
Ancient Text |
11142 | Peeters, P. | 1939 |
Peeters, P., La Passion de S. Pierre de Capitolias (†13 janvier 715), in: Analecta Bollandiana 57, 1939: 299–333.
https://doi.org/10.1484/J.ABOL.4.00830 ♦ Georgian passion of a priest from Capitolias under Caliph Omar in 715. It is probably translated from Christian-Palestinian Aramaic, but the original language of the account is not clear. See Griffith, ‘Neo-Martyrs’, pp. 184–187. |
Ancient Text |
11143 | Paulus, Elusinus | 1891 |
Paulus, Elusinus, Vita sancti Theognii, in: ‘Acta sancti Theogni episcopi Beteliae’, Analecta Bollandiana 10, edited by van Den Gheyn, J., 1891: 78–118.
♦ Hermit at Elusa, first half of the sixth century; Life of Theognius, founder of a monastery in the Judaean desert and bishop of Bitylion on the northern coast of Sinai, d. 522; written 522–526. |
Ancient Text |
11144 | Palladius, Helenopolitanus | 1928 |
Palladius, Helenopolitanus, Dialogus de vita sancti Joannis Chrysostomi, edited by Coleman-Norton, P. L., Cambridge (U.K.), 1928.
♦ 363/4–before 431; monk, bishop of Helenopolis in Bithynia and later of Aspuna in Galatia; Life of John Chrysostom, written soon after his death in 407 |
Ancient Text |
11145 | Palladius, Helenopolitanus | 1904 |
Palladius, Helenopolitanus, Historia Lausiaca, edited by Butler, E. C., Cambridge (U.K.), 1904: 3–169.
♦ (reprinted Hildesheim 1967) ♦ 363/4–before 431; monk, bishop of Helenopolis in Bithynia and later of Aspuna in Galatia; A collection of anecdotes on monastic life in Palestine and Egypt, once known as Paradisus Heraclidis, written in 419–420 and dedicated to Lausus, chamberlain of Theodosius II. A longer recension – a fusion of Historia Lausiaca and Rufinus’ Historia monachorum (Ruf., Hist. mon., q.v.) – was composed ca. 470: PG 34, cols. 995–1278; Vitae Patrum VIII, PL 73, cols. 1085–1234. |
Ancient Text |
11146 | Nilus, of Ancyra | 1983 |
Nilus, of Ancyra, Nilus Ancyranus: Narratio, edited by Conca, F., Leipzig, 1983.
♦ High official at the court of Theodsius I, later monk; d. after 430; Massacre of monks in Sinai by Saracens in 410 and abduction of Nilus’ son Theodulus by the barbarians. Justly ascribed to Nilus of Ancyra, according to the editor; falsely, according to other scholars |
Ancient Text |
11147 | Nilus, Ancyranus | 1857-1866 |
Nilus, Ancyranus, Narrationes, in: Patrologiae Cursus Completus, Series Graeca 79, edited by Migne, J. P., Paris, 1857-1866: cols. 589–693.
♦ High official at the court of Theodsius I, later monk; d. after 430; Massacre of monks in Sinai by Saracens in 410 and abduction of Nilus’ son Theodulus by the barbarians. Justly ascribed to Nilus of Ancyra, according to the editor; falsely, according to other scholars |
Ancient Text |
11148 | Nicetas, Paphlagon | 1891 |
Nicetas, Paphlagon, Encomium historicum de translatione reliquiarum sancti Stephani Protomartyris ad Constantinopolim, in: Analecta Hierosolymitikes Stakyologias V, edited by Papadopoulos-Kerameus, A., St. Petersburg, 1891: 54–69.
♦ Narration of the translation of St. Stephen’s relics from Jerusalem to Constantinople in the fifth–sixth centuries; text ascribed to Nicetas Paphlagon (ninth–tenth century) or to Michael Psellos (eleventh century) |
Ancient Text |
11149 | Negev, A. | 1981 |
Negev, A., The Greek Inscriptions from the Negev, in: SBF, Collectio minor, no. 25, Jerusalem, 1981: Pages.
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Ancient Text |
11150 | Nau, F. | 1903 |
Nau, F., Histoire de Dioscore, Patriarche d’Alexandrie, écrite par son disciple Théopiste, in: Journal Asiatique, 10ème sér., 1, 1903: 1–108, 241–310.
♦ Syriac version of a lost Greek Life of Dioscorus, Monophysite patriarch of Alexandria 444–451, written after his death in 454 and re-edited by a follower of Severus after the latter’s appointment to the patriarchate of Constantinople in 512. The Syriac text is followed by Nau’s translation into French. |
Ancient Text |
11151 | Joannes Moschus | 1953 |
Joannes Moschus, Leimonarion seu Pratum spirituale, in: ‘Pateriká del Pseudo-Mosco’, Studi bizantini e neoellenici 8, edited by Mioni, E., 1953: 7–36.
♦ Monk in the Judaean desert; d. 619; Anecdotes of monastic life, collected by Jo. Mosch. in Palestine, Egypt, and Syria |
Ancient Text |
11152 | Joannes Moschus | 1951 |
Joannes Moschus, Leimonarion seu Pratum spirituale, in: ‘Il Pratum Spirituale di Giovanni Mosco’, Orientalia Christiana Periodica 17, edited by Mioni, E., 1951: 61–94.
♦ Monk in the Judaean desert; d. 619; Anecdotes of monastic life, collected by Jo. Mosch. in Palestine, Egypt, and Syria |
Ancient Text |
11153 | Joannes Moschus | 1938 |
Joannes Moschus, Leimonarion seu Pratum spirituale, in: ‘Unbekannte Erzählungen aus dem Pratum spirituale’, Byzantinische Zeitschrift 38, edited by Nissen, Th., 1938: 351–376.
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Ancient Text |
11154 | Joannes Moschus | 1907 |
Joannes Moschus, Prologus in Pratum spirituale, in: Der heilige Tychon, edited by Usener, H., Leipzig–Berlin, 1907: 91–93.
♦ Monk in the Judaean desert; d. 619; Anonymous biography of Jo. Mosch. cf. PL 74, cols. 121–240 (Latin version) |
Ancient Text |
11155 | Joannes Moschus | 1905 |
Joannes Moschus, Leimonarion seu Pratum spirituale, in: ‘Vies et récits d’anachoretes: Textes grecs inedits’, Revue de l’Orient chrétien 10, edited by Nau, F. and Clugnet, L., 1905: 39–56.
♦ Monk in the Judaean desert; d. 619; Anecdotes of monastic life, collected by Jo. Mosch. in Palestine, Egypt, and Syria |
Ancient Text |
11156 | Joannes Moschus | 1903 |
Joannes Moschus, Leimonarion seu Pratum spirituale, in: ‘Vies et récits d’anachoretes: Textes grecs inedits’, Revue de l’Orient chrétien 8, edited by Nau, F. and Clugnet, L., 1903: 91–100.
♦ Monk in the Judaean desert; d. 619; Anecdotes of monastic life, collected by Jo. Mosch. in Palestine, Egypt, and Syria |
Ancient Text |
11157 | Joannes Moschus | 1902 |
Joannes Moschus, Leimonarion seu Pratum spirituale, in: ‘Vies et récits d’anachoretes: Textes grecs inedits’, Revue de l’Orient chrétien 7, edited by Nau, F. and Clugnet, L., 1902: 604–617.
♦ Monk in the Judaean desert; d. 619; Anecdotes of monastic life, collected by Jo. Mosch. in Palestine, Egypt, and Syria |
Ancient Text |
11158 | Joannes Moschus | 1857-1866 |
Joannes Moschus, Leimonarion seu Pratum spirituale, in: Patrologiae Cursus Completus, Series Graeca 87 iii, edited by Migne, J. P., Paris, 1857-1866: cols. 2847–3116.
♦ Monk in the Judaean desert; d. 619; Anecdotes of monastic life, collected by Jo. Mosch. in Palestine, Egypt, and Syria. The Greek text in PG is accompanied by a fourteenth-century Latin translation made by Ambrogio Traversari from a different Greek MS. ♦ The text in PG, containing 219 anecdotes, is not complete; Photius knew a collection of 304. Some additional anecdotes, not all certainly by Moschus, have been published by Mioni, Nau and Clugnet and by Nissen. |
Ancient Text |
11159 | Moret, J., Philippart, G. | 1969 |
Moret, J. and Philippart, G., Une curieux fragment de Ménée (Angelicus graecus 106, fol. 3 et 9), in: Analecta Bollandiana 87, 1969: 85–89.
https://doi.org/10.1484/J.ABOL.4.02851 ♦ A notice on the Palestinian monk Hilarion in the entry for 28 March in a twelfth-century MS of the Bibliotheca Angelica in Rome, containing a fragment of the Menologium, a collection of notices on saints by month and day. |
Ancient Text |
11160 | Modestus, hegumen of the monastery of St. Theodosius | 1857-1866 |
Modestus, hegumen of the monastery of St. Theodosius, Incerti auctoris opusculum de Persica captivitate, in: Patrologiae Cursus Completus, Series Graeca 86 ii, edited by Migne, J. P., Paris, 1857-1866: cols. 3236–3268.
♦ On the conquest of Jerusalem by the Persians in 614; ascribed by some scholars to Modestus, hegumen of the monastery of St. Theodosius and later patriarch of Jerusalem |
Ancient Text |