Biblio

ABBREVIATIONS

TOTAL NUMBER OF BIBLIO IN CORPUS: 4854

Displaying 2501 - 2520 of 4854
Nid Author(s)/Editor(s) Year Title Ref type
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.
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.
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

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