| Robert Flint - 1893 - 744 Seiten
...and intellectual, the civil and religious, state of society in Gaul prior to the German invasion, at the end of the fourth and the beginning of the fifth century (L. 2-6); then the dispositions, the manners, and institutions of the Germans before they began to... | |
| Robert Flint - 1893 - 794 Seiten
...and intellectual, the civil and religious, state of society in Gaul prior to the German invasion, at the end of the fourth and the beginning of the fifth century (L. 2-6) ; then the dispositions, the manners, and institutions of the Germans before they began to... | |
| Albany Institute - 1893 - 344 Seiten
...of securing the traditional treasures by writing them down, was felt sooner than in Babylon. Toward the end of the fourth and the beginning of the fifth century, the academy of Tiberias, founded by K. Jochanan, was busily engaged in collecting and writing down... | |
| Charles Taylor - 1897 - 282 Seiten
...for the neuter. In the Latin Church the earliest distinct testimony for the neuter is S. Augustine at the end of the fourth and the beginning of the fifth century. From that time forward the neuter gained ground in the Western Church till it altogether supplanted... | |
| Lemuel Stoughton Potwin - 1898 - 232 Seiten
...the neuter. In the Latin Church the earliest distinct testimony for the neuter is St. Augustine, at the end of the fourth and the beginning of the fifth century. From that time forward the neuter gained ground in the Western Church till it altogether supplanted... | |
| Lemuel Stoughton Potwin - 1898 - 232 Seiten
...the neuter. In the Latin Church the earliest distinct testimony for the neuter is St. Augustine, at the end of the fourth and the beginning of the fifth century. From that time forward the neuter gained ground in the Western Church till it altogether supplanted... | |
| John Macbeth - 1899 - 348 Seiten
...first successfully presented to the Irish people without some knowledge of the condition of the country about the end of the fourth and the beginning of the fifth century. Ireland was at this time, and indeed down to the eleventh century, called Scotia, and its inhabitants... | |
| John Wesley Hanson - 1899 - 344 Seiten
...it took its present shape, possibly between AD 25oand3So. It is first found in RUFINUS, who wrote at the end of the Fourth and the beginning of the Fifth Century. No allusion is made to it before these dates by JUSTIN MARTYR, CLEMENT, ORIGEN, the historian EusEBius,or... | |
| John Sampson - 1901 - 170 Seiten
...our tale of his expedition to Alba 1 contains a reminiscence of Irish invasions of Great Britain at the end of the fourth and the beginning of the fifth century. O'Donovan, 2 indeed, has no hesitation in identifying Niall with the Irish leader against whose attacks... | |
| Ernst Wilhelm Möller - 1902 - 562 Seiten
...by the conflict between the bishops of Vienne and Aries and Massilia as to ecclesiastical privileges about the end of the fourth and the beginning of the fifth century, in which the ancient ecclesiastical authority of Vier-ne was repressed by the importance of outstanding... | |
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