Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Quid habes Hester. Vidi te Domine (3) Quodcumque ligaveris (6) Rex Melchior (4) Salve Regina. Eia ergo advocata (4) Sancte Paule apostole (1) Sanctificavit Dominus (3) Senex puerum portabat. Hodie beata virgo Maria (1) Sic Deus dilexit mundum (4) Sicut lilium inter spinas (1) Sicut lilium inter spinas* (4) Si ignoras te, o pulchra inter ...
Later versions included a variant of "We who are about to die", and this translation is sometimes aided by changing the Latin to nos morituri te salutamus. Ave Maria: Hail, Mary: Roman Catholic prayer of intercession asking St. Mary, the Mother of Jesus Christ to pray for the petitioner ave mater Angliae: Hail, Mother of England: Motto of ...
Tenor voice part of Jacob Handl's Ecce quomodo moritur iustus: over a century after its publication "for use in the Catholic Church" ("Catholicae Ecclesiae vsv") it was a well-known Protestant funeral motet. The righteous perishes are the words with which the 57th chapter of the Book of Isaiah start.
quomodo vales: How are you? quorum: of whom: the number of members whose presence is required under the rules to make any given meeting constitutional quos amor verus tenuit tenebit: Those whom true love has held, it will go on holding: Seneca quot capita tot sensus: as many heads, so many perceptions "There are as many opinions as there are ...
Sept répons des ténèbres (Seven responsories for Tenebrae), FP 181, is a piece of sacred music composed by Francis Poulenc in 1961. He wrote the work in seven movements on Latin texts from the Responsories for the Holy Week and scored it for soprano, choir, and orchestra.
nosce te ipsum: know thyself: From Cicero, based on the Greek γνῶθι σεαυτόν (gnothi seauton), inscribed on the pronaos of the Temple of Apollo at Delphi, according to the Greek periegetic writer Pausanias (10.24.1). A non-traditional Latin rendering, temet nosce (thine own self know), is translated in The Matrix as "know thyself".
Within the liturgy, each responsory followed a reading. Each day's matins was divided into three nocturns.The first nocturn had three readings from Jeremiah's Book of Lamentations, and the second nocturn three readings from one or other of Saint Augustine's commentaries on the Psalms.
The rubric (in red) is the original title of the work, Quomodo sit capta Sanctaren civitas a rege Alfonso comitis Henrici filio. De expugnatione Scalabis is an anonymous Latin account of the Portuguese conquest of Santarém on 15 March 1147. It is the earliest and most detailed source for that event and is informed by eyewitness accounts. [1]