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Journey of the Soul into God - Itinerarium Mentis in Deum translation and Introduction by Zachary Hayes, OFM, and Philotheus Boehner, OFM, vol. 2, 2002. ISBN 978-1-57659-044-7; Disputed Questions on the Mystery of the Trinity, translated by Zachary Hayes, vol. 3, 1979. ISBN 978-1-57659-045-4.
Form and content to make them smaller and larger works, such as in De reductione Artium ad theologiam (Reduction of the Arts to Theology), Itinerarium mentis in Deum (The Mind's Road to God), and Lignum vitae (The Tree of Life), and appear as the final sum of his theological thinking. In Collationes is about the vision of God in the Creation.
Bonaventure uses images and even direct quotations from Dionysius' Mystical Theology in the last chapter of his famous work Itinerarium Mentis in Deum (The Soul's Journey into God). [ 41 ] During the thirteenth century, the Franciscan Robert Grosseteste made an important contribution by bringing out between 1240 and 1243 a translation, with ...
1259 – Bonaventure – Itinerarium Mentis ad Deum (Journey of the Mind to God) c. 1259–1265 – Thomas Aquinas – Summa contra Gentiles [23] c. 1259–1266 – Jacobus de Voragine – Golden Legend (Legenda sanctorum) completed 1260 – Minhaj-i-Siraj – Tabaqat-i Nasiri; c. 1260 Le Récit d'un ménestrel de Reims
— Bonaventure, Itinerarium mentis ad Deum, 2.11, as quoted [17]: 165 Aquinas' ideas on analogy presuppose that "cognition of the supernatural realm cannot be attained from this world by the mere exercise of our natural cognitive powers, but only through divine revelation and faith in the content of this revelation."
Sections 1–6, 27 and 32 have the character of an Itinerarium. The holy sites in Jerusalem are described in sections 7–11, 17, 21 and 31), interspersed with descriptions of holy sites in Asia Minor (12–13, 15, 26), Egypt (14), the Jordan Valley (18–20), Phoenicia (23) and Arabia (24). The biblical geography of Jordan is given in section 22,
His collection of woodcut maps, Itinerarium Sacrae Scripturae, first published in Magdeburg in 1581, was a very popular book in its day. [5] It was reprinted and translated several times. The book provided the most complete summary of biblical geography available and described the Holy Land by following the travels of various notable people ...
Itinerarium Burdigalense ("Bordeaux Itinerary"), also known as Itinerarium Hierosolymitanum ("Jerusalem Itinerary"), is the oldest known Christian itinerarium. It was written by the "Pilgrim of Bordeaux", an anonymous pilgrim from the city of Burdigala (now Bordeaux , France ) in the Roman province of Gallia Aquitania .