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Thomas composed the parts of his Catena aurea treating the gospels of Mark, Luke, and John while directing the Roman studium of the Dominican Order at the convent of Santa Sabina, the forerunner of the Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas, Angelicum. [6] Similar collections of Greek patristic utterances were constructed for dogmatic ...
It was in Orvieto that Thomas completed Summa contra Gentiles, which was followed by the Catena aurea [11] and minor works produced for Pope Urban IV such as the liturgy for the newly created feast of Corpus Christi and the Contra errores graecorum. [5] Parts of the text have survived in Aquinas's autograph, kept in the Vatican Library as Lat ...
The Golden Chain (Glossa (expositio) continua in Mattheum, Marcum, Lucam, Joannem [Catena aurea]) 1263ff. Summa Theologica: 1265–1273 Responsio ad fr. Joannem Vercellensem, Generalem Magistrum Ordinis Praedicatorum, de articulis CVIII ex opere Petri de Tarentasia: by 1266 Disputed Questions on the Soul (Quaestiones disputatae de Anima) 1267
His work was called Postillæ, i. e. post illa (verba textus), because the explanation followed the words of the text. Thomas Aquinas (thirteenth century) left commentaries on Job, Psalms, Isaiah, Epistles of St. Paul, and was the author of the well-known Catena Aurea on the Gospels.
Annibaldo was an associate of Albertus Magnus and Thomas Aquinas. Thomas dedicated his Catena aurea, drawn up while he was living at the Santa Sabina studium, to Annibaldo Annibaldi. Annibaldo was named Master of the Sacred Palace by Pope Innocent IV in 1246. He was named a cardinal in the Consistory of May 1262, and died in 1272.
The Triumph of St Thomas Aquinas is a painting by the Italian medieval artist Lippo Memmi, dating likely to 1323, when the former Dominican friar was canonized. It is displayed in the church of Santa Caterina in Pisa , a church once belonging to the Dominican order .
The Apotheosis of Saint Thomas Aquinas (1631) by Francisco de Zurbarán. The Apotheosis of Saint Thomas Aquinas is a 1631 altarpiece painting by Francisco de Zurbarán, originally painted for the Dominican College of Seville, but now in the Museum of Fine Arts of Seville. [1] [2] It is Zurbarán's largest composition. [3]
Together with Mark Pattison and others, he translated the Catena aurea of St Thomas Aquinas, a commentary on the Gospels, taken from the works of the Fathers. [1] He was a contributor to Newman's Lives of the English Saints, for which he wrote the studies on the Cistercian Saints. The Life of St Stephen Harding was translated into several ...