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13th-century papal bulls ... Works by Thomas Aquinas (1 C, 15 P) Pages in category "13th-century Christian texts" ... Book of the Bee;
In old times canon law, apostasy a fide, defined as total repudiation of the Christian faith, was considered as different from a theological standpoint from heresy, but subject to the same penalty of death by fire by decretist jurists. [164] The influential 13th century theologian Hostiensis recognized three types of apostasy. The first was ...
The Apocalypse is attributed to Methodius of Olympus in the Syriac text, [6] [7] of Patara in the Greek, both of whom lived in the fourth century. [8] In all likelihood, however, the text was written in the final decade of the seventh century, after 692, by a Miaphysite Christian, hence the moniker of Pseudo-Methodius. [9]
Nicholas Donin (French: Nicolas Donin) of La Rochelle, [1] a Jewish convert to Christianity in early thirteenth-century Paris, is known for his role in the 1240 Disputation of Paris, which resulted in a decree for the public burning of all available manuscripts of the Talmud. [2]
Cathedral Notre Dame de Paris.. The Eastern Roman (Byzantine) imperial church headed by Constantinople continued to assert its universal authority.By the 13th century this assertion was becoming increasingly irrelevant as the Eastern Roman Empire shrank and the Ottoman Turks took over most of what was left of the Byzantine Empire (indirectly aided by invasions from the West).
Marguerite Porete (French: [maʁɡ(ə)ʁit pɔʁɛt]; 13th century – 1 June 1310) was a Beguine, a French-speaking mystic and the author of The Mirror of Simple Souls, a work of Christian mysticism dealing with the workings of agape (divine love).
Apostasy a fide, defined as total repudiation of the Christian faith, was considered as different from a theological standpoint from heresy, but subject to the same penalty of death by fire by decretist jurists. [48] The influential 13th-century theologian Hostiensis recognized three types of apostasy. The first was conversion to another faith ...
A Greek and Latin copy of Xanthopoulos' Ecclesiastica Historia ("Church History"); published in 1630. Nikephoros Kallistos Xanthopoulos (Greek: Νικηφόρος Κάλλιστος Ξανθόπουλος; Latinized as Nicephorus Callistus Xanthopulus; [1] c. 1256 – 1335) was a Greek ecclesiastical historian and litterateur of the late Byzantine Empire. [2]