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Ti saluto, Croce Bianca, il più alto segno di pietà, Salve, Croce Bianca, nostra unica fonte di salute e speranza, Infiammate i cuori dei fedeli con abbondanti grazie, abbondanti grazie.
Roman sources used a variety of names to refer to consular tribunes. Livy called them tribuni militum (tribunes of the soldiers) or tribuni militares (military tribunes) consulari potestate (with consular power), but also as tribunes pro consulibus or pro consule, as well as simply tribuni consulares (consular tribunes).
A military tribune (from Latin tribunus militum 'tribune of the soldiers') was an officer of the Roman army who ranked below the legate and above the centurion.Young men of Equestrian rank often served as military tribune as a stepping stone to the Senate. [1]
Ten Preludes on Hymn Tunes (1950s, published by H.W. Gray in 1956, includes Deus tuorum militum, Sine nomine, St. Dunstan's, Capel, Song 46, St. Patrick, Were you there?, Land of rest, Charterhouse, and Ad perennis vitae fontem) [1] Sinfonia Brevis (1965) Passacaglia (1967)
The vocabulary of ancient Roman religion was highly specialized. Its study affords important information about the religion, traditions and beliefs of the ancient Romans. This legacy is conspicuous in European cultural history in its influence on later juridical and religious vocabulary in Europe, particularly of the Christian Church.
The rubrics, as is customary in similar liturgical books, indicate the manner in which to carry out the celebration. This article does not deal with the significance and history of this Eucharistic Prayer but only with modern text and rubrics of the Canon, contrasting the 1962 version with the 1970 version.
These continued a tradition of Greek-Hellenistic warfare and tacticians that stretched back to Xenophon and Aeneas Tacticus, late Hellenistic military manuals adapted and applied for the needs and realities of the Byzantine army, most of them deriving from the wide corpus of ancient Greek and late Hellenistic authors, especially Aelian, [1 ...
The Cistercian Hymnal is a compilation of the ancient texts and melodies sung by Cistercian monks and nuns during the Liturgy of the Hours.This collection of hymns influenced the Cistercian Order's identity, since early abbots emphasized the compositions' musical quality.