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Author: Baring-Gould, S. (Sabine), 1834-1924: Short title: The lives of the saints; Date and time of digitizing: 20:30, 23 October 2009: Software used: Digitized by the Internet Archive
Der Heiligen Leben ('The Lives of Saints'), also known as Passional, was a German legendary, compiled by a Dominican friar from Nürnberg around 1400. [1] Today, 197 manuscripts are known, along with 33 High German and 8 Low German imprints; the oldest imprint is that of Günther Zainer (Augsburg, 1471/72) and the latest is from Strassburg (1521).
"Barlaam and Josaphat" in the Eastern Orthodox version comes from John of Damascus, copied and translated into Old Church Slavonic by anonymous monk-scribes from the 9th-11th centuries, and in modern Serbian by Ava Justin Popović ("Lives of the Saints" for November, pp. 563–590), an abridged version of which is given in the Ohrid Prologue of ...
The book was published in two volumes with over a thousand pages total. [1] Skarga, inspired by some other historiographical works (ex. it is estimated he based at least four-fifths of his work on the translation of Laurentius Surius De probatis Sanctorum historiis), [2] wrote this book in 1577, in order to combat the popularity of Protestant writings and advance the cause of the Counter ...
Lives of the Saints, a 1570s Polish book; Butler's Lives of the Saints, a 1750s English collection by Alban Butler; The Lives of the Saints (Baring-Gould), an 1870s English collection; Lives of the Saints (Ricci novel), a 1990 novel by Nino Ricci; The Lives of the Saints (Berridge short story collection), a 1995 collection by Edward Berridge
Hermann of Fritzlar was a medieval German mystic and author of a collection of legends, the Buch von der Heiligen Leben (Book of the Lives of the Saints), also known as Das Heiligenleben (The Saints' Life), which was written between 1343 and 1349.
The Lives of the Saints is a sixteen-volume collection of lives of the saints by Sabine Baring-Gould, first published between 1872 and 1877 by John Hodges, of London, and later republished in Edinburgh in 1914.
Acta Sanctorum, January volume, published in 1643. Acta Sanctorum (Acts of the Saints) is an encyclopedic text in 68 folio volumes of documents examining the lives of Christian saints, in essence a critical hagiography, organised by the saints' feast days.