996 resultados para Sermons, Medieval.
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Contient : Méditations diverses
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Contient : Chronique abrégée depuis la naissance de Jésus-Christ jusqu'en 1304. Cf. Hist. litt. de la France, t. XXXII, p. 240 ; Recueil d'histoires tirées de la Bible : « Bien doivent metre lor entendement tuit cil ki ont sens... » (Genèse, Juges, Rois et Macchabées) ; Vie de Jésus-Christ: « Quant li tans fu raemplis... » ; Vies de saints abrégées, en français ; Sermons de MAURICE DE SULLY, en français. — Le premier de ces sermons débute : « Dominus ac salvator noster, dilectissimi, post passionem salutiferam... Dicit ei pasce oves meas. — Seignor provoire, ceste parole ne fu mie seulement dite à mon signor S. Pierre... » ; « Ce est la ramembrance combien li Crestien furent en servage o les Sarasins. » (Jusqu'en 1290. — Écriture postérieure.) — A la fin (fol. 375): « Ssm scrhtpr tblhs mpsstrbt mfb lhttfrb qsbl». » = Sum scriptor talis mosstrat mea littera qualis
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Contient : Sermons français anonymes, incomplets du début et de la fin, pour Noël, l'Ascension et diverses fêtes ; il y a un sermon latin (f. 111). (Lecoy de la Marche, Chaire française, 2e éd., p. 531)
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The actual scripture quotations begin with blue and gold illuminated letters. Towards the end of each passage, there is a small red “R” that marks the “Response”. At the conclusion of the Response, the next lesson is announced. There are three lessons on these leaves. The first leaf begins with the word “Requiem” with the initial letter illuminated. The third lesson begins with the illuminated letter “M” on the word “Manus”. This passage is from the Book of Job, Chapter 10, verses 8-11 which reads: Your hands have formed me and fashioned me; will you then turn and destroy me? Oh, remember that you fashioned me from clay. Will you then bring me down to dust again? Did you not pour me out as milk, and thicken me like cheese? With skin and flesh you clothed me, with bones and sinews knit me together.
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UANL
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Traditional explanations for Western Europe's demographic growth in the High Middle Ages are unable to explain the rise in per-capita income that accompanied observed population changes. Here, we examine the hypothesis that an innovation in information technology changed the optimal structure of contracts and raised the productivity of human capital. We present historical evidence for this thesis, offer a theoretical explanation based on transaction costs, and test the theory's predictions with data on urban demographic growth. We find that the information-technology hypothesis significantly increases the capacity of the neoclassical growth model to explain European economic expansion between 1000 and 1300.