999 resultados para Incipit liber
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Tesis (Maestría en Ciencias en Producción Agrícola) UANL, 2012.
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UANL
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UANL
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UANL
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Explicaciones, interpretaciones y comentarios varios sobre el Evangelio de San Lucas, organizados por San Ambrosio en diez libros. Sermones y tratados breves sobre temas diversos, a partir del texto evangélico de Lucas
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Diversas obras de dos autores diferentes con comentarios sobre la guerra de las Galias. Tres libros de comentarios sobre la Guerra Civil. Libro Cuarto de comentarios sobre la Guerra de Alejandría. Libro Quinto de comentarios sobre la guerra de África. Libro Sexto de comentarios sobre la guerra en España
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Programa emitido el 3 de octubre de 1995
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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)
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Pós-graduação em História - FCLAS
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Angela da Foligno’s Liber is a fundamental text for the scholar of Women Mystics between the XIIIth and the XIVth century in Italy and all over Europe, and it has been chosen in my research because of its originality, with refer of its feminine and franciscan essence. Angela teaches to the italian hagiographic tradition the internal point of view of the holy woman, who becomes the teller of her both ordinary and extraordinary experiences. After giving references about the religious and social historical universe in evolution during the XIIth century, my research proceeds with a linguistic and rhetorical analysis based upon the Liber. I have been searching in Angela’s text and in contemporary italian feminine hagiography the sensory metaphor of “tasting”. That kind of metaphor has an ancient memory and, thanks to the Origene’s studies - the Christian Father of the IIIrd century - we can easily recognize it already in the Bible; Origene identifies the sensory metaphor as a rhetoric system, able to exemplify the God learning process of soul. Theory of “spiritual senses”, theory of vision and rhetoric, evolving from the IIIrd to the XIIIth century, are the theological and linguistic heritage of our feminine and franciscan literature. Inside of that, the metaphor of “tasting” moves and changes, therefore becoming the favourite way of mystics to represent the contact of their souls with God.