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Topic: Aegidius Romanus


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  Aegidius unknown 464 464 was the magister militum magister militum...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
Aegidius unknown 464 464 was the magister militum magister militum...
"Aegidius" (unknown - 464 464) was the "magister militum magister militum per Gallias" in the reign of the emperor Majorian Majorian, and in the chaos of Gaul Gaul in the middle of the fifth century fifth century preserved a Gallo-Roman Gallo-Roman enclave in the region surrounding Soissons Soissons.
Aegidius was allied with Childeric I Childeric I and on his death, which occurred in uncertain circumstances, was succeeded by his son Syagrius Syagrius.
www.biodatabase.de /Aegidius   (235 words)

  
 New Catholic Dictionary: Colonna, Egidio; AEgidius a Columna; AEgidius Romanus; Giles of Rome   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
New Catholic Dictionary: Colonna, Egidio; AEgidius a Columna; AEgidius Romanus; Giles of Rome
Egidio Colonna; Ægidius a Columna; Ægidius Romanus; Giles of Rome
One of his most important writings was the treatise composed for his royal pupil on the conduct of rulers.
www.catholic-forum.com /saints/ncd02176.htm   (155 words)

  
 Treatise on City Government, c. 1330 - Bartolo of Sassoferrato
In the fourth place Aegidius says that this is established through experience, since he says he sees that provinces which are not governed by one king are in poverty, and do not enjoy peace, but rather are beset by strife and wars.
[20] From these things Aegidius concludes that the government of the people or multitude, which tends to a single end, is good, but that the government of a few is better, since it has a measure of unity.
And the same Aegidius in his book said, as has been said, that a government is called good insofar as it tends toward the common good.
evans-experientialism.freewebspace.com /bartolo.htm   (5251 words)

  
 John of Paris
Some ten of his works on theology, physics, and metaphysics, still exist in manuscript; two others, "De Antichristo" and "De modo existendi corporis Christi in sacramento altaris", appeared in print centuries after his death.
A treatise, "Contra corruptorem Sancti Thomae", published in 1516 under the name of Aegidius Romanus, is commonly attributed to John of Paris; it was certainly not written by Aegidius.
In his work on the temporal and spiritual power, "De potestate regia et papali", written during the controversy between Boniface VIII and Philip the Fair, he favours the king, and advances some untenable propositions.
www.catholicity.com /encyclopedia/j/john_of_paris.html   (408 words)

  
 Encyclopedia: Giles of Rome   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
Aegidius Romanus, more commonly known as Giles of Rome, was one of the most influential of high papalist theologians in the latter half of the thirteenth century and early part of the fourteenth.
Born in or around the year of the Lord's incarnation 1247, he became a member of the Augustinian Order of Hermits at a very early age.
Marsilius of Padua (1270-1343) would soon do a great deal to undermine Giles's kind of hierocraticism, and the shattering events of the Babylonian Captivity of the Papacy, the Western Schism, and the Conciliar Movement would all flow into the final collapse in the mid-sixteenth century of papalist hegemony over Christian culture.
www.societaschristiana.com /sketches/G/GilesOfRome.html   (504 words)

  
 Hist of Christ'n Church 6 (ii.ii.iv)
The tract by which Aegidius is chiefly known is his Power of the Supreme Pontiff—De ecclesiastica sive de summit pontificis potestate.
In the second part of his tract, Aegidius proves that, in spite of Numb.
Aegidius was used by his successors, James of Viterbo, Augustinus Triumphus and Alvarus, and also by John of Paris and Gerson who contested some of his main positions.
www.ccel.org /ccel/schaff/hcc6.ii.ii.iv.html   (4567 words)

  
 Property and Freedom
The argument was buttressed with references to Roman law, which was rediscovered and taught in Italian universities beginning in the early twelfth century.
A prominent exponent of this new clerical theory of property was Aegidius Romanus (Colonna), a pupil of Thomas Aquinas, who argued that Philip IV did not have it in his power to appropriate the church's possessions because the rights of property antedated and transcended those of the state.
Aegidius Romanus's opponent John of Paris maintained in defense of Philip IV that private property derived from princely grants and that the church, too, held its estates by virtue of these grants.
partners.nytimes.com /books/first/p/pipes-property.html   (4969 words)

  
 Klosterneuburg - Autoren A
Aegidius Carlerius: Sermo de assumptione BMV (Basel, 15.8.1432) [82], 53vb-56va; [516], 222r-228r
Aegidius Romanus OESA: Tractatus de regimine principum {ZK 0054} [748], 5r-110r
Aegidius Termongus: Sermo in dnca Reminiscere habitus in conc.
www.oeaw.ac.at /ksbm/kln/aut/klna_a.htm   (1730 words)

  
 History of the Christian Church, Volume VI: The Middle Ages. A.D. 1294-1517.   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
Boniface made the same assertion in a letter to the duke of Savoy, 1300, when he demanded submission for every mortal,—omnia anima.
Aegidius Colonna paraphrased the bull in these words, "the supreme pontiff is that authority to which every soul must yield subjection."
Nothing is more indicative of the intellectual change going on in Western Europe in the fourteenth century than the tractarian literature of the time directed against claims made by the papacy.
www.ccel.org /ccel/schaff/hcc6.htm   (13909 words)

  
 Aristotle.htm
The author believes after studying commentaries of Aegidius Romanus, a Parisian scholar and bishop, who lived toward the end of the 13thC., it is probable that Aristotle’s Rhetorica had become a valuable adjunct to studies of ethics and political science rather than being allied with dialectic or theory of discourse.
In fact, the fame and importance of Aegidius would have helped any such tendencies along.
Of the 96 manuscripts that survive, the book appears 17 times alone with no other works bound together with it.
people.uncw.edu /rohlerl/rohler/Aristotle.htm   (713 words)

  
 Amazon.ca: Giles of Rome on Ecclesiastical Power/the De Ecclesiastica Potestate of Aegidius Romanus: Books   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
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 Amazon.ca: Aegidius Romanus, De Rununciatione Pape: Books   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
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 Giles of Rome on Ecclesiastical Power/the De Ecclesiastica Potestate of Aegidius Romanus   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
Giles of Rome on Ecclesiastical Power/the De Ecclesiastica Potestate of Aegidius Romanus
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 Catholic Apologetics International - Robert Sungenis
For as it is now day time and now night time, so the Creator has constituted divers kinds of luminaries, although even before they were made there had been days without the sun and nights without the moon" (Sermon XXVII).
Honorius of Autun (Hexameron PL 172, 257); Peter Lombard (Lombardi opera omnia, PL 192, 651); Colonna, aka Aegidius Romanus (Opus Hexaemeron); Nicholas of Lyra (Postillae perpetuae); Cajetan (Commentarii de Genesis 1); as well as Moses Mendelssohn (Commentary on Genesis) Zwingli (Werke); Luther (Commentary on Genesis); Calvin (Commentary on Genesis); Petavius (Dogmata theologica) et al.
For a thorough critique of Raymond Brown and the school of Higher Biblical Criticism, purchase the tapes "Raymond Brown and the Demise of Catholic Biblical Scholarship" and "Historical Criticism: Friend or Foe?" at http://www.catholicintl.com/newtapes.asp
www.catholicintl.com /epologetics/articles/science/akin-genisis2.htm   (3664 words)

  
 Burgundian Frontispieces
Proceedings of the Seminar in the History of the Book to 1500, Leiden, 1993: 131-49.
Title: Aegidius Romanus, De regimine principium translated by Wauquelin, Le Livre du gouvernement des princes.
Scribe: Jacquemart Pilavaine of Mons was paid in 1452 for work on the manuscript by Philip the Good.
employees.oneonta.edu /farberas/arth/arth214_folder/burgundian_frontispieces.html   (2881 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
To what extent can narrative theory account for structural filtering?
Emeritus “Problems in the Glossing of Middle English” OVERVIEW: This presentation will discuss a completed glossary intended to accompany the apparatus for volume 2 of the recently published text of John Trevisa’s Middle English Translation of the De Regimine Principum of Aegidius Romanus.
Professor Fowler experimented with the idea of accounting for all forms of each word and will discuss particular interesting problems and decisions.
students.washington.edu /langrhet/pastpresentations.doc   (1864 words)

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