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Topic: Jean Bolland


In the News (Thu 16 Feb 12)

  
  Ses avions
Jean Navarre a utilisé ces avions, surnommés " cages à poules ", pendant sa formation militaire à Saint Cyr, à Tours et à Lyon-Bron.
Jean Navarre en vol sur son Nieuport XI peint en bleu, blanc et rouge
Cependant Jean Navarre utilise également un appareil sur lequel est montée une mitrailleuse synchronisée tirant à travers le champ de l'hélice.
www.navarre-jean.com /sesavions.htm   (1109 words)

  
  Bollandist
They are named after the Flemish Jesuit and hagiographer Jean Bolland[?] or Bollandus (1596-1665).
Underestimating the magnitude of the undertaking, Bolland initially thought he could finish the work on his own, but after a few years he had to admit that the undertaking was beyond his individual strength.
In 1659, Bolland and Henschen were joined by Daniel van Papenbroeck or Papebrochius (1628-1714), who devoted fifty-five years of his life to the Acta.
www.ebroadcast.com.au /lookup/encyclopedia/bo/Bollandists.html   (458 words)

  
 Heritage of Scholarship
Jean Bolland to examine Rosweyde’s papers and research to judge their worth.
The provincial agreed, and the Society of Bollandists was born.
Early on, Bolland expanded the project’s scope to include not only saints for whom there were written lives but also others for whom there might be only a mention in a local list of saints, a martyrology, or in local histories.
www.companymagazine.org /v194/heritage.htm   (1407 words)

  
 CMT.com : CJ Bolland : Biography
Bolland began producing in 1988, when a drummer friend gave him access to the right gear, and his tracks were soon heard on several Belgian pirate radio stations.
CJ Bolland's first production for R&S, the Project's "Do That Dance," jump-started his career, and he soon saw releases from his projects Pulse, Space Opera (with the Advent's Cisco Ferreira), Cee-Jay, Ravesignal and Sonic Solution.
His 1992 Ravesignal 3 EP (specifically, the track "Horsepower") made Bolland one of the hottest names in the new global dance community.
www.cmt.com /artists/az/bolland_cj/bio.jhtml   (323 words)

  
 Jean Bolland
Father Jean Bolland, SJ Founder of the Bollandists
Jean Bolland was a Flemish scholar who undertook an accurate historical investigation and presentation of the lives of the saints, an area which at that time was full of legend, myth and edifying stories.
He and the scholars who worked with him and after him, who came to be known as the Bollandists, followed the Church calendar and had worked their way down to mid-October by the time of the Suppression.
www.manresa-sj.org /stamps/1_Bolland.htm   (109 words)

  
 BOLLANDISTS,
The Bollandists derived their name from the Flemish Jesuit hagiographer Jean Bolland (1596–1665), editor of the first five volumes.
The Acta Sanctorum had been projected by a Flemish Jesuit, Heribert Rosweyde (1569–1629); on his death his collections were entrusted to Bolland, who continued the work in Antwerp.
When the Jesuit order was suppressed in 1773, the Bollandist Society moved to the monastery of Coudenberg in Brussels to carry on their work.
www.history.com /encyclopedia.do?articleId=203325   (271 words)

  
 Heritage of Scholarship
Jean Bolland to examine Rosweyde’s papers and research to judge their worth.
Early on, Bolland expanded the project’s scope to include not only saints for whom there were written lives but also others for whom there might be only a mention in a local list of saints, a martyrology, or in local histories.
When growing costs threatened the work, Jean Bolland found a patron in the Abbot of Liessies; successive abbots of this monastery continued their support.
www.companysj.com /v194/heritage.htm   (1407 words)

  
 Medieval Iberian Studies at UCI
A this time, Jean Bolland, leader of a group of Flemish Jesuits, was charged by the Holy See with producing an authoritative compendium of saints’ lives.
Jean Mabillon, a Benedictine monk of St. Germain de Prés, then published De re diplomatica (1681), which includes a section on the history of handwriting and uses paleographic means to argue for the validity of certain ancient grants ot the Benedictine Order.
Mabillon’s principles for assessing the authenticity of documents gave rise to the formal discipline of paleography (or diplomatic, as it was known until the nineteenth century).
www.hnet.uci.edu /spanishandportuguese/spanish/medievaliberia/manuscript_glossary_O-P.html   (1823 words)

  
 [No title]
The clergy were very much aided in their work by their private libraries and by their co-operation; Pere Philippe Labbe published his Bibliotheca nova manuscriptorum (1657), and began (1671) his Collection des conciles, which was successfully completed by his colleague Pere Cossart (18 vols.).
One of the chief editors of this collection, Dom Jean Mabillon, published on his own account the Vetera analecta (4 vols., 16751685) and prepared the Annales ordinis sancti Benedicti (6 vols., 17031793).
In imitation of this, Jean Le Clerc successively edited a Bibliotheque universelleet historique (16861693), a Bibliotheque choisie (17031713), and a Bibliotheque ancienne et moderne (17141727).
encyclopedia.jrank.org /correction/edit?locale=es&content_id=119175   (13610 words)

  
 Jean Bolland SJ   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Jean Bolland was the first head of that group.
Bolland moved to Antwerp and got in 1635 with Gottfried Heuschen a very talented co-worker.
Up to the death of Father Bolland, on September 12th 1665 in Antwerp, the first five folio volumes had appeared (each volume with more than thousand pages), about the saints of January and February.
www.con-spiration.de /syre/english/sep/e0912.html   (388 words)

  
 Medieval Iberian Studies at UCI
A this time, Jean Bolland, leader of a group of Flemish Jesuits, was charged by the Holy See with producing an authoritative compendium of saints’ lives.
Jean Mabillon, a Benedictine monk of St. Germain de Prés, then published De re diplomatica (1681), which includes a section on the history of handwriting and uses paleographic means to argue for the validity of certain ancient grants ot the Benedictine Order.
Mabillon’s principles for assessing the authenticity of documents gave rise to the formal discipline of paleography (or diplomatic, as it was known until the nineteenth century).
www.humanities.uci.edu /spanishandportuguese/spanish/medievaliberia/manuscript_glossary_O-P.html   (1823 words)

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