Sie sind auf Seite 1von 969

Christianae Litterae Latinae I

Institutiones
LA0420

Baccalaureato secondo anno = 8 1. Bavuidinsi Matondo Andoche 2. Ciccia Giancarlo 3. Koperski Marcin 4. Nguyen Xuan Tuan 5. Nkulu Kalala Rombaut 6. Paszkiewicz Bartosz 7. Smetanyak Mariya Atanasiya 8. Wierzbicki Jacek Mateusz

A.D. MMVIII

Christianae Litterae Latinae I Institutiones - LA0420 (Prof. Blasius Amata sdb)

LA0420.

Letteratura Cristiana Antica Latina I

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

(5 ECTS - 3 crediti nel I semestre): Prof. BIAGIO AMATA Argomenti: Pars generalis. Patristica, Patrologia, Litterae Christianae Antiquae: notio et ratio. Lectio functionalis. Genera litteraria. Hermeneutica. Rhetorica. Christianae Litterae Latinae aevo praeconstantiniano: exordia et antiquiora documenta. Acta Martyrum Latina. Latinitas christiana. Pars specialis: M. Minucius Felix: specimina interpretationum. Q.S.F. Tertullianus: doctrina et ars dicendi. Th. Caecili Cypriani epistulae et stilus. Novatiani rhetorica. Arnobius Siccensis. L.C Firmiani Lactantii theosophicum systema de Christiana veritate. Lectio Patrum: Hieronymus, De viris illustribus.
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

Testi: Commentarii Professoris. BOSIO G., Iniziazione ai Padri (Torino, SEI 1963-64), ora Introduzione ai Padri della Chiesa, 1-5 (Torino, SEI 1990-96); CONTRERAS E.-PENAS R., Introduccion al estudio de los Padres (Azul, Ed. Monasterio Trapense 1991-1994); QUASTEN J., Patrologia, I-III (Casale 1967-69, 1978), completata da DI BERARDINO A. (ed.), Patrologia, IV. I Padri latini dal concilio di Calcedonia a Beda il Venerabile (Genova 1996); MORESCHINI C.-NORELLI E., Storia della letteratura cristiana antica greca e latina (Brescia, Morcelliana 2002); SIMONETTI M.-PRINZIVALLI E., Letteratura cristiana antica (Casale Monferrato, Piemme 2003); D'ELIA S., Letteratura latina cristiana (Roma,
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

Jouvence 1982); FONTAINE J., La letteratura latina cristiana (Bologna, Il Mulino 2000). http://www.geocities.com/blas3/letter/let.htm
http://la.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roma_antiqua#Regnum http://la.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imperium_Romanum http://www.s-p-q-r.org/ III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

Nota bibliographica et siglorum

Laudantur opera recentiora et antiquiora maioris momenti.

Editiones usitatissimae CCL Corpus Christianorum series Latina, Turnholt, Brepols 1954ss. CCM Corpus Christianorum series Mediaevalis, s.8-12, Turnholt, Brepols 1966. CSEL Corpus Scriptorum Ecclesiasticorum Latinorum, Wien 1866ss ML seu PL J.-P.MIGNE, Patrologiae cursus completus: series Latina, Parisiis

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

1844-49 (221 voll.; indices 4 voll.) usque ad Pontificem Innocentium III (+1216) .1

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

PLS Patrologiae Latinae Supplementum, 1-4, Paris 1958-74 (recentiora).2 CLAVIS Dekkers E. - Garr A., Clavis Patrum Latinorum (Tertulliano-Beda). Turnholti, Brepols 19953. Sigla frequentatissima
ACW Ancient Christian Writers London 1946 (anglica versio) ANRW Aufstieg Und Niedergang Der Roemischen Welt, 21-28 Band: Religion BA Bibliotheque Augustinienne, Bruges, Descls (versio francogallica) BAC Biblioteca De Autores Cristianos, Madrid 1949ss (versio hispanica) BK Bibliothek Der Kirchenvter, Kempten 1869 (germanica versio) BP Bibliographia Patristica, Firenze 1984ss (textus et versio italica) BPI Biblioteca Patristica, Firenze, Nardini editore (textus et versio it.) III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

CN Collana Di Testi Patristici, Roma, Citt Nuova 1976 ss CP Corona Patrum, Torino 1975ss (textus et versio italica) CPSL Corona Patrum Salesiana, Series Latina, Torino, SEI 1935ss DACL Dictionnaire d'arch ologie chrtienne et de Liturgie , Paris 1907-1953 DHGE Dictionnaire d'Histoire et de Gographie Eccl siastique , Paris 1909ss DPAC Dizionario patristico e di antichit crist. 1-3 (seconda edizione) DS Denzinger H., Schnmetzer A., Hnermann P., Enchiridion Symbolorum, EDB DTC Dictionnaire de Thologie catholique , Paris 1903-1970 EC Enciclopedia cattolica , Citt del Vaticano 1949-54 LOEB Classical Library, Graeci (rubri), Latini (virides) MGH Monumenta Germaniae Historica, Berlin 1826ss NBA Nuova Biblioteca Agostiniana, Roma (it.) PSP Pisma Starochrzescijanskich Pisarzy III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

PTS RAC SC SCBO SP T

Patristische Texte Und Studien, Berlin, De Gruyter, 1964 Reallexicon Fr Antike Und Christentum, Stuttgart 1950ss Sources Chretiennes, Paris 1941ss (textus et versio gallica) Scriptorum Classicorum Bibliotheca Oxoniensis Studia Patristica Bibliotheca Scriptorum Graecorum Et Romanorum Teubneriana

Berlioz J., Identifier sources et citations , Turnhout [Brepols] 1994 Biblia patristica. Voll. 1-6. CNRS Editions, Paris 1991.1995 Dumeige G., Synopsis Scriptorum Ecclesiae antiquae ab A.D.60 ad A.D.460 , Uccle 1953 Fuentes Patrsticas . Edicin bilinge (dir E. Romero Pose), Ciudad Nueva, Madrid 1991ss Perutilia: P.Glorieux, Pour revaloriser Migne. Tables rectificatives (Mlanges de Science III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.
1

Instrumenta

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

10

Geerard M., Clavis Patrum Graecorum, 5 voll., CC Turnhout 1974-1987 Haureau B., Initia operum scriptorum Latinorum medii potissimum aevi Kirch C., Enchiridion Fontium Historiae Ecclesiasticae Antiquae , Barcinone 1965 Lundstrm S., Lexicon errorum interpretum Latinorum , Stockholm 1983 Maurach G., Enchiridion poeticum, Stellenindex, Darmstadt 1983 Mohrmann Chr., tudes sur le Latin des chrtiens, 5 voll., Romae 1958ss Pierini F., Mille anni di pensiero cristiano , Cinisello Balsamo (MI) 1988 Quacquarelli A., Retorica patristica e sue istituzioni interdisciplinari, Roma 1995
Quellet H., Bibliographia indicum, lexicorum et concordantiarum auctorum Latinorum , Hildesheim 1980

Rouet De Journel M.J., Enchiridion Patristicum , Barcinone 1965. Rouet De Journel M.J. - Dutilleul J., Enchiridion Asceticum , Barcinone 1965 Schneemelcher W., Bibliographia patristica , Bonn 1956ss Thesaurus Linguae Latinae, Leipzig, Teubner 19905 Religieuse 9[1952], Cahier supplmentaire), Lille, et A.Hamman, Pour un aggiornamento des III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

11

Trevijano R, Bibliotheca patristica Salmanticensis , Salamanca 1983 Tusculum-Lexicon griechischer und lateinischer Autoren. Monaco-Zurigo 19823 Altaner B., Patrologie , Freiburg 1938 (innumerae versiones; it.: Patrologia, Casale M. 19928 Beatrice P.F., Introduction to the Fathers of the Church , S.Paul 1989 Bosio G., Iniziazione ai Padri, Torino 1963-64; ed. aggiornata E. dal Covolo - M. Maritano, Introduzione ai Padri della Chiesa , 1-5, SEI, Torino 1990-96. Chauvet P., Pionieri della fede. I Padri della Chiesa , Padova 1991. Coman I., Patrologia, 3 voll. (rumena). Contreras E. - Peas R., Introduccin al estudio de los Padres . I-II, Mon. Trapense, Azul 1991, 1994 manuels de patrologie et de patristique : TU 107,1970,95-99; - Jacques P. Migne. Le retour aux III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

Patrologia

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

12

Libaert J. , Les Pres de l'Eglise, vol.1: I-IV sicle, BHC 10, Descle, Paris 1986 Papadopoulos Stylianos G., Patrologia, Athena 1990. Quacquarelli A., Complementi inerdisciplinari di patrologia , Roma 1989. Quasten J., Patrologia, I-III, Casale 1967-69, 1978; Di Berardino A.- (ed.), Patrologia, IV. I Padri Latini dal concilio di Calcedonia a Beda il Venerabile, Genova 1996 Spanneut M. , Les Pres de l'Eglise, vol. 2: IV-VIII s., BHC 22, DES., Paris 1990. Trevijano Etcheverria R., Patrologa, BAC, Madrid 1994. von Campenhausen H., Leteinische Kirchenv ter, Stuttgart 1960 (I Padri della Ch., FI 1969). Amatucci A.G., Storia della Letteratura Latina cristiana , Torino 19552 Bardenhewer O., Gesch. der altkirchlischen Literatur , 1-5, Freiburg 1913-32 (Darmstadt 1962) Pres de l'Eglise , Paris 1975. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

Historia Litterarum

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

13

Bardy G. -. di Noia G, Storia della letteratura cristiana antica greca . Libr. Ed. Vaticana, 1996 Cytowska M.-Szelest H., Literatura Rzymska, Warsz. 1994 De Labriolle P., Histoire de la litt rature Latine chrtienne , 1-2, Paris 1947 3 (rev.G.Bardy) D'Elia S., Letteratura Latina cristiana, Roma 1982 Fontaine J., La letteratura Latina cristiana , tr.it. Bologna 1973 Hagendahl H., Cristianesimo Latino e cultura classica. Da Tertull. a Cassiodoro, Borla, Roma 1988 Herzog R. (ed.), Nouvelle histoire de la litt rature Latine , I-V: Restauration et renouveau, 284-374, I, Turnhout 1993 Mariotti I., Storia e Testi della Letteratura Latina , Bologna 1976; vol.5: L'et cristiana Monceaux P., Histoire litt raire de l'Afrique chrtienne , Bruxelles 1901-23, 1-7, rist. 1966 Moreschini C.-Norelli E., Storia della letteratura cristiana antica greca e Latina . I e II,1-2. Morcelliana, Brescia 1995-1996 III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

14

Moricca U., Storia della letteratura Latina cristiana , Torino 1925-34, 3 voll. in 5 tomi Norden E., Die antike Kunstprosa , Leipzig-Berlin 19594 (La prosa d'arte antica , I-II, Roma 1986) Perrone L., Storia della letteratura cristiana antica , 1993 Simonetti M., Letteratura cristiana antica greca e Latina , Firenze 1969; - Profilo storico dell'esegesi patristica , Roma 1981; - SIMONETTI M.-PRINZIVALLI E., Letteratura cristiana antica. Antologia di testi . I-III, Piemme, Casale Monferrato 1996. 3

Cf. CETEDOC LIBRARY of Christian Latin Texts, CLCLT-3, Turnhout, Brepols 1996; IN III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.
2

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

15

DE CHRISTIANIS LITTERIS LATINIS


QUAESTIONES PRAEVIAE

Lectio functionalis Litterarum Christianarum divitias spectat Classicae,4 quae vocatur, Litteraturae, eique iure innititur. Nuncupatur Patristica, Patrologia, Latinae Litterae Christianae, quae nomina fere ut synonyma a nonnullis auctoribus habentur. Fortasse magis vulgandus est neologismus Christianistica, qui
PRINCIPIO, Incipit Index of Latin Texts, Turnhout, Brepols 1993; PHI CD ROM # 5.3 III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

16

amplectitur universas rationes Christiani eventus salutis, et Patrimonium factum est humani generis. Patristica enim praeiudicio theologico laborat; Patrologia vitam et opera historice prosequitur Christianorum auctorum, qui in lucem fidei veritatem extulerunt, vel a fide aberraverunt; Litterae Christianae doctrinam auctoris cuiusque exponunt, eius genus scribendi et artificiosum stilum, praeceptis rhetoricae artis adhibitis. Appellatio Sera Antiquitas (it. tardo-antico) nomen Christianae novitatis celat, quod Christianistica econtra extollit. Etenim totis viribus Christiani auctores declarare conati sunt Christianum Mysterium, contra relativismi hermeneuticam et
LATIN TEXTS - BIBLE VERSIONS, The Packard Humanities Inst.; PHI CD ROM # 6 III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

17

religiosam indifferentiam: ''Utinam ergo qui nos modo exercent, convertantur, et nobiscum exerceantur: tamen quamdiu ita sunt ut exerceant, non eos oderimus; quia in eo quod malus est quis eorum, utrum usque in finem perseveraturus sit, ignoramus; et plerumque cum tibi videris odisse inimicum, fratrem odisti, et nescis''.5 Litterae Christianae tesserae sunt Divinae Pietatis, eiusque oeconomiae salutis.6 Licet legitima sint habenda genera omnia exegesis, tamen summum locum in litteris tribuendum est philologiae, qua debent inniti ceterae exegesis formae: charismatica (non semel aberrans a sensu proprio), psychologica, psychoanalitica,
INSCRIPTIONS - PAPYRI - COPTIC TEXTS, The Packard Hum. Inst.; PATROLOGIA III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

18

sociologica et huiusmodi humanae finitudinis conatus in pervestigandis divinis rebus.7 Universae Christianae litterae libris innituntur sacris, quos Bibliam Sacram Christiana Traditio appellavit, unumque in se clausum et integrum habuit. Sunt XXVII libri ex Novo et fere XLV ex Vetere Testamento et locum principem habent apud omnes auctores primaevae Christianitatis, ut iterum atque iterum declarati sint, perscripti, vulgati, in coaevos quoque sermones translati. Iidem lex facti sunt martyrum et fidei confessorum, privatae et publicae vitae, ethicae individualis et socialis, necnon ceterorum sermonum non verbalium, ut sunt architectura, pictura, musica.
LATINA DATABASE . III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

19

Lectio Theologica o( qeo/j Deus veritas = do/gma praecepta ai( a(gi/ai grafai/ Spiritus = to\ pneu=ma Traditio = para/dosij a)/skhsij

Litteraria o( eu)rhth/j inventor opinio = do/ca genera ta\ ei)/dh mythus = oi( lo/goi otium e)gku/klioj paidei/a

Historica o( dida/skaloj magisterr gloria = kle/oj eventus ta\ pra/gmata mores = ta\ h)/qh negotium politikh/ te/xnh

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

20

A Verbo est incipiendum, quia In principio erat Verbum, et ut ait Augustinus, omne genus litterarum in eo declaratur eiusque fit functio: Hic physica, quoniam omnes omnium naturarum causae in Deo creatore sunt; hic ethica, quoniam vita bona et honesta non aliunde formatur, quam cum ea, quae diligenda sunt, quemadmodum diligenda sunt, diliguntur, hoc est Deus et proximus; hic logica, quoniam veritas lumenque animae rationalis nonnisi Deus est; hic etiam laudabilis reipublicae salus [it. politica], neque enim conditur et custoditur optima civitas nisi fundamento et vinculo fidei firmaeque concordiae,
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

21

cum bonum commune diligitur, quod summum ac verissimum deus est, atque in illo invicem sincerissime se homines diligunt, cum propter illum se diligunt cui, quo

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

22

animo diligant, occultare non possunt.8 Deus auctor Bibliae habetur et Ecclesia una certaque interpres. 9 Ante saec. III Litterarum Christianarum Latinarum documenta sunt Bibliae ex Hebraeo et Graeco versiones, liturgica traditio, actus martyrum. Aptius videtur Christianas litteras prae- et post-constantinianas appellare quam prae- et postnicaenas, quod primum genus apologeticum deinde libertate et pluralismo innixus novus humanus floruit cultus - e)gku/klioj paidei/a qui symphoniae veritatis favit - sumfoni/a th=j a)lhqei/aj - toto orbe et genus didacticum, ethicum, pastorale, iuridicum, asceticum, et huiusmodi vulgavit.10 Christiani non ficta exponunt, sed quae ipsi audierunt vel experti sunt.
3

Editiones antiquiores : Maxima Bibliotheca veterum Patrum , etc. Lugd. 1677, 27 tom.; A. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

23

Scientia recte dicendi et scribendi, cedit stilo humili, qui melius componitur cum

Gallandi (Andreas Gallandius, Oratorian, d. 1779): Bibliotheca Graeco-Latina veterum III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

24

stilo Scripturarum et cum ipso humillimo Incarnationis mysterio.11 Patres, notio theologica innixa traditioni Iudaico-Graecae vocati sunt presbyteri, abbates, ascetae et a s.IV etiam auctores, qui in controversiis doctrinalibus interpretes visi sunt Ecclesiae conscientiae universalis, licet episcopali ordine carentes.12 Maiore auctoritate praediti, vocantur doctores: in Ecclesia Occidentali (Latina) Ambrosius, Augustinus, Hieronymus, Gregorius Magnus, in Ecclesia Orientali (Graeca) Basilius, Gregorius Nazianzenus, Ioannes Chrisostomus, Athanasius (fortasse ratione symmetriae).13 Vincentius Lerinensis a.434 notionem Patrum communem factam in lucem posuit: Eorum dumtaxat patrum sententiae conferendae sunt, qui in fide et
Patrum, etc. Ven. 176588, 14 tom.; Migne (Jacques Paul, b. 1800, founder of the III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

25

communione Catholica sancte, sapienter, constanter viventes, docentes et permanentes, vel mori in Christo fideliter, vel occidi pro Christo feliciter meruerunt. In ipsa item catholica ecclesia magnopere curandum est, ut id teneamus quod ubique quod semper quod ab omnibus creditum est .14 Ratione historica ac methodologica Patres non appellantur haeretici et auctores qui ab Ecclesia damnati sunt, sed duce Hieronymo vocantur Scriptores ecclesiastici.15 Ratio chronologica relativa est, ut vocati sint in Occidente novissimi Patres quoque Gregorius Magnus (+ 604), Isidorus Hispalensis (+ 636) et Bernardus
Ultramontane LUnivers religeux and the Cath. printing establishment at Montrouge, III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

26

quoque Claravallensis (+ 1153): Ultimus inter Patres, sed primis certe non impar.16 Patrologia orientalis producitur usque ad Ioannem Damascenum (+ 749), post quem in Oriente et Bernardum in Occidente nemo Pater Ecclesiae appellatus est. Patrologia17 ergo vocatur pervestigatio systematica de vita et operibus Christianorum auctorum methodo quidem proxima ad historiam litterarum, cum scriptores eorumque opera et fontes collustret, et est habenda pars historiae litterarum Christianarum antiquarum. Patres habentur non tantum testimonia
consumed by fire 1868): Patrologiae cursus completus sive Bibliotheca universalis, III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

27

theologiae et Ecclesiae vitae, sed etiam nuntii religiosi, magistri, cultus humani

integra, uniformis, commoda, oeconomica, omnium III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

SS.

Patrum,

Doctorum,

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

28

viri.18 Patristica est pars Patrologiae, et spectat studium doctrinae theologicae Patrum.19 Adiectivum theologia patristica - factum est substantivum, ut evenit philosopiae quae scholastica a philosophia scholastica est appellata. Litterae Christianae antiquae Graecae et Latinae filiae sunt Patrologiae et Patristicae, sed indolem litterariam auctorum magis spectant, potius quam doctrinae veritatem. Adiectivum Christianum ante linguam in lucem ponit novitatem Christianismi, et antiquae ponit in lucem distinctionem primis saeculis vigentem nullam vim habituram in sequentibus. Recens denominatio Litterae Graecae vel Latinae Christianae in lucem ponit historicum eventum Christianismi,
Scriptorumque ecelesiasticorum. Petit Montrouge (near Paris), 18441866 (Garnier III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

29

ingredientis in Litteras Graecas et Latinas, et aeque videtur definire altiorem essentiam suae Christianae identitatis, nulla solutione continuitatis cum Litteris aevi

Frres). Latin in 222, the Greek in 167 vols.; Horoy: Bibliotheca Patristica ab anno III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

30

praecedentis.20 Schola Noviomagensis multum contulit ad analysim Christiani sermonis Latini et Schola Suetica ad studium tardioris Latinitatis. Quarum est laus si novum iudicium inlatum sit de vi litteraria documentorum, quae nihili antea habebantur, uti acta martyrum, hagiografiae, homiliae. Quaestio linguistica diu est agitata, potissimum quod spectat notionem liguae sacrae.21 Litterae classicae et Christianae humanitatem creaverunt novam. Latinus sermo est quasi magnum quoddam flumen a classicis, ut ita dicam, montibus ac fontibus ad mare magnum vulgarium sermonum defluens. Sermo autem Christianus phaenomena nonnulla secumfert lexicographica,
MCCXVI. usque ad Concilii Tridentini Tempora. Paris, 1879 sqq.; Imperial Academy of III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

31

semasiologica et syntactica, ut sunt Hebraismi, Graecismi, neologismi, ad normam Latinae suffixationis efformati. Neque sibi proposuit aestheticos vel litterarios fines, quamquam utrosque saepe attingit usque ad sublime, eruditionem fugiens et locupletem classicis Christianisque doctrinis se exhibens. Effectus linguisticae peculiaritatis est quoque Ecclesiae unitas per saecula servata in Occidente et ingens humanitatis patrimonium universo generi humano traditum: pagana enim monumenta quae supersunt parvo in spatio asservantur, Christianae autem Latinitatis testimonia vix magna in bibliotheca contineri possunt. Litteris Christianis faverunt rationes liturgicae (versiones biblicae, preces, acta martyrum), apologeticae (opera contra Iudaeos, haereticos, paganos),
Vienna in 1866, under the title: Corpus scriptorum ecclesiasticorum Latinorum ; Photius III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

32

cherygmaticae (mysterium salutis, praecepta, consilia ascetica). Methodus inquisitionis historicae extensivae enumerat et declarat quaestiones. Methodus inquisitionis historicae comprehensivae altius pervestigat de quaestione peculiari. Litterae Christianae oriuntur cum viri exculti convertuntur ad fidem. Qui imitantur classicos scriptores et generibus litterarum novis utuntur. Post eversum Lugdunum manent Roma et Africa ut capita culturae. Romae Hippolytus (170-235), coaevus Tertullianus, Novatianus et coaevus Cyprianus Graeca lingua utuntur. Litterae postea silent quia omnes episcopi post
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

33

Africanum papam Victorem martyres occumbunt.

(d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t.; Dallaeus (Daill, III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

34

Ceteri auctores Christiani ex Africa sunt vel in Africa vivunt, 22 si excipias Victorinum Poetoviensem (Ptuj in Stiria) probabiliter natum in Graecia, qui videtur Origenem esse secutus. Theatrum et carmina, ut forma litteraria praedicationis, silent, quae primas partes habuerunt in aevo classico Graeco. Latinus sermo fere ignotus fuit Orientalibus civibus, quod consectaria gravissima attulit historiae politicae, sociali, oeconomicae, religiosae. Antiqua documenta Litterarum Christianarum Latinarum
Calvinist): De usu Patrum in decidendis controversiis. Genev. 1656 (and often). Against III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

35

Litterae Latinae Classicae exordia versione Odissiae Livii Andronci incipiunt, item, ante saec. III, Christianarum litterarum prima documenta versiones sunt Sacrae Bibliae. Pauci fuisse videntur qui transtulissent Hebraicam Bibliam in Graecum, innumeri econtra qui ex Graeca in Latinam convertissent linguam: Latinae quidem linguae homines, quos nunc instruendos suscepimus, duabus aliis ad Scripturarum divinarum cognitionem opus habent, Hebraea scilicet et Graeca, ut ad exemplaria praecedentia recurratur, si quam dubitationem attulerit Latinorum interpretum infinita varietas. Quanquam et Hebraea verba non interpretata saepe inveniamus in libris, sicut Amen, et Alleluia, et Racha, et Hosanna, et si qua sunt alia, quorum partim propter sanctiorem auctoritatem, quamvis interpretari
the superstitious and slavish R. Catholic overvaluation of the fathers. Patristic III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

36

potuissent, servata est antiquitas, sicut est Amen, et Alleluia; partim vero in aliam linguam transferri non potuisse dicuntur, sicut alia duo quae posuimus. Sunt enim quaedam verba certarum linguarum, quae in usum alterius linguae per interpretationem transire non possint. Et hoc maxime interiectionibus accidit, quae verba motum animi significant potius, quam sententiae conceptae ullam particulam; nam et haec duo talia esse perhibentur: dicunt enim Racha indignantis esse vocem, Hosanna laetantis. Sed non propter haec pauca, quae notare atque interrogare facillimum est, sed propter diversitates, ut dictum est, interpretum, illarum linguarum est cognitio necessaria. Qui enim Scripturas ex Hebraea lingua in Graecam verterunt, numerari possunt: Latini autem interpretes nullo modo. Ut
Dictionaries: J. C. Suicer (d. in Zurich, 1660): Thesaurus ecclesiasticus e Patribus Graecis. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

37

enim cuique primis fidei temporibus in manus venit codex Graecus et aliquantulum

Amstel., 1682, second ed., much improved, 1728. 2 vols. for. (with a new title page. Utr. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

38

facultatis sibi utriusque linguae habere videbatur, ausus est interpretari.23 Quarum finis, vinculis solutis cum cultura innixa canonibus rhetoricis et litterariis, non est versionem excultam exhibere sed potius ad litteram ac fidelem erga sacrum textum, ut horridae visae sint doctis viris. Antiquum Testamentum ab Graeco LXX (Daniel autem ex Theodotione) vertebant Graecas voces, sententias, formas sequentes (quae vicissim Haebraicum sermonem sequebantur), neologismisque utebantur formalibus et semanticis, necnon synthacticis. Optima ergo sunt documenta de traditione textuali biblica, de Latinitate vulgari et Christiana, ut Schola Noviomagensis declaraverit apud Christianos Latinum sermonem peculiari forma indutum esse, alia ac communi et
1746); Du Cange (Car. Dufresne a Benedictine, d. 1688): Glossarium ad scriptores mediae III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

39

tarda Latinitate, vocibusque technicis et necessariis ad res novas cultus et fidei exprimendas ditatum. A charismatico ad iuridicum et ab inculto [artigianale] ad excultum gradum perventum est. Versiones a s.III diligentiores, sub ecclesiae auctoritate, factae sunt et ad nos usque pervenerunt per Christianos auctores vel anthologias (testimonia), inter quas Afra vel Itala, perantiquae Latinae versiones. Eadem fere aetate translati sunt qui Patres apostolici vocantur, testes Kerygmatis. Didaxh/ seu Doctrina [Institutio] XII Apostolorum fere exeunte s.II videtur esse translata ad litteram et ad verbum: peri\ de\ tou= bapti/smatoj ou)/tw bapti/sate - de baptismo autem, sic baptizate. Clementis Romani I Epistula autem medio s. II ad verbum et non inculta
et infimae Graecitatis. Lugd. 1688. 2 vols. By the same: Glossarium ad scriptores mediae III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

40

forma: a)ll' i(/na tw=n a)rxai/wn u(podeigma/twn pausw/meqa, e)/lqwmen e)pi\ tou\j e)/ggista genome/nouj a)qlhta/j, la/bwmen th=j genea\j h(mw=n ta\ gennai/a u(podei/gmata - sed ut vetera exempla relinquamus, ad proximos athletas veniamus; saeculi nostri generosa exempla proponamus. Pastor Hermae translatione coaeva fruitur (a. 140-150) ad verbum et concinna: a)pekalu/fqh de/ moi, a)delfoi/, koimwme/n% u(po\ neani/skou eu)eidesta/tou le/gonto/j moi - revelatum est autem, fratres, mihi dormienti a iuvene speciosissimo dicente mihi. Barnabae Epistula, Ignatius Antiochenus, Polycarpus, Epistula ad
et infimae Latinitatis. Par. 1681, again 1733, 6 vols. fol., re-edited by Carpenter 1766, 4 III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

41

Diognetum, Iustinus, Tatianus, Athenagoras, Theophilus Antiochenus, Irenaeus, Hippolytus, Acta martyrum Lugdunensium, ab initio s.III Latina sunt facta. Minucius, Tertullianus, Cyprianus, Novatianus, Lactantius ergo non in initio ponendi sunt Litterarum sed in earum evolutione post conatus innumeros. Archiva, calendaria, martyrum elogia, quae supersunt, testantur ecclesiam Romanam linguam Graecam deseruisse ante finem s.IV. In Bibliotheca Ambrosiana a.1740 inventus est cod. Latinus s.VIII, quo exhibetur antiquissimus canon Scripturarum (fere a.170-80), ab inventore L.A. Muratori Canon Muratorianus appellatus. Versiones linguam Latinam Christianam creaverunt et classicam
vols., and by Henschel, Par. 184050, 7 vols. A revised English edition of Du Cange by III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

42

'perturbaverunt' traditionem, ut evenit quoque in rebus socialibus et civilibus. APOLOGIA LATINA Inimici ad intra et ad extra tribulationibus innumeris affecerunt Christianos, qui haereticos superare debuerunt et ab Iudaeis seiungi, philosophis irridentibus contradicere, vulgi calumnias confutare, omnia turpitudinum genera in se avertere, adversas potestates convincere. Defensores (apologetae, apologistae) conati sunt Christianos declarare insontes coram legibus, irreprehensibiles vita et doctrina non ficta vel mythica quin
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

43

philosophorum digna, potestatibus oboedientes, gravitate excelsos. Itaque interdum defendunt, interdum persuadere conantur. Minucius Felix et Tertullianus primi apologetae habentur, qui dialogo et defensione utuntur, Arnobius econtra impetu et Augustinus systemate.

E. A. Dayman was announced for publication by John Murray (London), but has not yet III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

44

Apologia24 ante Christum natum habetur defensio ficta vel vera coram iudicibus, ut est Socratis Apologia. Apud Christianos apologia sermo factus est ad defendendam Christianam religionem, contra Hebraeos, haereses, paganos, argumentis adhibitis philosophicis, rethoricis, satyricis. Socratis apologia, teste Dionysio Alicarnassensi (Demosth. 22) - ou)\t \ e)n lo/goij to/pon e)/xei, ou)\t \ e)n dialo/goij , sed Socrates vir iustus habetur, licet magis theatris accommodatus quam foro, et vulgi comicorumque iudicio damnatus ut scurra sed ut martyr apud philosophos et Christianos auctores laudatus. Eius mens habetur fere Christiana: vir sapiens virtuti potissimum consulere
appeared, in 1889; E. A. Sophocles: A glossary of Latin and Byzantine Greek. Boston, III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

45

debet - peri\ a)reth\n dei=n sofo\n a)/ndra pa/ntwn ma=llon fronti/zein (ap. 29 e); vir sapiens magis Deo quam hominibus debet servire to\n sofo\n a)/ndra a(/ qeo\j keleu/ei dei=n poiei=n (cf pei/somai de\ ma=llon t%= qe%= h)/ u(mi=n : Act. IV, 19); vir sapiens eligere debet potius mori quam iniuste agere: to\n sofo\n a)/ndra dei=n a)poqanei=n ma=llon h)/ a)diko/n ti pra/ttein; vir sapiens a ceteris hominibus debet distingui - to\n sofo\n a)/ndra dei=n tw=n pollw=n a)nqrw/pwn diafe/rein. Apologia Latina Christiana alia est ac Graeca quod attinet formam et
1860, enlarged ed. 1870. A new ed. by Jos. H. Thayer, 1888; G. Koffmane: Geschichte III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

46

fontes.25 Etenim est docta apologia, supplex oratio ad Imperii antistites, philosophica disceptatio, potissimum iuridica defensio contra damnationem nominis. Conscientiae libertas quoque vindicatur rationibus moralibus, extolliturque Christianorum sanctimonia.26 Dialogo diatribico utitur ut non sermo continuus videatur sed potius dialogus ciceronianus et platonicus, doctrina quam maxime fontibus innixa. Inimici infensissimi sunt Iudaei, haeretici, potissimum pagani, ceteris numerosiores: 1.ad extra Iudaei, qui seminatores persecutionum a Tertulliano appellantur, sacerdotes, necromantes, astrologi; 2.ad intra haeretici et schismatici.27
des Kirchlateins. Breslau, 1879 sqq.; E. C. Richardson (Hartford, Conn.): Bibliographical III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

47

MARCUS MINUCIUS FELIX

Synapsis of the Ante-Nicene Fathers. An appendix to the Am. Ed. of the Ante-Nicene III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

48

Auctor primus litterarum Christianarum Latinarum, ut videtur, est 28 Minucius, Evanescens - ut docti viri Simonetti verbis utamur figura, quies post Tertulliani procellam, si eum sequi credimus. Fascinans est eius imago Christianae communitatis - ut ait Card. Pellegrino caritate innixa, communi resurrectionis spe, Dei praesentia. Minucius traditur fuisse non ignobilis inter causidicos, ex Cirta in Numidia (Oct. 9,6; 31,2), et Romae provectus iam aetate ad Christi fidem conversus. Obiit circiter a.260. De vita eius testatur Hieronymus, qui Lactantium sequitur: Minucius Felix, Romae insignis causidicus, scripsit dialogum Christiani
Fathers, N. York, 1887. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

49

et ethnici disputantium, qui Octavius inscribitur: sed et alius sub nomine eius fertur de Fato, vel contra mathematicos, qui cum sit et ipse diserti hominis, non mihi videtur cum superioris libri stilo convenire. Meminit huius et Lactantius [DI 1,11,55; 5,1,21] in libris suis (vir.ill. 58). Opus Octavius traditum est in codice Parisino (Lat. 1661) post septem libros apologiae Adversus Nationes Arnobii Siccensis seu Senioris, fortasse quia octavus liber est habitus eiusdem operis. Verum stilus et sententiae plurimae consonant ut excusari possit error anonymi amanuensis: in neutro enim opere nomen Iesu, Mariae, Spiritus Sancti invenitur, utrumque magis tendit ad destruendam fidem paganorum, quam ad exponendam religionem Christianorum.
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

50

Utrum Octavius antecedat an sequatur Tertullianum decretoriam solutionem non habet;29 Tertullianum praecedere qui credunt argumenta potissimum litteraria proponunt, duce Hieronymo, qui primum auctorem Latinitatis Tertullianum laudat.30 Econtra Lactantius (DI 5,1,21s), Minucium primum laudat. Sunt qui fictum ac personatum esse virum Octavium suspicentur. Tres sunt personae: Minucius Felix, narrator, Octavius Ianuarius, ad fidem conversus, Caecilius Natalis Cirtensis, Minucii ac rhetoris Frontonis concivis. Fortasse putari potest Caecilius personam caeci in spiritualibus induere, Octavius personam diei octavi, id est resurrectionis et Baptismi, insinuare, Minucius autem
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

51

personam humilis iudicis praebere. Veluti protrepticon, structura rhetorica binaria compositum, demonstrat unum esse Deum, animae naturam spiritualem et immortalem, destinationem aeternam attingere hominem post mortem. I.1. Cogitanti mihi et cum animo meo Octavi boni et fidelissimi contubernalis memoriam recensenti tanta dulcedo et adfectio hominis inhaesit, ut ipse quodammodo mihi viderer in praeterita redire, non ea, quae iam transacta et decursa sunt, recordatione revocare; 2. ita eius contemplatio, quantum subtracta est oculis, tantum pectori meo ac paene intimis sensibus inplicata est. 3. Nec
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

52

inmerito discedens vir eximius et sanctus inmensum sui desiderium nobis reliquit, utpote cum et ipse tanto nostri semper amore flagraverit, ut et in ludicris et seriis pari mecum voluntate concineret eadem velle vel nolle: crederes unam mentem in

Sigla : Latini Auctores cf. Thesaurus Linguae Latinae , Leipzig 19902; Editiones cf. H.J. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.
4

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

53

duobus fuisse divisam.31 Sermo Caecilii (V-XIII) apologia est paganismi. Vir pius erga traditionem et rationem inclinat ad scepticismum, ut Cotta in Ciceronis nat.deor. 2,5,6. De deis sententia nulla est certa; vanum est rerum investigare originem et hominum destinationum; sapientis est suscipere, sine querela, fidem patrum, deosque venerari, qui Romanum Imperium ad terminos terrae produxerunt. Christiani indoctissimi sunt et simillimi mulierum credularum et ad fraudem paratarum. Sermo Octavii (XVI-XXXVIII) apologia est Christianorum et retorsio incriminationum. Caecilius (XXXIX-XL) amplectitur Christianam veritatem et Minucius concludit: Post haec laeti hilaresque discessimus; Caecilius quod
FREDE, Kirchen Schriftsteller Verzeichnis und Siegel , Freiburg 1981, 1984, 1988; Auctores cf. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

54

crediderit, Octavius gaudere quod vicerit, ego et quod hic crediderit et hic vicerit. Inter pulcherrima Christianorum opera32, Octavius optimam Latinitatem exhibet, semper ab omnibus litterarum Latinarum cultoribus dilaudatam, cum Platonis et Ciceronis dialogorum virtutem consequatur, adque genus dicendi Ciceroni proximum accedat. Praeclare dictus est ludus testarum (c.III, it. rimbalzello),33 argumenta autem declarantur gratia, lepre ac urbanitate. Lingua pura et emendata nullum fert verbum insolens, inusitatum, peregrinum, nullum fere Christianismum. Carnalis (c.18,10; 32,6), vivificare (c.32,6), resurrectio (c.34,11) sunt verba innnovata a Christianis. Structura concinna et Ciceroniana sententiarum bimembris est parallelismis vel antithesi est
G.W.H. LAMPE, A Patristic Greek Lexicon , Oxford 1961s; Editiones cf. M.GEERARD III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

55

referta. Forma dialogica potius protrepticum quam apologiam sapit. Non omnes margaritam litterarum Christianarum34 existimant, tamen concinnitas sub sole est.35 Comparationis specimen Patrologiae Patristicae Litterarum * [Altaner Patrologia, p. 43]
Il dialogo Octavius ci stato trasmesso in un solo ms., il Cod. parigino 1661 del secolo IX, dove segue come VIII libro i sette libri dell' Adversus Nationes di Arnobio... Questa apologia Latina in forma di dialogo filosofico. Supera, per l'arte espositiva e lo stile attraente, tutte le apologie dei secoli II e III. A questo dialogo, probabilmente fittizio, prendono parte l'autore F.GLORIE, Clavis Patrum Graecorum 1-5, Turnhout 1974-87; Ephemerides cf. LAnnee III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

56

Marco Minucio Felice, che esercitava a Roma l'avvocatura (2,3), ed i suoi due amici, il cristiano Ottavio e il pagano Cecilio. Il primo, compagno di studi di Minucio, avvocato come lui, esercitava la sua professione in una provincia posta oltre il mare (l'Africa ?) e si trovava casualmente a Roma. Cecilio nomina Frontone di Cirta come suo compatriota; era quindi della Numidia. Questo libro di piccola mole, scritto in memoria di Ottavio, morto nel frattempo, e diretto anche ai parenti cristiani di lui, coll'intento di confortarli, soprattutto ispirato al proposito di influire sui suoi lettori pagani della classe colta; si comprende quindi che non contenga gli articoli di fede proprii del cristianesimo e non ricorra ad argomenfi basati sulla Scrittura. Questo giusto modo di rinunciare metodicamente alle argomentazioni della Sacra Scrittura si ritrova anche nell'Apologeticum di Tertulliano e in Arnobio... Invece Cipriano, dinanzi al pagano Demetriano, argomenta continuamente con testi scritturistici, fatto biasimato da Lattanzio (Inst. 5, 4, 4-7). Il cristianesimo vi considerato sotto l'aspetto puramente filosofico: caratteristiche Philologique. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

57

essenziali sono il monoteismo, la credenza nella risurrezione, la perfezione nel campo etico. Lo scritto ispirato al dialogo ciceroniano De natura deorum. Molte sono le idee stoiche, nelle formulazioni di Posidonio, di Cicerone e di Seneca. Minucio Felice non si distingue dunque per una particolare originalit, ma per l'incomparabile obiettivit dell'esposizione. Nella sua polemica evita quasi del tutto le frasi offensive e dimostra un nobile riguardo verso il punto di vista avversario. Per lo stile elegante e ritmico, l '0ctauius un piccolo capolavoro; ma la sua fedelt nell'espressione letteraria alla tradizione profana e la sua riserva nell'utilizzazione degli elementi nuovi della lingua corrente dei cristiani non ci permettono di considerarlo come 'un gioiello della letteratura cristiana'. Contenuto: I tre amici fanno insieme una gita da Roma a Ostia. Mentre passano in prossimit di una statua di Serapide, il pagano Cecilio le manda un bacio con la mano. Questo gesto d lo spunto alla discussione religiosa che i tre intavolano subito dopo sedendosi sopra una diga che si stende sul mare. Minucio, denominato nel dialogo Marco, sar il giudice che dar la III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

58

sentenza (1-4). Cecilio afferma che i pi grandi savi non sono riusciti a conoscere nulla di certo intorno ai numi e alla vita ultraterrena. Socrate, il principe dei filosofi, ha dichiarato: 'Quod supra nos, nihil ad nos '. Data questa incertezza, cosa migliore attenersi al culto della divinit come lo si pratica a Roma, che ad esso deve la sua grandezza. Il Dio invisibile dei Cristiani una chimera. Quanto ai cristiani, essi sono uomini privi di cultura o credule femmine; nelle loro assemblee commettono terribili disonest (5-13). Ottavio segue passo passo il suo oppositore: l'uomo chiamato alla conoscenza della verit e non deve passare indifferente accanto ad essa; vero che Dio non pu essere veduto dall'uomo, ma altrettanto vero che l'occhio umano non pu mirare il sole. I numi dei pagani sono stati semplici uomini ai quali pi tardi si tributarono onori divini. Roma non arrivata alla conquista del mondo per merito della sua religione, ma attraverso la violenza e la rapina; le accuse contro i Cristiani si riducono a calunnie (EH 222 s.) messe in circolazione dai demoni (14-38). Cecilio si III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

59

confessa vinto, e l'autore conclude: 'Ci allontanammo di l tutti quanti soddisfatti, Cecilio per essere diventato credente, Ottavio per essere stato vittorioso, io finalmente per la fede dell'uno e per la vittoria dell'altro'. Circa il tempo della composizione : l'Ottavio presenta tali analogie di pensiero e di espressioni con l'Apologeticum, e in parte anche con l' Ad nationes di Tertulliano, che non improbabile esista una interdipendenza fra queste opere. Se crediamo alla cronologia di S.Girolamo (Vir. ill. 53; Ep.70,5), si dovrebbe dare la priorit a Tertulliano. Le ricerche sempre pi approfondite, che risalgono a 100 anni (A. Ebert, 1868) e sono state condotte con grande zelo e acutezza d'indagine, per stabilire in modo definitivo la questione del rapporto di questi scritti, non hanno condotto finora a una risposta soddisfacente. Dinanzi al gran numero di opere in proposito, non assolutamente possibile rendere una posizione critica sui diversi e divergenti punti di vista. A me sembra che la priorit di Tertulliano sia pi fondata se non accertata.

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

60

*[Rizzi, Ideologia e retorica negli exordia apologetici, pp. 155-170]


Il dialogo si conclude, cos, come si era aperto: sul terreno dell' amicitia , terreno proprio e tipico anche dell'altro dal cristiano. Solo che non tutto pi come prima: se l'apertura era fondata sull' amicitia nel segno della auctoritas ciceroniana, ora la chiusura si rivela fondata sulla amicitia nel segno della veritas, della verit cristiana e della dissipazione dell'errore: Ego triumphator erroris esclama Cecilio (Oct. 40,1). Il giudizio arbitrale, che avrebbe potuto incrinare la perfetta trasparenza del rapporto di amicizia, viene superato dalla forza della verit, anzi, da Dio stesso: 'Possiede uno straordinario dono di Dio, ispirato dal quale ha parlato e ha ottenuto aiuto', dice Minucio di Ottavio. La rabbiosa reazione di Cecilio alla invocazione della verit da parte di Minucio nello scambio di battute tra i due discorsi non ha, a questo punto, pi ragione d'essere, essendosi ormai risolto nel III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

61

nome della veritas il confronto contenuto e condotto sul piano dell amicitia . Il disegno di Minucio si chiarito: su di un terreno che l'altro riteneva di sua salda propriet, quello dell' amicitia ciceronianamente connotata, stato innescato un confronto sulla veritas: 'Noi ben attenti, perch da entrambe le parti si affronta l'argomento con ogni cura, e da un lato la verit perlopi oscura, mentre dall'altra parte c' una sottigliezza finissima, che imita in non pochi casi, grazie alla ricchezza dell'espressione, l'efficacia di una dimostrazione incontestata, pesiamo le singole posizioni nella maniera pi accurata possibile, perch possiamo senza dubbio lodare l'ingegnosit, ma scegliere, approvare, adottare ci che giusto'. L'esito ha mostrato come l'amicitia stessa si deve ricomprendere nel nome di questa verit; quello che sembrava un confine tra Cristianesimo e altro, la concezione dell' amicitia e dell'auctoritas amicale, si rivelato tale da rendere l' altro cristiano'; il valore dell' amicitia , valore cardine della cultura Romana, realizzato al grado superlativo ( amicissimus homo) nel momento in cui viene compreso nella verit cristiana e da essa ricompreso: in definitiva, ci che III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

62

pu essere comune per Minucio saldamente e tipicamente cristiano. Questa analisi parrebbe essere confermata dall'uso della terminologia relativa all'amicitia nelle battute iniziali del dialogo; Ottavio definito a Oct. 1,1 fidelissimus contubernalis; a Oct. 2,2 amicissimus homo; sembrerebbe di poter dire con il FAUSCH ( Die Einleitungskapitel..., pp. 17 s.) che i due termini nsultano pressoch sinonimici, sulla scorta di affermazioni come quella di Plinio... ed una serie di passi di APULEIO tra cui spicca quello dl Met. 8,7: Illum amicum, coaetaneum, contubernalem, fratrem. Tuttavia una serie di passi senecani ci mette in guardia da una affermazione che sembrerebbe a prima vista scontata. Vale la pena di evidenziare soprattutto un passo delle Epistulae ad Lucilium: 'Servi sunt'. Immo homines. 'Servi sunt'. Immo contubernales. 'Servi sunt'. Immo humiles amici (SEN. Epist. 5,47,1). In questo caso, mentre contubernalis non ritenuto bisognoso di specificazioni riduttive, amicus, per il filantropo ma pur sempre 'padrone' Seneca, quando sia predicato di servus abbisogna di qualche precisazione (si veda anche SEN. Epist. 1,9,3: Sed tamen et amicum habere vult et vicinum et contubernalem, 5 Aug., en. ps. LIV 4. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

63

quamvis sibi ipse sufficiat, ove si noti la climax discendente della successione aggettivale... Esisteva s una marcata prossimit semantica tra i due termini; tuttavia persisteva anche la possibilit di lasciar trasparire qualche differenza. Cos si comporta anche Minucio: Ottavio definito contubernalis (non a caso specificato dall'aggettivo fidelissimus) a Oct. 1,1, quando non ancora affermato il suo status di cristiano. A Oct. 2,2, invece, egli epitetato come amicissimus homo; a Oct. 4,4 ricompare ancora il termine contubernalis, questa volta in un'accezione che lo caratterizza in maniera non del tutto positiva (... Iam profecto intelleget facilius esse in contubernalibus disputare quam conserere sapientiam ), determinata dalla contrapposizione tra conserere sapientiam e in contubernalibus disputare. Retrospettivamente, cos, quest'ultima accezione del termine illumina la differenza tra un contubernalis, per quanto fidelissimus, non ancora cristiano e un amicissimus homo ormai cristiano. Una distinzione sottile, forse non percepibile di primo acchito (quindi tale da non disorientare il lettore), ma che parrebbe illustrare la strategia teologica di Minucio. 6 Cf. N. LUHMANN, Funzione della Religione . Brescia, Morcelliana 1991, pp. VII-IX; Maur. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

64

*[Mariotti, Storia e Testi della Letteratura Latina , 5, pp. 74-77]


Marco Minucio Felice era avvocato a Cirta, la patria di Frontone e visse a cavallo fra il II e il III secolo. Scrisse un dialogo, Octavius, giunto, nel manoscritto fondamentale, come 1. VIII dell' Adversus Nationes di Arnobio. L'Octavius presenta una conversazione fra tre amici durante una passeggiata sul litorale di Ostia (una situazione che ricorda l'inizio del 1. XVIII delle Notti Attiche di Gellio, dove un peripatetico e uno stoico discutono, in presenza del filosofo Favorino e di Gellio stesso, sul lido di Ostia, intorno alla vita 'beata'). Con l'autore, che parla in prima persona, sono il cristiano Ottavio e il pagano Cecilio. Itaque cum diluculo ad mare inambulando litore pergeremus, ut et aura adspirans leniter FERRERIS, Storia dellermeneutica . Milano, Bompiani 1997. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

65

membra vegetaret et cum eximia voluptate molli vestigio cedens arena subsideret, Caecilius, simulacro Serapidis denotato, ut vulgus superstitiosus solet, manum ori admovens osculum labiis pressit. Un giorno mentre di buon mattino ci dirigevamo alla marina per passeggiare lungo la spiaggia, cos che l'arietta, soffiando leggermente, abituava le membra alla frescura, e la sabbia, ispirandoci un sottile brivido di piacere, ci faceva sentire la sua leggerezza, perch i nostri piedi lasciavano su di essa solo una tenue orma, Cecilio, scorto un simulacro di Serapide, avvicin la mano alle labbra e vi impresse un bacio, come suol fare il volgo degli sciocchi credenti. Minucio Felice, Octavius 2, 4. Trad. Paratore Questo atto di venerazione reso a Serapide permette l'avvio di una disputa in cui Cecilio, dopo una professione di fondamentale scetticismo, che richiama tesi sostenute da Cotta nel De natura deorum di Cicerone - e Minucio avr anche in mente tendenze e scrittori del sec. II d.C., come il III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

66

gruppo che aveva fatto capo al retore Favorino di Arelte -, afferma che conviene osservare la religione tradizionale e rimprovera i cristiani per quelle che ritiene le storture della loro fede, del loro culto, della loro vita: arrivano a disprezzare anche gli onesti piaceri, nell'attesa di un'incerta beatitudine futura. Ita nec resurgitis miseri, nec interim vivitis. 7. Proinde, si quid sapientiae vobis aut verecundiae est desinite caeli plagas et mundi fata et secreta rimari: satis est pro pedibus aspicere, maxime indoctis impolitis, rudibus agrestibus: quibus non est datum intellegere civilia, multo magis denegatum est disserere divina. Cos, col folle miraggio di un'impossibile resurrezione, rinunciate frattanto alla vita! Sicch, se vi resta ancora un briciolo di saggezza o almeno di pudore, cessate di andar frugando le ragioni del cielo, i fatali destini del mondo e altri reconditi misteri del genere; per gente ignorante, incolta, rozza selvatica, cui non dato comprendere la vita civile, e a maggior ragione negata la possibilit di indagare i misteri soprannaturali, 7 Cf. exegesis mariana Veteris Testamenti apud Albertum Magnum: Vidit Iacob in somniis III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

67

gi abbastanza sapere dove si mettono i piedi. Minucio Felice, Octavius 12, 6 sg. Trad. Paratore Ottavio prende poi la parola per controbattere le accuse; reca prove di tipo filosofico per l'esistenza di un Dio unico e provvidente e, dopo aver criticato la religiosit pagana, illustra l'elevatezza e la bont del cristianesimo, evitando per altro argomenti esplicitamente desunti dalla tradizione biblica (alla quale si fa allusione, mentre mancano citazioni dirette); Ottavio si preoccupa di eliminare le premesse scettiche del suo interlocutore, per arrivare al comune riconoscimento di un ordine nell'universo che pu rappresentare solo il frutto dell'azione di un Essere superiore. Nec recuso, quod Caecilius adserere inter praecipua conisus est, hominem nosse se et circumspicere debere, quid sit, quare sit: utrum elementis concretus an concinnatus atomis, an potius a Deo factus, formatus, animatus. 2. Quod ipsum explorare et eruere sine universitatis inquisitione non possumus, cum ita cohaerentia, conexa, concatenata sint, ut, scalam, id est Mariam . Per eam enim descendit Filius Dei ad nos et nos per eam ad illum III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

68

nisi divinitatis rationem diligenter excusseris, nescias humanitatis nec possis pulchre gerere rem civilem, nisi cognoveris hanc communem omnium mundi civitatem, praecipue cum a feris beluis hoc differamus, quod illa prona in terramque vergentia nihil nata sint prospicere nisi pabulum, nos, quibus vultus erectus, quibus suspectus in caelum datus est, sermo et ratio, per quae Deum adgnoscimus, sentimus, imitamur, ignorare nec fas nec licet ingerentem sese oculis et sensibus nostris caelestem claritatem: sacrilegii enim vel maximi instar est, humi quaerere quod in sublimi debeas invenire. 3. Quo magis mihi videntur qui hunc mundi totius ornatum non divina ratione perfectum volunt, sed frustis quibusdam temere cohaerentibus conglobatum, mentem, sensum, oculos denique ipsos non habere. 4. Quid enim potest esse tam apertum, tam confessum tamque perspicuum, cum oculos in caelum sustuleris et quae sunt infra circaque lustraveris quam esse aliquod numen praestantissimae mentis, quo omnis natura inspiretur, moveatur, alatur, gubernetur? E non respingo quello che Cecilio si sforzato di porre come uno dei suoi punti basilari, ascendimus, stantem super terram licet sedeat in Throno; ad proficiendum enim peccatoribus III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

69

cio che l'uomo deve conoscere se stesso e andare indagando l'essenza, l'origine, il perch della propria esistenza: se egli costituisca una fusione di elementi o un armonico aggregato di atomi o non piuttosto sia stato creato, plasmato, insufflato da Dio. Ma anche questo non lo si pu ricercare e rivelare senza indagare a un tempo stesso l'universo, dato che tutte le cose sono cos conglutinate, collegate, concatenate fra loro che, se non avrai prima diligentemente indagato il modo d'essere della divinit, non potrai conoscer neppure quello dell'umanit e non potrai comportarti bene nella vita civile se prima non avrai imparato a conoscere questa pi vasta comunit di tutti gli esseri che il mondo, soprattutto perch ci distinguiamo dalle bestie irragionevoli proprio in questo che esse, costrette a viver sempre col muso rivolto a terra, non son destinate a guardare se non il suolo che offre loro sostentamento, noi invece, cui stato concesso di tenere il volto eretto e di sollevare lo sguardo al cielo, ed stato conferito l'uso della parola e dell'intelligenza con cui riconosciamo, sentiamo, imitiamo Dio, non vicina est; B. Amata, Parentela e discepolato : Rilettura Patristica di Mt 12,46-50 e par.: III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

70

possiamo e non dobbiamo ignorare questa luce del cielo che irrompe a forza nei nostri occhi e in tutta la nostra coscienza: e invero equivale quanto mai a un sacrilegio andar cercando per terra ci che si dovrebbe scoprire nelle eterne altezze. Soprattutto per questo coloro che pretendono che quest'armonia dell'universo non sia stata costituita dall'intelligenza divina, ma sia un ammasso di frantumi aggregati alla cieca mi paiono privi di ragione, di sensibilt, privi addirittura di occhi. Infatti, non appena tu sollevi gli occhi al cielo e contempli poi tutto quanto ti circonda o ti sta sotto i piedi, che altra cosa ti pu apparire cos evidente, cos chiara cos indiscutibile se non questa: che vi un eccelso spirito divino che d concepimento, movimento, alimento, regolamento a tutto il creato? Minucio Felice. Octavius 17,1 sgg Tr. Paratore Minucio si riporta in particolare alla tradizione stoica, ma all'interno di un discorso di sapore filosofico riecheggia anche con discrezione temi neotestamentari. Theotokos II, 1994/2, pp. 37-68; M. SIMONETTI, Lettera e/o allegoria. Un contributo alla III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

71

Ceterum quod plerique pauperes dicimur, non est infamia nostra sed gloria: animus enim ut luxu solvitur, ita frugalitate firmatur. 4 Et tamen qui potest pauper esse qui non eget, qui non inhiat alieno, qui Deo dives est? Magis pauper ille est, qui cum multa habeat, plura desiderat. 5 Dicam tamen quemadmodum sentio: nemo tam pauper potest esse quam natus est. Quanto al fatto che i pi tra noi sono ritenuti poveri, questo giudizio si risolve non in vergogna, ma in gloria per noi, perch l'anima, come si infrollisce negli agi, cos si corrobora nei disagi. E poi come pu essere povero colui che non ha bisogno, che non ha la brama dei beni altrui, che ricco di Dio? E' molto pi povero colui che, pur possedendo molti beni, ne agogna ancora di pi. Dir anzi per intero la mia opinione: nessuno, per il fatto che nato, pu essere veramente povero. Minucio Felice, Octavius 36, 3 sgg. Trad. Paratore storia dell'esegesi patristica , Roma 1985; Fr.A. SULLIVAN, Creative Fidelity. Weighing and III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

72

Il dialogo termina con la conversione di Cecilio, che si dichiara convinto dalle prove addotte da Ottavio~ Minucio, che era stato scelto come arbitro della disputa, manifesta tutta la sua gioia. Post haec laeti hilaresque discessimus; Caecilius quod crediderit, Octavius gaudere quod vicerit, ego et quod hic crediderit et hic vicerit. Dopo queste parole ci allontanammo di l con grande letizia: Cecilio era felice di aver conquistato la fede, Ottavio era felce di avergliela ispirata, vincendo la disputa, io ero felice sia che l'uno l'avesse raggiunta, sia che l'altro gliela avesse ispirata. Minucio Felice, Octavius 40, 4. Trad. Paratore *** Lo stile e la lingua di Minucio s'ispirano alla lezione ciceroniana - tenendo conto anche di autori come Apuleio, Gellio, Frontone -: tanto che si pu parlare, a questo proposito, di 'manierismo'. Minucio, insieme, risente di tutta una tradizione del 'dialogo' che arriva a Platone, soprattutto al Fedro. Il tono pi protrettico che apologetico, e lascia intravedere come, in questa 'epoca di Interpreting Documents of the Magisterium , N.Y. 1996. Tr.it. Romeo Fabbri: Capire e III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

73

ansiet', diversi temi sono comuni a pagani e cristiani: tanto che si parlato della possibilit di lettura dell' Octavius 'in doppia trasparenza', sia da un punto di vista filosofico monoteista sia da quello pi propriamente cristiano. Di quest'opera discussa anche la collocazione cronologica precisa. Lattanzio ricorda, nelle sue Divinae institutiones, Minucio prima di Tertulliano, mentre Gerolamo ne tratta in ordine inverso. Si pu sostenere che l'Octavius dipenda dall'Apologeticum , mentre certo che ha delle influenze sull'opuscolo di Cipriano Ad Donatum; il dialogo di Minucio databile perci con probablit all'inizio del sec. IIL Gerolamo (De viris illustribus, 58) cita il titolo di un'altra opera attribuita a Minucio, che tende a considerare apocrifa e che a noi non pervenuta: De fato o Contra mathematicos.

*[Simonetti: Letteratura cristiana antica greca e Latina , pp. 140-144]


Interpretare il Magistero. Una fedelt creativa , Bologna 1997; R.F. TAFT, Oltre l'oriente e III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

74

Nulla ci restato delle lettere dell'africano Vittore, autoritario vescovo di Roma nell'ultima decade del sec. II, che Girolamo enumera come primo degli scrittori Latini in De vir. ill. 53, e cos dicasi dell'apologia che il senatore ApoIlonio pronunci in Senato al tempo di Commodo per difendere la sua fede cristiana... Le prime opere di carattere letterario scritte in Latino che ci siano pervenute sono di ambiente africano, cio di una terra dove il greco, malgrado notevoli eccezioni come Apuleio e Tertulliano, non si era acclimatato come in Italia o in Gallia e dove perci l'esigenza di scrivere in Latino anche a livello letterario doveva essere pi sentita che altrove. Si aggiunga che il cristianesimo, diffuso a Cartagine gi da tempo - sembra ad opera di missionari provenienti da Roma -, produsse nel sec. III una serie di notevoli personalit letterarie che fecero dell'Africa la regione occidentale pi rappresentativa, sotto questo aspetto, in campo cristiano. l'occidente. Per una tradizione liturgica viva . Roma, LIPA 1999, pp.12-13: ''Lo studio della III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

75

Ma non si d'accordo su chi considerare qui primo scrittore cristiano in lingua Latina: infatti l'Octavius di Minucio Felice e l' Apologeticum di Tertulliano presentano tali elementi in comune, anche sul piano dell'espressione formale, oltre che nel contenuto, da far concludere che non si pu pensare soltanto ad una fonte greca comune ai due autori e che perci uno dei due autori ha avuto sott'occhio l'altro. D'altra parte, mentre sappiamo che l' Apologeticum fu scritto verso il 197, nulla affatto sappiamo della data di composizione dell' Octavius, e l'esame dei dati interni non consente di attribuire, con ragionevole margine di probabilit, la priorit ad uno dei due. Diremo prima di Minucio Felice, non tanto perch il pi recente indirizzo della critica sembra essere piuttosto in suo favore quanto per motivi di opportunit pratica. Il problema stato discusso a lungo, e qualche studioso ancora ci insiste, ma i risultati sono stati assolutamente deludenti. Infatti vari accenni di carattere storico contenuti nell' Octavius, soprattutto uno chiaro ad imminente guerra contro i parti, non possono essere determinati cronologicamente per la loro genericit e incertezaa, perch allora, fra l'impero di III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

76

Marco Aurelio e quello di Alessandro Severo, ripetutamente ci furono guerre o minacce di guerra contro i Parti. Il confronto diretto dei passi in comune ha dato risultati incerti con argomenti deboli, talvolta reversibili. La questione complicata dal fatto che, come vedremo, il problema della tradizione manoscritta dell'opera tertullianea complicato e non si pu escludere la possibilit che l'opera sia stata edita due volte dall'autore, e allora nel confronto bisogna prendere in considerazione ambedue le edizioni. I fautori della priorit tertullianea sono molto pi numerosi dei fautori di Minucio, ma questi negli ultimi tempi hanno variamente riproposto la loro tesi e i loro pareri sono autorevoli (Paratore, Quispel). In definitiva l'argomento principe a favore della priorit di Tertulliano che non sembra possibile che autore di cos prorompente genialit abbia composto un'opera seguendo tanto da vicino una fonte specifica: ma l'argomento, di per s tutt'altro che cogente, perde valore se consideriamo che per un'altra opera di Tertulliano, l'Adversus Valentinianos, siamo in possesso della fonte greca da lui seguita molto spesso alla lettera, e lo stesso procedimento si pu forse ragionevolmente postulare anche per qualche altra liturgia, come la linguistica, una disciplina comparativa: non si pu essere un liturgista III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

77

opera. ...Ben poco si sa di Minucio, e neppure gli antichi sapevano altro all'infuori di quanto si ricava dall' Octavius. Di qui sappiamo che Minucio era avvocato a Roma, ma di origine africana, con ogni probabilit di Cirta. Di famiglia pagana, nulla si sa delle circostanze della sua conversione. Nell'ultima parte dell' Octavius Minucio promette uno scritto sul fato, e un'opera De fato vel contra mathematicos , a noi non pervenuta, era conosciuta da Girolamo, che per per motivi di carattere stilistico dubitava della sua autenticit. In definitiva, il nome di Minucio legato esclusivamente all' Octavius. E' questa un'apologia scritta a forma di dialogo, forma letteraria che abbiamo gi visto adoperata dai cristiani d'Oriente (ad esempio, da Giustino) ma non per opere di carattere apologetico all'indirizzo dei pagani. Si tratta comunque di un dialogo alla maniera di Cicerone, in cui una cornice esterna in forma di narrazione e di dialogo incastona due lunghi discorsi, che propongono prima le accuse pagane contro i cristiani e poi la risposta cristiana. In un'ariosa studiando una sola tradizione, allo stesso modo di come non si pu sviluppare una teoria III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

78

apertura ambientata ad Ostia l'autore ci si presenta mentre passeggia sulla riva del mare con due amici, il cristiano Ottavio e il pagano Cecilio. Un cenno di reverenza indirizzato da Cecilio alla statua del dio Serapide provoca le rimostranze di Ottavio e quindi la proposta da parte di Cecilio di discutere sulle rispettive fedi religiose, rimettendo il giudizio a Minucio. Segue il discorso di Cecilio in difesa della religione tradizionale e d'accusa contro la religione cristiana; dopo un breve intermezzo di Minucio che ricorda lo scopo del dialogo, la ricerca della verit, Ottavio sviluppa la sua risposta confutando le accuse di Cecilio e attaccando a sua volta la religionepagana. Alla fine Cecilio si confessa vinto. Il discorso di Cecilio comincia con mettere in evidenza il mistero dell'universo che ci circonda, mistero che supera le possibilit di comprensione dell'umano intelletto e che perci preferibile non illudersi di poter comprendere, come invece pretendono di fare i cristiani che nella loro ignoranza parlano di una provvidenza che regola il corso delle umane cose. In questa condizione non c' di meglio che aderire lealmente alla credenze che ci propone una lunga e linguistica conoscendo una sola lingua''; La tradizione non il passato; l'autocoscienza della III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

79

gloriosa tradizione e che trovano, per cos dire, conferma nella grandezza dell'impero romano che le ha prese a fondamento. A questo punto comincia l'attacco vero e proprio alla religione cristiana: accuse di ignoranza, ateismo, immoralit, di professare dottrine fantastiche, come quella di un Dio onnipresente e della resurrezione del corpo. La replica di Ottavio, pi lunga del discorso di Cecilio, lo segue passo passo nell'argomentazione. Perci esordisce con la dimostrazione dell'esistenza della provvidenza e di Dio unico, e passa poi a criticare la religione tradizionale nei suoi aspetti scandalosi del mito e del rituale: una educazione fondata su queste menzogne non pu che corrompere i giovani. Segue la confutazione delle accuse di Cecilio, che permette a Ottavio non soltanto di dimostrare la razionalit delle dottrine criticate dall'avversario confermate anche dalla filosofia greca, ma anche di insistere sulla superiore condotta morale che caratterizza la vita dei cristiani, sull'eroismo che li fa forti fino al martirio. Con questa perorazione piena di calore e di sincerit si chiude il discorso. Chiesa ora di ci che ha ricevuto non come un tesoro inerte, ma come una dinamica vita III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

80

Questa breve opera presenta struttura ammirevolmente costruita e molto curata nei particolari, dall'inquadratura complessiva alla proporzione fra le varie parti ed i vari argomenti, alla variet dei toni che sottolineano i singoli punti ed i trapassi da uno all'altro. Tutto costruito bilanciato meditato: siamo ben lungi dal disordine e dall'approssimazione che caratterizza l'argomentare di certe apologie greche. La forma dialogica impostata su due discorsi contrapposti permette di mettere in evidenza anche gli argomenti della parte avversa, con inusitata cura nel presentarli con convinzione e obiettivit: si tratta di presentazione di tono tipicamente romano, che doveva ben corrispondere ad uno stato d'animo diffuso fra le persone istruite ma incapaci di affrontare il problema di Dio e dell'uomo alla maniera filosofica dei greci e perci ripiegate su un fondo di scetticismoche cercava un esteriore ubi consistam nella leale fedelt alla tradizione degli avi. A questa abile presentazione della tesi pagana, che senza validi argomenti si voluta considerare esemplata su un discorso anticristiano di Frontone, il discorso di Ottavio oppone gli interiore; Se vogliamo sapere cosa significhino Natale, Eucarestia, Pasqua, non dobbiamo III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

81

argomenti che abbiamo bene imparato a conoscere nell'apologetica greca: la scarsa insistenza sugli argomenti di carattere giuridico, cos sviluppati da Tertulliano, e l'insistenza su quelli di carattere morale, proposti con tono di convinzione e di entusiasmo nella descrizione delle virt cristiane: eroismo purezza santit, ci convince che qui era il centro dell'interesse di Minucio, e questa considerazione pu forse gettare un po' di luce sull'aspetto dell'apologia di Minucio che pi ha intrigato gli studiosi moderni. A lettura anche superficiale dell 'Octavius balza evidente lo scarsissimo insistere dell'autore sulle verit specifiche della religione cristiana: si preferisce insistere su concetti d'ordine generale, per i quali si trovava valido corrispondente nella filosofia dell'epoca: Dio, la provvidenza; solo l'escatologia trattata sotto aspetto pi specificamente cristiano: ma non citato neppure un passo della Scrittura e non fatto mai esplicitamente il nome di Cristo, cui si allude solo indirettamente Tale particolarit fa dell' Octavius un unicum nell'ambito della letteratura apologetica sia greca sia Latina, che certo tratta ampiamente di argomenti comuni con metterci a studiare l'antropologia o la teoria del gioco, ma tuffarci nell'enorme mare di III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

82

la filosofia del tempo ma non rinuncia a proporre anche verit specificamente cristiane, in maggiore o minor misura. La fantasia degli studiosi si sbizzarrita nel proporre spiegazioni dell'inconsueto modo di fare di Minucio: si proposta la disciplina dell'arcano, si pensato a Minucio catecumeno, poco al corrente delle verit cristiane di carattere pi tecnico, si pensato anche ad un cristiano di dubbia ortodossia e che perci si limitato a concetti di ordine generale evitando punti specifici dove le sue idee erano imprecise o non ortodosse; si anche pensato che l'attuale Octavius nell'intenzione dell'autore dovesse costituire solo la prima parte di un'apologia destinata a trattare pi specificamente delle verit cristiane nella seconda parte, che non consta sia mai stata scritta. Da accenni fuggevoli del dialogo chiaro che Minucio conosce della religione cristiana pi di quanto non voglia dire: cade perci ogni tentativo di spiegaione impostato sulla reale ignoranza dell'autore. Si tratta di voluta astensione: e in mancanza di spiegazione precisa possiamo genericamente pensare a prevalente interesse dell'autore per esigenze di carattere testimonianze liturgiche e patristiche e sguazzarvi pezzo per pezzo, et per et, attenti a cogliere i III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

83

morale pi che dottrinale, e insieme a precisa limitazione della trattazione ad argomenti che potessero far presa su lettori colti, pi sensibili a tematica di carattere morale che ad approfondimento dottrinale. Si tenga anche presente il rigido senso della costruzione, per cui la risposta di Ottavio segue fedelmente la traccia proposta da Cecilio, senza concessioni a divagazioni di una certa consistenza. La stessa accuratezza che abbiamo notato nella costruzione dell'opera evidente anche nella lingua e nello stile di Minucio: anche qui prevalente l'influsso ciceroniano, cui si affianca Seneca, con concessioni anche al gusto arcaicizzante dell'epoc:3. Il tutto filtrato attentamente da una personalit non originale ma ricettiva e sensibile, molto attenta nel dosare i vari imprestiti, s da darci un dettato limpido omogeneo vario nel tono, sempre rispondente al concetto da esprimere. 3. Ben altro risalto che l'evanescente Minucio ha la figura di Q. Settimio Fiorente Tertulliano, nel quale il cristianesimo africano, passionale battagliero ed estremista fino cambiamenti nella corrente, dal momento che ogni generazione cerca di arrivare ad una propria III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

84

all'eccesso, trov il suo primo valido rappresentante e la letteratura Latina cristiana uno dei pi grandi esponenti.

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

85

QUINTUS SEPTIMIUS FLORENS TERTULLIANUS Tertulliani36 litteraria, philosophica et theologica navitas vincit fines historiae litterarum et spectat rationes quoque civiles et politicas in Africa et fere toto orbe.37 Ingeni vir nativi et praepotentis [De Labriolle] exhibetur, contradictionibus sauciatus [C. Moreschini], persona tragica [E.K. Rand], proprior Antiquo quam Novo Testamento, Hebraeus fere [Campenhausen], Christi doctrinae proditor [Cl. Rambaux], peritissimus Romanis legibus ac clarissimus [EUS., h.e. 2,2,4], eruditissimus ac praestantissimus Christianorum auctorum ante Augustinum.
comprensione di ci che . III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

86

Exemplar Africani particularismi et 'Africitatis' ab Erasmo pluries declaratur, licet dubitetur utrum adversarius Imperii Romani exstiterit et de natura operis De

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

87

Pallio non una sit sententia.38 Carthagine natus esse videtur fere a.150 et Sub [Sept.] Severo principe [193-211] et Antonino Caracalla [211-217] maxime floruit, multaque scripsit volumina, quae, quia nota sunt pluribus, praetermittimus... Hic usque ad mediam aetatem presbyter fuit Ecclesiae; postea ... ad Montani dogma delapsus [ab a.207] in multis libris novae prophetiae meminit ... Fertur vixisse usque ad decrepitam aetatem [medio s.III ?] et quae non extant opuscula edidisse.39 Pater, cohortis urbanae centurio vel titulo hoc ornatus cum ministerio fungeretur in proconsulari sede, paganus fuisse videtur: Haec et nos risimus

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

88

aliquando. De vestris sumus: fiunt, non nascuntur Christiani [ap. 18,4].40 Militaris ambitus nonnihil in eius ingenium severum efformandum contulit: Infantes penes Africam Saturno immolabantur palam usque ad proconsulatum Tiberii, qui ipsos sacerdotes in eisdem arboribus templi sui obumbraticibus scelerum votivi crucibus vivos exposuit, teste militia patris nostri, quae id ipsum munus illi proconsuli functa est (ap. 9,2).

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

89

Utrum autem causidicus an iuris fuerit peritus dubitatur.41 Mira Christianorum martyrum patientia et constantia, eorum mores et in daemones potestas, fortasse uxoris quoque pietas, quam Christianam fuisse testantur libri duo ad eam dicati, impulerunt eum ut baptizaretur: Quis non contemplatione eius [= martyris] concutitur ad requirendum quid intus in re sit? Quis non, ubi requisivit, accedit? Ubi accessit, mori exoptat (ap. 50,15).42 Veritatem ita sitivit ut 162es inveniatur uno in opere et encyclopaedica tanta fuit scientia ditatus ut Hieronymus ( ep. 70,5) diceret: Quid Tertulliano eruditius quid acutius? Apologeticus eius et Contra gentes libri cunctam saeculi obtinent disciplinam.
Ep.137.5: CSEL 44.121; cf. Actas del VIII Congreso espanol de estudios clasicos . Madrid III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.
8

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

90

Hebraicum parum (Prax. 5,1), Graecum autem optime novit sermonem, non litteras, facile autem vincit ceteros coaevos Latinos auctores, 'punicitate' si vis addita. Carmina parvipendit: Poetis nec vigilantibus credo ( an. 33,8), licet poeticam exhibeat mentem ac refertam imaginibus innumeris, novissimis ac insolitis (res. 112). Sermo vehemens et varius exhibetur: Plane non negabimus aliquando philosophos iuxta nostra sensisse. Nonnumquam et in procella confusis vestigiis coeli et freti aliqui (improviso) portus offenditur prospero errore, nonnumquam et in tenebris aditus quidam et exitus deprehenduntur caeca felicitate, sed et natura
1994. Aristoteles (Rhet . 1.2.1) et Cicero (de or. 1.31.138; Brut. 15) docent primum oratoris III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

91

pleraque suggeruntur quasi de publico sensu, quo animam Deus dotare dignatus est (De an. 2,1). Presbyter fuisse traditur. Opus Contra Marcionem Scripturarum millies farcit locis ac diversis sententiis: utrum vulgata ac auctoritate praedita versione utatur, an primam ad verbum suam ipsius translationem exhibeat non satis decerni potest. At cur inclinavit ad Montanismum? Cur mentem mutavit?43 Hieronymi fortasse malignitas tradit eum ad Montani delapsum esse dogma invidia et contumeliis clericorum Romanae Ecclesiae, cum Agrippini, Carthaginiensis episcopi, non fuisset in successorem designatus. Sed severa Montanistarum disciplina cum ardore martyrum ac fide confessorum componitur,
officium esse dicere ad persuadendum (pisteu/ein): docere, delectare , movere. Triplex ratio III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

92

quibus naturali indole inclinabat.44 Item parusiae exspectatio et sunte/leia [extremitas temporum mundi] eum impulerunt ad disciplinam severiorem amplectendam et ad charismata veneranda. Non schisma sed fortasse 'ecclesiolam in ecclesia' fundavit, quam defendere perrexit,45 licet saepe dicat: 'apud (penes) nos', 'nostri', 'apud vos', 'vestri'. Fortasse ad montanismum inclinatio habenda est ut severioris disciplinae studium, et ad severitatem moralem adhortatio, ne Christiani spectacula frequentarent, stipendia mererent, Dominicam diem violarent, commercia exercerent, magistratus adirent, saeviente persecutione fugerent, secundas nuptias inirent, quas species stupri habebat, neque virgines caput nudum exponerent.
logos, pathos, ethos spectat universam eloquentiam classicam. Ioannis evangelium aperte: i(/na III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

93

Vigiliae Christianae 5 (1951), pp.111-112

SAINT JRME ET SAINT AUGUSTIN SUR TERTULLIEN PAR CHRISTINE MOHRMANN Le fait que Tertullien a rompu avec l'glise et qu'il est mort hrtique a compromis sa mmoire dans l'glise ancienne. Mme Cyprien qui puise chaque instant dans les oeuvres de Tertullien n'a jamais fait mention de son prdcesseur. L'anathme de l'hrsie tait, aussitt aprs sa mort, une vraie damnatio memoriae. Lactance est le premier qui rompt le silence pour dire que l'obscurit du style de Tertullien est la cause du fait qu'il est trs peu connu ( div. inst. 5, 1, 23). Le jugement de saint Hilaire de Poitiers est beaucoup plus pntrant et en mme temps plus sage: consequens error hominis detraxit scriptis probabilibus auctoritatem (Comm. in Matth. 5, 1). pisteu/shte - ut credatis, inquit - ceteraque evangelia ad persuadendum mundo conscripta sunt III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

94

Au cours des quatrime et cinquime sicles on prend un intrt de plus en plus intense aux oeuvres de Tertullien et ce sera saint Jrme qui aura le courage de lui prodiguer des loges. Il le qualifie comme eruditus et ardens vir (ep. 84, 2), comme creber . . . in sententiis, sed difficilis in loquendo (ep. 58, 10) et ep. 70, 5 il admire son rudition en mme temps que sa pntration: quid Tertulliano eruditius, quid acutius? Apologeticus eius et contra gentes libri cunctam saeculi continent disciplinam. Mais, lui aussi, ne passe pas sous silence que Tertullien est un hrtique : in Tertulliano laudamus ingenium, sed damnamus haeresin (Adv. Ruf . 3, 2 7 ). Cependant, le moine de Bethlhem ne peut pas refouler un sentiment de sympathie pour le Carthaginois fougueux et de caractre difficile (acris et vehementis ingenii , de vir. ill. 53). La raison de cette sympathie m semble tre claire : plusieurs gards il y a une parent psychologique entre Tertullien et Jrme. Sous ce rapport est trs loquent ce que saint Jrme suggre de vir. ill. 53: que Tertullien aurait t pouss vers le Montanisme par des expriences peu agrables qu'il avait eues dans ses rapports avec |[p.112] le clerg de Rome (hic cum usque ad mediam aetatem (Aug. cons. ev . 1.7.10). III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

95

presbyter Ecclesiae perinansisset, invidia postea et contumeliis clericorum Romanae ecclesiae ad Montani dogma delapsus). Dans cette information de saint Jrme, qui nest pas confirme par d'autres donnes, on voit reflte la rancune de saint Jrme lui-mme l'gard du clerg de Rome. A ct du jugement favorable de saint Jrme, l'attitude de saint Augustin est trs svre. Non seulement il range Tertullien parmi les hrtiques ( Haer. 86), sans attnuer le jugement impitoyable qui rsulte de cette constatation, comme saint Hilaire l'avait fait d'une manire si sage, mais il ne mentionne mme pas le nom de Tertullien quand il numre, de doctr. christ. 2, 40, 61, les auteurs chrtiens importants. Et, qui plus est, dans le trait de bono viduitatis 4, 6, il reproche Tertullien son style pathtique par des mots qui sont - eux aussi - assez dclamatoires : buccis sonantibus non sapientibus . Il faut ajouter toutefois que de gen. ad litt. 10, 25, 41 il

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

96

qualifie Tertullien comme un esprit pntrant: quoniam acutus est (Tertullianus). 46 Ce qu'on n'a pas signal jusqu'ici, c'est que saint Augustin dans un de ses sermons, a repris un des plus beaux mots de Tertullien sous une forme trs augustinienne. Il s'agit des mots semen est sanguis christianorum (apol. 50, 13), qui sont devenus chez saint Augustin, serm, 22, 4, 4: sparsum est semen sanguinis, surrexit seges ecclesiae. 47 En dpit de son antipathie saint Augustin n'a pas pu s'empcher de traduire d'une manire trs personnelle un des mots les plus sublimes de Tertullien et c'est la version augustinienne qui est beaucoup plus pathtique que le mot concis et lapidaire de Tertullien. 48

Opera Tertullianus ab a.197 ad 222 fere triginta et unum opus exaravit, primum
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

97

corpus ac monumentum Litterarum Christianarum. Opera nonnulla sunt catholica, alia ad montanismum inclinant (ab anno fere 213), cetera montanistica. Quae partitio theorica habetur, quia numquam indolem mutavit suam: in gentiles et haereticos ita vehementer invectus est, ut modum excedere visus sit, quaeque eruditionis ubertate et eloquentiae ardore in opere apologetico conscripsit nihil ab rebus differunt, quas in operibus Ad uxorem, De exhortatione castitatis, De monogamia perscripsit. Opera De spectaculis, De baptismo, De virginibus velandis, De corona militis, Graeco sermone primum edita, perierunt; opus De extasi numquam est in Latinam linguam conversum.
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

98

A. Inter opera C a t h o l i c a (CC 1, Turnhout 1954) annumerantur: 1. Ad Martyras, 2. Ad Nationes (a.197), 3. Apologeticum (a.197) 4. De testimonio animae (a.197-200), 5. De spectaculis (a.198-200) 6. De praescriptione haereticorum (a.198-200), 7. De oratione (a.200-206), 8. De patientia (a.200-206), 9. De baptismo (a.200-206), 10. De paenitentia (a.200-206) 11. De cultu feminarum (a.200-206), 12. Ad uxorem (a.200-206) 13. Adversus Hermogenem (a.200-206), 14. Adversus Iudaeos (a.200-206)

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

99

B. Ad montanismum inclinant (CC 2, Turnhout 1954): 15. De virginibus velandis (a.206), 16. Adversus Marcionem (a.207-211) 17. De pallio (a.209), 18. Adversus Valentinianos (a.208-211) 19. De carne Christi (a.208-211), 20. De resurrectione carnis (a.208-211) 21. De anima (a.208-211), 22. De exhortatione castitatis (a.208-211) 23. De corona (a.211), 24. De idolatria (a.211-212) 25. Scorpiace (a.211-212), 26. Ad Scapulam (a.212) C. Sunt M o n t a n i s t i c a: 27. De fuga in persecutione (a.213), 28. Adversus Praxean
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

100

29. De monogamia, 30. De ieiunio, 31. De pudicitia (a.217-223) Tertulliani opera spectant ad extra et ad intra Ecclesiae. 1.Ad extra sunt: Pagani vulgus Ad nationes potestates Apologeticum - Ad Scapulam docti viri De testimonio Iudaei exegesis Adversus Iudaeos Haeretici exegesis De praescriptione Hemogenes De anima - Adversus Hermogenem
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

101

Marcio Valentiniani Gnostici Praxeas Docetistae

Adversus Marcionem Adversus Valentinianos Scorpiace Adversus Praxeam De carne Christi - De resurrectione

2.Ab intra declarat mores Christianorum: Mos agendi in persecutionibus Ad martyras - De fuga in spectaculis De spectaculis in ritibus De idolatria
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

102

in rebus militaribus De corona Mos agendi Christianorum in vestibus De cultu - De virginibus velandis - De pallio in oratione De oratione in ieiunio De ieiunio in rebus adversis De patientia in nuptiis Ad uxorem - De exhortatione castitatis De monogamia - De pudicitia in fide suscipienda De baptismo - De poenitentia Ad nationes L.2
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

103

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

104

Apologeticum49 Praestantissimum atque elegantissimum est opus, tum doctrina tum eloquentia. Testimonium ignorantiae uestrae, quae iniquitatem dum defendit, reuincit, in prom<p>tu est, quod omnes qui uobis cum retro ignorabant et uobis cum oderant, simul eis contigit scire, desinunt odisse qui desinunt ignorare, immo fiunt et ipsi quod oderant, et incipiunt odisse quod fuerant . Tertullianus Romani Imperii antistites hortatur ac Praesides ne Christianos inique vexent, falsisque incusent de criminibus, quae potius paganis sunt adscribenda.
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

105

In nuce cetera complectitur opera et in Graecam linguam meruit, raro honore, converti (EUS., h.e. 2,2,4). Refutatio (cc. 7-49) est tripartita: 1.(cc.7-9) falsa esse demonstrat occulta Christianorum crimina (infanticidii, incesti, caenae tiesteae); 2.(cc.10-27) a crimine lesae divinitatis [religionis] Christianos esse immunes proclamat, nec atheos esse, cum Deum Summum rerum creatorem colant; 3.(cc.28-45) denique crimine lesae maiestatis Christianos esse innoxios asserit, neque Romani Imperii publicos esse hostes, cum pro imperatoris salute et reipublicae pace, cui suis optimis prosunt moribus, preces ad Deum effundant. Praemunitio (cc.46-49) et peroratio sive conclusio (cc.49-50) religionem
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

106

Christianam non novam quamdam philosophiam, sed a Deo revelatam religionem proclamat praestantiorem ceteris philosophorum coetibus, Christianos vero mira constantia in confitenda fide et martyrio subeundo praeclaros: Si non licet vobis, Romani Imperii antistites, in aperto et edito, in ipso fere vertice civitatis praesidentibus ad iudicandum, palam dispicere et coram examinare, quid sit liquido in causa Christianorum; si ad hanc solam speciem auctoritas vestra de iustitiae diligentia in publico aut timet aut erubescit inquirere; si denique, quod proxime accidit, domesticis iudiciis nimis operata infestatio sectae huius os obstruit defensioni
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

107

liceat veritati vel occulta via tacitarum litterarum ad aures vestras pervenire. Nihil de causa sua deprecatur, quia nec de condicione miratur. Scit se peregrinam in terris agere, inter extraneos facile inimicos invenire, ceterum genus, sedem, spem, gratiam, dignitatem in caelis habere. Unum gestit interdum, ne ignorata damnetur. Hanc itaque primam causam apud vos conlocamus iniquitatis: odii erga nomen Christianorum. Quam iniquitatem idem titulus et onerat et revincit, qui videtur excusare, ignorantia scilicet.
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

108

Quid enim iniquius quam ut oderint homines quod ignorant, etiam si res

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

109

meretur odium?.50 Tunc Traianus rescripsit, hoc genus inquirendos quidem non esse, oblatos vero puniri oportere. O sententiam necessitate confusam! Negat inquirendos ut innocentes et mandat puniendos ut nocentes. Parcit et saevit, dissimulat et

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

110

animadvertit.51 Corpus sumus de conscientia religionis et disciplinae unitate et spei foedere. Coimus in coetum et congregationem, ut ad Deum quasi manu facta precationibus ambiamus. Haec vis Deo grata est. Oramus etiam pro imperatoribus, pro ministeriis eorum et potestatibus, pro statu saeculi, pro rerum quiete, pro mora finis. Coimus ad litterarum divinarum commemorationem, si quid praesentium temporum qualitas aut praemonere cogit aut recognoscere. Certe fidem sanctis vocibus pascimus, spem erigimus, fiduciam figimus, disciplinam praeceptorum nihilo minus inculcationibus densamus. Ibidem etiam exhortationes, castigationes
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

111

et censura divina.52 Fratres autem etiam vestri sumus iure naturae, matris unius, etsi vos parum homines, quia mali fratres. At quanto dignius fratres et dicuntur et habentur, qui unum patrem Deum agnoverunt, qui unum spiritum biberunt sanctitatis, qui de uno

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

112

utero ignorantiae eiusdem ad unam lucem expaverunt veritatis?.53

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

113

De praescriptione haereticorum54 Fere a. CC, luculenter inquirit de iure possidendi ac interpretandi Scripturas.

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

114

Veritas praecedit (principalitas veritatis), haeresis sequitur.55 Ecclesia fruitur continua possessione, sc. longi temporis praescriptione, proprietate hereditatis, praescriptione proprietatis. Veritas mendacio haereticorum omnium opponitur. Praescriptio indicat iuris extinctionem, si rei dominus iuxta tempus ab iure statutum non utatur, sed Tertullianus vocem usurpat, ad exceptionem seu obiectionem ponendam haereticis, ne quid agant contra ius et statutas leges Scripturarum, quas Apostoli Ecclesiae commiserunt: nullum ius habent haeretici eis fruendi; patrimonium ac depositum veritatis ipse Christus Apostolis et Episcopis, legitimis successoribus, concredidit, neque est disputatio facienda cum eis quia veritas est quiddam absolutum, cui ipsi nihil conferunt. Disputatio de proprietate
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

115

Scripturarum firmam theologiam extruit de Ecclesiae traditione. Argumentatio exponit praescriptionem veritatis (20-30), praescriptionem principalitatis (31-35), praescriptionem proprietatis (36-40). Cc. 41-45 de disciplina, de praedicandi munere, de communicatione in fide (peroratio). Canon fidei - XIII 1. Regula est autem fidei ut iam hinc quid defendamus profiteamur, illa scilicet qua creditur. 2. Unum omnino Deum esse nec alium praeter mundi conditorem qui universa de nihilo produxerit per verbum suum primo omnium emissum. 3. Id verbum filium eius appellatum in nomine Dei varie visum a patriarchis, in prophetis semper auditum, postremo delatum ex spiritu
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

116

patris Dei et virtute in virginem Mariam, carnem factum in utero et ex ea natum egisse Iesum Christum. 4. Exinde praedicasse novam legem et novam promissionem regni caelorum, virtutes fecisse, crucifixum, tertia die resurrexisse, in caelos ereptum sedisse ad dexteram patris; 5. misisse vicariam vim spiritus sancti qui credentes agat, venturum cum claritate ad sumendos sanctos in vitae aeternae et promissorum caelestium fructuum et ad profanos iudicandos igni perpetuo, facta utriusque partis resuscitatione cum carnis restitutione. 6. Haec regula a Christo, ut probabiliter, instituta nullas habet apud nos quaestiones nisi quas haereses inferunt et quae haereticos faciunt. XXXVI 1. Age iam, qui voles curiositatem melius exercere in negotio
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

117

salutis tuae, percurre ecclesias apostolicas apud quas ipsae adhuc cathedrae apostolorum suis locis praesident, apud quas ipsae authenticae litterae eorum recitantur sonantes vocem et repraesentantes faciem uniuscuiusque. 2. Proxima est tibi Achaia, habes Corinthum. Si non longe es a Macedonia, habes Philippos; si potes in Asiam tendere, habes Ephesum; si autem Italiae adiaces, habes Romam unde nobis quoque auctoritas praesto est. 3. Ista quam felix ecclesia cui totam doctrinam apostoli cum sanguine suo profuderunt, ubi Petrus passioni dominicae adaequatur, ubi Paulus Iohannis [Baptistae] exitu coronatur, ubi apostolus Iohannes posteaquam in oleum igneum demersus nihil passus est, in insulam relegatur; videamus quid didicerit, quid docuerit: cum Africanis quoque ecclesiis
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

118

contesseratis, unum Deum Dominum novit, creatorem universitatis, et Christum Iesum ex virgine Maria filium Dei creatoris, et carnis resurrectionem, legem et prophetas cum evangelicis et apostolicis litteris miscet, inde potat fidem; eam aqua signat, sancto spiritu vestit, eucharistia pascit, martyrium exhortatur et ita adversus hanc institutionem neminem recipit. 6. Haec est institutio, non dico iam quae futuras haereses praenuntiabat, sed de qua haereses prodierunt. Sed non sunt ex illa, ex quo factae sunt adversus illam.

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

119

Adversus Marcionem L.V56 Marcion Ponticus, a.144 damnatus, floruit Carthagine s.III. Summa theologica Tertulliani decem annos exarata demonstrat eundem esse Deum Veteris Testamenti, legis conditorem, et Deum quem Iesus Patrem invocavit, neque alterum bonum alterum malum, neque Iesum non veram de Maria Virgine carnem sumpsisse, neque unum corpus paulinum Novi Testamenti authenticum esse. Sed nihil tam barbarum ac triste apud Pontum quam quod illic Marcion natus est, Scytha tetrior, Hamaxobio instabilior, Massageta inhumanior, Amazona
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

120

audacior, nubilo obscurior, hieme frigidior, gelu fragilior, histro fallacior, caucaso abruptior. Quidni? penes quem uerus Prometheus, Deus omnipotens, blasphemiis lancinatur. Iam et bestiis illius barbariei importunior Marcione tu, Euxine, probabiliorem feram philosophis edidisti quam Christianis. Nam ille canicola Diogenes hominem inuenire cupiebat, lucernam meridie circumferens, Marcion deum, quem inuenerat, extincto lumine fidei suae amisit (1,290).

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

121

Adversus Praxean57 Phrygius Praxeas, Personarum divinarum distinctione ablata, Patrem incarnatum ac cruce passum esse praedicabat (= patripassianismus). Opus (a. 213) in historia dogmatis momentum habet, quia Tertullianus primus systematice de Trinitate disseruit. 13. Si enim una persona et dei et domini in scripturis inueniretur, merito Christus non esset admissus ad nomen dei et domini - nemo enim alius praeter unus deus et dominus praedicabatur - et futurum erat ut ipse pater descendisse uideretur quia unus deus et unus dominus legebatur et tota oikonomia eius obumbraretur quae in materiam fidei prospecta atque dispensata est.
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

122

De anima Primus est tractatus psychologiae (apologeticae) Christianae, a. 210-213. Platonis doctrinam de animi immortalitate reicit et stoicam amplectitur de corporeitate, universum existens esse corpus proclamans: res activa, resistens stereo\n kai\ a)nti/tupon - quod opponitur ceteris incorporeis rebus quae non consistunt - accidentia - non habent consistentiam. Ergo Corpus sunt omnia: Deus, spiritus, angeli, anima hominis, caro animalis; non-corpus seu accidentia sunt cetera. Animus generatur una cum corpore per parentes (= traducianismus), et post mortem, praeter martyres, in Ade
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

123

manet usque ad corporis resurrectionem. Philosophos contra philosophos ponit, auctoritatem Scripturarum extollens, atque contra sophistas et curiositatis inquisitores asserit: credibile est quia impossibile est.

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

124

De carne Christi (a.212)58 Christi veram esse carnem defendit contra docetistas, Marcionem, Apellem, Valentinum et Basilidem, qui phantasma natum crucifixum ac mortuum praedicabant (1,1ss): Marcion, ut carnem Christi negaret, negauit etiam natiuitatem, aut ut natiuitatem negaret, negauit et carnem, scilicet ne inuicem sibi responderent natiuitas et caro, quia nec natiuitas sine carne nec caro sine natiuitate. Quasi non eadem licentia haeretica et ipse potuisset aut admissa carne natiuitatem negare, ut apelles discipulus et postea desertor ipsius, aut et carnem et natiuitatem professus aliter illas interpretari, ut condiscipulus et condesertor eius valentinus. Scilicet qui carnem Christi putatiuam introduxit, aeque potuit natiuitatem quoque
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

125

phantasma confingere, ut et conceptus et praegnatus et partus uirginis et ipsius exinde infantis ordo tw=i dokei=n haberentur eosdem oculos eosdem que sensu fefellissent quos carnis opinio elusit. Plane, natiuitas a gabriele adnuntiatur Potestne credere homo in resurrectionem quin credat Cristum resurrexisse? Christianum paradoxum credo quia absurdum vehementer sentit: Alias non invenio materias confusionis, quae me per contemptum ruboris probent bene impudentem et feliciter stultum. Crucifixus est dei filius: non pudet, quia pudendum est. Et mortuus est dei filius; credibile est, quia ineptum est. Et sepultus resurrexit; certum est, quia impossibile (car. 5,4).
Auctores litteras, soluto vel metrico sermone, fine artificioso innixas, appellant Graecas, III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.
9

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

126

De resurrectione carnis59 Contra docetas resurrectionem futuram esse cum iisdem corporibus integris docet, quae in vita sunt gestata (a.212). Sublime attingit. 1. Fiducia Christianorum resurrectio mortuorum. Illam credentes sumus; hoc credere ueritas cogit; ueritatem deus aperit. Sed uulgus inridet, existimans nihil superesse post mortem, et tamen defunctis parentat, et quidem inpensissimo officio pro moribus eorum, pro temporibus esculentorum, ut, quos negant sentire quidquam, etiam desiderare praesumant O pietatem de crudelitate ludentem! sacrificat an insultat, cum crematis crematur.
Latinas, Mediae quae dicitur Aetatis, Humanisticas, Pueriles, Roseas, Nigras, Consummisticas, III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

127

Ad martyras60 Exeunte a. 196, Martyres vehementer hortatur, in vinculis detentos et ante extremum supplicium languentes, ad fidei constantiam, ad squalorem carceris perferendum, ad supplicia pro Christo toleranda: (mart. 2,10) Habet tenebras [carcer] sed lumen estis ipsi. Habet vincula, sed vos soluti Deo estis. Triste illic expirat, sed vos odor estis suavitatis... Nihil crus sentit in nervo, cum animus in caelo est. Totum hominem animus circumfert
et huiusmodi. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

[ceppo]

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

128

Nemo miles ad bellum cum deliciis venit Etiam in pace labore et incommodis bellum pati iam ediscunt, in rmis deambulndo cmpum decurrendo, fssam molindo, [costruire fossati] testdinem densando. Sudore omnia constant, ne corpora atque animi expavescant de umbra ad solem et sole ad gelum, de tunica ad loricam, de silentio ad clamorem de quite ad tumltum.
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

129

Proinde vos, benedicti, quodcumque hoc durum est, ad exercitationem virtutum animi et corporis deputte Itaque epistates vester Christus Iesus, qui vos Spiritu unxit, [dux] et ad hoc scamma produxit, [locus pugnae] voluit vos ante diem agonis ad duriorem tractationem a liberiore condicione seponere, ut vires corroborarntur in vbis. Nempe enim et athletae segregantur ad strictiorem disciplinam, ut robori aedificando vacent; continentur a luxuria, a cibis laetioribus, a ptu iucundire. Coguntur, cruciantur, fatigantur;
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

130

quanto plus in exercitationibus laboraverint, tanto plus de victria sprant. Et illi, inquit Apostolus, ut coronam corruptibilem consequntur. De spectaculis (a.197). Spectacula pagana sunt inverecunda, contraria pietati, infesta atque cathedra pestilentiarum; idolatriam sapiunt in titulis (c.6), in caeremoniis (c.7), in circis (cc.8-12); contra baptismi fidem peccant. Maximum erit spectaculum adventus Christi: Si scaenicae doctrinae delectant, satis nobis litterarum est, satis versuum est, satis sententiarum, satis etiam canticorum, satis vocum, nec fabulae sed veritates, nec strophae sed simplicitates (29.4).
Praeiudicio aesthetico classicistico Litterae appellatae sunt aureae, argenteae, aeneae et III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.
10

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

131

De corona (a.201)61 Militem defendit coronam manu gestantem in castris et propterea in carcerem coniectum: Adhibetur quidam illic magis dei miles ceteris constantior fratribus, qui se duobus dominis seruire posse praesumpserant, solus libero capite, coronamento in manu otioso. Vulgato iam et ista disciplina Christiano, relucebat. Denique singuli designare, eludere eminus, infrendere comminus. Continuo murmur: tribuno <nomen> defertur et persona. Iam ex ordine accesserat. Statim tribunus: 'cur', inquit, 'tam diuersus habitus'? negauit ille sibi cum ceteris licere. Causas expostulatus 'Christianus sum' respondit. O militem gloriosum in deo!
huiusmodi prout Ciceronis et Caesaris Latinitati, quoad orationem solutam, Vergilii autem et III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

132

suffragia exinde, et res apud acta, et reus ad praefectos. Ibidem grauissimas paenulas posuit, releuari auspicatus, speculatoriam morosissimam de pedibus absoluit, terrae sanctae insistere incipiens, gladium nec dominicae defensioni necessarium reddidit, laurea et de manu caruit: et nunc rufatus sanguinis sui spe, calceatus de euangelii paratura, succinctus acutiore uerbo dei ac totus de apostolo armatus, ut de martyrii candida laurea melius coronandus donatiuum Christi in carcere expectat . De pallio62 Opus peculiare, nativum et fere acrobaticum probabiliter mutato habitu
Horatii, quoad carmina, proximae viderentur (cf. W.J. VERDENIUS, The Principles of Greek III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

133

converisonem interiorem revelat, sc. segregationem a Romanitate atque a Catholica Ecclesia, cum induat pallium Graeci philosophi pro toga Romana: 1. Principes semper Africae, uiri Carthaginienses, uetustate nobiles, nouitate felices, gaudeo uos tam prosperos temporum, cum ita uacat ac iuuat habitus denotare. Pacis haec et annonae otia. Ab imperio et a caelo bene est. Tamen et uobis habitus aliter olim tunicae fuere, et quidem in fama de subteminis studio et luminis concilio et mensurae temperamento, quod neque trans crura prodigae nec intra genua inuerecundae nec brachiis parcae nec manibus artae, sed (nec cingulo sinus diuidere expeditum) beatae quadrata iustitia in uiris stabant. Pallii extrinsecus habitus et ipse quadrangulus ab utroque laterum regestus et ceruicibus
Literary Criticism : Mnemosyne 36, 1983, pp. 14-59). Methodus historica eodem praeiudicio III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

134

circumstrictus in fibulae morsu, humeris acquiescebat. Pro, quantum circummeauit, a Pelasgis ad Lydos, a Lydiis ad Romanos, ut ab humeris sublimioris populi Carthaginienses complecteretur! exinde tunicam longiorem cinctu arbitrante suspenditis, et pallii iam teretis redundantiam tabulata congregatione fulcitis, et si quid praeterea condicio uel dignitas uel temporalitas uestit, pallium tamen generaliter uestrum immemores etiam denotatis. Ad uxorem L.II63 Uxorem ne secundas ineat nuptias post se defunctum hortatur, neque, in altero libro, cum paganis coniungatur, maneatque fidelis erga unum maritum:
evolutionistico laborat, et senescentis Imperii opera, corruptelam litterarum existimat. Ita III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

135

1.1. Dignum duxi, dilectissima mihi in domino conserua, quid tibi sectandum sit post discessum de saeculo meum, si prior te fuero uocatus, iam hinc prouidere, ut prouisum obserues, mandare fidei tuae. Nam <si de> saecularibus satis agentes sumus et <ut> utrique nostrum consultum uolumus tabulis ordinamus, cur non magis de diuinis atque caelestibus posteritati nostrae prospicere debeamus et legatum quodammodo praelegare: dmonitionem et demonstrationem eorum, quae ex bonis immortalibus et hereditate caelorum deputantur? tu modo ut solidum capere possis hoc meae admonitionis ac <demonstrationis> fideicommissum deus faciat, cui sit honor, gloria claritas, dignitas et potestas et nunc et in saecula saeculorum. Praecipio igitur tibi, quanta continentia potes, post excessum nostrum
Christianis litteris novitatem et optimam formam negant easque occasum esse et corruptionis III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

136

renunties nuptiis, nihil mihi isto nomine collatura, nisi quod tibi proderis, ne me putes propter carnis tuae integritatem mihi perseruandam de contumeliae dolore suspectum insinuare iam hinc tibi consilium uiduitatis. Nihil tunc inter nos dedecoris uoluptuosi resumetur. 1.8. Haec tibi iam hinc commendo, conserua carissima, post apostolum quidem ex abundanti pertractata, sed tibi etiam solatio futura, quod meam memoriam, si ita euenerit, in illis frequentabis. De monogamia64 Viam mediam proponit inter nuptias damnantes et Psychicos [ catholicos]
causam autumant classicorum generum. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

137

secundas concedentes: monogamia, id est semel nubendum, servanda est: 1. Haeretici nuptias auferunt, psychici ingerunt. Illi nec semel, isti non semel nubunt. Quid agis, lex creatoris? inter alienos spadones et aurigas tuos tantumdem quereris de domestico obsequio quantum de fastidio extraneo. Proinde et te laedunt qui abutuntur quemadmodum qui non utuntur. Verum neque continentia eiusmodi laudanda, quia haeretica est, neque licentia defendenda, quia psychica est. Illa blasphemat, ista luxuriat; illa destruit nuptiarum deum, ista confundit. Penes nos autem, quos spiritales merito dici facit agnitio spiritalium charismatum, continentia tam religiosa est quam licentia uerecunda, quandoquidem ambae cum creatore sunt. Continentia legem nuptiarum honorat, licentia temperat; illa non
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

138

cogitur, ista regitur; illa arbitrium habet, haec modum. 3. Et nunc recogitans ista facile tibi persuadebis multo magis unicas nuptias competisse paracleto praedicare, qui potuit et nullas, magis que credendum temperasse illum quod et abstulisse decuisset, si quae uelit Christus intellegas. De pudicitia65 Pudicitia, flos morum, honor corporum, decor sexuum, integritas sanguinis, fides generis, fundamentum sanctitatis, praeiudicium omnibus bonae mentis. Nemo moechiae et fornicationis delicta paenitentia functis dimittere potest. Erit igitur et hic adversus psychicos titulus,
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

139

adversus meae quoque sententiae retro penes illos societatem, quo magis hoc mihi in notam levitatis obiciant. Numquam societatis repudium delicti praeiudicium. Quasi non facilius sit errare cum pluribus, quando veritas cum paucis ametur. At enim me non magis dedecorabit utilis levitas quam ornarit nocens. Non suffundor errore quo carui, quia caruisse delector, quia meliorem me et pudicitiorem recognosco. Nemo proficiens [it. crescendo] erubescit. Habet et in Christo scientia aetates suas, per quas devolutus est et apostolus:
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

140

'Cum parvulus, inquit, essem, tamquam parvulus loquebar, tamquam parvulus sapiebam; at ubi vir sum factus, ea quae parvuli fuerant evacuavi .66

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

141

Journal of Theological Studies New Series 22 (1961) pp. 273-9 NOTES ON TERTULLIAN'S INTERPRETATION OF SCRIPTURE I TERTULLIAN'S attitude to allegorizing forms an interesting and in some ways surprising subject of study. He, of course, knows of the existence of allegorical interpretation of the Scriptures in his day. He glosses the quae sunt allegorica of Galatians iv. 23 with id est aliud portendentia,67 a definition reminiscent of that of Heracleitus in his Quaestiones Homericae 22.68 He acknowledges that two methods of prophesying were used by the prophets of the Old Testament. One of
sublimis stili fundamentum est, quia per cognita, nova noscuntur: bene dicit, qui iuxta principia III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

142

these was the method of direct prevision, and the other was 'per aenigmata et allegorias et parabolas'. But the instances of this last which he gives are mainly of simple metaphor: Joel iii. 18; Exod. iii. 8; Isa. xli. 19, xliii. 20; Eph. v. 3i-32; and Gal. iv. 22-25.69 He has, however, no objection to traditional Christian allegory used with moderation. He allows, for instance, that the holy land promised to the saints in the Old Testament is Christ himself: 'carnem potius domim interpretandam, quae exinde et in omnibus Christum indutis sancta sit terra, vere sancta per incolatum spiritus sancti, vere lac et mel manans per suavitatem spei ipsius, vere Iudaea per fidei [v.l. dei] familiaritatem.'70 This same allegory is already to be found in the Epistle of Barnabas vi. 8 f. and probably in Acts vii. 3-5. It is
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

143

interesting to note that Tertullian may be here giving us a clue to the custom of administering milk and honey to the newly baptized [p.274] at their first eucharist, evidenced in Hippolytus's Apostolic Tradition. When he is dealing with the Lord's Prayer he interprets 'thy will be done in earth as it is in heaven' to mean 'thy will be done in us', by a process which he calls interpretatione figurata carnis et spiritus, in contrast to simpliciter intelligendum. And he expounds 'give us this day our daily bread' to mean first (spiritaliter) 'give us Christ himself', and then to refer to the bread consecrated in the eucharist.71 There is no sign anywhere in all Tertullian's writings of the influence, so evident in the works of Clement of Alexandria and of Origen, of Philonic allegory.
naturae dicit. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

144

But though Tertullian is ready to acknowledge as legitimate the practice of allegorizing Scripture in the Church of his day, and will occasionally have recourse to it himself, he often rejects the practice and his writings leave a general impression that he was suspicious of allegory. He describes the heretics' way of interpreting Scripture, which he rejects,72 as allegoriae, parabolae, aenigmata, and he describes Carpocrates's handling of a Dominical saying thus: 'this is the way in which he twists all that allegory of the Lord which radiates reliable meanings and is to be understood literally at least in its first sense.'73 Gnostic allegory impressed him as dangerous more strongly than Christian allegory struck him as felicitous. Several times he recognizes the possibility of allegorizing a passage but prefers
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

145

instead the literal sense. He contrasts interpretation in allegories et parabolis with interpretation in definitionibus certis et simplicibus.74 Faced with that thorny problem for all Christian, and for many Jewish, expositors, the laws about forbidden food in the Pentateuch, he refrains from allegorizing them: they were intended to ensure self-control and restraint in eating; complicated regulations about sacrifice were intended to prevent the Jews indulging in idolatry; though he is aware of the possibility of writing 'de arcanis significantiis legis, spiritalis scilicet et propheticae et in omnibus paene argumentis figuratae', he does not expound these, and though he hints that there is a figura of the brazen serpent he does not

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

146

mention what it is.75 But this avoidance of allegorizing is not confined to the work against Marcion (who had affected to eschew allegorizing). In his De Resurrectione Mortuorum Tertullian maintained that it was unnecessary and wrong to allegorize Scriptural references to the resurrection of the dead, which was the device used by the Gnostics to render these references invalid, and he applies to the prophets the phrase 'sollemnissimam eloquii [p.275] prophetici formarn allegorici et figurati plerumque, non semper'.76 He claims that he could argue for corporal resurrection by allegorizing prophecies, but he refuses to do so, in order to leave himself open to take literally the prophetic statements about the resurrection. 77 And though he is ready to allegorize the 'white garments' of the martyrs in Revelation to
Augustinus Patrem appellat presbyterum Hieronymum (c. Iul. 1,7,31 e 34; 2,36); Prosper Tiro III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.
12

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

147

mean their risen bodies,78 he refers contemptuously to 'the mist of allegory'.79 When therefore we find in the Adversus Iudaeos (vii. 6) the statement that though Isa. xlv. 1 , 2 can be taken in a spiritual manner, yet the words also propria specie sunt adimpleta, because so many people now believe in Christ, we are justified in regarding this as a characteristic view of Tertullian, and a sign of his authorship at least to this point of the work. II Indeed Tertullian's interpretation of Scripture, where he is not using any and every argument in order to indulge in special pleading, leaves a very favourable impression on the modern reader. Its characteristics are common sense, realism,
(Aquitanus), laicus, habetur Pater, praeter ministerii potestatem. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

148

and restraint. This is particularly true of one of his longest works, the Adversus Marcionem. 'Sed malumus in scripturis minus, si forte, sapere quam contra' 80 is a very good exegetical maxim, and one to which Tertullian usually confines himself. He tells us that our Lord's words recorded in Scripture can be interpreted in one of three ways. We immediately recall the literal, moral, and spiritual senses of Origen; but Tertullian intends nothing of the sort: our Lord will himself interpret the parable for us, as in the parable of the sower; or the evangelist will preface the teaching by a preliminary remark, as in the parable of the unjust judge; or the meaning is to be readily discerned from the parable itself, as in the parable of the

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

149

unfruitful tree.81 He understands, none better, that Christians must accept the embarrassing particularity of the Old Testament revelation:
What is sillier, what more open to criticism, than the demand by God for blood sacrifices and reeking holocausts? What is more open to criticism than the cleansing of vessels and beds? What is more indecent than the additional indignity inflicted on the flesh which is already ashamed? What so base as the promulgation of retaliation? What so despicable as picking and choosing among foods? Every heretic, you need not tell me, laughs at the whole Old Testament. For God chose the foolish things of the world in order to put to shame the wise, &c. 82

Perhaps the most remarkable evidence of Tertullian's ability as an [p.276] expounder of the Bible is his insistence that a passage must be taken in its original sense, and interpreted according to the situation in which it was uttered or written.
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

150

Several examples of this trait could be given. In order to refute the heretics' use of the text 'seek and ye shall find' (Matt. vii. 7), Tertullian divests these words of every reference to the contemporary church and interprets them as a command to the apostles to discover, at that early stage in their discipleship, what Jesus was. 83 The command, 'when they persecute you in one city, flee into another' (Matt. x. 23), he refuses to take as a universal command, but he regards it as limited to the apostles and conditioned by the circumstances of its utterance: 'et personas suas habent et tempora et causas',84 and not long afterwards he adds 'omnium iam nunc dominicarum pronuntiationum suae sunt et causae et regulae: termini non in
Patres apostolici , post Io.B. Cotelier (a.1672), vocati sunt Barnabas, Clemens, Herma, III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.
13

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

151

infinitum nec ad omnia spectant'.85 In another work he has some very sensible things to say about the interpretation of our Lord's parables. The psychici (i.e. antiMontanist Catholics) apply the parable of the lost sheep to the erring Christian, allegorizing it thoroughly. Tertullian answers that it applied to people involved in the situation then obtaining, that is, to the Gentiles; 'or how can the Lord be represented as someone scoring debating points (cavillator responsionis) by leaving out the immediate meaning which he ought to emphasize and contriving a meaning referring to the future?'86 A danger for all interpreters of parables, he adds later, is that men are tempted to pull the meaning of them in some other direction than the material of the parable can really afford. It is reminiscent of actors who
Ignatius, Polycarpus; quibus Gallandi (a.1765) addidit Papiam et ep. Ad Diognetum ; Philotheus III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

152

allegoricos gestus accommodant canticis which are quite alien to the situation, the plot, the scene, and the character, and yet are very appropriate. 87 Later still he returns to the parables of the lost sheep and the lost coin. Why a hundred sheep, he asks? And why mention the sweeping of the house? Origen might have answered, because a hundred is a mystic number, the square of ten, and there were ten virgins in the parable and ten commandments, and because the Logos sweeps falsehood from our souls. Tertullian simply says that if it is necessary to explain how welcome is the recovery of one sinner, then a large number of saved must be contrasted with him, and because the actions of a woman looking for money would include the use of a broom. And he adds, speaking of allegorical interpretations of
Bryennios (a.1883) edidit opus Didaxh/, quod invenerat Constantinopoli, antiquitate cetera III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

153

parables: 'fanciful notions of this sort both render some passages uncertain and often by the ingenuity of forced interpretations lead away from the truth. Some things, however, have been stated literally [in the parable] in order [p.277] to support the parable and make it orderly and coherent, so that people may be

antecedens. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

154

brought to that point for which the illustration is designed.'88 Here Tertullian's interpretation is neither Alexandrian nor Antiochene. It is simply an example of the working of robust common sense. III Since Tertullian held these exegetical principles, it is not surprising to find that he does not allegorize the Old Testament law wholesale. We have already seen that he regarded the ritual commandments of the law as designed simply to keep the Jews out of mischief. This is an opinion to be found in several writers before Tertullian's

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

155

day, notably in Justin Martyr. 89 Tertullian can admit that the Old Testament law performed an educative function. Christ, he says, bade us give to him that asketh us, but the law had reached the point of commanding men to return at sundown clothes taken in pledge: 'it was then gradually shaping the faith of some people towards the perfect splendour of Christian discipline by some preliminary demands

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

156

for a mercifulness which was still a tentative (balbutiensis) one.'90 The law was an immature Gospel or the Gospel in nuce. He explains it thus: 'But even if we do allow a distinction between them, it is a distinction achieved by improvement, by expansion, by progress. Just as the fruit is distinguished from the seed, although the fruit derives from the seed, so the Gospel is distinguished from the law, even while it proceeds from the law, distinct from it but not incompatible with it,

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

157

different but not opposed.' 91 It is clear that Tertullian held that what was permanent or unchanged in the old law was its moral commandments. The Ten Commandments are the prima lex dei, the

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

158

sanctissima lex.92 This was a law which Christ fulfilled but did not abolish: 'onera enim legis usque ad Iohannem, non remedia. Operum iuga reiecta sunt, non disciplinarum. Libertas in Christo non fecit innocentiae iniuriam.'93 The law which remains is summarized thus: 'Manet lex tota pietatis sanctitatis humanitatis veritatis castitatis iustitiae misericordiae benevolentiae pudicitiae.'94 He apparently imagines that these moral commandments were confined [p.278] to the tables of the first law, the tablets which Moses broke in anger when, having just received them from God, he came down from Sinai only to witness the worship of the golden calf by the people of Israel; Tertullian describes the custom of virgins veiling themselves
Nauroy, Institut d'tudes augustiniennes, Paris 2004. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

159

on the approach of puberty as 'tabellae priores naturalium sponsarum et nuptiarum'.95 1 He does not directly tell us what were the contents of the second tablets, produced after the destruction of the first, though it looks as if he thought that they contained the ritual and sacrificial enactments, designed for the temporary function of keeping the Jews under the old dispensation out of mischief. When therefore we find the argument advanced in Adversus ludaeos, ii. 1-14, that the law given through Moses was not the first law but that God gave to Adam in paradise a lex primordialis consisting of the double commandment to love God and to love his neighbour and the moral commandments of the Decalogue, and that this was observed by the patriarchs before Abraham and was known to all men
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

160

descended from Adam all over the world, we can recognize this teaching as consistent with Tertullian's views and accept it as a slight confirmation of the hypothesis that he was in fact the author of at least the first part of this work. This attitude to the old law did not, however, prevent Tertullian from approving of at least one entirely ritual observance, the refusal to eat flesh from which the blood had not been drained. He tells us that, so far from eating infants' blood, Christians abstain even from'animals which have been strangled or have died of themselves in case we should be contaminated even by the blood which is stored in the flesh', and that at their trials Christians are offered sausages filled with blood because it is

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

161

known that Christians will not eat such things.96 And he believes that among the original commands made to mankind and confirmed or revived in Christ were

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

162

'libertas ciborum et sanguinis solius abstinentia'.97 He betrays the fact also that some Catholic Christians of his day were in the habit of observing the Jewish

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

163

Sabbath.98 Hitherto we have had much reason to respect and even to agree with Tertullian's handling of the place of the law of the Old Testament in the life of the Christian. It may not have been original or brilliant, but it [p.279] was founded on good sense and good feeling. Unfortunately, Tertullian did make one innovation in his treatment of this subject, and that a deplorable one. Having virtually removed the burden of a legalistic Old Testament religion, he introduced a legalistic New Testament one. Some people, he says, think that Christians have nothing to do with law. He agrees that the burdens of the law which even the fathers of old could not bear should be dispensed with: 'but the matters which concern righteousness
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

164

not only remain unimpaired but are even expanded, in order of course that our righteousness may exceed the righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees. If righteousness, then also modesty.'99 1 A little later he is writing 'Nunc ad legem proprie nostram, id est evangelium, conversi.'100 And finally he argues that the old law allowed a woman to marry again after her husband's death; Christians have died to the law and are no longer bound by it; therefore they are forbidden to marry after their first partner's death. 101 It is characteristic of Tertullian that by far the longest chapter in his book on the Lord's Prayer should be the twenty-second in which he deals with the insignificant question of whether virgins should be veiled during public prayer. He cheerfully converts into a legal code of behaviour for
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

165

Christians the sayings of our Lord in the Sermon on the Mount about lusting after

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

166

a woman and nursing anger in the heart. 102 He decides the question of whether Christians can be soldiers simply on one word of Christ, his telling Peter to put up

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

167

his sword, disregarding all other evidence. 103 He rejects the law of Levirate marriage, as superseded in Christ, but allows the condemnation of marriage with

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

168

foreigners under the old law to apply to Christians marrying pagans. 104 He maintains that though Jewish feasts and fasts and ceremonies are abrogated, yet all the more are nova sollemnia instituted by Christ. These are (for anti-Montanist Catholic Christians, anyway) the observance of Easter, the observance of fifty days after this as a joyous festival, and the consecration of the fourth and sixth day of the week to fasts.105 And he believes that Joel (i. 14) foretold that the apostles and (Montanist) prophets would sanction fasting and 'observances reverencing God'. 106 The tendency to turn Christianity into a baptized Judaism, observable in many aspects of the life and the thought of the third-century church, finds its earliest exponent in Tertullian.
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

169

R. P. C. HANSON

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

170

CLASSICAL WORLD 73 (APRIL-MAY 1980), pp. 417-419.

CREDO QUIA ABSURDUM?


Paul Ciholas ("Plato: The Attic Moses", CW 72 [1978-79] 217-25) follows a venerable tradition in portraying Tertullian as a Christian who, though "aware of Greek philosophical tenets," nevertheless rejected rationalism and accepted a Gospel which addressed itself to the "non-rational levels of perception." Three centuries ago Sir Thomas Browne, man of science and letters, supported the authority of faith over reason by an appeal to Tertullian's certum, quia impossible

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

171

est.107 By far the largest portion of modern scholarship, too, has understood Tertullian in this way. C. N. Cochrane in his widely read Christianity and

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

172

Classical Culture has popularized the view that Tertullian was a fideist, 1082 while Tertullian's opposition to philosophy received a classic scholarly statement in Andr Labhardt's "Tertullien et la philosophie ou la recherche d'une position pure."1093 Modern text-books written for the easy dissemination of Christian thought often follow uncritically the lead given by the majority of scholars. 1104 As Ciholas observes, two passages in particular have been extracted to demonstrate the anti-rationalist position of Tertullian: first, the famous credo quia absurdum, and second, the equally dramatic "Quid ergo Athenis et Hierosolymis." But the context of these two statements belies the evidence scholars have drawn from

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

173

them.1115 Credo quia absurdum is, of course, a misquote. 1126 Tertullian's words are credibile est, quia ineptum est (De carne Christi 5.4). The difference between the imputed and actual words is striking and important. James Moffatt in a sadly neglected article of a half-century ago discovered the clue to the interpretation of the words in observing that here Tertullian "follows in the footsteps of that cool philosopher Aristotle."1137 In Rhetoric 2.23.22 Aristotle shows that an argument | [P.418] from probability can be drawn from the sheer improbability of a story: some stories are so improbable that it is reasonable to believe them. On this view, the words presuppose a tidy correlation between faith and reason, and a
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

174

consideration of Tertullian's aims in the treatise in which they are found supports this interpretation. In writing the De carne Christi Tertullian undertook to demonstrate that the flesh of Christ was real; in fact, was exactly what sense data made it appear to be to the rational mind. His opponents were a variety of "heretics" who refused to admit that Christ's flesh was like ours. The most formidable of these opponents was Marcion, who regarded the flesh of Christ as phantasmic - not, therefore, what it appeared to be - and it is to the refutation of Marcion that he devotes the first major portion of his treatise. In this debate two reasons constrained Tertullian to be thoroughly rationalistic. First, his case depended, as we have just seen, on the validity of mind
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

175

and sense to establish truth. Second, Marcion rested his case, however perversely, on a claim to be absolutely logical. Hence his book of Antitheses, in which he showed impossible contradictions between Old and New Testaments; hence also his expurgation of the Gospel of Luke, and his Apostolicon which freed the New Testament from "later" accretions and made - to his mind - a logically consistent gospel.114 Tertullian was never a man to skirt an issue, and he readily saw that his case would be strengthened by using Marcion's own weapons against him. Consequently he shaped his argument against Marcion in this book into a calculated appeal to rational probability through methods established by a long tradition of rhetorical theory on the nature of conjecture, a tradition going back at
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

176

least to Aristotle.1159 It is significant that in this same chapter (5.7) Tertullian uses fides to mean not "blind faith," but "token of evidence." Moffatt then was right: in this context a sudden intrusion of anti-rationalism is improbable, and we should regard the whole section as a manifesto on behalf of reason in religious faith. If the second passage, "What has Athens to do with Jerusalem," opposes Greek philosophy to the truth of the Bible, it is not because Tertullian is anti-rationalist, but, quite the reverse, because he looks upon heathen philosophy from a radically rationalist point of view which rejects falsehood of every kind. The words appear in the introduction to the De praescriptione haereticorum. This treatise is much more than its central, highly technical, argument proving that "heretics" have no
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

177

right to use the Scriptures11610 might suggest. It is, in fact, nothing less than a study in the nature of heresy: how and why do heresies exist? Tertullian explicates his answer in the lengthy introduction (1-14) and conclusion (39-44). If heresy emerges from Greek philosophy, it is because the two are at heart alike: a groping for truth on the part of men who do not know God. Never fully escaping the Stoicism once impressed upon him, Tertullian saw an essential continuity between God and the world. God is reason and the fundamental characteristic of the world created by him is rational order. Not to know the creative reason behind the world is to see in distorted forms - that is, in false-|[P.418]hoods, the "order" in the

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

178

world.11711 Accordingly, the portrait in chapter 41 of the disordered lives of heretics is drawn as a symbol of their disordered minds. In a similar way, philosophers, too, not knowing the God who created a rational order can only systematize the disordered perceptions they have of the world. Tertullian recognizes, however, that in spite of its distortions, pagan philosophy has often enjoyed glimpses of the truth. In recalling his quotable strictures against philosophy, we must not forget his equally quotable Seneca saepe noster (De anima 20.1). In the Ad nationes, an early work, Socrates becomes a forerunner of the Christian martyrs, because he suffered, as they suffer, on behalf of the truth at the hands of those ignorant of it (1.4.6-7). If there is a change of tone in the more
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

179

artful Apologeticum, Tertullian still grants that Socrates aliquid de veritate sapiebat deos negans (46.5). Tertullian's position is not, in fact, substantially different from that of Greeks such as Clement and Origen. Here, too, we meet ambiguities. In the Protrepticus Clement stigmatizes the theories of philosophers as "old wives' tales" (6.67.1), and yet he is delighted that philosophers have sometimes hit upon the truth, though they have borrowed from the Bible (6.70.1-2). In the De principiis Origen contrasts the wisdom of this world with the wisdom of God, and attributes the false notions which prevail among the Greeks to the "spiritual princes of this world," who tried to destroy the Saviour (3.3.2-4). Yet Origen also believed that
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

180

the philosophers of the "glorious and distinguished schools of Greece" shared in the divine Logos (Commentary on John 2.3.30). In the second and third centuries Christians of both East and West generally accepted a common mythos about God and the world. They believed that the world was rationally ordered, because it was created by God through his reason, his Logos. The same Logos spoke to man through rational terms in the Revelation embodied in the Bible and in Jesus. Even apart from Christ, men have caught glimpses of the truth, whether borrowed from the Bible or gathered from the order of nature. Unfortunately, the demonic, in one form or another, has entered to distort the vision of man, so that pagan philosophy never attained the wholeness
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

181

and integrity of truth. Such integrity can be found only in Christ, the Logos; but because he is the Logos the integrity of truth implies the necessity of rational perception. Differences in apologetic aims, in individual style, and in personal temperament led to formulations of the relationships between faith and reason, and Christianity and philosophy which undoubtedly varied in tone and emphasis, but the common commitment on the part of all the major Christian thinkers of the second and third centuries, including Tertullian, to a belief in Christ, the Logos, eliminated fideism as a possible mode of Christian self-understanding.
Dickinson College ROBERT D. SIDER

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

182

Ars dicendi

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

183

Luculentissima est dicendi ars Tertulliani118 qua ceteros Christianos auctores vincit, et in paganos mordaci ac crebri aculeo invehit (delectando et fastidiendo). Quem Latinitatis Christianae inventorem dicit Harnack ( Dogmengeschichte 1,667), alii autem theologici sermonis, quia mire ac concinne primus exposuit Christianam veritatem, tamquam Cicero redivivus, summoque artis fastigio ornavit, ut iure primus habeatur scriptor germanus post Tacitum. Vehemens stilus viri ardentis (HIER., ep. 84,2) est: Pictoris Hermogenis prius quam sententias excutiat, bis falsarium, penicillo et calamo, proclamat; bis etiam adulterum, doctrina et corpore (Herm. 1; 22,5; Marc. 1,1). Utitur argumentis Varronis contra politheismum, stoicorum Verbum Dei et
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

184

Mentem supremam confitentium necnon sensum communem, platonicorum ad quandam emanationem Verbi declarandam in mysterio Trinitatis, naturae pro resurrectione et testimonio animae. Sicut Origenes apud Graecos, ita hic apud Latinos nostrorum omnium facile princeps iudicandus est. Quid enim hoc viro doctius? Quid in divinis atque humanis rebus exercitatius? Nempe omnem philosophiam et cunctas philosophorum sectas, auctores, assectoresque sectarum, omnesque eorum disciplinas, omnem historiarum ac studiorum varietatem, mira quadam mentis capacitate complexus est; Cuius quot paene verba, tot sententiae sunt: quot sensus tot victoriae (Vinc. Lir., comm. 18,24).
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

185

Fere oracula sunt sententiae Tertulliani: Si Tiberis ascendit in moenia, si Nilus non ascendit in arva, si caelum stetit, si terra movit, si fames, si lues, statim: 'Christianos ad leonem!' adclamatur (ap. 40). Cruciate, torquete, damnate, atterite nos: probatio est enim innocentiae nostrae iniquitas vestra. Plures efficimur, quotiens metimur a vobis: semen est sanguis Christianorum ( ap. 50).119 Deus non vocis, sed cordis auditor est (orat. 17). Iure eum decet sententia: Stilus est homo, sive cum exclamationibus animique motibus sermonem exornat, ut pulcherrime: O testimonium animae naturaliter Christianae! (ap. 17,5), sive cum adversarium fere adoritur: Hesterni sumus, et vestra omnia implevimus, urbes, insulas, castella,
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

186

municipia, conciliabula, castra ipsa, tribus, decurias, palatium, senatum, forum; sola vobis reliquimus templa (ap. 37,4); Cum damnamur a vobis, a Deo absolvimur (ap. 50,16). Item: Nihil scire omnia scire est (praescr. 14,5); Pudicitiae Christianae satis non est esse, verum et videri (cult. 2,13,3); Fiunt, non nascuntur Christiani (ap. 18,4; cf test. 1,7); Ethnici non credendo credunt, at haeretici credendo non credunt (carn. 15,4); Prorsus credibile est, quia ineptum est... certum est, quia impossibile est (carn. 5,4). Primus formulas in saecula mansuras creavit: una substantia, tres personae; duae substantiae, una persona; trinitas unius divinitatis; duplicem statum non confusum sed coniunctum in una persona. Eadem dicenda sunt de lexico liturgico
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

187

et ascetico, quia primum atque progressum gradum Christiani sermonis declarat. Etenim elocutio novella perficitur, si opus De pallio consideres, hermetismo formali superabundans, quod inconcinnitatem sallustianam et dissymetriam tacitianam aliquantulum resonat. Primus Tacitus Christianus est habendus ut Cyprianus primus Cicero (Fontaine, 43). Breviantur sententiae omissis praepositionibus subordinandis et per participia declarativa: cor.8 (Passivitas fallit obumbrans corruptelam); vel per 'ut': ux. 1,17 (Ut de... placita... affectans); vel vi autonoma verbali tributa participio, vel causali ante participia: car.Chr. 6 (Habuerit... carnem dum omnino non natam). Adhibentur adiectiva substantivata, in cum ablativo instrumentali,
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

188

plus, maxime, extremius ad comparativum et superlativum efformandum.

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

189

Lexicon Latinitatis 982 novis verbis auxit,120 quorum 544 apud eum unum frequentantur; nomina desinentia in -tor, -trix, adiectiva in -tilis, et huiusmodi altiores sensus exprimunt, quin et communia verba altiore vi ditantur: saeculum ex.g. non generatio vel centum annorum spatium sed quod terrenum est significat; paganus, qui opponebatur militari, opponitur Christiano; gentes, gentiles, nationes, habentur non Christiani; plebs est parva communitas. Nomen pro adiectivo adhibet: an. 49,1 (per carnis teneritatem = per carnem teneram); ap. 1,4 (iniquitatis odii = iniqui odii); idol. 11,2 (sit nunc aliqua iustitia quaestus = aliquis iustus quaestus); spect. 6,3 (institutionis antiquitatem = antiquam institutionem); abstractum pro concreto: p. 5,7 (omnium curiositatum
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

190

explorator); nomina ut adiectiva: n. 42,1 (mortem dissolutricem); Marc. 2,7,3 (circumscriptorem colubrum); praescr. 17,2 (corruptor stilus = qui corrumpit); Val. 15,5 (o risum illuminatorem! o fletum rigatorem [primum apud Tertullianum]). Ecclesiam balbutientemTertullianus eloquentem fecit, clausulis adhibitis pulcherrimis dicretico - v - - v - ac ditrochaeo - v - x. Ad syntaxim quod spectat adhibet: - benedicere, maledicere aliquem (cf eu) | kakw=j le/gein | eu)logei=n, kakologein= (sed Herm. 1,1: maledicere singulis); - suadere (per-): pall. 6,1 (Sermone me suasisti); scorp. 2,1 (Duritia vincenda est, non suadenda); - uti, frui, fungi [archaice trans.]: virg. 17,2
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

191

(Dimidiam frui lucem); - accusativus Graecus: res. 20,5 (Perfossus manus et pedes); Marc. 3,7,6 Despoliatus pristinas sordes; pall. 3,4 Multa dicendum fuit ( polla\ ei)rhte/on ); -locativus: nat. 2,16,5 (Cn.Pompeius de Ponto primus Italiae provolgavit); finale infinitum: pud. 21,4 (qui pati venerat); scorp. 10,17 (veni dividere hominem = Mt 10,35); - deponens pro passivo: confiteri (pall. 4,2: quando neque veritas negari debuisset neque fallacia confiteri); Iud. 9,1 (quod interpretatur Nobiscum Deus). De peculiaribus quibusdam rationibus Tertulliani sermonis Multa extant necessitudines inter sonum et formam verborum apud
(cristiano indica la novit che permane sotto possibili espressioni di lingua diversa); L. Alfonsi, III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

192

Tertullianum,121 quae triplici ratione influunt in morphologiam, semanticam, lexicum et generant metaplasmata (novitates syntacticae), semanticas exclusiones (it. 'scarti'), neologismos. Innovationes linguisticae morfologiae sunt rarae, maiore extante rigiditate linguae, ideoque maioris momenti. Homophonia creat metaplasmata, et nihil est in formis quod non fuerit prius in stylo. Etenim in Pud. 7, 14 Tertullianus, ut efformet perfectum tetracolon utitur quattuor gerundiis in homeoteleuto ABAB, quorum formam interire, intereundo, immutat in interiendo: et ovis non moriendo, sed errando et drachma non interiendo, sed latitando perierunt.
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

193

Analogicus interiendo supplantat intereundo propter claram adtractionem homophonica verbi moriendo. Item metaplasma deglubavi in Pal. 3,5: deglubasse - eliquasse est isomorphismus homeoteleticus; et metaplasma increpavi in Pud. 14,2: si enim dedendum satanae pronuntiaverat in interitum carnis, utique damnaverat eum

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

194

magis quam increpaverat122 est isomorphismus consonanticus syllabicus. Metaplasma [innovatio] coniugationis verbi odi, odisse, creat odio, odire, quibus saepius Tertullianus utitur consociationis phonicae causa: odis in Carn. 4,2

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

195

consonat cum proximo despuis, in Marc. IV 35,2 odies cum horres,123 traduces, sumes; in An. 10,4 odiit cum proximo exsecuit; in Ap. 3 ,5 oditur cum deducitur, pronuntiatur; invenitur polyptotice in Nat. I 1,4: mavultis nescire, quia iam odistis, quasi certi non odituros vos <si> sciatis, paronomastice extollens par

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

196

nescire - sciatis.124 Chiasma contradicit parallelismo negationum (nescire quia... / non odituros si ... ) et quasi iconice in extollit irrationalitatem et iniquitatem contra Christianos. Item in Marc. IV 16,1 odientes alternatur polyptotice cum tribus proximis traditis participiis perfectis. Maxima autem utitur libertate innovandi in verbis deponentibus, aequiparans formam - diathesim passivam (id est hortor = moneor - it. 'sono esortato') vel diathesim - formam activam (horto). Verbo cavillari utitur forma deponente in Pud. 10,3; Cor. 11,4; Pal. 2,2, sed in Res. 35,3 homeoteleutice facit passivum: sed quoniam et hic de interpretatione corporis quaestio cavillatur, ego corpus humanum non aliud intellegam quam
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

197

omnem istam struem carnis, quoquo genere materiarum concinnatur atque variatur, quod videtur, quod tenetur, quod denique ab hominibus occiditur.125 Item fungor, activum in Ap. 9,2, Nat. II 10,6, Carn. 20,6, Marc. II 17,2, An. 35,6; 51,6, Pud. 18,15, Res. 58,9 fit passivum in Praes. 29,3, per structuram quinque membrorum asyndeticorum, quorum parallelismum complexio extollit, sc. anaphora (tot), epiphora (perperam), participia passiva homeoteleutica): tot milia milium perperam tincta, tot opera fidei perperam ministrata, tot virtutes, tot charismata perperam operata, tot sacerdotia, tot ministeria perperam functa,
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

198

tot denique martyria perperam coronata.126 Isocolon et homeoteleuton trahit diathesim passivam verbi remunerari in Ap. 46-5: facilius statuis et salariis remunerantur quam ad bestias pronuntiantur. Sed merito; philosophi enim, non Christiani cognominantur127. Item in Marc. IV 38,10: remunerata quidem fide caeci, quasi filium David crediderat [in] illum, pulsata vero traditione scribarum, qua non et dominum eum norant.128 In an. III philosophi dicuntur patriarcae haereticorum (3,1), sapientiae et facundiae caupones (ib.), et philosophia concussio veritatis (ib.), teste Paulo
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

199

apostolo Athenis, in linguata (it. di parolai - primum hic) civitate. In an. 3,2: Et animae ratio <concussa est> per philosophatas doctrinas hominum miscentes aquas vino129). Palam philosophatus pro philosophicus trahitur a linguatus, qui est neologismus et par homeoteleuticum creat (cf ea erunt Christianis enubilanda et percutientibus argumentationes originales, id est philosophicas, et opponentibus definitiones caelestes, id est dominicas).130 Deponentia cum diathesi activa in ludo veborum Pal. 5,4: canales non odoro, cancellos non adoro, innixa homofonia in initio, id est in adlitteratione syllabica, et in fine adlitteratio verborum, id est in rima, ad paronomasiam
cristiana, Roma 1973 e 1978; Introduzione di G. Lazzati alla Letteratura cristiana antica greca III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

200

obtinendam.131 In Bapt. 4,5; Scorp. 2,2; 8,6; Marc. IV 33,2; Res. 47,6 famulari adhibetur recte ut famulus esse, sed alibi adhibetur quoque forma famulare, sensu activo-mediali famulum [sibi] facere, necnon diathesi passiva famulus fieri: cum ille daemonia ... excuteret verbo, caecos reluminaret, leprosos purgaret, paralyticos restringeret, mortuos denique verbo redderet vitae, elementa ipsa famularet (Ap. 21,17)132 penes vos parasiti affectant al gloriam famul andae libertatis
e latina di M. Simonetti (Firenze 1969, pp. 5 ss.). III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

201

sub auctoramento ventris inter contumelias saginandi (ib. 39,16)133 sic et virtus in infrmitate perficietur quod periit salvum faciens, quod mortuum est vivificans, quod percussum est sanans, quod languit medicans, quod ereptum est redimens, quod famulatum est liberans, quod seductum est revocans, quod elisum est suscitans (Res. 47,14).134 Metaplasticum famulatum (part . perf . pass. verbi famulare) evocat percussum et ereptum una cum seductum et elisum, cum quibus consonat perfecte sive morphosemantice (part. perf. pass.) sive phonice (homeoptoton).
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

202

Metaplasmata declinationis fiunt in nominibus III - tio in IV - tus. In Val. 13,1 series quinque nominum abstractorum (cum homoeoteleuto), et quattuor neologismi (quorum tres sunt hapax), doctrinam miram gnosis valentinianae declarant: continet hic igitur ordo primus professionem pariter et nascentium et nubentium et generantium Aeonum, Sophiae ex desiderio patris periculosissimum casum, Hori oportunissimum auxilium, Enthymeseos et coniunctae Passionis expiatum, Christi et Spiritus Sancti paedagogatum,
B.Amata, Il Latino nella Chiesa : O(sservatore) R(omano) 22.2.1987, p.4; - Cultura e lingue III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.
21

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

203

Aeonum tutelarem reformatum, Soteris pavoninum ornatum, Angelorum comparaticium antistatum135 Ornatus generavit per parallelismum paedagogatus, antistatus [hapax], expiatus, reformatus, quorum metaplastica sunt verba expiatus, pro expiatio et reformatus, pro reformatio. Idem habetur in serie ternaria polysyndetica, homeosuffixali et homeoptotica: et visui et contactui et recordatui (per recordationi) (Res. 4,3); concubitu et fetu et educatu (per educatione) (ib. 60,3); cursus et iaculatus (per iaculationes) et saltus (Spect. 18,2);
classiche nella Chiesa : O.R. 22.2.1989, p.6; - Fra tradizione e rinnovamento : O.R. 27.10.1989, III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

204

et conceptus et praegnatus (per praegnatio) et partus (Carn. 1,4). Latinitatis vulgaris sermo simplicior fit: ex.c. iusiurandum relinquitur pro faciliore deieratio: in Id. 20,4, inter figuras phonosemanticas ut sunt homeoteleuton suffixale et figura etymologica, dicitur: consuetudinis vitium est Mehercule dicere [...] accedente ignorantia quorundam, qui ignorant iusiurandum esse per Herculem. Porro quid erit deieratio per eos quos eierasti quam praevaricatio fidei cum idololatria? Quis enim, per quos deierat, non honorat?136 Cui sequitur: timiditatis est autem, cum te alius per deos suos obligat iuratione vel aliqua testificatione et tu, ne intellegaris, quiescis.137 Metaplasmata innumera inveniuntur in gradibus comparationis.
p.6; - Quaestio de linguarum studio in Ecclesia : Latinitas 37(1989), pp. 210-217; - Il patrimonio III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

205

In An. 33,10 legitur: si quod iudicium animas manet, gravius debet credi in dispunctione vitae quam in administratione, quia nihil plenius, quam quod extremius, nihil autem extremius, quam quod divinius.138 Cum anadiplosi plenius - extremius - extremius - divinius invenitur, in Ap. 19,4, extremissimus in parallelismo cum vetustissimus. In Ap. 11,16 invenitur militarior in serie homeoptotica octo comparativorum: Sed [...] probi et integri et boni fuerint! Quot tamen potiores viros apud inferos reliquistis!
classico e cristiano nella scuola all'appuntamento europeo del 1992 (synthesis): Cultura e lingue III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

206

Aliquem de sapientia Socratem, de iustitia Aristiden, de militia Themistoclem, de sublimitate Alexandrum, de felicitate Polycraten, de copia Croesum, de eloquentia Demosthenen! Quis ex illis deis vestris gravior et sapientior Catone, iustior et militarior Scipione? Quis sublimior Pompeio, felicior Sylla, copiosior Crasso, eloquentior Tullio? (Ap. 11,15-16)139 Allitteratio et homeoteleuton generant nova verba: In Mon. 7,3: illis ex suo genere vicaria et quasi posthuma suboles
classiche 3, Roma 1993, pp. 655-687. C.Riggi, Epistrophe. Tensione verso la Divina Armonia III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

207

supparabatur.140 Neologismus supparare semper invenitur in eodem contextu allitterante de lege veteris testamenti, Marc. 34,8: ut supparetur semen illi. In Mon. 16,2: habet Deum etiam corvorum educatorem, etiam florum excultorem,141 (hapax in dicolon cuius parallelismus fit maior per anaphoram (etiam) et homeoteleuton (coruorum, florum). In Mon. 5,3: repudii cohibitio quod ab initio non fuit, neologismus cohibitio consonat cum paraphonico ab initio. In Mon. 16,4 descriptio apocalyptica ultimus exitus saeculi - phonico-rhythmica cola et commata isosyllabismo, homeoteleuto et clausulis metricis innititur: Adiciant tertium dictum: 'Manducemus et bibamus et nubamus,
(ed. B.Amata), Roma 1985, pp. 394-400; Ch.Mohrmann, Etudes sur le Latin des Chrtiens 4, III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

208

cras enim moriemur', non recogitantes 'vae' illud 'praegnantibus et lactantibus' multo gravius et amarius eventurum in concussione totius mundi, quam evenit in uastatione unius particulae Iudaeae. Satis opportunos nouissimis temporibus fructus iteratis matrimoniis colligant: ubera fluitantia et uteros nauseantes et infantes pipiantes (16,5).142 In Mon. 8 evangelica exempla virginitatis et connubii monogamici in Zacharia e et Ioanne Baptista exhibentur: alia pudica in Zacharia sacerdote, alia integra in Ioanne antecursore, alia placans Deum,
Roma 1977, pp. 141-192; p.143; S.H.Siedl, De lingua Latina consideratio : Lat. 34(1986), pp. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

209

alia praedicans Christum, alia totum praedicans sacerdotem alia plus praeferens quam propheten (8,1).143 Cetera Tertulliani opera Titulus ad nos usque pervenit: 1. De Vestibus Aaron 2. Ad Amicum Philosophum 3. De Censu Animae 4. De Spe fidelium 5. De Paradiso 6. De Ecstasi libri VII 7. De Animae Summissione 8. De Superstitione Saeculi 9. De Carne et Anima 10. Adversus Apelliacos 11. De Incommodis Nuptiarum 12.De fato; Sermone Graeco scripsisse tradunt: Apologeticum; De baptismo
108-117; U.Gallizia, Riflessioni sulla VS: S 25(1963), pp. 367-402; A.Melloni, Tensioni e timori III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

210

Dubia quae supersunt: De circumcisione; De mundis atque immundis animalibus; De paradiso; De spectaculis Graece; De superstitione saeculi; De virginibus velandis Graece.
[Opera notha (it. Spurie) - Nonnulla opera Tertullianum auctorem habuisse tradunt auctores vel codices vel editores. Sed auctoritate carent vel iure de his dubitatur. Patrologia Latina d.v. J.-P. Migne ea omnia sub eius nomine tradit, CSEL et CCSL autem perpauca Tertulliano tribuunt. Notha: Adversus Omnes Haereses - De execrandis gentium diis . Dubia: Passio Perpetuae , de qua bene noscitur tempus compositionis, sed minime auctor. Carminum corpus quod tributum est Cypriano Gallo vel Pseudo-Cypriano: Introductio -- Genesis -- De Sodoma -- De Iona Propheta/De Nineva -- Ad Senatorem -- De Iudicio Domini nella preparazione del Vaticano II. La VS di Giovanni XXIII: Cristianmo nella Storia 11, 1990, III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

211

Carmen Adversus Marcionitas. Opera Novatiani: De Trinitate - De Cibis Iudaicis.]

Adversus omnes haereses catalogus est errorum haereticorum, propter quod appendix habitum est operis De praescriptione haereticorum.
I. [1] Quorum haereticorum, ut plura praeteream, pauca perstringam. Taceo enim Iudaismi haereticos, Dositheum, inquam Samaritanum, qui primus ausus est prophetas quasi non in spiritu sancto locutos repudiare, taceo Sadducaeos, qui ex huius erroris radice surgentes ausi sunt ad hanc haeresim etiam resurrectionem carnis negare, praetermitto Pharisaeos, qui additamenta quaedam legis adstruendo a Iudaeis diuisi sunt, unde etiam hoc accipere ipsum quod habent nomen digni fuerunt, cum his etiam Herodianos, qui Christum Herodem esse dixerunt: ad eos me converto qui ex evangelio pp. 275-307. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

212

haeretici esse voluerunt. [2] Ex quibus est primus omnium Simon Magus, qui in Actis Apostolorum condignam meruit ab apostolo Petro iustamque sententiam. Hic ausus est summam se dicere virtutem, id est summum deum, mundum autem ab angelis suis institutum, ad daemonem se errantem, quid esset sapientia, descendisse quaerendum, apud Iudaeos se in phantasmate dei non passum, sed esse quasi passum.

Victorinus Petavionensis (=Poetovionensis vel a Ptuj vel a Pettau) et Gennadius opus eiusdem tituli scripserunt. De execrandis gentium diis frusculum videtur apologeticum Romanum saeculi VI corrupta Latinitate conscriptum. Carmen adversus Marcionitas - Poema 1302 hexametrum non emendata Latinitate, ante Nicaenam Synodum vel saeculo V fortasse in Gallia conscriptum.
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

213

Ad amicum philosophum / De virginitate (De nuptiarum angustiis) Hier. Adversus Jovinianum I, 13: Non est hujus loci nuptiarum angustias describere, et quasi in communibus locis rhetorico exsultare sermone. Plenius super hac re contra Helvidium, et in eo libro quem ad Eustochium scripsi, arbitror absolutum. Certe et Tertullianus cum adhuc esset adolescens lusit in hac materia. Et praeceptor meus Gregorius Nazianzenus virginitatem et nuptias disserens, Graecis versibus explicavit. [PL23, col. 230 CD]; Hier. Ep. 22, 22 (ad Eustochium): At, si tibi placet scire, quot molestiis virgo libera, quot uxor adstricta sit, lege Tertulliani ad amicum philosophum et de virginitate alios libellos et beati Cypriani volumen egregium et papae Damasi super
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

214

hac re versu prosaque composita et Ambrosii nostri quae nuper ad sororem scripsit opuscula. Adversus Apelleiacos (cf. Tert. De carne Christi, 8; Aug., De haeresibus 24: Apelles] praeterea Philumenem quamdam puellam dicebat inspiratam diuinitus ad praenuntianda futura, ad quam somnia atque aestus sui animi referens diuinationibus seu praesagiis eius secretim erat solitus praemoneri, eodem phantasmate eidem Philumenae pueri habitu se demonstrante, qui puer apparens Christum se aliquando, aliquando esse assereret Paulum. A quo phantasmate sciscitans ea soleret respondere quae se audientibus diceret. Nonnulla quoque illam miracula operari solitam, inter quae illud praecipuum, quod in angustissimi oris
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

215

ampullam uitream panem grandem immitteret eumque extremis digitulis leuare soleret illaesum, eoque solo quasi diuinitus sibi cibo dato fuisse contenta; Hier., in epistulam ad Galatas, 1. 8: Eleganter in hoc loco uir doctissimus Tertullianus aduersus Appellem et eius uirginem Philumenem, quam angelus quidem diabolici spiritus et peruersus impleuerat, hunc esse scribit angelum, cui, multo antequam Apelles nasceretur, Spiritus Sancti uaticinio sit anathema per apostolum prophetatum. De Aaron vestibus Hier. ep. 64, 23 (Ad Fabiolam): 23. Jam sermo finitur, et ad superiora retrahor. Tanta debet esse scientia et eruditio Pontificis Dei, ut et gressus ejus, et motus, et universa vocalia sint. Veritatem mente concipiat, et toto
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

216

eam habitu resonet et ornatu: ut quidquid agit, quidquid loquitur, sit doctrina populorum. Absque tintinnabulis enim et diversis coloribus, et gemmis floribusque virtutum, nec Sancta ingredi potest, nec nomen Antistitis possidere. Haec ad unam lucubratiunculam cum jam funis solveretur a littore, et nautae crebrius inclamarent, propero sermone dictavi, quae memoria tenere poteram, et quae diuturna in Rationali pectoris mei lectione congesseram: satis intelligens magis me loquendi impetu, quam judicio scribentis fluere, et more torrentis turbidum proferre sermonem. Fertur in indice Septimii Tertulliani liber de Aaron vestibus, qui interim usque ad hanc diem a me non est repertus. Si a vobis propter celebritatem Urbis fuerit inventus, quaeso ne meam stillam illius flumini comparetis. Non enim
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

217

magnorum virorum ingeniis, sed meis sum viribus aestimandus. (PL 22, col. 622) De animae submissione; De carne et anima; De censu animae De circumcisione (cf. Hier. ep. 36 [Ad Damasum]: duabus tantum
Quaestiunculis praetermissis: non quo non potuerim ad illas aliquid respondere, sed quod ab eloquentissimis viris, Tertulliano nostro scilicet, et Novatiano, latino sermone sint editae; et si nova voluerimus afferre, sit latius disputandum. Certe exspecto quid placeat: utrumne epistolari brevitate sententias tibi velis digeri aut singulorum libros confici. Nam et Origenes in quarto Pauli ad Romanos .... tomo de circumcisione magnifice disputavit: et de mundis atque immundis animalibus in Levitico plura disseruit: ut si ipse invenire nihil possem, de ejus tamen fontibus mutuarer. Et ut verius loquar, Didymi de Spiritu sancto librum in manibus habeo, quem translatum tibi cupio dedicare: ne me existimes tantummodo dormitare, qui lectionem sine stilo somnum putas. Antelatis itaque problematibus, quae epistolae tuae subjeceras, quid mihi III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

218

videretur annexui, veniam postulans, et festinationis pariter et morarum: festinationis, quia ad unam lucubratiunculam dictare voluerim multorum opus dierum; tarditatis, quia alio opere detentus, non statim ad interrogata rescripsi. (PL 22, col.453) De fato (cf. De anima, 20). De mundis atque immundis animalibus (cf. Hier., ep. 36, 1) De paradiso (cf. Adversus Marcionem V 12; De anima 55) De spe fidelium (cf. Adversus Marcionem III 24; Hier., De viris illustribus 18 (Papias Hierapol.), In Ez. comm. 36, 1: Neque enim iuxta Iudaicas fabulas, quas illi deuteroseis appellant, gemmatam et auream de caelo exspectamus Ierusalem, nec rursum passuri eircumcisionis iniuriam, nec oblaturi taurorum et arietum uictimas, nec sabbati otio dormiemus. Quod et multi nostrorum et praecipue Tertulliani liber, qui inscribitur 'De spe fidelium' ... pollicetur (Comm. in Ezechiel. XI, XXXVI, 1: PL. xxv [ed. 1884], col. 339 B = CCSL II; In Is. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

219

comm. L. 18 praef.: Duo devicesimus in Isaiam, immo extremus liber, tuo, o filia Eustochium, et sanctae matris tuae Paulae nomini dedicatur, ut quas pari honore suspexi, aequa commemoratione nunc recolam: praesertim cum et illa dum viveret, hoc opus tecum crebrius postularit, et vir eruditissimus frater tuus Pammachius et tunc et postea frequentibus scriptis cogere non destiterit: mihique et praesentium amicorum et absentium, virorumque ac feminarum in Christo dormientium eadem religio sit, id est, animorum charitas, non corporum. Nec ignoro quanta inter homines sententiarum diversitas sit. Non dico de mysterio Trinitatis, cujus recta confessio est ignoratio scientiae: sed de aliis Ecclesiasticis dogmatibus, de Resurrectione scilicet, et de animarum et humanae carnis statu, de Repromissionibus futurorum, quomodo debeant accipi, et qua ratione intelligenda sit Apocalypsis Joannis, quam si juxta litteram accipimus, judaizandum est; si spiritualiter, ut scripta est, disserimus, multorum veterum videbimur opinionibus contraire: Latinorum, Tertulliani, Victorini, Lactantii: Graecorum, ut caeteros praetermittam, Irenaei tantum Lugdunensis episcopi faciam mentionem, adversum quem vir III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

220

eloquentissimus Dionysius Alexandrinae Ecclesiae pontifex elegantem scribit librum, irridens mille annorum fabulam, et auream atque gemmatam in terris Jerusalem, instaurationem Templi, hostiarum sanguinem, otium sabbati, circumcisionis injuriam, nuptias, partus, liberorum educationem, epularum delicias, et cunctarum gentium servitutem: rursusque bella, exercitus, ac triumphos et superatorum neces, mortemque centenarii peccatoris. Cui duobus voluminibus respondit Apollinarius, quem non solum suae sectae homines, sed et nostrorum in hac parte dumtaxat plurima sequitur multitudo, ut praesaga mente jam cernam quantorum in me rabies concitanda sit. (PL col. 627]; Gennadius Mars., De Ecclesiae dogmatibus , 55: LV. In divinis promissionibus nihil terrenum vel transitorium exspectemus, sicut Melitani sperant. Non nuptiarum copulam, sicut Cerinthus et Marcion delirant. Non quod ad cibum vel ad potum pertinet, sicut, Papia auctore, Irenaeus, et Tertullianus, et Lactantius acquiescunt. Neque post mille annos post resurrectionem regnum Christi in terra futurum, et sanctos cum illo in deliciis regnaturos speremus, sicut Nepos docuit, qui primam justorum resurrectionem, et secundam III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

221

impiorum confinxit. Et inter has duas mortuorum resurrectiones, gentes ignorantes Deum in angulis terrarum in carne servanda. Quae post mille annos regni in terra justorum, instigante diabolo movendae sunt ad pugnam contra justos regnantes; et Domino pro justis pugnante imbre igneo compescendas, atque ita mortuas, cum caeteris in impietate ante mortuis, ad aeterna supplicia in incorruptibili carne resuscitandas. (PL. 58 coll. 994-5); Hrabanus Maurus (PL 110, 853).

De superstitione saeculi Pro Graecis operibus Tertulliani: Apologeticum (cf. Eus., HE II, 2, 4-6); De baptismo, De spectaculis (cf. De corona 6), De virginibus velandis (cf. 1). Dubitatur utrum Graece an Latine sint conscripta: De ecstasi (cf. Hier. Vir. Ill. 53; 24; 40.
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

222

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

223

QUINTUS THASCIUS CAECILIUS CYPRIANUS144 Cyprianus primus et unus est episcopus martyr litteris versatus, concivis Tertulliani, probabiliter Cathagine natus anno fere CC (vel CCX), non obscuro loco; artem rhetoricam docuit sed alius ac Tertullianus litterarum classicarum fere obltus est suscepto episcopatu et de quaestionibus moralibus fere tantum

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

224

pertractavit.145 Hieronymus tradit: Cyprianus Afer primum gloriose rhetoricam docuit et exinde, suadente presbytero Caecilio, a quo et cognomentum sortitus est, Christianus factus omnem substantiam suam pauperibus erogavit, ac non post multum temporis electus in presbyterium etiam episcopus Cathaginiensis constitutus est. Huius ingenii superfluum est indicem texere, cum sole clariora sint eius opera. Passus est sub Valeriano et Gallieno principibus persecutione octava eo die quo Romae Cornelius, sed non eodem anno. Donato defuncto a.249, episcopale munus tribus post annis ab conversione immutavit rhetorem in virum Ecclesiae. Laicus Felicissimus infensissimis inimicis
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

225

eius dux praefuit (ep. 59,1), una cum presbytero Novato ( ep. 52,2,1), Fortunato et tribus aliis. Cypriano a.252 contraponitur Fortunatus, qui tamen a Privato Lambaesitano [in Numidia] deponitur (ep. 59,14). Saeviente Decii persecutione a.250: Absens tamen - inquit - corpore nec spiritu, nec actu, nec monitis meis defui, quominus secundum Domini praecepta fratribus nostris, in quibus possem, mea mediocritate consulerem. Et quid egerim loquuntur vobis epistolae pro temporibus emissae numero tredecim, quas ad vos transmisi: in quibus nec clero consilium, nec confessoribus exhortatio, nec extorribus [excommunicatis] quando oportuit obiurgatio, nec universae fraternitatis ad deprecandum Dei misericordiam allocutio et persuasio nostra
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

226

defuit.
1.Cum perlatum ad nos fuisset, fratres carissimi, commentarios (=guardie carcerarie) esse missos qui me Uticam perducerent et consilio carissimorum persuasum esset ut de hortis nostris interim secederem, iusta interveniente causa consensi, eo quod congruat episcopum in ea civitate in qua ecclesiae dominicae praeest illic Dominum confiteri et plebem universam praepositi praesentis confessione clarificare. 2.Quodcumque enim sub ipso confessionis momento confessor episcopus loquitur aspirante Deo, ore omnium loquitur. Ceterum mutilabitur honor ecclesiae nostrae tam gloriosae, si ego, episcopus alterius ecclesiae praepositus, accepta apud Uticam super confessione sententia, exinde martyr ad Dominum proficiscar, quandoquidem ego et pro me et pro vobis apud vos confiteri et ibi pati et exinde ad Dominum proficisci orationibus continuis deprecer et votis omnibus exoptem et debeam. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

227

3.Expectamus ergo hic, in secessu abdito constituti, adventum proconsulis Carthaginem redeuntis, audituri ab eo quid imperatores super christianorum laicorum et episcoporum nomine mandaverint et dicturi quod ad horam Dominus dici voluerit. 4.Vos autem, fratres carissimi, pro disciplina quam de madatis Dominicis a me semper accepistis, et secundum quod me tractante saepissime didicistis, quietem et tranquillitatem tenete, ne quisquam vestrum aliquem tumultum fratribus moveat, aut ultro se gentibus offerat. Apprehensus enim et traditus loqui debet; siquidem in nobis Dominus positus illa hora loquatur, qui nos confiteri magis voluit quam profiteri. 5.Quid autem de cetero nos observare conveniat, antquam in me super confessione nominis Dei proconsul sententiam ferat, instruente Domino in commune disponemus. Incolumes vos, fratres carissimi, Dominus noster in Ecclesia sua permanere faciat er conservare dignetur.

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

228

Persecutio martyres et lapsos plurimos fecit: Dominus probare voluit familiam suam. Confessores, seu stantes, victores evaserunt, sicut gladiatores in certamine. Martyres vincula passi sunt et bona publicata. Econtra lapsi appellati sunt qui ceciderunt, sicut Angeli de coelo, ex quibus traditores libros tantum qui tradidissent, libellatici libellum sacrificii qui sibi comparavissent (exemplaria papyracea assevantur), thurificati thus ante deorum focos qui posuissent (fortasse ante deam Romam), sacrificati hostias qui obtulissent et carnes idolis immolatas manducavissent. Cyprianus statuit libellaticis parcendum, thurificatos autem et sacrificatos publica poenitentia subiciendos atque tantum in articulo mortis absolvendos.
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

229

Quam agendi rationem Novatus aegre tulit Romamque legatos misit ad Novatianum, qui a.251 contra Cornelium creatus erat episcopus, statuens lapsos absolvendos non esse ne in articulo quidem mortis, schismaque suscitavit usque ad s.V duraturum.

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

230

Paenitentiae tamen rigorem confessores libello pacis minuebant,146 nec defuerunt presbyteri qui ultro, nulla anteacta poenitentia, lapsis indulgerent. Exul Cyprianus opus De Unitate Ecclesiae (a.251) concinnavit et post 15 menses concilia a.251 et 252 convocavit. Peste saeviente aegrotis cum Christianis tum gentilibus diligentissime consulit et tractatus perscripsit De dominica oratione (a.251-2), De mortalitate (a.252), De opere et eleemosyna (a.252). Contra sententiam Africae episcoporum de irrito baptismo haereticorum (a.254) Stephanus papa decrevit:: Si qui ergo a quacumque haeresi venient ad vos, nihil innovetur nisi quod traditum est, ut manus illis imponantur ad
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

231

paenitentiam (ep. 74,1 ad Pompeium), iuxta consuetudinem Romanae Ecclesiae. Tantum Stephano defuncto (2.VIII.257) quaestio soluta est. Die XXX mensis augusti exilio multatur (Curubis) a proconsule Paterno, et die XIV mensis septembris, a Galerio Maximo Africae Proconsule iubetur gladio necari (a.258). Acta proconsularia martyrium enarrant, sed spiritualia lineamenta inveniuntur in epistulis, quae et eloquentiam eius inlustrant et fortunam fere semper integram per saecula. Opera
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

232

Rhetor factus Ecclesiae vir rhetoricae artis praecepta in ornamentum Dei verbi transtulit, compositione, anaphoris, paronomasiis, allitterationibus, frequentibus homoeoteleutis, parallelismis, clausolis metricis et rhytmicis, procedens a parallelismo gorgiano non minus quam a biblico, suavitatem sermoni tribuens. Inferior coaevo Origene (185-253) et Plotino (205-270) evadit tum theologica pervestigatione tum vi apologetica, Tertullianoque cedit sive docens sive monens. Tamen fere omnia supersunt opera multis codicibus tradita, qui fortunam quoque concelebrant, apud Orientales quoque Graecos, Syriacos, Armenos:
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

233

81 Epistulae et 13 Tractatus sive opuscula, speculum pastoris magistri martyris optimi auctoris (Pontius, Vita 7,3-10). Tractatus [sermones, libelli] sacros libros redolent; Epistulae (59 Cypriani, 6 synodales, 16 aliorum) 1-4 de disciplina tractant, ceterae, usque ad Ep. 68, spectant Decii persecutionem, lapsos, schismaticos, Ep. 69-75 controversiam de baptismo, Ep. 55,57,58 aequum agendi modum episcopi. Ante episcopatum conscripsisse videtur: 1. Quod idola dii non sint - anthologia patristica, seu collectio locorum apologetarum, praesertim Tertulliani (et Minucii); Evemerum sequitur de deorum origine, deumque unum agnoscendum esse proclamat.
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

234

2. Ad Quirinum Testimoniorum libri 3 adversus Iudaeos - anthologia biblica, seu collectio locorum Veteris Testamenti, per argumenta distributorum, ad demonstrandam Iudaicam perfidiam (L.1) et Christi divinitatem (L.2), et ad praecepta vitae moralis (L.3) danda; imitari videtur Barnabae, Iustini et Hebraeorum lectiones. 3. Ad Donatum - per epistolam enarrat conversionem suam ad paganos hortandos ut idola et morum pravitates relinquant; rhetorica arte utitur, quam et didicerat et docuerat. Post susceptum episcopatum: 4. De habitu virginum: perficit Tertulliani opus De cultu feminarum vel de
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

235

virginibus velandis. 5. De catholicae Ecclesiae unitate : clarissimus et primus est tractatus ecclesiologiae. Fundamentum totius ecclesiae structurae collegium est apostolicum. Unitas Dei in coelo habet speculum in unitate visibili Ecclesiae in terris. 6. De lapsis seu de apostatis: gratulatur martyrum confessorumque gloriae, sed plurima vulnera gregis sananda censet. Lapsi nihil presumant neque desperent de divina misericordia. Confessores autem eorum reficiant animos atque adiuvent ut aptam poenitentiam expleant. Post pestem anno 252 fortasse: 7. De opere et eleemosynis: in paupere ipsi Deo servimus: Misericors monet
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

236

misericordiam fieri. 8. De mortalitate: inter praecipua opera nativa habetur, de theologia mortis, quae est 'accersitio dominica': Senecam post Ciceronem et Lucretium luculenter vincit innixus scripturis. 9. De Dominica oratione: Tertullianum sequitur. 10. Ad Demetrianum Tertulliani more, hortatur ad conversionem. Tempore controversiae de baptismo: 11. De bono patientiae Tertullianum imitatur: Deus et Christus patientiae exemplaria atque doctores sunt habendi: Est enim cum Deo virtus ista communis... Nec hoc, fratres dilectissimi, Iesus Christus Dominus et Deus noster
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

237

tantum verbis docuit, sed implevit et factis. 12. De zelo et livore: amorem proximi zelo contraponit. 13. Ad Fortunatum (novissimum opus) est anthologia biblica ad praeparandas et corroborandas fratrum mentes. Ergo opera apologetica sunt: Ad Donatum, Ad Demetrianum, Quod idola dii non sint, Ad Fortunatum, Ad Quirinum ; reliqua de ecclesiastica disciplina pertractant: De habitu, De Lapsis, De Catholicae Ecclesiae unitate, De dominica oratione, De mortalitate, De opere et eleemosynis, De bono patientiae, De zelo et livore.147

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

238

De oratione Dominica 1. Evangelica praecepta, fratres dilectissimi, [tertio loco, ut apud classicos ] nihil aliud sunt quam magisteria divina, [nisi, atque] Compar. et negatio fundamenta aedificandae spei, sunt velut firmamenta conroborandae fidei, parallelismus (concinnitas) nutrimenta fovendi cordis, gubernacula dirigendi itineris, praesidia obtinendae salutis, quae dum dociles credentium mentes in terris instruunt, ad caelestia regna perducunt.
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

239

Multa et per prophetas servos suos dici Deus voluit et audiri; sed quanto maiora quae Filius loquitur, [antithesis] quae Dei sermo qui in prophetis fuit propria voce testatur, non iam mandans ut paretur venienti via sed ipse veniens et viam nobis aperiens et ostendens, paron., etym ., verborum ludus ut qui in tenebris mortis errantes improvidi et caeci prius fuimus, [antithesis] luce gratiae [il]luminati
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

240

iter vitae duce et rectore Domino teneremus. [iter est eundi actio]. 2. Qui inter cetera salutaria sua monita et praecepta divina, quibus populo suo consulit ad salutem etiam orandi ipse formam dedit, ipse quid precaremur monuit et instruxit. Qui fecit vivere docuit et orare, benignitate ea scilicet qua et cetera dare et conferre dignatus est, ut dum prece et oratione quam Filius douit apud Patrem loquimur, facilius audiamur. Iam praedixerat horam venire quando veri adoratores adorarent Patrem in spiritu et veritate,
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

241

et implevit quod ante promisit, ut qui spiritum et veritatem de eius sanctificatione percepimus, de traditione quoque eius vere et spiritaliter adoremus. Quae enim potest esse magis spiritalis oratio quam quae a Christo nobis data est, a quo nobis et Spiritus Sanctus missus est, quae vera apud Patrem precatio quam quae a filio qui est veritas de eius ore prolata_est? Ut aliter orare quam docuit non ignorantia sola sit, sed et culpa, quando ipse posuerit et dixerit:
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

242

Reicitis mandatum Dei, ut traditionem vestram statuatis (Mt 15,6; cf Mc 7,8) 3. Oremus itaque, fratres dilectissimi, sicut magister Deus docuit. Amica et familiaris oratio est Deum de suo rogare, ad aures eius ascendere Christi_orationem. Agnoscat Pater Filii sui verba cum precem facimus: qui habitat intus in pectore ipse sit et in voce, et cum ipsum habeamus apud Patrem advocatum pro peccatis nostris quando peccatores pro delictis nostris petimus, advocati nostri verba promamus.
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

243

Ad Donatum 3. Ego cum in tenebris atque in nocte caeca iacerem, cumque in salo iactantis saeculi nutabundus ac dubius vestigiis oberrantibus [= incerto pede] fluctuarem vitae meae nescius, veritatis ac lucis alienus, difficile prorsus ac durum pro illis tunc moribus opinabar, quod in salutem mihi divina indulgentia pollicebatur, ut quis renasci denuo posset utque in novam vitam lavacro aquae salutaris animatus, quod prius fuerat, exponeret et corporis licet manente conpage hominem animo ac mente mutaret. Qui possibilis, aiebam, tanta conversio, ut repente ac perniciter exuatur, quod vel genuinum situ materiae naturalis obduruit
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

244

vel usurpatum diu senio vetustatis inolevit? alta haec et profunda penitus radice sederunt. Quando parcimoniam discit, qui epularibus cenis et largis dapibus adsuevit? et qui pretiosa veste conspicuus in auro atque in purpura fulsit, ad plebeium se ac simplicem cultum quando deponit? fascibus ille oblectatus et honoribus esse privatus et inglorius non potest. Hic stipatus clientium cuneis [multitudine], frequentiore comitatu officiosi [= devoti] agminis honestatus, poenam putat esse, cum solus est. Tenacibus semper inlecebris necesse est, ut solebat, vinolentia invitet, inflet superbia, iracundia inflammet, rapacitas inquietet, crudelitas stimulet, ambitio delectet, libido praecipitet. 4. Haec egomet saepe mecum. Nam et ipse quam plurimis vitae prioris
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

245

erroribus implicatus tenebar, quibus exui me posse non crederem: sic vitiis adhaerentibus obsecundans eram, desperatione meliorum [= vitae melioris] malis meis velut iam propriis ac vernaculis et favebam. Sed postquam undae genetalis auxilio superioris aevi labe detersa in expiatum pectus ac purum desuper se lumen infudit, postquam caelitus spiritu hausto in novum me hominem nativitas secunda reparavit, mirum in modum protinus confirmare se dubia, patere clausa, lucere tenebrosa, facultatem dare quod prius difficile videbatur, geri posse quod impossibile putabatur, ut esset agnoscere [= posset agnosci] terrenum fuisse, quod prius carnaliter natum delictis obnoxium viveret, Dei esse coepisse, quod iam Spiritus sanctus animaret.
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

246

De Ecclesiae Catholicae Unitate Diabolus est auctor schismatum et persecutionum. Christus ecclesiam in uno Petro aedificavit et unum episcopatum creavit. 5. Quam unitatem tenere firmiter et uindicare debemus maxime episcopi, qui in ecclesia praesidemus, ut episcopatum quoque ipsum unum adque indiuisum probemus. Nemo fraternitatem mendacio fallat, nemo fidei ueritatem perfida praeuaricatione corrumpat. Episcopatus unus est cuius a singulis in solidum pars tenetur. Ecclesia una est quae in multitudinem latius incremento fecunditatis extenditur: quomodo solis multi radii sed lumen unum, et rami arboris multi sed
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

247

robur unum tenaci radice fundatum, et cum de fonte uno riui plurimi defluunt, numerositas licet diffusa uideatur exundantis copiae largitate, unitas tamen seruatur in origine. Auelle radium solis a corpore, diuisionem lucis unitas non capit; ab arbore frange ramum, fractus germinare non poterit; a fonte praecide riuum, praecisus arescit. Sic et ecclesia, Domini luce perfusa, per orbem totum radios suos porrigit, unum tamen lumen est quod ubique diffunditur nec unitas corporis separatur; ramos suos in uniuersam terram copia ubertatis extendit; profluentes largiter riuos latius spandit, unum tamen caput est et origo una, et una mater fecunditatis successibus copiosa: illius fetu nascimur, illius lacte nutrimur, spiritu eius animamur.
Latin West, 2 voll., Leiden 1987. B.Amata, La curiositas humana nel milieu culturale di Arnobio III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

248

Adulterari non potest sponsa Christi, incorrupta est et pudica: unam domum nouit, unius cubiculi sanctitatem casto pudore custodit. Haec nos Deo seruat, haec filios regno quos generauit adsignat. Quisque ab ecclesia segregatus adulterae iungitur, a promissis ecclesiae separatur [una sponsa, una domus, unus thalamus: una est mater, una arca salutis, sc. ecclesia. Unitas divinarum personarum unitatem Ecclesiae generat et fidei], nec perueniet ad Christi praemia qui relinquit ecclesiam Christi: alienus est, profanus est, hostis est. Habere iam non potest Deum patrem qui ecclesiam non habet matrem. Si potuit euadere quisque extra arcam Noe fuit, et qui extra ecclesiam foris fuerit euadet. Monet Dominus et dicit: 'Qui non est mecum aduersus me est, et qui non mecum colligit spargit. Qui pacem
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

249

Christi et concordiam rumpit, adversus Christum facit; qui alibi praeter ecclesiam colligit, Christi ecclesiam spargit. Dicit Dominus: 'Ego et Pater unum sumus, et iterum de Patre et Filio et Spiritu sancto scriptum est: Et tres unum sunt. Et quisquam credit hanc unitatem de diuina firmitate uenientem, sacramentis caelestibus cohaerentem, scindi in ecclesia posse et uoluntatum conlidentium diuortio separari? Hanc unitatem qui non tenet non tenet Dei legem, non tenet Patris et Filii fidem, uitam non tenet et salutem. Hoc unitatis sacramentum, hoc uinculum concordiae inseparabiliter cohaerentis ostenditur quando in euangelio tunica Domini Iesu Christi non diuiditur omnino nec scinditur sed, sortientibus de ueste Christi, quis Christum
il Vecchio , in: S.Leanza (ed.), Polyanthema, VIII, Misc.Costanza, Messina 1993. D.v. I.Lana III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

250

potius indueret integra uestis accipitur et incorrupta adque indiuisa tunica possidetur. Loquitur ac dicit scriptura diuina: De tunica autem, quia de superiore parte non consutilis sed per totum textilis fuerat, dixerunt ad inuicem, 'Non scindamus illam sed sortiamur de ea cuius sit.' Vnitatem ille portabat de superiore parte uenientem, id est de caelo et a Patre uenientem, quae ab accipiente ac possidente scindi omnino non poterat, sed totam semel et solidam firmitatem inseparabiliter obtinebat: possidere non potest indumentum Christi qui scindit et diuidit ecclesiam Christi. Contra denique cum, Solomone moriente, regnum eius et populus scinderetur, Achias propheta Hieroboam regi obuius factus in campo in duodecim scissuras uestimentum suum discidit, dicens: 'Sume tibi decem scissuras
laudat: curiosa felicitas Horati (Petr., sat. 118); curiosus alioquin et inquieti procacitate III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

251

quia haec dicit Dominus, Ecce scindo regnum de manu Solomonis, et dabo tibi decem sceptra, et duo sceptra erunt ei propter servum meum David et propter Hierusalem civitatem, quam elegi ut ponam nomen meum illic. Cum duodecim tribus Israel scinderentur, uestimentum suum propheta Achias discidit; at uero quia Christi populus non potest scindi, tunica eius per totum textilis et cohaerens diuisa a possidentibus non est: indiuidua, copulata, conexa ostendit populi nostri, qui Christum induimus, concordiam cohaerentem; sacramento uestis et signo declarauit ecclesiae unitatem. Una domus Raab servata, unus agnus in una domo manducandus. Quis ergo sic sceleratus et perfidus, quis sic discordiae furore uesanus, ut aut credat scindi
praeditus asinus (APUL., met. 9,42,1); sum enim unus ex curiosis, quod infitias ire non III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

252

posse aut audeat scindere unitatem Dei, uestem Domini, ecclesiam Christi? Monet ipse in euangelio suo et docet, dicens: 'Et erunt unus grex et unus pastor', et esse posse uno in loco aliquis existimat aut multos pastores aut greges plures? Apostolus item Paulus hanc eandem nobis insinuans unitatem, obsecrat et hortatur et dicit: Obsecro, inquit, vos, fratres, per nomen Domini nostri Iesu Christi, ut id ipsum dicatis omnes, et non sint in vobis schismata, sitis autem compositi in eodem sensu et in eadem sententia; et iterum dicit: Sustinentes invicem in dilectione, satis agentes servare unitatem Spiritus in coniunctione pacis. Stare tu et uiuere putas posse de ecclesia recedentem, sedes sibi alias et diuersa domicilia condentem, cum dictum sit ei in qua praeformabatur ecclesia: 'Patrem tuum et matrem tuam et
possumus, incendentibus vobis, qui, cum multa sciatis, scire multo plura cupitis (Hist.Aug., III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

253

fratres tuos et totam domum patris tui colliges ad te ipsam in domum tuam: et erit, omnis qui exierit ostium domus tuae foras, reus sibi erit'; item sacramentum Paschae nihil aliud in Exodi lege contineat quam ut agnus, qui in figura Christi occiditur, in domo una edatur? Loquitur Deus dicens: 'In domo una comedetur: non eicietis de domo carnem foras.' Caro Christi et sanctum Domini eici foras non potest, nec alia ulla credentibus praeter unam ecclesiam domus est. Hanc domum, hoc unianimitatis hospitium designat et nuntiat Spiritus sanctus in Psalmis, dicens: Deus qui inhabitare facit unianimes in domo. In domo Dei, in ecclesia Christi unianimes habitant, concordes et simplices perseuerant. Idcirco et in columba uenit Spiritus sanctus. Simplex animal et laetum est:
Probus 2,8); nobis curiositate opus non est post Christum (Tert., pr. 7,2; 14,5; 36,1); quod III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

254

non felle amarum, non morsibus saeuum, non unguium laceratione uiolentum; hospitia humana diligere, unius domus consortium nosse; cum generant simul filios edere, cum commeant uolatibus inuicem cohaerere; communi conuersatione uitam suam degere, oris osculo concordiam pacis agnoscere, legem circa omnia unianimitatis inplere. Haec est in ecclesia noscenda simplicitas, haec caritas obtinenda: ut columbas dilectio fraternitatis imitetur, ut mansuetudo et lenitas agnis et ouibus aequetur. Quid facit in pectore Christiano luporum feritas et canum rabies et uenenum letale serpentium et cruenta saeuitia bestiarum? Gratulandum est cum tales de ecclesia separantur, ne columbas, ne oues Christi saeua sua et uenenata contagione praedentur. Cohaerere et coniungi non potest amaritudo cum
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

255

dulcedine, caligo cum lumine, pluuia cum serenitate, pugna cum pace; cum fecunditate sterilitas, cum fontibus siccitas, cum tranquillitate tempestas. Nemo existimet bonos de ecclesia posse discedere: triticum non rapit uentus, nec arborem solida radice fundatam procella subuertit; inanes paleae tempestate iactantur, inualidae arbores turbinis incursione uertuntur. Hos execratur et percutit Iohannes apostolus, dicens: Ex nobis exierunt, sed non fuerunt ex nobis; si enim fuissent ex nobis mansissent nobiscum. Hinc haeresis et factae sunt frequenter et fiunt, dum peruersa mens non habet pacem, dum perfidia discordans non tenet unitatem. Fieri uero haec Dominus permittit et patitur manente propriae libertatis arbitrio ut, dum corda et mentes
utique non fieret, si certum aliquid tenere curiositas posset humana (Arn., nat. 2,57); quid mihi III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

256

nostras ueritatis discrimen examinat, probatorum fides integra manifesta luce clarescat. Per apostolum praemonet Spiritus sanctus et dicit: Oportet haeresis esse ut probati manifesti sint in nobis. Sic probantur fideles, sic perfidi deteguntur, sic et ante iudicii diem hic quoque iam iustorum adque iniustorum animae diuiduntur, et a frumento paleae separantur. Hi sunt qui se ultro aput temerarios conuenas sine diuina dispositione praeficiunt, qui se praepositos sine ulla ordinationis lege constituunt, qui nemine episcopatum dante episcopi sibi nomen adsumunt; quos designat in Psalmis Spiritus sanctus: sedentes in pestilentiae cathedra: pestes et lues fidei serpentes ore fallentes et corrumpendae ueritatis artifices, uelena letalia linguis pestiferis euomentes; quorum sermo ut cancer serpit quorum tractatus pectoribus
ergo est cum hominibus, ut audiant confessiones meas, quasi ipsi sanaturi sint omnes languores III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

257

et cordibus singulorum mortale uirus infundit. Contra eiusmodi clamat Dominus, ab his refrenat et reuocat errantem plebem suam, dicens: 'Nolite audire sermones pseudoprophetarum, quoniam uisiones cordis eorun frustrantur eos; locuntur sed non ab ore Domini. Dicunt eis qui abiciunt verbum Domini: Pax erit vobis et omnibus ambulantibus in voluntatibus suis; omni qui ambulat errore cordis sui: Non venient super te mala.... Quando aliud baptisma praeter unum esse non possit, baptizare posse se opinantur; uitae fonte deserto, uitalis et salutaris aquae gratiam pollicentur. Non abluuntur illic homines sed potius sordidantur, nec purgantur delicta sed immo cumulantur; non Deo natiuitas illa sed diabolo filios generat: per
meos? curiosum genus ad cognoscendam vitam alienam (Aug., conf. 10,3,3). Plato, Phaedr III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

258

mendacium nati ueritatis promissa non capiunt, de perfidia procreati fidei gratiam perdunt. Ad pacis praemium uenire non possunt qui pacem Domini discordiae furore ruperunt. Nec se quidam uana interpretatione decipiant quod dixerit Dominus: Vbicumque fuerint duo aut tres collecti in nomine meo, ego cum eis sum.' Corruptores euangelii adque interpretes falsi extrema ponunt et superiora praetereunt, partis memores et partem subdole conprimentes; ut ipsi ab ecclesia scissi sunt, ita capituli unius sententiam scindunt. Dominum enim, cum discipulis suis unianimitatem suaderet et pacem, 'Dico, inquit, uobis quoniant si duobus ex uobis conuenerit in terra de omni re quamcumque petieritis continget uobis a Patre
275d-e, dialogum formam proximam habet vivae conversationi. Thamus, rex Aegypti scripturae III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

259

meo qui in caelis est. Vbicumque enim fuerint duo aut tres collecti in nomine meo, ego cum eis sum': ostendens non multitudini sed unianimitati deprecantium plurimum tribui. 'Si duobus, inquit, ex uobis conuenerit in terra': unianimitatem prius posuit, concordiam pacis ante praemisit ut conueniat nobis fideliter et firmiter docuit. Quomodo autem potest ei cum aliquo conuenire, cui cum corpore ipsius ecclesiae et cum uniuersa fraternitate non conuenit? Quomodo possunt duo aut tres in nomine Christi colligi, quos constet a Christo et ab eius euangelio separari? Non enim nos ab illis, sed illi a nobis recesserunt et, cum haeresis et schismata postmodum nata sint dum conuenticula
inventorem Theut increpat, quod discentibus non veritatem sed imaginem veritatis offerat. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

260

sibi diuersa constituunt, ueritatis caput adque originem reliquerunt. Dominus autem de ecclesia sua loquitur, et ad hos qui sunt in ecclesia loquitur ut, si ipsi concordes fuerint, si secundum quod mandauit et monuit, duo aut tres licet collecti unianimiter orauerint, duo aut tres licet sint, impetrare possint de Dei maiestate quod postulant. 'Vbicumque fuerint duo aut tres, ego, inquit, cum eis sum.' Cum simplicibus scilicet adque pacatis, cum Deum timentibus et Dei praecepta seruantibus, cum his duobus uel tribus licet esse se dixit; quomodo et cum tribus pueris in camino ignis fuit et, quia in Deum simplices adque inter se unianimes permanebant, flammis ambientibus medios spiritu roris animauit; quomodo apostolis duobus in custodia clausis, quia simplices quia unianimes erant, ipse
Scripta sunt veluti imagines pictae et viventes sed nequeuntes respondere interrogantibus. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

261

adfuit; ipse resolutis carceris claustris, ut uerbum quod fideliter praedicabant multitudini traderent, ad forum rursus inposuit. Quando ergo in praeceptis suis ponit et dicit: 'Vbi fuerint duo aut tres, ego cum eis sum', non homines ab ecclesia diuidit, qui instituit et fecit ecclesiam; sed, exprobrans discordiam perfidis et fidelibus pacem sua uoce commendans, ostendit magis esse se cum duobus aut tribus unianimiter orantibus quam cum dissidentibus plurimis, plusque impetrari posse paucorum concordi prece quam discordiosa oratione multorum. Ideo et, cum orandi legem daret, addidit dicens: 'Et cum steteritis ad orationem, remittite si quid habetis aduersus aliquem, ut et Pater uester qui in caelis est remittat peccata uobis'; et ad sacrificium cum dissensione uenientem
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

262

reuocat ab altari et iubet prius concordare cum fratre, tunc cum pace redeuntem Deo munus offerre; quia nec ad Cain munera respexit Deus, neque enim habere pacatum Deum poterat qui cum fratre pacem per zeli discordiam non habebat. Quam sibi igitur pacem promittunt inimici fratrum? Quae sacrificia celebrare se credunt aemuli sacerdotum? Secum esse Christum, cum collecti fuerint, opinantur qui extra Christi ecclesiam colliguntur? Tales etiam si occisi in confessione nominis fuerint, macula ista nec sanguine abluitur: inexpiabilis et grauis culpa discordiae nec passione purgatur. Esse martyr non potest qui in ecclesia non est, ad regnum peruenire non poterit qui eam quae regnatura est derelinquit. Pacem nobis Christus dedit, concordes adque unianimes
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

263

esse praecepit, dilectionis et caritatis foedera incorrupta adque inuiolata mandauit. Exhibere se non potest martyrem qui fraternam non tenuit caritatem. Docet hoc et contestatur Paulus apostolus, dicens: Et si habuero fidem ita ut montes transferam, caritatem autem non habeam nihil sunt; et si in cibos distribuero omnia mea, et si tradidero corpus meum ut ardeam, caritatem autem non habeam, nihil proficio. Caritas magnanima est, caritas benigna est; caritas non aemulatur, non inflatur, non inritatur, non agit perperam, non cogitat malum; omnia diligit, omnia credit, omnia sperat, omnia sustinet. Caritas numquam excidit. 'Numquam' inquit 'excidet caritas': haec enim semper in regno erit, haec in aeternum, fraternitatis sibi cohaerentis unitate, durabit. Ad regnum caelorum non potest peruenire discordia; ad praemium
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

264

Christi, qui dixit: 'Hoc est mandatum meum ut diligatis invicem quemadmodum dilexi uos', pertinere non poterit qui dilectionem Christi perfida dissensione uiolauit. Qui caritatem non habet, Deum non habet; Iohannis beati apostoli uox est: Deus, inquit, dilectio est, et qui manet in Deo, in dilectione manet, et Deus in illo manet. Cum Deo manere non possunt qui esse in ecclesia Dei unianimes noluerunt: ardeant licet flammis, et ignibus traditi uel obiecti bestiis animas suas ponant, non erit illa fidei corona sed poena perfidiae, nec religiosae uirtutis exitus gloriosus sed desperationis interitus. Occidi talis potest, coronari non potest. Sic se Christianum esse profitetur quomodo et Christum diabolus saepe mentitur, ipso Domino praemonente et dicente: 'Multi uenient in nomine meo dicentes: Ego sum
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

265

Christus, et multos fallent.' Sicut ille Christus non est, quamuis fallat in nomine, ita nec Christianus uideri potest qui non permanet in euangelii eius et fidei ueritate. Vigilate, quia nemo est firmus - Nec quisquam miretur, dilectissimi fratres, etiam de confessoribus quosdam ad ista procedere, inde quoque aliquos tam nefanda, tam grauia peccare. Neque enim confessio immunem facit ab insidiis diaboli, aut contra temptationes et pericula et incursus adque impetus saeculares adhuc in saeculo positum perpetua securitate defendit: ceterum numquam in confessoribus fraudes et stupra et adulteria postmodum uideremus, quae nunc in quibusdam uidentes ingemescimus et dolemus. 21. Confessio exordium gloriae est non meritum iam coronae, nec perficit
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

266

laudem sed initiat dignitatem; cumque scriptum sit: 'Qui perseveraverit usque ad finem hic salvus erit', quicquid ante finem fuerit, gradus est quo ad fastigium salutis ascenditur, non terminus quo iam culminis summa teneatur. Confessor est: sed post confessionem periculum maius est, quia plus aduersarius prouocatus est; confessor est: hoc magis stare debet cum Domini euangelio, per euangelium gloriam consecutus a Domino. Cui multum datur multum quaeritur ab eo, et cui plus dignitatis adscribitur plus de illo exigitur seruitutis. Nemo per confessoris exemplum pereat, nemo iniustitiam nemo insolentiam nemo perfidiam de confessoris moribus discat; confessor est: sit humilis et quietus, sit in actu suo cum disciplina modestus ut, qui Christi confessor dicitur Christum quem confitetur
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

267

imitetur. Nam cum dicat ille: 'Qui se extollit humiliabitur et qui humiliat se exaltabitur', et ipse a Patre exaltatus sit quia se in terris sermo et uirtus et sapientia Dei Patris humiliauit, quomodo potest extollentiam diligere qui et nobis humilitatem sua lege mandauit, et ipse a Patre amplissimum nomen praemio humilitatis accepit? Confessor est Christi: sed si non postea blasphemetur per ipsum maiestas et dignitas Christi. Lingua Christum confessa non sit maledica, non turbulenta, non conuiciis et litibus perstrepens audiatur, non contra fratres et Dei sacerdotes, post uerba laudis, serpentis uenena iaculetur. Ceterum si culpabilis et detestabilis postmodum fuerit, si confessionem suam mala conuersatione prodegerit, si uitam suam turpi foeditate maculauerit, si ecclesiam denique ubi
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

268

confessor factus est derelinquens, et unitatis concordiam scindens, fidem primam perfidia posteriore mutauerit, blandiri sibi per confessionem non potest quasi electus ad gloriae praemium, quando ex hoc ipso magis creuerint merita poenarum. Rhetorica Ad Lactantii sententiam (Div.Inst. 5,1) Cyprianus unus... praecipuus et clarus exstitit... quoniam et magnam sibi gloriam ex artis oratoriae professione quaesierat, et admodum multa conscripsit in suo genere admiranda copiosum, suave, apertum ut discernere nequeas, utrumne ornatior in eloquendo, an facilior in explicando, an potentior in persuadendo fuerit (ibid.). Ciceronem et rhetores
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

269

adamussim sequitur (ep. 8, PL 4, 249 B): O beatam ecclsiam nstram quam sic honor divinae dignatinis inlminat quam temporibus nostris gloriosus martyrum snguis inlstrat. Erat ante in operibus fratrum candida: nunc facta est in martyrum crure purprea Floribus eius nec lilia nec rosae desunt. Crtent nunc singuli ad utriusque honoris amplissimam dignittem.
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

planus tardus planus creticus tardus cret.- troch. tardus velox

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

270

Accipiant cornas trispondaicus vel de pere cndidas tardus vel de passine purpreas. tardus In caelestibus castris et pax et acies habent flores suos creticus quibus miles Christi ob glriam corontur. cret.- troch. et c. velox Ut ceteri Africae auctores abundat figuris rhetoricis, indulget nimium redundantiis, delectatur sententiarum insertione. Ecclesia Mater una est, unum celebrat baptismum, unam profitetur fidem: Ecclesia una est unitatis sacramentum, vinculum concordiae, inconsutilis
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

271

tunica Christi: Ecclesia una unum habet caput Episcopum, unum habet Episcopatum, cuius a singulis in solidum pars tenetur, sed: 'Scire debes episcopum in Ecclesia esse et ecclesiam in episcopo et si qui cum episcopo non sit, in ecclesia non esse' (ep. 66,8).

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

272

NOVATIANUS [I antipapa] Primus Romanae Ecclesiae auctor, qui lingua Latina usus est, Novatianus fuit. Quaestio de lapsis Christianos quoque Romanos exagitavit post mortem martyris Fabiani. Collegium presbyterorum, sede vacante (Ian. 250 - Mart. 251), Novatiano exarandas dedit Cypriani epistulas 30, 31 et 36, de lapsis. Hieronymus tradit: Novatianus, Romanae urbis presbyter, adversus Cornelium cathedram sacerdotalem conatus invadere, Novatianorum quod Graece kaqaro/n dogma constituit, nolens apostatas suscipere paenitentes ( vir.ill. 70).
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

273

Haec severitas contra lapsos vincit etiam Cypriani sententiam. Praeter Hieronymi testimonium perpauca scimus de Novatiano eiusque tumultuaria vita. Fortasse natus ineunte s.III in Phrygia (Philostorgius, Hist.Eccl. 8,15), Montani patria, vel potius Romae (CYP., ep. 30,32), instante morte baptizatus est et quam cito presbyter contra ius et contradicente clero a Fabiano presbyter est ordinatus. Cornelius a.251 remissionem lapsis, paenitentiam agentibus, concessit, quod Novatianus aegre tulit et ab suis asseclis primus antipapa est factus, licet Cyprianus, Dionysius Alexandrinus et Cornelius ad unitatem hortarentur et schisma tollendum, quod usque ad s.VI viguit.
8,1,7094-7098: tituli Cirtenses cum nomine Caecilii, c. 212-217. Gellius, noct. Att. 18, III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

274

Sunt qui dubitent de testimonio Cornelii, in unam tantum partem inclinantis, et Cypriani, qui tantum indirecte de eo novit. Novatianus enim vir magni fuit ingenii, Tertulliano proximus, licet institutione alia, philosophica et Stoicha.148 In Romana Ecclesia caput exstitit collegii presbyteralis sede vacante, defuncto papa Fabiano, ante electionem Cornelii a. 251. Fortasse martyr occubui sub Valeriano.149 Novatum presbyterum Carthaginiensem, Cypriani inimicissimum, qui Romam confugerat, socium habuit in invadenda sede pontificali, cum confessoribus tribusque episcopis, qui eum consecraverant. Romana synodus Novatum eiusque asseclas ab Ecclesia secluserunt. Hieronymus, vir.ill. 70, testatur opera scripsisse de Pascha, de Sabbato, de
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

275

Circumcisione, de Sacerdote, de Oratione, de Cibis Iudaicis, de Instantia, de Attalo, multaque alia et de Trinitate grande volumen, quasi epitomen operis Tertulliani faciens, quod plerique, nescientes, Cypriani existimant. Supersunt de Trinitate et de Cibis Iudaicis epistula, inter Tertulliani opera, pseudocyprianea opera de Spectaculis et de Bono Pudicitiae, Ep.30 (Presbyteri et Diaconi Romae Cypriano; Ep. 55,5) et Ep. 36 (Presbyteri et Diacones Romae Cypriano). De Trinitate Tertullianus personas Trinitatis (Prax. 2,4) unum deum esse docuit propter
philosophos, peripateticum et stoicum, de vita beata disserentes coram Favorino et Gellio iuxta III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

276

unitatem et 'potestatis' et 'substantiae'. Novatianus notionem substantia', stoichos sequens, ut 'spiritus' intellegit, et creatura (7,39). Symbolum quattuor capita habet: pater (1-18), Filius (19-28), Spiritus Sanctus (29), necessitudines Patris et Filii (30-31). Trinitas (TERT., pud. 21) numquam invenitur et fortasse contra Montanismum minuit munus Spiritus Sancti, ita ut titulus non a Novatiano datus esse videatur. Tertulliani mentem ac terminos tam fideliter refert, ut Hieronymus epitome fecisse crediderit (Vir. ill. 70), cui consentit d.v. Altaner, sed Quasten maiorem diligentiam ac perfectionem invenit quam in ceteris antecedentibus operibus. D.v. Simonetti econtra cum ad mentem Hippolyti Pater sit mittens, filius
litus Hostiense inducit; Cicero, De orat. I,1: Cogitanti mihi saepe numero et memoria vetera III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

277

missus atque oboediens et Spiritus Sanctus inferior Filio et numquam dicatur tertia persona, eum retrocessisse docet theologicam pervestigationem. Opus concinne compositum, Scripturae locis ornatissimum, stilo sublime, non cedit Tertullianeo operi in historia theologiae occidentalis et propter nova verba et propter novas formulas, licet nimium iteratas. Orthodoxa fides de Deo creatore: Deus creator rerum 1. Regula exigit veritatis, ut primo omnium credamus in deum patrem et dominum omnipotentem, id est rerum omnium perfectissimum conditorem: qui caelum alta sublimitate suspenderit, terram deiecta mole solidaverit, maris soluto
repetenti perbeati fuisse, Quinte frater, illi videri solent, qui in optima re publica, cum et III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

278

liquore diffuderit, et haec omnia propriis et condignis instrumentis et ornata et plena digesserit. 2. Nam et in solidamento caeli luciferos solis ortus excitavit, lunae candentem globum ad solacium noctis mensuris incrementis orbis implevit, astrorum etiam radios variis fulgoribus micantis lucis accendit. Et haec omnia legitimis meatibus circumire totum mundi ambitum voluit, humano generi dies, menses, annos, signa, tempora utilitatesque factura. 3. In terris quoque altissimos montes in verticem sustulit, valles in ima deiecit, campos aequaliter stravit, animalium greges ad varias hominum servitutes utiliter instituit, silvarum quoque robora humanis usibus profutura solidavit, fruges
honoribus et rerum gestarum gloria florerent, eum vitae cursum tenere potuerunt, ut vel in III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

279

in cibum elicuit, fontium ora reseravit et lapsuris fluminibus infudit. post quae, ne non etiam ipsis quoque deliciis procurasset oculorum, variis florum coloribus ad voluptatem spectantium cuncta vestivit. Deus creator hominis Post quae hominem quoque mundo praeposuit, et quidem ad imaginem dei factum: cui mentem et rationem indidit et prudentiam, ut deum posset imitari. Cuius etsi corporis terrena primordia, caelestis tamen et divini halitus inspirata substantia. 6. Quae cum omnia in servitutem illi dedisset, solum liberum esse voluit. et
negotio sine periculo vel in otio cum dignitate esse possent. Cicero opus de republica et de III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

280

ne in periculum caderet rursum soluta libertas, mandatum posuit, quo tamen non inesse malum in fructu arboris diceretur, sed futurum si forte ex voluntate hominis de contemptu datae legis praemoneretur. Nam et liber esse debuerat, ne incongruenter dei imago serviret, et lex addenda, ne usque ad contemptum dantis libertas effrenata prorumperet, ut et praemia condigna et merita poenarum consequenter exciperet, suum iam habens illud, quod motu mentis in alterutram partem agitare voluisset. ex quo mortalitatis invidia utique in ipsum redit, qui, cum illam de oboedientia posset evadere, in eandem incurrit, dum ex consilio perverso deus esse festinat. 7. Cuius tamen poenam nihilominus indulgenter temperavit, dum non tam
natura deorum in feriis Latinis, Minucius in vindemiis, Cyprianus quoque ad Donatum in III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

281

ipse quam labores eius maledicuntur super terra. Nam et quod requiritur, non ex ignorantia venit, sed spem hominis futurae in Christo et inventionis et salutis ostendit. Et quod, ne de ligno arboris vitae contingat, arcetur, non de invidiae maligno livore descendit, sed ne vivens in aeternum, nisi peccata Christus ante donasset, circumferret secum in poenam sui semper immortale delictum. 8. Quamquam etiam superioribus, id est super ipsum quoque solidamentum, partibus, quae non sunt hodie nostris contemplabiles oculis, angelos prius instituerit, spiritales virtutes digesserit, thronos potestatesque praefecerit, et alia multa caelorum immensa spatia et sacramentorum infinita opera condiderit, ut immensum hic licet mundus paene novissimum magis dei corporalium rerum
vindemiis ponit. Praeterea: ego dicens [ io parlante ], reverentia alterius [attenzione allaltro ], III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

282

appareat opus esse quam solum. 9. Nam neque quae infra terram iacent, neque ipsa sunt digestis et ordinatis potestatibus vacua: locus enim est, quo piorum animae impiorumque ducuntur, futuri iudicii praeiudicia sententes, ut operum ipsius in omnibus partibus rebundantes magnitudines non intra mundi huius capacissimos licet, ut diximus, sinus conclusas videremus, sed etiam intra ipsius mundi et profunda et altitudines cogitare possemus, et sic considerata operum magnitudine tantae molis digne mirari possemus artificem. Stilus
flores [citazioni classicheggianti ] Latinam apologiam peculiariter adnotant. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

283

De Trinitate videtur novo stilo exaratum esse. Optimus auctor est atque creator Christiani sermonis Latini una cum Tertulliano. Pura et eleganti eloquentia ordinem et methodum servat, sine vehementia Tertulliani, sine suavitate Cypriani. Graecismi abundant: paracletus, baptisma, charisma, parabola, anathema, chirographum, haeresis. Elocutio sententiis, metaphoris, verborum figuris, anaphoris crebris alitur (2,16; 10,50-52), cum isocolis (1,1; 29,170), antithesibus et paronomasiis (2,16), allitterationibus et homeoteleutis (1,1; 29,170). Novatiani gratia litterae Latinae Christianae Romam primum ingrediuntur sermone ornato et concinno.

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

284

ARNOBIUS Arnobius non pastoralem theologiam Cypriani et Novatiani sed apologeticum

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

285

genus Tertulliani sequitur.150 Arnobius resonat caelum novum inter paganos et Christianos exeunte s.III. Porphirius Graeco sermone c. 270-80 Contra Christianos L.XV exaraverat magnum momentum in novissima persecutione habituros, quibus respondent perfecte ut creditur septem Arnobii. Est rhetor Africanus, natus ferme a.CCXL eiusque opus Adversus Nationes post a.303 editum est. Quod scimus de eius vita fere totum ex Hieronymo novimus: Arnobius sub Diocletiano principe, Siccae apud Africam rhetoricam florentissime docuit scripsitque adversus gentes quae vulgo extant volumina (HIER., vir.ill. 79).
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

286

Eius ad Christi fidem conversionem idem Hieronymus tradit: Arnobius rhetor clarus in Africa habetur, qui cum in civitate Siccae ad declamandum iuvenes erudiret et adhuc ethnicus ad credulitatem somniis compelleretur neque ab episcopo impetraret fidem, elucubravit adversus pristinam religionem luculentissimos libros et tandem velut quibusdam obsidibus pietatis foedus impetravit.151 De se tantum tradit mancipatum quondam fuisse nefario idolorum cultui et liberatum esse a Christo: Venerabar, o caecitas, nuper simulacra modo ex fornacibus prompta, in incudibus deos et ex malleis fabricatos, elephantorum ossa, picturas, veternosis in arboribus taenias; si quando conspexeram lubricatum
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

287

lapidem et ex olivi unguine sordidatum, tamquam inesset vis praesens, adulabar, adfabar et beneficia poscebam nihil sentiente de trunco, et eos ipsos divos, quos esse mihi persuaseram, adficiebam contumeliis gravibus, cum eos esse credebam ligna lapides atque ossa aut in huius modi rerum habitare materia. Nunc doctore tanto in vias veritatis inductus omnia ista quae sint scio (nat. 1,39). Quid egisset post conversionem vel temporum iniuria vel oblivio hominum scire omnino negavit. Testimonium Hieronymi: Sub Diocletiano principe non declarat quo tempore Arnobius opus suum edidit. Neque melius ipse Arnobius: Trecenti sunt anni, inquit, ferme, minus vel plus aliquid, ex quo coepimus esse Christiani et
rivivere in persona i tempi trascorsi, non soltanto rievocarli attraverso il ricordo di cose passate e III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

288

terrarum in orbe censeri (nat. 1,13). Cui fere similia verba respondent, a paganis contra Christianos prolata: Ante trecentos annos religio, inquit, vestra non fuit (nat. 2,71). Colligitur ergo opus circa annum 300um p.Ch.n. exaratum esse. In eodem autem loco haec occurrunt: Aetatis urbs Roma cuius esse in annalibus indicatur? Annos ducit quinquaginta et mille aut non multum ab his minus ( nat. 2,71). Hic annus probabiliter est 297. Sed computationem non esse accuratam deducitur ex verbis 'minus vel plus aliquid ... aut non multum ab his minus'. Praeterea alio in loco: Nostra quidem scripta, inquit, cur ignibus meruerunt dari? cur immaniter conventicula dirui? (nat. 4,36). Quae verba aptius referuntur ad Diocletiani persecutionem saevientem anno 303: Tunc enim, ait Eusebius ( h.e.
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

289

8,8) aedes sacras solo aequari ac funditus subverti, sacros divinarum scripturarum libros in medio foro concremari, oculis nostris vidimus. Igitur opus inchoatum circa annum 303 publici iuris factum est ante annum.311 Adversus nationes Inscriptio operis non satis est certa, cum Hieronymus de libris Adversus Gentes loquatur. Non agitur de quadam encyclopaedia religionis paganorum. Ad mentem docti viri Fontaine Arnobium secundum librum primum composuisse tractantem de anima in quo neoplatonici et hermetici interpellantur, cui praemisisset primum librum tamquam generalem introductionem ad refellandas
che han fatto il loro corso. Infatti l'immagine sua, quanto pi si allontanata dalla mia vista, III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

290

difficultates communes etiam cum Porphirio. Ceteri quinque mordicus paganismum refellunt theologiam anthropomorphicam, deos impios, exegesim allegoricam, templa, statuas, liturgias et sacrificia, Esculapium et Magnam deam Cybelem. Eius Christologia docet Christum esse 'doctorem', taumaturgum, eius psychologia animam esse 'mediae qualitatis' atque finitam in suis facultatibus sciendi. Libri I-II Christianos esse causam malorum omnium confutant et divinitatem Christi proclamant; reliqui libri deos, ritus, cultus oppugnant. 152 De theologica et Christiana operis Arnobii natura diversae extant sententiae. Sunt qui credant eum, quamquam gentilibus adversum atque infensum se praebentem et eorum religiones ac caerimonias dicacissime irridentem, saepiusque
tanto pi mi rimasta impressa nel cuore e nel sentimento pi profondo. Non senza ragione che III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

291

eandem in eos animi vehementiam adhibentem qua antea adversus Christianos exarsisset, Christi doctrinam parum didicisse evangeliaque et ceteros Novi Testamenti libros parum lectitavisse, quin etiam in eius libris tam multa inesse errata de Dei animorumque doctrina, ut ad haereticos propius accedat. Huic accedunt sententiae etiam qui ex ipso operis titulo propositum Arnobii patere proclamant sc. falsam gentilium religionem et Christianorum veram esse demonstrandi; utrumque propositum non aeque perfecisse, cum ipse multo facilius impios deorum cultus evertisset quam Christianae doctrinae demonstravisset veritatem; itaque ut saepius inculcatam calumniam propulsaret, qua ethnici propter abdicatum a Christianis deorum cultum eos publicarum calamitatum et
quell'uomo eccellente e pio con la sua dipartita abbia lasciato in noi un immenso rimpianto di s; III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

292

malorum omnium causam et auctores esse accusarent, primo et secundo libro nihil in religione Christiana esse demonstravisse quod iram Dei commovere posset; deinde tertio, quarto et quinto libro malorum causam esse declaravisse, quod probrosa de diis ethnici crederent et colerent; denique sexto et septimo libro confutavisse caeremonias, templa, sacrificia, vana esse ad cultum diis praebendum. Sunt autem qui miram eruditionem ubique disseminatam extollant, Platonisque ac Lucretii influxum, declarent, quippe qui ad paganos et praesertim ad rhetores ac philosophos dirigat sermonem. Errores non inesse alii proclamant, neque scopulos, in quos impegisset, cum contempletur Summum Deum, spectantem res humanas sine ira atque affectibus (nat. 1,17; 6,2; 7,5), neque cum confuse loquatur de diis
perch in lui vi fu sempre tale ardore di amicizia, da far s che nelle situazioni liete come nelle III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

293

inferioribus (nat. 1,28; 7,35), neque cum hominis animi mortalitatem proclamet (nat. 2,32). Non desunt enim argumenta quae veritatem Christianam confirment, Christi divinitatem vehementer proponant, Christianorum vitam defendant ( nat. 1,42.43.54; 1,58; 2,5; 3,19). Rectius alii mirum exemplum habent 'syncretismi' inter maiorum cultum humanitatemque et 'mysticismum' philosophicum et religiosum suae aetatis proprium, sed 'rationalismo' ita infectum dicant ut pulchritudinem et spiritualitatem novae religionis minime intellexerit. Alii denique 'pessimismum' eius ex Lucretio haustum maxime poeticas credunt inspiravisse paginas: nat. 2,37 - definitio hominis - stercoris utres et saccati obscenissimas serias inter potiores
difficili egli si trovasse sempre d'accordo con me in tutto: voleva o non voleva le stesse cose: si III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

294

pessimismi sententias annumeranda est. Ex Arnobii sententia unus Christus 'doctor' habendus est, qui animam sanctam, immortalem, beatam facit: ceterae opiniones cedere debent ante ipsam Veritatem. Animae autem sunt mediae qualitatis, sicut Christo auctore compertum est, et interire quae possint deum si ignoraverint, vitae et ab exitio liberari, si ad eius se minas atque indulgentias adplicarint, et quod ignotum est pateat ( nat.2,36). Propositum eius est defendere Christianam religionem ab calumniosis paganorum criminationibus (nat. 1,1.8-10): Statui pro captu ac mediocritate sermonis contraire invidiae ac calumniosas dissolvere criminationes.
sarebbe detto che un'anima sola fosse stata divisa fra due corpi. Cos lui solo era a parte delle mie III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

295

Unus est hominis intellectus de Dei natura certissimus, si scires et sentias nihil de illo posse mortali oratione depromi (nat. 3,19.19-21). Christus est fons totius hominis scientiae: Qui [Christus], quod frugiferum primo atque humano generi salutare, Deus monstravit quid sit, quis, quantus et qualis: qui profundas eius atque inenarrrabiles altitudines, quantum nostra quivit mediocritas capere, et intellegere permisit et docuit: qui quo auctore, quo patre mundus iste sit constitutus et conditus, fecit benignissime sciri (nat. I 38.15-21). Quae Christus non revelaverit neque digna sunt quae sciantur: Christus... cum mortalium sciret caecam esse naturam neque ullam posse comprehendere veritatem positarum nec ante oculos rerum, pro comperto habere et cognito quidquid sibi
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

296

esse suasisset... omnia ista nos linquere et posthabere praecepit neque in res eas quae sint a nostra procul cognitione dimotas infructuosas inmittere cogitationes, sed, quantum fieri potis est, ad dominum rerum tota mente atque animo proficisci... quem satis sit scire ut nihil aliud noveris, sisque veram et maximam scientiam consecutus in dei rerum capitis cognitione defixus (nat. II 60.9-32). Christiani definiuntur: Nihil sumus aliud Christiani nisi magistro Christo summi regis ac principis veneratores; nihil, si consideres, aliud invenies in ista religione versari (nat. I 27.6-9). In Deo omne quod colendum est colimus, quod adorari convenit adoramus, quod obsequium venerationis exposcit venerationibus promeremur (nat. III 2.8-13). Adorare Deum totius summa est actionis, hic
aspirazioni, lui solo compagno dei miei errori; e quando, dissipata la caligine, uscii dall'abisso III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

297

propositus terminus divinorum officiorum, hic finis, huic omnes (nos) ex more prosternimus, hunc conlatis precibus adoramus (nat. I 27.9-12). Arnobius primus verba 'deitas' adhibet et 'atheus'. Pagani dei non sunt vocandi dei, quia carent magno nomine: Si sunt, esse et habere substantiam sui nominis maiestatisque coeperunt. Ii dii sunt vocandi qui ferre nominis huius auctoritatem condigni sunt. Rhetorice ergo hypothesi utitur: si sunt, si nomen magnum habent, cum mentem suam aperiat in libro septimo: Nequeuntes homines quidnam sit Deus scire, quidnam sit vis eius, natura substantia qualitas, utrumne habeat formam an nulla sit corporis circumscriptione finitus, agat aliquid an non agat, vigiletne perpetuo, an aliquando solvatur in
delle tenebre per assurgere alla luce della saggezza e della verit, egli non rifiut di essermi III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

298

somnos, currat sedeat ambulet an ab huiusmodi motibus et cessatione sit liber, haec omnia ut dixi nequeuntes scire neque ratione aliqua pervidere, in eas sunt opinatione lapsi, ut deos ex se fingerent et qualis sibi natura est et illis talem darent actionum rerum voluntatumque naturam (nat. VII 34.3-13). Deus est Summus non quia prior et Maximus sit inter ceteros, sed quia pater rerum ac dominus, constitutor moderatorque cunctorum ( nat. III 2.10-11). De Deo loquitur quodam arcaico sermone. Ad animi mortalitatem quod spectat anthropologia apologetarum nonnulli animam natura sua non esse immortalem proclamant; immortalitatem autem esse praemium, quod Deus his qui bene vixerint largiturus est: ita Iustinus, Tatianus,
compagno, ma, ci che ancor pi degno di gloria, primo si slanci sulla nuova via. Per questo, III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

299

Theophilus (Ad Aut. 2,27: natura media animae) et alii. Etenim Iustinus (dial. 5,3): Videtur hoc rectum se habere. - Non ergo immortales sunt? - Non: siquidem stauimus mundum esse genitum. - Non tamen perire dico omnes animas: vere enim de lucro id esset improbis. Quid igitur? Piorum quidem animas in meliore loco manere, iniquorum autem et malorum in deteriore, iudicii tempus exspectantes. Sic istae, cum Deo dignae iudicatae fuerint, non iam moriuntur: hae vero puniuntur, quamdiu eas esse et puniri Deus voluerit... Quaecumque enim post Deum sunt aut erunt aliquando, ea naturam habent corruptioni obnoxiam, ac talia sunt ut aboleri possint ac iam nulla esse. Solus enim Deus est qui nec genitus sit nec corruptioni obnoxius, ac propterea
mentre il mio pensiero andava a tutto il tempo da noi trascorso in intima amicizia e comunanza III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

300

Deus est: reliqua vero omnia, quae post eum sunt, genita et corruptioni obnoxia. Hoc ipsum causa est, cur animae et moriantur et puniantur. Tatianus (or. 13) item: Non est immortalis per se ipsa, o Graeci, anima, sed mortalis. Potest tamen eadem non mori. Moritur enim et dissolvitur cum corpore, si veritatem ignoret; postea autem resurgit in fine mundi una cum corpore, mortem per supplicia in immortalitate accipiens. Rursus autem non moritur, etiamsi solvatur ad tempus, si Dei cognitione instructa sit. Utilitatem credendi ita expressit: Nonne purior ratio est, ex duobus incertis et in ambigua exspectatione pendentibus id potius credere quod aliquas spes ferat quam omnino quod nullas? In illo enim periculi nihil est, quod dicitur imminere
di vita, la mia attenzione si ferm particolarmente su quella famosa conversazione, nella quale III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

301

cassum si fiat et vacuum; in hoc damnum est maximum id est salutis amissio, si cum tempus advenerit aperiatur non fuisse mendacium (nat. II 4). Biblicus sermo desideratur, sed abundat afaticus et vehemens desiderium proclamandi Christum deum (nat. I 29-31): Atque utinam daretur in unius speciem contionis toto orbe contracto oratione hac et humani in generis audientia conlocari. Ergone impiae religionis sumus apud vos rei et quod caput rerum et columen venerabilibus adimus obsequiis, ut convicio utamur vestro, infausti et athei nuncupamur? Et quis magis rectius horum feret invidiam nominum, quam qui alium prae hoc deum aut novit aut sciscitatur aut credit? Nonne huic omnes debemus hoc ipsum primum, quod sumus, quod esse homines dicimur, quod ab eo
Ottavio prese a partito Cecilio, ancora attaccato alle vanit della superstizione e, con gran forza III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

302

vel missae <animae> vel lapsae caecitate huius in corporis continemur? non quod incedimus, quod spiramus et vivimus, ab eo ad nos venit vique ipsa vivendi efficit nos esse et animali agitatione motari? . De ipso Deo lyrice loquitur (nat. I 31): O maxime, o summe rerum invisibilium procreator, o ipse invisus et nullis umquam conprehense naturis, dignus, dignus es vere, si modo te dignum mortali dicendum est ore, cui spirans omnis intelligensque natura et habere et agere numquam desinat gratias, cui tota conveniat vita genu nixo procumbere et continuatis precibus supplicare. Prima enim tu causa es, locus rerum ac spatium, fundamentum cunctorum quaecumque sunt, infinitus ingenitus inmortalis perpetuus solus, quem nulla deliniat forma
di ragionamenti, lo convert alla vera religione. Conturbernalis est miles qui in eodem exercitu III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

303

corporalis, nulla determinat circumscriptio, qualitatis expers, quantitatis, sine situ motu et habitu, de quo nihil dici et exprimi mortalium potis est significatione verborum, qui ut intellegaris tacendum est atque, ut per umbram te possit errans investigare suspicio, nihil est omnino muttiendum. Da veniam, rex summe, tuos persequentibus famulos, et quod tuae benignitatis est proprium, fugientibus ignosce tui nominis et religionis cultum. Non est mirum, si ignoraris: maioris est admirationis, si sciaris; nisi forte audet quisquam hoc enim furiosae restat insaniae ambigere, dubutare, an sit iste deus an non sit, explorata fidei veritate an rumoris cassi opinatione sit creditus. Audimus enim quosdam philosophandi studio deditos partim ullam negare vim esse divinam, partim an sit cotidie quaerere; alios casibus
sub eodem tentorio cum aliis habitat, translate autem dicitur qui diutius et familiariter cum alio III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

304

fortuitis et concursionibus temerariis summam rerum construere atque diversitatis impetu fabricari, cum quibus hoc tempore nullum nobis omnino super tali erit obstinatione certamen. Aiunt enim sana sentientes contradicere rebus stultis stultitiae esse maioris. Stilus Stilus scribendi magis vehementiae est aptus quam persuasioni: varius, multis verborum luminibus distinctus, saepe rhetorum ampullis praegravatus. Obsoletas, inusitatas, novatas etiam voces et synonima quam plurima cumulat, immoderatas periodos evolvit, in quibus interrogationes rhetoricae
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

305

densantur, necnon antitheses, allitterationes, anaphorae, hyperbata. Sed occurrunt quoque apte, polite et eleganter dicta, ac gravissimis ornata illustrataque verbis et sententiis, necnon plurima quae animi mordacitate et acritate mirabiliter eminent. Periodi longae, interrogationibus sunt refertae innumeris, figuris, synonymis, diatriba et varietate verborum, ut concinnus et inconcinnus videatur, difficilis in dicendo, voces raras cumulat et implicat in complexo ordine verborum, usque ad taedium in structuris anaphoricis et iterationibus saepius prolatis.153

vivit; vanitates sunt opiniones vanae, mendacia, figmenta. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

306

LUCIUS CAECILIUS FIRMIANUS LACTANTIUS Ab edicto Gallieni qui finem posuit a.260 persecutioni Valeriani usque ad maximam Diocletiani persecutionem a.303 parva pax ecclesiae favit expansioni Latinitatis Christianae. Etenim Lactantius, Africanus et rhetor, nuntiat tempora nova novoque stilo induit apologeticam. Discipulus Arnobii licet esset, alia ratione historica et cultuali ac alternativa se exhibuit. Lucius Caecilius (vel Caelius, ut traditur in quibusdam codicibus) Firmianus Lactantius, anno circiter 250 in Africa est natus (non Firmi in Piceno oppido, adiectivus enim huius urbis Firmanus est). De quo Hieronymus: Firmianus qui et Lactantius, Arnobii discipulus, sub Diocletiano principe accitus cum Flavio
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

307

grammatico, cuius de Medicinalibus versu compositi extant libri, Nicomediae rhetoricam docuit, ac penuria discipulorum ob Graecam videlicet civitatem, ad scribendum se contulit. Habemus eius Symposium, quod adulescentulus scripsit Africae, et Odoiporicon de Africa usque Nicomediam, hexametris scriptum versibus, et alium librum qui inscribitur Grammaticus, et alium pulcherrimum de Ira Dei, et Institutionum Divinarum adversus Gentes libros septem et Epitomen eiusdem operis in libro uno akephalo; et ad Asclepiadem libros duos; De persecutione librum unum; ad Probum Epistolarum libros quattuor; ad Severum Epistolarum libros duos; ad Demetrianum auditorem suum, Epistolarum libros duos; ad eundem de Opificio Dei vel de formatione hominis librum unum. Hic
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

308

extrema senectute magister Caesaris Crispi, filii Constantini, in Gallia [303-307, Treviris] fuit, qui postea a patre interfectus est (HIER., vir.ill. 80). Opus amissum Symposium fortasse Diocletianum impulit ut vocaret eum Nicomediam (imperii caput in Bithynia), fere a.285-295, ad linguam Latinam docendam ac vulgandam in Oriente. Nullibi memoriam tradit Arnobii. Idolorum se fuisse cultorem dolet: Nos autem, qui ante cognitionem Dei fuimus iniusti, spinae id est mali et nocentes eramus, ignorantes quid esset bonum et a iustitiae notione atque operibus alieni, omnia scelere ac libidine polluebamus.

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

309

Electi ergo ex dumis et sentibus sanctum Dei caput cingimus.154 Conatur praeprimis quaestionem illam solvere de summo bono deque vita beata, quam per saecula frustra auctores pertractaverant, docens hominem in terris, si officio a Deo commisso perfecerit, pervenire ad vitam aeternam. Sed contra gentes potius quam summa theologica habendum est opus, quod potissimum utatur paganis auctoribus: Cicerone persaepe, Seneca, stoicorumque grege, necnon et Sybillinis Oraculis et opere quod inscribitur Corpus Hermeticum, quod sunt scripta dei Aegyptii Thoth (quem Plato Theuth appellat, quemque Herodotus deo Hermes exaequat), trismegistos (id est ter-maximus) dicti et aliquot opera a sacerdotibus Aegyptiis diligentissime asservata. Huiusmodi XIX opera
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

310

videntur Neoplatonica, s.III exarata. Primum, Poimandre/j sc.Pastor, titulum ad universa scripta tribuit auctore Marsilio Ficino, a.1471, cum in Latinum sermonem convertit XIV eorundem operum. Cyprianus hortatur fideles qui bene noverant Christianum mysterium, propterea opera eius nimis spiritualia sunt et nonnisi a fidelibus intelligi poterant. Lactantius econtra clavi nova utitur et magis divulgativa, ut iam in titulis insinuatur operum, quae usque ad nos prvenerunt: De opificio Dei, Divinarum Institutionum, De Ira Dei, Epitome Divinarum Institutionum, De mortibus persecutorum. Codicum testimonio eius est carmen De Ave Phoenice. De Opificio Dei, Demetriano dicatum, saeviente Diocletiani persecutione
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

311

edidit, qui magistros Christianos prohibuit ne docerent (fortasse haec fuit causa eius egestatis), fere a.303-305: Pro rerum ac temporum necessitate plura et meliora laturus, si nobis indulgentia coelitus venerit (1,1). Corpus humanum comparat cum ceteris animalibus (c.2-4), anatomice et physiologice describit (c.3-15), anima ditatum esse demonstrat. Philosophica utitur ratione multa Ciceronis Rei publicae redolens breviter in quarto libro de hac re loquentis, et fere nihil de Christiana agitur veritate: Quam minime sim quietus, etiam in summis necessitatibus, ex hoc libello poteris aestimare, quem ad te rudibus paene verbis prout ingenii mediocritas tulit, Demetriane, perscripsi, ut et cotidianum studium meum nosses et non deessem tibi praeceptor etiam nunc, sed honestioris rei
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

312

meliorisque doctrinae. Docens animas a Deo oriri dissentit magistro suo Arnobio: Illud quoque venire in quaestionem potest, utrumne anima ex patre an potius ex matre an vero ex utroque generetur. Sed ego id meo iure ancipiti vindico. Nihil enim ex his tribus verum est, quia neque ex utroque neque ex alterutro seruntur animae. Corpus enim ex corporibus nasci potest, quoniam confertur aliquid ex utroque, de animis anima non potest, quia ex re tenui et incomprehensibili nihil potest decedere. Itaque serendarum animarum ratio uni ac soli deo subiecta (DI 2.19). Tertulliani taducianismus spectabat animas a parentibus una cum corpore generatas, quarum naturam corpoream habebat. Augustinus autem de peccato
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

313

originali pertractans, corporalem traducianismum negavit spiritualem autem professus est. Post s.V traducianismo damnato sententia comunis facta est animas a Deo immediate creari. Divinae Institutiones L.VII Annis 304-311 in Bithynia composuit opus maius imitatus Institutiones civilis iuris (1,1,12), critice et ordinate sibi proponens universam paganorum philosophiam atque religionem evertere: Sopire superstitiones mortiferas et errores turpissimos. Titulus resonat ius civile, rhetoricam, potissimum autem Quintiliani Institutiones.
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

314

Opus Divinae institutiones ethnicorum impios cultus reprobat Christianaeque religionis praecepta et instituta extollit. Primi tres libri constituunt partem destruentem. In libro I pertractat De falsa religione: deorum cultus est impius et refertus erroribus; Christiani econtra sapientiam et religionem mirum in modum coniungunt (saepe Euhemerus Ennii laudatur). In libro II, De origine erroris, illustrat politheismi originem et eius permanentiam daemonum (=deorum) opera; dei nonnisi homines divinizati sunt. In III, De falsa sapientia philosophorum, vanam dicit esse atque contradictoriam ethnicorum philosophiam, quae cum idolatria homines corrumpit. In IV, De vera sapientia et religione a Christo allata: Sola igitur catholica ecclesia est quae verum cultum retinet. Hic est fons
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

315

veritatis, hoc domicilium fidei, hoc templum Dei: quo si qui non intraverit vel a quo si quis exierit, a spe vitae et salutis alienus est (4,30,11). In V, De iustitia disputat atque tantum Christianos eam exercere proclamat, post Saturni regnum illud mythicum. In VI, De vero cultu quo Deum coli oporteat: Hic verus est cultus in quo mens colentis se ipsam Deo immaculatam victimam sistit (6,2); verus est cultus qui iustitiam (=religionem) erga Deum agit et erga proximum (=misericordiam et humanitatem). In VII, De vita beata, de animi immortalitate disputat, de resurrectione, de iudicio Dei novissimo, de ultimis mundi temporibus (millenarismum redolet) atque de vita aeterna. De vita beata saepius disputatum est et a paganis et a Christianis; vita beata fruituri sunt Christiani ut praemio veri
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

316

cultus. Non aliter ac Eusebii opera contra Porphirium fortasse et Ieroclem exaratum est hoc primum et perfectum opus de universa Christiana doctrina in occidente, cui Graeca lingua Origenis De principiis opponi potest, et iure comparatur cum Adversus Marcionem Tertulliani. Fontibus Christianis Theophilo Antiocheno, Minucio, Tertulliano, Cypriano, paganis Ennio, Lucretio, Cicerone, Vergilio, Oratio, Ovidio, Seneca, Persio, necnon libris Sybillinis et Hermeticis, theosophia exstruitur vincens philosophiam. Sapientia seu divina traditio superat philosophiam seu inventionem humanam. Igitur meditatio vincit impetum ac retorsionem, patientia et ratio corrigunt errorem
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

317

intellectualem paganorum. Polytheismus corruptio monotheismi argumentis a paganis ipsis depromptis auctoribus habetur. Evemerus (apud Ennium), scholia Germanici (in Aratum), Poimandres, Corpus Hermeticum, Seneca ( Moralia, quae ad non usque non pervenerunt), Persius, Lucretius proximi habentur fidei Christianae. Antinomia paganos inter et Christianos contrahit ad errorem (defectu) et veritatem (plenam), non aliter ac Cicero ( De republica, De natura deorum, Consolatio quod periit). Proficiscens a vera sapientia et a vera religione (l.IV) ducit paganos per iustitiam (l.V) et verum cultum (l.VI) ad beatitudinem (l.VII), de qua Augustinus novissime post innumeros Graecos Latinosque sublimius pertractavit, sed Seneca quoque auctor extiterat tractatus eiusdem tituli: De vita
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

318

beata. Lactantius fontes adhibet orientales neque interpretationem neglegit Christianam mythorum quoque. Quamquam Tertullianus - inquit - eandem causam plene peroraverit in eo libro cui Apologeticum nomen est, tamen, quoniam aliud est accusantibus respondere, quod in defensione aut negatione sola positum est, aliud instituere, quod nos facimus, in quo necesse est doctrinae totius substantiam contineri, non defugi hunc laborem ut implerem materiam, quam Cyprianus non executus est in ea oratione qua Demetrianum, sicut ipse ait, oblatrantem atque obstrepentem veritati redarguere conatur, qua materia non est usus ut debuit; non enim Scripturae testimoniis, quam ille utique vanam, fictam, commentitiamque putabat, sed
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

319

argumentis et ratione fuerat refellendus... Quod quia ille non fecit, raptus eximia eruditione divinarum litterarum... accessi, Deo inspirante, ut ego facerem (5,4,3-7). Philosophica ac rhetorica ratione incipit: Magno et excellenti ingenio viri, cum se doctrinae penitus dedissent, quicquid laboris poterat impendi contemptis omnibus et privatis et publicis actionibus ad inquirendae veritatis studium contulerunt, existimantes multo esse praeclarius humanarum divinarumque rerum investigare ac scire rationem quam struendis opibus aut cumulandis honoribus inhaerere: quibus rebus, quoniam fragiles terrenaeque sunt et ad solius corporis pertinent cultum, nemo melior, nemo iustior effici potest. Erant illi quidem veritatis
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

320

cognitione dignissimi, quoniam scire tanto opere cupierunt atque ita, ut eam rebus omnibus anteponerent nam et abiecisse quosdam res familiares suas et renuntiasse universis voluptatibus constat, ut solam nudamque virtutem nudi expeditique sequerentur, et tantum apud eos virtutis nomen et auctoritas valuit, ut in ipsa esse summi boni praemium iudicarent, sed neque adepti sunt id quod volebant et operam simul atque industriam perdiderunt, quia veritas id est arcanum summi Dei, qui fecit omnia, ingenio ac propriis sensibus non potest comprehendi: alioquin nihil inter deum hominemque distaret, si consilia et dispositiones illius maiestatis

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

321

aeternae cogitatio adsequeretur humana.155 Quod quia fieri non potuit ut homini per se ipsum ratio divina notesceret, non est passus hominem deus lumen sapientiae requirentem diutius errare ac sine ullo laboris effectu vagari per tenebras inextricabiles: aperuit oculos eius aliquando et notionem veritatis munus suum fecit, ut et humanam sapientiam nullam esse monstraret et erranti ac vago viam consequendae inmortalitatis ostenderet. Verum quoniam pauci utuntur hoc caelesti beneficio ac munere, quod obvoluta in obscuro veritas latet eaque vel contemptui doctis est, quia idoneis adsertoribus eget, vel odio indoctis ob insitam sibi austeritatem, quam natura hominum proclivis in vitia uti non potest nam quia virtutibus amaritudo permixta est, vitia vero voluptate
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

322

condita sunt, illa offensi, hac deleniti feruntur in praeceps et bonorum specie falsi mala pro bonis amplectuntur, succurrendum esse erroribus credidi, ut et docti ad veram sapientiam dirigantur et indocti ad veram religionem.156 Quae professio multo melior utilior gloriosior putanda est quam illa oratoria, in qua diu versati non ad virtutem, sed plane ad argutam malitiam iuvenes erudiebamus, multoque nunc rectius de praeceptis caelestibus disseremus, quibus ad cultum verae maiestatis mentes hominum instituere possimus, nec tam de rebus humanis bene meretur qui scientiam bene dicendi adfert quam qui pie atque innocenter docet vivere. Idcirco apud Graecos maiore in gloria philosophi quam oratores fuerunt. Illi enim recte vivendi doctores sunt existimati, quod est longe
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

323

praestabilius, quoniam bene dicere ad paucos pertinet, bene autem vivere ad omnes. Multum tamen nobis exercitatio illa fictarum litium contulit, ut nunc maiore copia et facultate dicendi causam veritatis peroremus, quae licet possit sine eloquentia defendi, ut est a multis saepe defensa, tamen claritate ac nitore sermonis inlustranda et quodammodo adserenda est, ut potentius in animos influat et vi sua instructa et luce orationis ornata. De religione itaque nobis rebusque divinis instituitur disputatio (1,1-11).157 Epitome seu retractatio Postulante Pentadio fratre (utrum consanguineus an Christianus?) Divinas
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

324

Institutiones angustioribus constrinxit terminis (cc.68), ut neque prolixitas pareret fastidium neque brevitas obscuritatem. Omissis potissimum locis classicis biblici adduntur, fortasse ad rudiores fideles docendos. De ira Dei Capita XXIV operis, exarati circa a.311-314, videntur conatus componendi sententiam hellenicam impassibilitatis deorum - a)pa/qeia cum Veteris Testamenti Deo irato ac interdum saevo, qui odit, diligit, irascitur, vindex exhibetur.158 Fere haeretica ratione docet unum Dei filium, incarnaturum, sensibus et
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

325

passionibus obnoxium, ipsum irasci in Vetere Testamento, ipsum se paenitere, ipsum miserere, cum Pater impassibilis maneat in sua transcendenti maiestate. 159 Iuris institutione imbutus, declarat potestatem et imperium timore inniti, qui gignitur ira et Deus ipse ergo necesse est ira frui, quae potestatis est fundamentum. At ira (ut apud Augustinum) non passio sed iudicium est. Ergo ira est iustitia punitiva Dei, quae ordinem restaurat violatum. Deus est Pater sed quoque Dominus. Contra stoicos, divinam benevolentiam extollentes, iramque passionem indignam Dei esse credentes, contra epicureos, iram et gratiam Dei negantes, contra Arnobium magistrum suum, indignm Dei esse proclamantem, Lactantius
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

326

docet Deum iustissime irasci contra hominum delicta, eosque aeternis poenis puniturum, cum bene merentes praemiis donaturum esse. Ira etenim pars est necessaria imperii iusti Dei et quasi quaedam dilectionis ratio erga optimos: si iratus non esset, neque providens esset neque iustus. Eloquenti sermone est conscriptum ideoque Hieronymus Epitomen dialogorum Ciceronis habuit. De mortibus persecutorum Opus De mortibus persecutorum (quinquaginta duo capita, annis 315 et 321 exarata) novam Constantini aetatem extollit, proferens de Imperio iudicium
Literary Study, Oxford 1971, 19852; R.BRAUN, Deus Christianorum. Recherches sur le III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

327

religiosum, quo declaratur victrix Dei potentia et politicum, quo omnes imperatores, Christianorum persecutores, damnandi et misere damnati sunt, quia mali. Vehementia Tertulliani interdum iteratur: Qui insultaverunt Deo iacent; | qui templum sanctum everterant ruina maiore occiderunt; | qui iustos excarnificaverant, caelestibus plagis et cruciatibus meritis nocentes animas profuderunt. || Sero id quidem, sed graviter et digne. || Distulerat enim poenas eorum Deus, | ut ederet in eos magna et mirabilia exempla, | quibus posteri discernerent | et Deum esse unum | et eundem iudicem | digna videlicet supplicia impiis ac persecutoribus inrogare. Econtra: Commonitus est in quiete Constantinus, ut celeste signum Dei
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

328

notaret in scutis atque ita proelium committeret (44,5). De Ave Phoenice Poemation 85 distichis elegiacis concinnis de fabulosa illa ave canit, quae millesimo quoque anno moritur et ex cineribus suis resurgit. Ut Christi resurgentis figura iam usurpata est a Clemente Romano ( Ep. 25) et Tertulliano (Res.car. 13). Primus enarravit Herodotus (2,73). Num finis inlustrare paganis sit avem in pecuniis Constantini pictam, dubitatur? Poemation symbolicum multi postea imitati sunt.
vocabulaire doctrinal de Tertullian, Paris 1977 2 (bibl. 596-623; 725-732); S.VICASTILLO, III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

329

Doctrina Litterae Veritati inserviunt: Nam et in hoc philosophi et oratores et poetae perniciosi sunt, quod incautos animos facile inretire possunt suavitate sermonis et carminum dulci modulatione currentium. Ob eamque causam volui sapientiam cum religione coniungere, ne quid studiosis inanis illa doctrina possit officere, ut iam scientia litterarum non modo nihil noceat religioni atque iustitiae, sed etiam prosit quam plurimum, si is qui eas didicerit, sit in virtutibus instructior, in veritate sapientior. Praeterea etiamsi nulli alii, nobis certe proderit: delectabit se conscientia, gaudebitque mens in veritatis se luce versari, quod est animae pabulum incredibili quadam iucunditate perfusum. Verum non est desperandum, fortasse
Tertulliano y la muerte del hombre , Madrid 1980. Interretialia documenta sunt plurima. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

330

non canimus surdis (Verg. b. 10,8). Nec enim tam in malo statu res est. ut desint sanae mentes, quibus et veritas placeat et monstratum sibi rectum iter et videant et sequantur. Circumlinatur modo poculum caelesti melle sapientiae, ut possint ab inprudentibus amara remedia sine offensione potari, dum inliciens prima dulcedo acerbitatem saporis asperi sub praetexto suavitatis occultat. Nam haec in primis causa est cur aput sapientes et doctos et principes huius saceuli scriptura sancta fide careat, quod prophetae communi ac simplici sermone ut ad populum sunt locuti. Contemnuntur itaque ab iis qui nihil audire vel legere nisi expolitum ac disertum volunt nec quicquam haerere animis eorum potest nisi quod aures blandiore sono mulcet, illa vero quae sordida videntur, anilia inepta vulgaria
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

331

existimantur. Adeo nihil verum putant nisi quod auditu suave est, nihil credibile nisi quod potest incutere voluptatem: nemo rem veritate ponderat, sed ornatu. Non credunt ergo divinis, quia fuco carent, sed ne illis quidem qui ea interpretantur, quia sunt et ipsi aut omnino rudes aut certe parum docti. Nam ut plane sint eloquentes, perraro contingit: cuius rei causa in aperto est. Eloquentia enim saeculo servit, populo se iactare et in rebus malis placere gestit, siquidem veritatem saepius expugnare conatur, ut vim suam monstret: opes expetit, honores concupiscit, summum denique gradum dignitatis exposcit. Ergo haec quasi humilia despicit, arcana tamquam contraria sibi fugit, quippe quae publico gaudeat et multitudinem celebritatemque desideret: eo fit ut sapientia et veritas idoneis
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

332

praeconibus indigeat.160 Stilus sive splendor formae De suo stilo Lactantius ipse: Multum tamen nobis exercitatio illa fictarum litium contulit, ut nunc maiore copia et facultate dicendi causam veritatis peroremus, quae licet possit sine eloquentia defendi, ut est a multis saepe defensa, tamen claritate ac nitore sermonis inlustranda et quodammodo adserenda est, ut potentius in animos influat et vi sua instructa et luce orationis ornata. 161 Dedit enim homini artifex ille noster ac parens deus sensum atque rationem, ut ex eo appareret nos ab eo esse generatos, quia ipse intellegentia, ipse sensus ac ratio
est Septimii Severi, 'latinis litteris sufficienter instructus, Graecis sermonibus eruditus, Punica III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

333

est, ceteris animantibus quoniam rationalem istam vim non attribuit, quemadmodum tamen vita earum tutior esset, ante providit. Omnes enim suis ex se pellibus texit, quo facilius possent vim pruinarum ac frigorum sustinere. Singulis autem generibus ad propulsandos impetus externos sua propria munimenta constituit, ut aut naturalibus telis repugnent fortioribus aut quae sunt inbecilliora, subtrahant se periculis pernicitate fugiendi aut quae simul et viribus et celeritate indigent, astu se protegant aut latibula saepiant. Itaque alia eorum vel plumis levibus in sublime suspensa sunt vel suffulta ungulis vel instructa cornibus, quibusdam in ore arma sunt dentes aut in pedibus adunci ungues: nulli munimentum ad tutelam sui deest. Hominem vero quoniam aeternum animal
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

334

inmortale fingebat, non forinsecus ut cetera, sed interius armavit nec munimentum eius in corpore, sed in animo posuit, quoniam supervacuum fuit, cum illi quod erat maximum tribuisset, corporalibus eum tegere munimentis, cum praesertim pulchritudinem humani corporis inpedirent. Unde ego philosophorum qui Epicurum secuntur amentim soleo mirari, qui naturae opera reprehendunt, ut ostendant nulla providentia instructum esse ac regi mundum, sed originem rerum insecabilibus ac solidis corporibus adsignant, quorum fortuitis concursionibus universa nascantur et nata sint. Cicero Christianus appellatus est,162 vir omnium suo tempore
eloquentia promptior' (Epit. de caes. 20,8,A). Punico sermone utuntur Anno et Himilco (peripli), III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

335

eloquentissimus, quasi quidam fluvius eloquentiae Tullianae.163 Est heres classicae Latinitatis et Arnobii aemulavit rationalitatem: Nisi festinetis facere recte, consummabitur turris, et excludemini.

Mago (agricultura) et Severus (eloquentia). Querebantur autem ut imperiosa civitas non solum III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

336

iugum, verum etiam linguam suam domitis gentibus imponeret (AUG., Civ.Dei 19,7). Carthago III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

337

altera Urbs exhibetur in Occidente, portus patens religionibus et cultibus, quo confluxerunt ex III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

338

Italia et Asia innumeri motus haereticales. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

339

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

340

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

341

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

342

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

343

plurimum urbibus constant. Id negotium sine deorum iniuria non est; eadem strages et moenium III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

344

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

345

et templorum, pares caedes civium et sacerdotum, nec dissimiles rapinae sacrarum divitiarum et III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

346

profanarum. Tot igitur sacrilegia Romanorum quot tropaea, tot de deis quot de gentibus III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

347

triumphi; cf. Minucius 25,5: Quicquid Romani tenent, colunt, possident, audaciae praeda est: III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

348

templa omnia de manubiis, id est de ruinis urbium, de spoliis deorum, de caedibus sacerdotum. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

349

HIER., vir.ill . 53; TERT., ap. 9,2; 18,4; paen. 1,1; spect. 19,5; res. 9,3; praescr.40,4. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.
39

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

350

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

351

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

352

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

353

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

354

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

355

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

356

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

357

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

358

de Deo inquirere et inquisito invenire et invento credere et credito deservire (ap. 18,1). III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

359

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

360

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

361

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

362

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

363

Praxeamque damnavit inimicissimum Montanismo sive Romae sive in Africa, propterea quod III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

364

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

365

Spiritum Sanctum expulisset, Patremque crucifixisset: cf. R.Braun, Tertullien et le Montanisme : III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

366

Eglise institutionnelle et Eglise spirituelle: R.St.Lett.Rel. 21(1985)245-257. Montanismum III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

367

pervestigare deficientibus vel dubiis testimoniis non facile evadit; amissi sunt L.VII De ecstasi. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

368

Cf. Hier., vir.ill . 53; Nova prophetia, exeunte s.II orta est, a.circiter 172 (M.Aurelio imp. ac III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

369

Eleutherio papa) in finibus Phrygiae [Cataphrygiae] et Mysiae auctore Montano, veluti Paracleto III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

370

a Ioanne praenuntiato suscepto (Io 14,6), et a Prisc[ill]a et Maximilla diffusa est, qui novam III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

371

Spiritus Sancti revelationem praedicaverunt et conventiculam fundaverunt, finemque saeculi III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

372

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

373

proximum putabant; severam ascesim imponebant. Tertullianus psychicos catholicos, III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

374

pneumaticos, sive spiritales montanistas vocat. Sed spiritus eius inquietus neque Montanismo III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

375

adhaesit semel pro semper suumque gregem Tertullianistarum fundavit (Aug., haer. 86, III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

376

a.428-429): Tertullianistae a Tertulliano, cuius leguntur opuscula multa eloquentissime scripta, III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

377

usque ad nostrum tempus paulatim deficientes, in extremis reliquiis durare non potuerunt in urbe III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

378

Cathaginiensi. Me enim ibi posito ante aliquot annos, quod etiam te [Quodvultdeus] meminisse III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

379

arbitror, omni ex parte consumpti sunt. Paucissimi etiam qui remanserunt in catholicam III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

380

transierunt suamque basilicam, quae nunc etiam notissima est, Catholicae tradiderunt. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

381

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

382

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

383

ratio', 'Paracleto auctore', 'sermo novae prophetiae', 'apud fidem nostram' ( Marc. 1,29,4; 3,24,4). III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

384

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

385

D.Powel, Tertullianists and Cataphrygians : VC 29(1978), pp. 33-54. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.
45

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

386

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

387

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

388

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

389

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

390

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

391

martyribus terra, et de illo semine segea surrexit ecclesiae , serm. 286, 4, 3; sic sanguine III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

392

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

393

martyrum impletus orbis praeiactatis seminibus seges ecclesiae pullulavit , serm. 301, 1, 1; tunc III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

394

enim seges ista seminabatur, quando ille locus sanguine martyris rigabatur , serm. ed. Morin III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

395

Den. 15, 2; pauca grana seminata sunt, et tantam messem fecerunt et horrea Christi inpleverunt III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

396

(of many martyrs), serm. ed. Morin 2, 3 III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

397

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

398

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

399

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

400

(1951), pp.111-2. Brill Academic Publishers, 1951. Reproduced by permission of the publisher. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

401

All rights reserved. - This translation by Roger Pearse. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

402

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

403

Apologetico . Testo latino, traduzione e note di A. Resta Barrile, Bologna, Zanichelli 1980. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.
49

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

404

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

405

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

406

proprio al sommo della citt presiedete ai giudizi, palesemente investigare e dinanzi a tutti III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

407

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

408

esaminare non permesso che cosa chiaramente nella causa dei Cristiani si contenga: se per III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

409

questa unica specie di processi l'autorit vostra di inquisire in pubblico, come esige una giustizia III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

410

accurata, o teme o arrossisce: se, in una parola, com' recentemente in processi di casa nostra III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

411

accaduto, l'ostilit contro questa setta, soverchiamente accanitasi, la bocca chiude alla difesa, sia III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

412

lecito alla verit arrivare alle orecchie vostre almeno per l'occulta via di uno scritto silenzioso. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

413

Essa in favore della propria causa punto non prega, perch della propria condizione nemmeno si III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

414

meraviglia. Sa essa che straniera vive su la terra, che fra estranei facilmente trova dei nemici: III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

415

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

416

che, del resto, la sua famiglia, la sua sede, la sua speranza, il suo credito, la sua dignit l'ha nel III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

417

cielo. Un'unica cosa frattanto brama: di non essere, senza essere conosciuta, condannata. Che ci III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

418

perdono qui le leggi, che nel proprio regno signoreggiano, se essa viene ascoltata? Forse che per III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

419

questo maggiormente n'avr del loro potere gloria, perch la verit, pur senza averla udita, III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

420

condanneranno?. Ma qualora senza averla udita la condannino, oltre l'odio per l'ingiusto III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

421

procedere, anche il sospetto si attireranno di nutrire qualche preconcetto, ascoltare non volendo III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

422

quello che, ascoltato, condannare non avrebbero potuto. Orbene, questa prima accusa noi contro III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

423

di voi formuliamo: l'ingiusto odio verso il nome cristiano. La quale ingiustizia dimostra e III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

424

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

425

aggrava lo stesso titolo che sembra scusarla, vale a dire, l'ignoranza. Che infatti di pi ingiusto, III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

426

che dagli uomini venga odiato quello che essi ignorano, pur se la cosa l'odio meriti? Ch allora lo III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

427

merita, quando viene conosciuto se lo merita. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

428

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

429

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

430

doveansi punire. O sentenza per necessit confusa! Dice che non si devono ricercare, come III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

431

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

432

innocenti, e che siano puniti ordina, come colpevoli. Risparmia e infierisce, fa finta di non sapere III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

433

e sa. Perch da te stessa nella censura ti avvolgi? Se condanni, perch anche non ricerchi? Se non III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

434

ricerchi, perch anche non assolvi?. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

435

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

436

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

437

con un manipolo serrato. Questa violenza a Dio gradita. Preghiamo anche per gl'imperatori, per III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

438

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

439

i loro ministri e magistrati, per la stabilit del mondo, per la tranquillit della vita, per la III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

440

dilazione della fine. Ci raccogliamo per la lettura della Scrittura divina, se qualche caratteristica III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

441

del tempo presente a preannunziare c'induce un fatto o a riconoscerne il compimento. Almeno III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

442

con le parole sante la fede nutriamo, la speranza confortiamo, la fiducia consolidiamo, serriamo III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

443

la disciplina non foss'altro inculcandone i precetti. Ivi stesso anche hanno luogo esortazioni, III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

444

correzioni e punizioni in nome di Dio. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

445

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

446

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

447

poco uomini, perch tristi fratelli. Ma quanto pi degnamente fratelli si dicono e si ritengono III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

448

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

449

coloro, che un unico Dio hanno come padre riconosciuto, che a un unico spirito di santit si sono III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

450

abbeverati, che da un unico grembo della medesima ignoranza, con un pauroso stupore, a III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

451

un'unica luce emersero di verit. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

452

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

453

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

454

1991. Cf. M. Simonetti, Eresia e ortodossia ad Antiochia nei primi tre secoli : Salesianum 58 III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

455

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

456

(1996) 645-659. Sunt coaevi qui docent haeresim praecedere semper hortodoxiam. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

457

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

458

Posteritas mendacii: praescr. 31,1; posteritas haeretica : Marc. 5,19,1; posteritas III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.
55

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

459

haereticorum: (Prax. 2,2); veritatis nota est apostolicitas, haeresis novitas (praescriptio III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

460

novitatis: Marc. 1,1,7). III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

461

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

462

E.Evans, Oxford 1972; Contre Marcion / Tertullien par R. Braun. Paris, 1990-1994 (SCh 365, III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.
56

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

463

368, 399); Tertulliani adversus Marcionem / edidit C. Moreschini; Milano-Varese 1971. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

464

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

465

Contro Prassea / Q.S.F. Tertulliano; edizione critica con introduzione, traduzione italiana, note III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.
57

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

466

e indici a cura di Giuseppe Scarpat, Torino, Societ Editrice Internaz. 1985 (Corona patrum 12). III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

467

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

468

Tertullien, La chair du Christ, Paris 1975 (SCh 216, 217: J.P. Mah). III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.
58

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

469

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

470

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

471

resurrection, by E. Evans. London, SPCK 1960. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

472

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

473

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

474

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

475

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

476

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

477

impero, Torino 1974, p.145: antimilitarismo che sfida all'autorit di uno degli imperi pi III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

478

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

479

militaristici che mai siano esistiti. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

480

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

481

D.Tringali, O De Pallio de Tertulliano , So Paulo 1980, pp. 95-122 voces latinae vestes III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.
62

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

482

spectantes, pp.177-223 stilus et sermo; S.Costanza (a cura), Tertulliano: De Pallio, Napoli 1968. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

483

In 2,7: praesentis imperii triplex virtus [3 imperatores: 193-4 Septimius Severus, Pescennius III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

484

Niger, Claudius Albinus; 196-7 Septimius Severus, Caracalla, Claudius Albinus; 209-211 III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

485

Septimius Severus, Caracalla, Geta. Utrum inclinans ad montanismum an montanista cum esset III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

486

exaraverit dubitatur. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

487

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

488

P.A. Gramaglia (cur.), Tertulliano. Il matrimonio nel cristianesimo preniceno. Ad uxorem - De III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.
63

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

489

exhortatione castitatis - De monogamia, Borla, Roma 1988; M. Naldini (cur.), Matrimonio e III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

490

famiglia. Testimonianze dei primi secoli, LP 3, Nardini, Fiesole 1996; G. Mathon, Le mariage III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

491

chrtien. L Des origines au concile de Trente, Desclde, Paris 1993; Ph.L. Reynolds; Marriage in III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

492

the Western Church. The Christianisation of Marriage during the Patristic and Early Medieval III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

493

Periods, SVigChr 24, Brill, Leiden 1994. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

494

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

495

L.J. van der LOF, The Plebs of the Psychici. Are the Psychici of De Monogamia III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.
64

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

496

Fellow-Catholics of Tertullian? : Eulogia, Ml. Bastiaensen (IP 24), The Hague 1991; Q.S.F. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

497

Tertulliano, Le uniche nozze (=Corona Patrum). Ed. cr. a cura di R.Uglione. SEI, Torino 1993; III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

498

B.Amata, Il sofisma prende il posto dell'argomentazione . L'Edizione critica de Le uniche III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

499

nozze di Tertulliano: O.R. 17 nov.1993, p.7; Le mariage unique: (De monogamia) / Tertullien; III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

500

introduction, texte critique, traduction et commentaire de Paul Mattei. Paris: Cerf, 1988. 419 p. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

501

(Schr 343) Bibl. p. [122]-129]. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

502

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

503

Tertullien, La pudicit (De pudicitia ) Paris 1993 (SCh 394, 395). III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.
65

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

504

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

505

Quaestiones: 1. Respuit doctrinam creationismi animarum, item praeexistentiae earundem; et III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.
66

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

506

amplectitur traducianesimum, id est animae generationem per parentes una cum corpore. 2. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

507

Originale peccatum non destruit semen divinum creationis primi hominis ( de testimonio III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

508

animae). 3. Corporeitas animarum (et Dei) sensu stoicho est intellegenda: est corpus actualiter III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

509

existens. 4. Trinitas est una substantia. 5. Baptismus arcte conectitur cum poenitentia. 6. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

510

Ecclesia est apostolica, id est ab Apostolis aedificata. 7. Rigorismus asceticus. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

511

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

512

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

513

Tertullian printed in the series Corpus Ckristianorum (Turnhout, 1954). The two
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

514

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

515

exceptions are T. R. Glover's edition of the Apologeticus (Loeb Classics, London,


III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

516

1931) and J. N. Bakhuyzen van den Brink's edition of the Adversus Praxean in the
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

517

series Scriptores Christiani Primaevi (The Hague, 1946).


III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

518

68

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

519

,
III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

520

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

521

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

522

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

523

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

524

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

525

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

526

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

527

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

528

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

529

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

530

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

531

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

532

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

533

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

534

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

535

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

536

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

537

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

538

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

539

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

540

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

541

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

542

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

543

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

544

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

545

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

546

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

547

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

548

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

549

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

550

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

551

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

552

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

553

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

554

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

555

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

556

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

557

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

558

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

559

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

560

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

561

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

562

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

563

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

564

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

565

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

566

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

567

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

568

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

569

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

570

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

571

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

572

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

573

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

574

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

575

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

576

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

577

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

578

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

579

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

580

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

581

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

582

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

583

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

584

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

585

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

586

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

587

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

588

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

589

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

590

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

591

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

592

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

593

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

594

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

595

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

596

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

597

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

598

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

599

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

600

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

601

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

602

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

603

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

604

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

605

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

606

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

607

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

608

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

609

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

610

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

611

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

612

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

613

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

614

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

615

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

616

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

617

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

618

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

619

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

620

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

621

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

622

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

623

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

624

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

625

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

626

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

627

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

628

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

629

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

630

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

631

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

632

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

633

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

634

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

635

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

636

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

637

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

638

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

639

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

640

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

641

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

642

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

643

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

644

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

645

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

646

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

647

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

648

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

649

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

650

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

651

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

652

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

653

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

654

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

655

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

656

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

657

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

658

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

659

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

660

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

661

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

662

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

663

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

664

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

665

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

666

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

667

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

668

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

669

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

670

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

671

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

672

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

673

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

674

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

675

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

676

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

677

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

678

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

679

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

680

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

681

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

682

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

683

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

684

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

685

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

686

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

687

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

688

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

689

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

690

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

691

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

692

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

693

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

694

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

695

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

696

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

697

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

698

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

699

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

700

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

701

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

702

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

703

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

704

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

705

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

706

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

707

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

708

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

709

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

710

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

711

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

712

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

713

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

714

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

715

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

716

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

717

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

718

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

719

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

720

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

721

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

722

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

723

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

724

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

725

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

726

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

727

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

728

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

729

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

730

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

731

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

732

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

733

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

734

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

735

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

736

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

737

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

738

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

739

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

740

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

741

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

742

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

743

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

744

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

745

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

746

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

747

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

748

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

749

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

750

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

751

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

752

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

753

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

754

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

755

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

756

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

757

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

758

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

759

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

760

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

761

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

762

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

763

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

764

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

765

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

766

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

767

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

768

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

769

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

770

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

771

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

772

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

773

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

774

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

775

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

776

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

777

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

778

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

779

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

780

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

781

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

782

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

783

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

784

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

785

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

786

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

787

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

788

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

789

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

790

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

791

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

792

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

793

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

794

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

795

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

796

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

797

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

798

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

799

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

800

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

801

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

802

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

803

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

804

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

805

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

806

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

807

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

808

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

809

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

810

2004, pp. 19-35. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

811

Cognomen Tascius ioculare videtur Punicum incertae significationis. D.v. Ch. BOBERTZ, An III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.
145

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

812

Analysis of Vita Cypriani 3.6-10 and the attribution of Ad Quirinum to Cyprian of Carthage : III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

813

VCh 46(1992)112-128 censet Vitam pendere quoque a De mortalitate . III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

814

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

815

Confessores tantam auctoritatem callebant ut martyr Numidicus inter sacerdotes accitus sit III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.
146

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

816

nulla facta manuum impositione ( ep. 40) et Celerinus adolescentior lector sit factus ( ep. 39). III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

817

Hippolytus docuit martyrem promoveri posse presbyterum et per manuum impositionem etiam III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

818

episcopum. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

819

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

820

Opuscula pseudocyprianea: Liber ad Novatianum de venia lapsis non neganda (c.253-257 III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.
147

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

821

contradicit Cypriano) - De Pascha computus - De singularitate clericorum (contra virgines III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

822

subintroductas vel agapitas) - De spectaculis et De bono pudicitiae (Novatiani) - De montibus III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

823

Sina et Sion (ca. 240) - De laude Martyrii - De centesima sexagesima tricesima . III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

824

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

825

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

826

J.Stelzenberger. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

827

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

828

Socrates, Hist. Eccl . 4,28; inscriptio Laurentinae Basilicae coemeteri a.1932: Novatiano III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.
149

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

829

Beatissimo Martyri Gaudentius Diac.Fec. ; Martyr. Hieronym, III a.Kal.Iul. [29 iunii]: nulla III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

830

mentio tituli. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

831

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

832

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

833

contre les gentils , L.I, Paris 1982; B.AMATA, Problemi di antropologia arnobiana , Roma 1984; III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

834

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

835

- Arnobio, Difesa della vera religione , Roma 2000; - L'apologia cristiana di Arnobio di Sicca III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

836

come ricerca della verit assoluta: Salesianum 51(1989), pp. 47-70; - Dubbio e certezza in III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

837

Arnobio di Sicca , in: E.LIVINGSTONE (ed.), St.Patr.XXI, Leuven 1989; - La curiositas III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

838

humana nel milieu culturale di Arnobio il Vecchio : in S.LEANZA, Polyanthema VIII, Messina III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

839

1990; L.BERKOWITZ, Index Arnobianus, Hildesheim 1967; A.WLOSOK, Zur lateinischen III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

840

Apologetik der constantinischen Zeit (Arnobius, Lactantius, Firmicus Maternus): Gymnasium III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

841

96(1989), pp. 133-148. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

842

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

843

HIER., chr. a.MMCCCXLII = 326 p.Ch.; J.S.HANSON, Dreams and Visions in Early III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.
151

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

844

Christianity : AUNDRW 2 - Principat 23.2, religion, Berlin - N.York 1989, pp.1421-1427. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

845

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

846

In initio libri III scribit: Nunc ad ordinem revertamur a quo sumus necessario paulo ante III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.
152

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

847

digressi (nat. III 2). Philosophos et theosophos spectat Vos, vos appello qui Mercurium, qui III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

848

Platonem Pythagoramque sectamini (nat. II 15). III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

849

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

850

Cf. M. Marin Cl. Moreschini, Africa cristiana. Brescia, Morcelliana 2002, p. 304. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.
153

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

851

Moreschini sottolinea litinerario di Tertulliano attraverso la cosiddetta `triade antignostica' (de III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

852

carne Christi, adversus Marcionem, de resurrectione mortuorum ), La magia in Arnobio III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

853

ricorre di frequente sia per difendere i cristiani dall'accusa di pratiche magiche, sia per accusare III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

854

il mondo pagano. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

855

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

856

Lact., Div.Inst. 4,26,22; cf. Epit. 43,3. Baptizatus est probabiliter ante Diocletiani III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.
154

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

857

persecutionem, cum Nicomediam pervenisset. Forum non attigit (Div.Inst. 3,13,12). Fortasse III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

858

Nicomediam reliquit cum Galerius scholas eloquentiae clausit ( De mort. pers. 2). Anno 317 in III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

859

Gallias perrexit, a Constantino arcessitus ut Crispum Caesarem filium honestioribus artibus III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

860

informaret. Ei Divinarum Institutionum libros dicavit. Probabiliter mortem obiit Treviris a.330. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

861

De Romano Imperio eadem ei mens fuit ac Tert. Ap. 25,14-15, Min., Oct. 25,5 et Arn. Nat. II 1 III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

862

et VII 51. Etenim in Inst. 5,9 scribit: Populus ipse Romanus per fetiales bella indicendo et III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

863

legitime iniurias inferendo semperque aliena cupiendo atque rapiendo possessionem sibi totius III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

864

orbis comparavit. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

865

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

866

Uomini forniti di alta e splendida intelligenza si dedicarono con tutta l'anima al sapere e, III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.
155

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

867

trascurando ogni altra attivit sia privata sia pubblica, s'impegnarono interamente nella ricerca III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

868

della verit; essi infatti ritenevano che meritasse conoscere la natura delle cose umane ... che non III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

869

attendere ad accumulare ricchezze ed onori: questi sono beni passeggeri, mortali, che riguardano III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

870

solo la vita del corpo e, perci non possono rendere alcuno migliore o pi giusto. Tali uomini III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

871

erano ben degni di conoscere la verit, poich bramavano con tanto ardore di possederla e cos III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

872

fortemente, che la anteposero ad ogni altro interesse: alcuni, secondo quanto ci risulta, III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

873

rinunziarono alle proprie sostanze ed a tutti i piaceri, per poter seguire la virt sola e spoglia, III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

874

spogli di tutto e sciolti da qualsiasi legame; e su di loro il nome e l'autorit della virt III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

875

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

876

esercitarono tanto fascino, da indurli a riporre in essa il sommo bene; ma non riuscirono ad III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

877

ottenere ci che desideravano e consumarono invano, perch la verit, cio il mistero del supremo III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

878

Iddio, che ha creato ogni cosa, non pu essere percepita dall'intelligenza e dal pensiero di un III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

879

uomo: altrimenti non vi sarebbe alcuna differenza tra Dio e l'uomo, se la mente umana fosse in III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

880

grado di comprendere i disegni e le disposizioni dell'eterna maest divina. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

881

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

882

Siccome non poteva avvenire che l'uomo con le sole sue forze conoscesse la natura divina, III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.
156

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

883

Dio non permise che l'uomo pi a lungo errasse ricercando la luce della sapienza e senza ricavare III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

884

alcun vantaggio dalla sua fatica, andasse vagando in mezzo a fittissime tenebre: gli aperse gli III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

885

occhi, una buona volta, e fece della conoscenza della verit un suo dono, sia per dimostrare la III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

886

vanit della sapienza umana, sia per indicare, a chi andava errando e vagava, la via per la quale III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

887

potesse raggiungere l'immortalit. Senonch pochi sanno approfittare di questo celeste beneficio e III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

888

dono, poich la verit, come avvolta da un velo, si cela nelloscurit e i dotti la disprezzano, III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

889

mancandole difensori adatti, e gli ignoranti la detestano per la severit in lei connaturata, che la III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

890

natura umana incline ai vizi non pu tollerare; infatti, alla virt congiunto qualcosa di III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

891

sgradevole, mentre il piacere rende gradito il vizio, e, di conseguenza, gli uomini offesi dall'una, III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

892

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

893

allettati dall'altro, vanno in rovina ed illusi da beni apparenti si dnno al male scambiandolo per III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

894

il bene: per queste ragioni pensai di dover venire in aiuto a chi sbaglia in tal modo, per III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

895

indirizzare i dotti alla vera sapienza e gli ignoranti alla vera religione. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

896

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

897

Il compito che mi sono assunto lo si deve giudicare molto pi degno ed utile e glorioso di III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.
157

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

898

quello del retore, cui attesi a lungo ammaestrando i giovani non gi nella virt, bens soltanto in III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

899

una sottile, cavillosa scaltrezza; ora invece tratter assai pi opportunamente dei divini precetti, III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

900

con cui possibile educare l'animo degli uomini al culto della vera maest: chi insegna l'arte di III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

901

parlare con eleganza non si rende tanto benemerito dell'umanit quanto colui che insegna a III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

902

condurre una vita pia ed irreprensibile. Perci i Greci tennero in maggiore considerazione i III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

903

filosofi che gli oratori, giudicando i primi maestri di vita morale; e tale ufficio di gran lunga pi III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

904

importante, perch il parlare bene riguarda pochi, mentre il vivere bene riguarda... essermi III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

905

esercitato nel trattare cause fittizie, mi ha giovato assai permettendomi ora di difendere con III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

906

maggiore facondia ed efficacia oratora la causa della verit. Questa, vero, pu essere difesa III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

907

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

908

senza ricorrere all'eloquenza, come spesso molti hanno fatto; ci nondimeno, la si deve dilucidare III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

909

ed in certo qual modo sostenere con una esposizione chiara e forbita, affinch pi efficacemente III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

910

penetri negli animi, sorretta dalla sua propria forza ed ornata dallo splendore dello stile. Io III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

911

dunque mi propongo di ragionare intorno alla religione ed alle questioni riguardanti la divinit. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

912

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

913

Ez 25,16-17: haec dicit Dominus Deus: ecce ego extendam manum meam super Palestinos III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.
158

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

914

et interficiam interfectores et perdam reliquias maritimae regionis, faciamque in eis ultiones III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

915

magnas arguens in furore et scient quia ego Dominus cum dedero vindictam meam super eos III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

916

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

917

Quaestio perdifficilis evasit Graecis et Latinis auctoribus. Lucretius iram humanam esse neque III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.
159

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

918

deis tribui posse (2,646ss; 5,1194ss; 6,71ss), Iovemque iratum contra Phetontem (5,399ss) III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

919

opinionem esse hominum. Vergilius in Euridicis fabula: Non te nullius exercent numinis irae; / III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

920

magna luis commissa ( Georg., 4,453-4); Dabunt veniam votis irasque remittent ( ibid., 536). III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

921

Ceterum Achillis, Poseidonis et Iunonis ira universam Iliadem, Odysseam, Aeneidem ita replet ut III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

922

quaeratur poeta: Tantaene animis caelestibus irae? ( Aen. 1,11). Cicero (off. 3, 30.102) docuit: III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

923

Ira Dei quae nulla est... Num iratum timemus Iovem? [it. Perch temere l'ira (che non esiste) di III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

924

Giove?]. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

925

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

926

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

927

animi incauti con la dolcezza dell'espressione e la soave armonia dei versi. Perci volli unire alla III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

928

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

929

sapienza la religione, affinch quella vana scienza non possa recare alcun danno ai dotti e la III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

930

cultura letteraria non solo non nuoccia alla religione ed alla giustizia, ma giovi il pi possibile; e III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

931

ci avverr se chi imbevuto di letteratura, ancor pi fornito di virt e pi sapiente rispetto alla III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

932

conoscenza della verit. Inoltre ammettiamo pure che questo lavoro non giovi a nessun altro: III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

933

certamente giover a noi; la coscienza prover piaccre e lo spirito gioir di trovarsi nella luce III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

934

della verit, che il cibo dell'anima, incredibilmente soave. Ma non bisogna disperare: forse non III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

935

cantiamo a sordi (Virg., Buc. X 8). Ed infatti la situazione non cos triste: non mancano III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

936

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

937

intelletti sani, cui piace la verit, che scorgono il retto cammino, loro indicato, e lo seguono. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

938

Basta cospargere la coppa del celeste miele della sapienza, di modo che gli ignari possano bere III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

939

amare medicine senza provare alcun disgusto: intanto il dolce sapore, che sull'orlo, alletta, e III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

940

nasconde sotto un'apparenza gradevole l'amaro. Infatti la principale ragione per cui i saggi, i III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

941

dotti, i grandi di questo mondo non credono nella Sacra Scrittura questa: i profeti hanno III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

942

adoperato frasi semplici ed usuali, adatte al popolo. Per tanto sono tenuti in disprezzo da quanti III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

943

non vogliono ascoltarc o leggere se non quello che espresso con forbitezza ed eleganza; nei loro III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

944

aninni pu imprimersi soltanto ci che accarezza gli orecchi con piacevole suono, mentre gli III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

945

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

946

scritti che appaiono negletti sono giudicati cose da vecchierella, di nessun valore, volgari. III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

947

Talmente per essi nulla vero all'infuori di ci che riesce dolce agli orecclai, nulla credibile III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

948

all'infuori di ci che pu produrre piacere: nessuno valuta una cosa secondo l'intrinseca verit, III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

949

ma secondo l'esterno splendore. Dunque non credono nelle celesti dottrine, perch sono prive di III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

950

ornamento; e nemmeno prestano fede a quelli che le interpretano perch anch'essi sono o del tutto III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

951

ignoranti o certamente poco colti. Infatti assai di rado accade che siano veramente eloquenti: e la III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

952

ragione di questo fatto a tutti manifesta. L'eloquenza vuole riuscire gradita al mondo, mira a III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

953

esibirsi al popolo ed a piacere trattando argomenti immorali: giacch molto sovente tenta di III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

954

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

955

sopraffare la verit, per dar prova della sua potenza, cerca di ottenere ricchezze, ha bramosia di III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

956

onori, pretende infine di raggiungere il piu alto grado di dignit. Dunque disprezza questi III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

957

argomenti considerandoli di nessuna importanza, rifugge da quanto arcano come da cosa a lei III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

958

contraria: essa che si compiace della piazza, brama la folla e la rinomanza! Perci avviene che la III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

959

sapienza e la verit mancano di abili banditori (V 1.10, trad. Boella). III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

960

Ma il fatto di essermi esercitato nel trattare cause fittizie mi ha giovato assai permettendomi III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.
161

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

961

ora di difendere con maggior facondia ed efficacia oratoria la causa della verit. Questa, vero, III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

962

pu essere difesa senza ricorrere all'eloquenza, come spesso molti hanno fatto; ci nondimeno, la III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

963

si deve dilucidare ed in certo qual modo sostenere con una esposizione chiara e forbita, affinch III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

964

pi efficacemente penetri negli animi, sorretta dalla sua propria forza e ornata dallo splendore III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

965

dello stile. (I 1.10, trad. Boella). III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

966

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

967

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

968

III. Biographical, critical, doctrinal. Patristics and Patrology.

St. Jerome (d. 419): De Viris illustrious. Comprises, in 135 numbers, brief notices of the biblical and ecclesiastical authors, down to a.d. 393. Continuations by Gennadius (490), Isidor (636), Ildefons (667), and others. Photius (d. 890): , , ed. J. Becker, Berol. 1824, 2 t. fol., and in Migne, Phot. Opera, t. III. and IV. Extracts of 280 Greek authors, heathen and Christian, whose works are partly lost. See a full account in Hergenrthers, Photius, III. 1331. Bellermin (R.C.): Liber de scriptoribus ecclesiasticis (from the O. T. to a.d. 1500). Rom. 1613 and often. Tillemont (R.C.): Memoirs pour servir lhistoire eccls. Par. 1693 sqq. 16 vols. The first six centuries. L. E. Dupin (R.C. d. 1719): Nouvelle Bibliothque des auteurs ecclesiastiques, contenant lhistoire de leur vie, etc. Par. 16881715, 47 vols. 8, with continuations by Coujet, Petit-Didier to the 18th century, and Critiques of R. Simon, 61 vols., 9th ed. Par. 1698 sqq.; another edition, but incomplete, Amstel. 16901713, 20 vols. 4. Remi Ceillter (R.C. d. 1761): Histoire gnrale des auteurs sacrs et ecclesiastiques. Par. 172963, 23 vols. 4; new ed. with additions, Par. 18581865 in 14 vols. More complete and exact, but less liberal than Dupin; extends to the middle of the thirteenth century. Will. Cave (Anglican, d. 1713): Scriptorum ecelesiasticorum Historia a Christo nato usque ad saecul. XIV. Lond. 168898, 2 vols.; Geneva, 1720; Colon. 1722; best edition superintended by Waterland, Oxf. 174043, reprinted at Basle 174145. This work is arranged in the centurial style (saeculum Apostolicum, s. Gnosticuni, s. Novatianum, s. Arianum, s. Nestorianum, s. Eutychianum, s. Monotheleticum, etc.) W. Cave: Lives of the most eminent fathers of the church that flourished in the first four centuries. Best ed. revised by Henry Cary. Oxf. 1840, 3 vols. Chas. Oudin (first a monk, then a Protestant, librarian to the University at Leyden, died 1717): Commentarius de scriptoribus ecclesiae antiquis illorumque scriptis, a Bellarmino, Possevino, Caveo, Dupin et aliis omissis, ad ann. 1460. Lips. 1722. 3 vols. fol. John Alb. Fabricius ("the most learned, the most voluminous and the most useful of bibliographers." born at Leipsic 1668. Prof. of Eloquence at Hamburg, died 1736): Bibliotheca Graeca, sive notilia Scriptorum veterum Graecorum; ed. III. Hamb. 171828, 14 vols.; ed. IV. by G. Chr. Harless, with additions. Hamb. 17901811, in 12 vols. (incomplete). This great work of forty years labor embraces all the Greek writers to the beginning of the eighteenth century, but is inconveniently arranged. (A valuable supplement to it is S. F. G. Hoffmann: Bibliographisches Lexicon der gesammten Literatur der Griechen, Leipz. 3 vols.), 2nd ed. 184445. J. A. Fabricius published also a Bibliotheca Latina mediae et infimae aetatis, Hamb. 173 46, in 6 vols. (enlarged by Mansi, Padua, 1754, 3 tom.), and a Bibliotheca ecclesiastical Hamb. 1718, in 1 vol. fol., which contains the catalogues of ecclesiastical authors by Jerome, Gennadius, Isidore, Ildefondus, Trithemius (d. 1515) and others.

969

Das könnte Ihnen auch gefallen