Apologeticus or Apologeticum ref The early texts do not agree on the title Bardenhewer . ref is Tertullian s most famous work, ref Unlike the very scattered and imperfect manuscripts of Tertullian, only the Apologeticum has come down in numerous codices, some of them quite ancient Bardenhewer . ref consisting of apologetic and polemic it was written in Carthage in the summer or autumn of 197 AD, during the reign of Septimius Severus . ref The actual date is doubtful or much disputed there are no certain points of comparison Bardenhewer . ref In this work Tertullian defends Christianity , demanding legal toleration and that Christians be treated as all other sects of the Roman Empire . It is in this treatise that one finds the phrase the blood of the martyrs is the seed of the Church Apologeticus , Chapter 50 . ref A similar theme, but concerning Mexican Revolutionaries, is depicted in Diego Rivera s mural La sangre de los martires revolucionarios fertilizando la tierra The Blood of the Revolutionary Martyrs Fertilizing the Earth . ref Apologeticus is ostensibly addressed to the provincial governors of the Roman empire that the truth, being forbidden to defend itself publicly, may reach the ears of the rulers by the hidden path of letters and thus bears resemblance to the Apologue ... through Tertullian s defense against rationalizations and rumours. The Apologeticus is calm ... of the laws under which the Christians were persecuted. The Apologeticus was written before ... earlier in the same year and it has been claimed that the latter is a finished draft of Apologeticus ... animae Concerning the Evidences of the Soul is an appendix to the Apologeticus , intended to illustrate ... century satire about eating Irish poor children, may have been influenced by the Apologeticus . Notes ... links http www.tertullian.org latin apologeticum becker.htm Apologeticus Latin http www.tertullian.org works apologeticum.htm Apologeticum The Apology DEFAULTSORT Apologeticus Category 2nd century ... more details
wiktionary apology apologize apologise Apology or Apologize may refer to Apologetics , the systematic defense of a position Christian apologetics , the defense of Christianity Apology Plato Apology Plato , Plato s recording of Socrates defense at trial Apology Xenophon Apology Xenophon , Xenophon s version of Socrates defense Apologeticus or Apology of Tertullian Apologia Pro Vita Sua , book by John Henry Newman Apologies to the Queen Mary , indie rock album by Wolf Parade Apology of the Augsburg Confession , a 1531 defense of Lutheranism by Philipp Melanchthon Apology film Apology film , a 2006 independent short The Apology Seinfeld The Apology Seinfeld , an episode of Seinfeld Apologize song Apologize song , a song by OneRepublic Apologize , a song by Hollywood Undead on the 2011 album American Tragedy album American Tragedy Apology hand gesture , used in India See also Regret emotion Sorry disambiguation Non apology apology A Mathematician s Apology No Apologies disambiguation All Apologies disambig da Apologien de Apologie la Apologia nl Apologie pt Apologia ru sq Apologjia scn Apolugg a fi Apologia sv Apologin ... more details
Codex Petropolitanus is the Latin for Saint Petersburg Codex and may refer to one of the following manuscripts preserved in the Russian National Library , St. Petersburg Codex Petropolitanus Purpureus N 022 , New Testament manuscript from the 6th century, written in uncial majuscule script with silver ink on purple parchment and preserved in the Russian National Library . Other leaves are held by the British Library in London , the Byzantine museum in Thessaloniki , the Vatican City Vatican , Lerma Alessandria in Italy , Patmos , and the Pierpont Morgan Library in New York . Codex Petropolitanus New Testament Codex Petropolitanus 041 , New Testament manuscript from the 9th century, written in uncial majuscule script on parchment and preserved in the Russian National Library. An Old Testament manuscript B19A, which is also called Leningrad Codex Codex Leningradensis A manuscript of Tertullian , Apologeticus from the 8th&ndash 9th century is sometimes referred to a Codex Petropolitanus Latinus Q.v.I.40 . It is on 61 folios of parchment, originating in the Abbey of Corbie . Category Manuscripts Petropolitanus, Codex Category National Library of Russia collection dab de Codex Petropolitanus it Codex Petropolitanus pl Codex Petropolitanus ru ... more details
Ichthyas lang el floruit fl. 4th century BCE , the son of Metallus, was a Greek philosopher and a disciple and successor of Euclid of Megara in the Megarian school . ref Diogenes La rtius, ii. 112 Athenaeus, viii. 335 Suda, Euclides ref He was a colleague of Thrasymachus of Corinth in the school. ref Diogenes La rtius, ii. 113 ref Ichthyas is described as a man of great eminence, and Diogenes of Sinope is said to have addressed a dialogue to him. ref Diogenes La rtius, ii. 112 cf. vi. 80 ref According to Hilarius Emonds , ref H. Emonds, 1937 , Die Oligarchenrevolte zu Megara im Jahre 375 und der Philosoph Ichthyas bei Tertullian, Apol. 46, 16 . Rh. Mus. 86, 180 191. ref correcting a previously misread passage in Tertullian s Apologeticus , Ichthyas was a leader in the oligarchic revolt in Megara in 375 BCE . ref Tertullian, Apologeticum , 46, 16 et Ichthyas, dum civitati insidias disponit, occiditur. ref Notes reflist Category 4th century BC philosophers Category Ancient Greek philosophers Category Megarian philosophers Megarian philosophy el fr Ichthyas it Ichthyas ... more details
Thomas Chaundler 1418 1490 was an England English playwright and illustrator . A manuscript at Trinity College, Cambridge depicts Chaundler presenting one of his plays to the Bishop of Bath , Thomas Beckynton , in 1460. Between 1454 and 1475, Chaundler was List of Wardens of New College, Oxford Warden of New College, Oxford , and from 1463 to 1468 he served as Vice Chancellor of the University of Oxford . He was also twice List of Chancellors of the University of Oxford Chancellor of the University. Bibliography Collocutiones septem et allocutiones duae de laudibus Willelmi de Wykeham, Wintoniensis episcopi c. 1460 Liber apologeticus de omni statu humanae naturae A defence of human nature in every state References Personennamen des Mittelalters. PMA. Nomina Scriptorum Medii Aevi. compiled by Claudia Fabian at the Bavarian State s Library. Munich Saur. 2000, p. 124. Review of Thomas Chaundler, Liber Apologeticus , ed. Doris Enright Clark Shoukri, in Medium Aevum 44 1975 , 327 329. start box s aca succession box title Warden of New College, Oxford years 1454 1475 before Nicholas Ossulbury after Walter Hyll s bef before George Neville bishop George Neville s ttl title Chancellor of the University of Oxford years 1457 1461 s aft after George Neville bishop George Neville succession box title Vice Chancellor of the University of Oxford years 1463 1468 before William Ive after Thomas Stevyn , Thomas Jaune s bef before George Neville bishop George Neville s ttl title Chancellor of the University of Oxford years 1472 1479 s aft after Lionel Woodville end box Deans of Hereford Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Chaundler, Thomas ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH 1418 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 1490 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Chaundler, Thomas Category 1418 births Category 1490 deaths Category 15th century English people Category People of the Tudor period Category 15th century writers Category English dramatists and playwrights Category Eng ... more details
dablink For the cookbook see Apicius . For other people named Apicius see Apicius disambiguation Apicius is the name of a Ancient Rome Roman lover of luxury who lived in the 90s BC and was said to have outdone all his contemporaries in lavish expenditure. According to Poseidonius , Apicius was responsible for the banishment from Rome of Rutilius Rufus , who was the author of a history of Rome written in Greek language Greek and was notable for the modesty of his entertaining. As Tertullian observes, this early Apicius gave his name to a series of later gourmets and cooks, notably Marcus Gavius Apicius and a slightly later Apicius 2nd century AD Apicius who lived in the 2nd century AD. Apicius was not transmitted as a family name, but was apparently applied as a nickname, meaning gourmand . For the same reason, the name of Apicius was eventually thought appropriate for a cookbook, and as such was applied both to the late Roman cookery text currently known as Apicius and to the quite different and much briefer Excerpta Apicii Abridged Apicius ascribed to Vinidarius . Sources Poseidonius fragment 27 Jacoby, quoted by Athenaeus , Deipnosophistae http www.attalus.org old athenaeus4.html 168 4.168d Tertullian , Apologeticus http www.tertullian.org articles bindley apol bindley apol.htm p12 3.6 Bibliography Citation surname Dalby given Andrew title Food in the ancient world from A to Z publisher Routledge place London, New York year 2003 ISBN 0415232597 p.  16 Category Ancient Roman chefs Category 1st century BC Romans de Apicius 1. Jahrhundert v. Chr. fr Apicius Ier si cle av. J. C. ... more details
Dominic Gravina b. in Sicily, about 1573 d. in the Minerva, at Rome, 26 August 1643 was an Italian Dominican Order Dominican theologian. Life He entered the Dominican Order at Naples, and made his classical and sacred studies in the order s schools. As professor of theology in the Dominican college of St. Dominic Naples , in the Minerva, and in other schools of his order, he became the most celebrated theologian of his time in Italy. He was made master of sacred theology by a general chapter of the order held at Rome in 1608, and then became dean of the faculty of the theological college of Naples. In the pulpit also he gained great renown, and was frequently called upon to conduct Lenten course s and to preach before Pope Paul V . He displayed, moreover, a tireless activity in the administrative offices of prior and provincial in his own province, and of procurator general and vicar general of the entire order. While discharging the duties of these two offices, to the latter of which he was raised by Pope Urban VII , who had caused the general to be removed, he was also Master of the Sacred Palace . Works Of his many writings on theological subjects, chiefly of an apologetic character, a large number have never been published. Of the published works the most important are Catholicae praescriptiones adversus omnes haereticos 7 vols., Naples, 1619 39 Pro sacro ordinis sacramento vindiciae orthodoxae Naples, 1634 Cologne, 1638 Apologeticus adversus novatorum calumnias Naples, 1629 Cologne, 1638 Lapis Lydius ad discernendas veras a falsis revelationibus 2 vols., Naples, 1638 , a mystical writing. Catholic External links http www.newadvent.org cathen 06733a.htm Source Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Gravina, Dominic ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 1643 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Gravina, Dominic Category 1643 deaths Category Italian theologians Category Members of the Dominican Order ... more details
for other meanings of Abellio Abellio disambiguation File Abellio.jpg thumb Drawing of a Gallo Roman religion Gallo Roman votive altar dedicated to Abellio, found in the village of Garin, Haute Garonne Garin , Haute Garonne , France Abellio also Abelio and Abelionni was a god worshipped in the Garonne Valley in Gallia Aquitania now southwest France , known primarily by a number of inscriptions which were discovered at Comminges . ref name DGRBM Citation last Schmitz first Leonhard author link Leonhard Schmitz contribution Abellio editor last Smith editor first William title Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology volume 1 pages 2 publisher place year 1867 contribution url http www.ancientlibrary.com smith bio 0011.html ref He may have been a god of Apple fruit apple tree s. Some scholars have postulated that Abellio is the same name as Apollo , ref name DGRBM who in Crete and elsewhere was called Abelios Greek polytonic , and by the Italians and some Dorians Apello , ref Fest. s. v. Apellinem Eustath. ad II. ii. 99 ref and that the deity is the same as the Gallic Apollo mentioned by Julius Caesar Caesar , ref Julius Caesar , Commentarii de Bello Gallico http classics.mit.edu Caesar gallic.6.6.html vi. 17 ref and also the same as the Belis or Belenus mentioned by Tertullian ref Tertullian , Apologeticus 23 ref and Herodian . ref viii. 3 comp. Capitol. Maoeimin. 22 ref Other scholars have taken the reverse position that Abellio might have been a similar solar deity of Celtic origin in Crete and the Pyrenees , but the Cretan Abellio may however not be the same god as the Celtic one, but rather a different manifestation, or dialectal form, of the Greek god Apollo or his name. References Footnotes references Other sources Ellis, Peter Berresford, Dictionary of Celtic Mythology Oxford Paperback Reference , Oxford University Press, 1994 ISBN 0 19 508961 8 Wood, Juliette, The Celts Life, Myth, and Art , Thorsons Publishers 2002 ISBN 0 00 764059 5 http ... more details
Bernold of Constance c. 1054&ndash Schaffhausen , September 16, 1100 was a chronicler and writer of tracts, and a defender of the Church reforms of Pope Gregory VII . Life He was educated at Constance under the renowned teacher Bernard of Constance . He attended the Lenten Synod of Rome, in 1079, at which Berengarius of Tours retracted his errors. Remaining in Italy till 1084 he probably attended the Council of Piacenza , on the proceedings of which he is the main authority. Once more at Constance, he attended the ordination of bishop Gebhard and was ordained priest himself by the papal legate. In 1086 he went with Bishop Gebhard as counsellors to Herman, contender for the Imperial crown, at the Battle of Bleichfeld . About the same time he entered first the Benedictine Sankt Blasien Abbey in the Black Forest Abbey of St Blasien in the Black Forest and then, in 1091, the Abbey of All Saints nearby in Schaffhausen, where he died. Works He wrote seventeen surviving tracts which are mostly apologetics for the pope s policy, defences of papal supremacy or vindications of men who advocated or enforced it in Germany. Chief among these are De prohibend sacerdotum incontinenti against married clergy De damnatione schismaticorum and Apologeticus super excommunicationem Gregorii VII justifying excommunication of schismatics and of Henry IV, Holy Roman Emperor and his partisans . Of broader interest is Bernold s chronicle, Chronicon, the latter part is a terse record of contemporary events by a knowing and intelligent observer in the extreme Papal camp. Bernold was the author of Micrologus de ecclesiasticis observationibus c. 1085 , a lengthy commentary on the papal liturgy that became an important medieval liturgical treatise. Thanks to him, the German church was provided with a fairly common sacramentary throughout the Empire. The form of the mass given in Micrologus was established for Hungary , too, about 1100, by order of the local bishops. External links http www.newad ... more details
For others called Bartholomew of Pisa, Bartholomaeus Pisanus, etc. Bartholomew of Pisa disambiguation Bartholomew of Pisa Bartholomew Rinonico was an Italian Franciscan and chronicler. He was a Pisan of noble family. In 1352 he was a student at Bologna and later filled the office of Lector there as well as at Padua, Pisa, Sienna, and Florence. He also preached for many years with great succession different Italian cities. He died about 1401, renowned no less for sanctity than for learning, and is commemorated in the Franciscan Martyrology in 4 November. Bartholomew s chief title to fame rests upon his remarkable book, De Conformitate Vitae B. P. Francisco ad Vitam Domini Nostri Jesu Christi , begun in 1385 and formally approved by the general chapter held at Assisi in 1399. Enthusiastically received on its appearance and long held in high esteem, this work became the object of bitter attacks on the part of Lutherans and Jansenists . Against it Erasmus Alber wrote the Alcoranus Franciscanus Der Barfusser Monche Eulenspiegel und Alcoran mit einer Vorrede D. M. Luthers, 1531 in reply to which Henry Sedulius , OFM, published his Apologeticus adversus Alcoranum Franciscanorum pro libro Conformitatum Antwerp, 1607 . Subsequent writers on Franciscan history ignored the work more recently it has been over praised. Between these extreme views, the Conformities is a book of very uneven value. The parallels between the lives of Our Lord and St. Francis which form its basis are sometimes forced, but nowhere does it make St. Francis the equal of Christ. Side by side with fantastic legends, ridiculous visions, and other absurdities, it contains historical information. It is considered a source of great importance for Franciscan history. It was first printed at Milan in 1510 and in 1513. The new edition published at Bologna in 1590 is mutilated and corrupted, especially in the historical parts, at almost every page. A critical edition of the text was published in tom. IV of the An ... more details
Orphan date February 2009 Jean Bagot born Rennes , France, 9 July 1591, died Paris, 23 August 1664 was a Jesuit theologian. He entered the Society of Jesus , 1 July 1611, taught belles lettres for many years at various colleges in France, philosophy for five years, theology for thirteen years, and became theologian to the General of the Society. In 1647 he published the first part of his work Apologeticus Fidei entitled Institutio Theologica de vera Religione In 1645 the second part, Demonstratio dogmatum Christianorum , appeared, and in 1646 Dissertationes theologicae on the Sacrament of Penance Catholic Church Sacrament of Penance . In his Avis aux Catholiques , Bagot attacked the new doctrine on grace, directing against it also his Lettre sur la conformite de S. Augustin . In 1653 his Libertatis et gratiae defensio was published. In 1655 Rousse, Cur of Saint Roch or Masure, the Cur of St. Paul s , published a little work entitled De l obligation des fid les de se confesser a leur cure, suivant le chapitre 21 du concile general de Latran . P re Bagot answered this in his D fense du droit éppiscopal et de la libert des fid les , which he afterwards translated into Latin. A controversy arose, in which various ecclesiastics, including Pierre de Marca , Archbishop of Toulouse , took sides against Bagot. The work was referred to the faculty of theology at Paris, which censured some of the propositions. Bagot, however, defended his doctrine before this assembly with the result that the censure was removed. he answered his opponents in the R ponse du P. Bagot . On his return from Rome he devoted the remaining years of his life to the congregation of the Blessed Virgin, and died superior of the professed house Paris professed house at Paris. References reflist Attribution Catholic wstitle Jean Bagot cites Hurter, Nomenclator, II, 67 de Backer, Bibl. des escriv. de la c. de J., I, 32 Carlos Sommervogel , Bibl. de la c. de J. , I, 774 Idem in Dict. de theol. cath. ... more details
Juan Bautista de Lezana 23 November 1586 &ndash 29 March 1659 was a Spanish Carmelite theologian. Lezana was an authority on canon law , dogmatic theology , and philosophy his historical works are not of the same standard. Life Lezana was born at Madrid . He took the habit at Alberca , in Old Castile , 18 October 1600, and made his profession at the house of the Carmelites of the Old Observance, at Madrid, in 1602. He studied philosophy at Toledo, Spain Toledo , theology at Salamanca , partly at the college of the order, partly at the university under Juan Marquez , and finally at Alcal de Henares Alcal under Luis de Montesion . For some years he was employed as lecturer at Toledo and Alcal , but having been sent to the general chapter of 1625 as delegate of his province, he remained in Rome as professor of theology. At the following chapter 1645 , at which he assisted in the quality of titular provincial of Palestine, he obtained some votes for the generalship, but remaining in the minority he was nominated assistant general for some years he also filled the office of procurator general. In addition to these dignities within the order, he filled for sixteen years the chair of metaphysics at the Sapienza and became consultor to the Congregation of the Index under Pope Urban VIII , and to that of Rites under Pope Innocent X . Appointed to a bishopric, he requested a nun to recommend an important matter the nature of which be did not disclose to Our Lord in prayer, and received through her the answer, which he acted upon, that it would be more perfect for him to refuse the dignity. He died in Rome. Works His Annals of the Carmelite Order four folio vols. were published between 1645 and 1656, and there remained another volume in manuscript. The following are his main works Liber apologeticus pro Immaculata Conceptione Madrid, 1616 . De regularium reformatione Rome, 1627 , four times reprinted and translated into French, although it is doubtful whether the translation ... more details
have survived. The principal works of Nikephorus are three writings referring to iconoclasm Apologeticus ... and the first phase of the iconoclastic movement Apologeticus major with the three Antirrhetici ... more details
of John , the source of the Comma Johanneum , appears to be the Latin book Liber Apologeticus ... Church , Oxford University Press, 1975 Liber Apologeticus http pilgrimagetoheresy.com . Fletcher ... more details
File Wenceslas Hollar Bastwick cropped.jpg thumb right 200px John Bastwick. John Bastwick 1593 1654 was an English Puritan physician and controversial writer. Life He was born at Writtle , Essex . He entered Emmanuel College, Cambridge , on 19 May 1614, but remained there only a very short time, and left the university without a degree. ref Venn id BSTK614J name Bastwick ref He travelled and served for a time as a soldier, probably in the Dutch army. He then studied medicine abroad, and took the degree of M.D. at Padua . Back in England in 1623, he settled at Colchester , where he practised as a physician. ref name DNB s Bastwick, John DNB00 ref He was a Latin stylist, and began a career as controversial with Latin works. In 1634 he published in the Netherland two anti Catholic Latin treatises Elenchus Religionis Papisticae , an answer to a Catholic called Richard Short and Flagellum Pontificis , an argument in favour of Presbyterianism . The latter came under the notice of William Laud . He had Bastwick brought before the Court of High Commission , where he was convicted of a scandalous libel , was condemned to pay a fine of 1,000 and costs, and was imprisoned in the Gatehouse Prison until he should recant. In 1636 Bastwick published , sive Apologeticus ad Praesules Anglicanos , written in the Gatehouse against the high commission court. In 1637 he produced in English the four parts of his Letanie of Dr. John Bastwicke , in which bishop s were denounced as the enemies of God and the tail of The Beast Bible The Beast . For this publication he was summoned before the Star Chamber . The request for a work in English came from the publisher John Wharton. The Letanie was printed by a Dutch press for John Lilburne , who had been brought to the Gatehouse in 1636 by the clothier Thomas Hewson and minister Edmund Rosier. Lilburne was just finishing an apprenticeship with Hewson, and smuggled the text abroad, but was betrayed by his assistant in importin ... more details
Daniello Concina 20 October 1687 21 February 1756 was an Italy Italian Dominican Order Dominican preacher, controversialist and Theology theologian . Biography He was born at Clauzetto or San Daniele, villages in Friuli . On the completion of his early studies at the Jesuit college at G rz then in Austria , he entered the Dominican Order making his religious profession in March 1708, in the convent of Sts. Martin and Rose. After studying philosophy three years, he was sent to study theology in the convent of the Holy Rosary at Venice, where he spent eight years under the direction of the fathers of his order, Andruisso and Zanchio. In 1717 he was appointed to the chair of philosophy, and later to that of theology, in the convent of Forl . About this time he began to attract attention as a preacher. He confined himself at first to the smaller places, but his success soon brought him to the pulpits of the chief cities of Italy and he preached the Lenten sermon s seven times in the principal churches of Rome. He died in Venice in 1756. Works Concina s literary activity was confined chiefly to moral topics. His career as a theologian and controversialist began with the publication of his first book, Commentarius historico apologeticus , etc. Venice, 1736, 1745 , in which be refuted the opinion, then recently adopted by the Bollandists , that St. Dominic had borrowed his ideas and form of religious poverty from St. Francis of Assisi . While engaged in the sharp controversy aroused by this work, he entered into another concerning the Lenten fast, which was not closed until Benedict XIV issued on 30 May, 1741 the Encyclical Non ambigimus which was favourable to Concina s contention. Shortly afterwards he published his Storia del probabilismo e rigorismo 1743 , a work composed of theological, moral and critical dissertations. Being directed against the Jesuits, it naturally gave rise to a large controversial literature. The work was highly praised by some notably by Benedi ... more details
Constantino Cajetan 1560, Syracuse, Sicily &mdash September 17, 1650, Rome was a Benedictine scholar. Although his brothers, Ottavio and Alfonso, joined the Society of Jesus , Constantino became a Benedictine October 29, 1586 at San Nicol d Arena in Catania . He was soon called to Rome by Pope Clement VIII , who confided to the promising young scholar an edition of the works of St. Peter Damian , which he executed in four folio volumes Rome, 1606 et saep. . His constant and successful researches in Roman archives won him the friendship of Cardinal Baronius , through whom he was made titular Abbot of San Baronzio in the Diocese of Pistoia , and custodian of the Vatican Library . The latter important office he held under four popes until his death. Baronius was much indebted to him in the composition of his Annales Ecclesiastici , and more than once praised Cajetan s thorough knowledge of the Roman archives. He was a tireless worker in the field of ecclesiastical history the long list of his writings may be seen in Magnoald Ziegelbauer ref Hist. rei lit. O. S. B. Augsburg, 1754, III, 360 sqq. ref . Among them are a life of the liturgist, St. Amalarius of Trier Rome, 1612 , annotated lives of St. Isadore of Seville , St. Ildephoses of Toledo , Cardinal Gregory of Ostia , notes on the life of St. Anselm , an annotated edition of the Vita Gelasii II by Pandolfo of Pisa , treatises on the primacy and the Roman episcopate of St. Peter . He was persuaded that St. Pope Gregory I Gregory the Great was a genuine disciple of St. Benedict of Nursia Benedict , and wrote in defense of this thesis De S. Gregorii monachatu benedictino libri duo Salzburg, 1620 . The authorship of the Imitation of Christ interested him also, and he several times supported the Benedictine Jean Gerson ref Joannes Gersen, De Imit. Xti, acced. Defensio pro Gersen et methodo practic IV librorum Rome, 1616 Concertatio, Apologetica responsio Rome, 1618 Libellus apologeticus pro Gersen Rome, 1644 , the latt ... more details
groups. Apologetic and polemic writings, like Apologeticus , De testimonio animae , Adv. Judaeos ... apologetic writings, the Apologeticus, addressed to the Roman magistrates, is a most pungent defense ... made. Apologetic Apologeticus pro Christianis . Dissertatio Mosheim in Apol . Libri duo ad Nationes ... Heretics , Indeterminate 10. Apologeticus pro Christianis Apology for the Christians 11.,12. ad Nationes ... more details