The Lives of the British Saints: The Saints of Wales and Cornwall and Such Irish Saints as Have Dedications in Britain, Volum 1For the honourable Society of cymmrodorion, by C. J. Clark, 1907 |
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Side 24
... remained in it four years , then be- came a solitary in the desert for seven , and then suddenly was trans- formed into a missionary who traversed Mesopotamia in all directions . He gathered about him a congregation of 400 monks on the ...
... remained in it four years , then be- came a solitary in the desert for seven , and then suddenly was trans- formed into a missionary who traversed Mesopotamia in all directions . He gathered about him a congregation of 400 monks on the ...
Side 41
... remained for nearly a twelvemonth at Bourges , during which time Sidonius Apolli- naris entered into correspondence with him about some captives the Britons had taken.11 Riothimus , at last , impatient at his enforced inactivity ...
... remained for nearly a twelvemonth at Bourges , during which time Sidonius Apolli- naris entered into correspondence with him about some captives the Britons had taken.11 Riothimus , at last , impatient at his enforced inactivity ...
Side 46
... remained Gallo - Roman cities , as hostile in feeling to the new colonists as they were to the new Frank kingdom . At first , probably , the settlers maintained a political connexion with the mother country . This is implied by a ...
... remained Gallo - Roman cities , as hostile in feeling to the new colonists as they were to the new Frank kingdom . At first , probably , the settlers maintained a political connexion with the mother country . This is implied by a ...
Side 48
... remained only in the towns . Those natives who clung to the fields and woods were of the original non - Aryan stock , and probably still retained their agglutinative tongue . M. de Courson 34 first promulgated the theory that the ...
... remained only in the towns . Those natives who clung to the fields and woods were of the original non - Aryan stock , and probably still retained their agglutinative tongue . M. de Courson 34 first promulgated the theory that the ...
Side 63
... remained to stay , for unless they had done so they would hardly have carried off their romantic and historic literature with them . Much difficulty exists in the identification of the saints in Brittany , owing to the various forms ...
... remained to stay , for unless they had done so they would hardly have carried off their romantic and historic literature with them . Much difficulty exists in the identification of the saints in Brittany , owing to the various forms ...
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The Lives of the British Saints: The Saints of Wales and Cornwall ..., Volum 1 Sabine Baring-Gould,John Fisher Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1907 |
The Lives of the British Saints: The Saints of Wales and Cornwall ..., Volum 1 Sabine Baring-Gould,John Fisher Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1907 |
The Lives of the British Saints: The Saints of Wales and Cornwall ..., Volum 1 Sabine Baring-Gould,John Fisher Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1907 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
Ab.C abbot according Acta Aedh Aelhaiarn Aidan Ailbe Alban Amphibalus Amwn Arch Armorica Arthmael Asaph Azenor Bangor Beuno Bishop Book of Lismore Book of Llan Borderie Breaca Brendan Breviary Brigid Brioc Britain British Britons Brittany Brychan Brynach Budoc Cadoc Calendar called Cambro-British Saints Catwg Ceredigion chapel church Cieran Clynnog Cogn commemorated Confessor Connaught Cornwall Cunedda curse daughter death dedicated Diarmid died disciple Domnonia Dubricius Dwynwen ecclesiastical father Festival fifteenth century genealogies Germanus Germanus of Auxerre Gildas given gives holy Ibid Iolo MSS Ireland Irish island Isle Kildare king land later legend Leinster Léon Lives Llan Dâv Malo Martyrology monastery monastic monks mother Munster Nicolas Roscarrock Palladius parish Patrick patron pedigrees Pembrokeshire Peniarth prince probably Roman Samson says sixth century sons story supposed Teilo Tewdrig Tudwal Vannes Vesp Virgin visited Vita Ima Wales Welsh Welsh Saints wife William of Worcester Wledig
Populære avsnitt
Side 14 - Let it rest on the head of Joab, and on all his father's house; and let there not fail from the house of ' Joab one that hath an issue, or that is a leper, or that leaneth on a staff, or that falleth on the sword, or that lacketh bread.
Side 169 - So likewise, whosoever he be of you that forsaketh not all that he hath, he cannot be my disciple.
Side 61 - Chuailgne in full ; and they said that they knew of it but fragments only. Senchan then spoke to his pupils to know which of them would go into the countries of Leilia to learn the Tain, which the Sai had taken 'eastwards' after the Cuilmenn. Emine, the grandson of Nininé, and Muirgen, Senchan's own son, set out to go to the East".
Side 242 - The youth of green savannahs spake, And many an endless, endless lake With all its fairy crowds Of islands, that together lie As quietly as spots of sky Among the evening clouds.
Side 308 - Brecheinoc, and from whom it derived this name. The British histories testify that he had four and twenty daughters, all of whom, dedicated from their youth to religious observances, happily ended their lives in sanctity. There are many churches in Wales distinguished by their names, one of which, situated on the summit of a hill near Brecheinoc, and not far from the castle of Aberhodni, is called the church of St.
Side 264 - Brigit, take charge of your own fire, for this night belongs to you.' She then leaves the fire, and in the morning it is found that the fire has not gone out, and that the usual quantity of fuel has been used.
Side 138 - Of whom it is apparent, that though he was not regenerated by baptism, yet he was cleansed by the washing of his own blood, and rendered worthy to enter the kingdom of heaven. Then the judge, astonished at the novelty of so many heavenly miracles, ordered the persecution to cease immediately, beginning to honour the death of the saints, by which he before thought they might have been diverted from the Christian faith.
Side 324 - ... had first appeared and began her note on a stone called St. Byrnach's Stone, being curiously wrought with sundry sorts of knots, standing upright in the churchyard of this parish : and one year staying very long, and the priest and the people expecting her accustomed coming (for I account this bird of the feminine gender), came at last, lighting on the said stone, her accustomed preaching-place, and being scarce able once to sound the note, presently fell dead.
Side 42 - But why should I say more? they left their cities, abandoned the protection of the wall and dispersed themselves in flight more desperately than before. The enemy, on the other hand, pursued them with more unrelenting cruelty than before, and butchered our countrymen like sheep...
Side 314 - Drayton, whilst not denying the existence of twenty-four daughters to Brychan, says that they all underwent metamorphosis by becoming so many rivers. He is very probably incorporating some tradition, now lost. He says : — For Brecan was a Prince once fortunate and great (Who. dying, lent his name to that his nobler seat) With twice...