| George Campbell - Church history - 1807 - 530 pages
...pastor would he entitled to preside. Another witness whom I shall adduce is Jerom, who wrete about the end of the fourth century, and the beginning of the fifth. The testimony which I shall bring from him, regards the practice that had long subsisted at Alexandria.... | |
| Nathaniel Lardner - Dissenters, Religious - 1815 - 654 pages
..." from blood," as a prohibition of homicide. These two things at least are extremely manifest; that at the end of the fourth century, and the beginning of the fifth, many among the Latin Christians neglected the distinction of meats, and likewise understood that prohibition... | |
| Guizot (M., François) - Civilization - 1838 - 352 pages
...different principles, animated by different sentiments, and which has brought into European civi 5 lization elements of a widely different character : I speak...had formed itself into a corporate body. It had its government, a body of priests ; a settled ecclesiastical polity for the regulation of their different... | |
| Nathaniel Lardner - Theology - 1838 - 622 pages
...from blood," as a prohibition of homicide. These two things at least are extremely manifest ; that at the end of the fourth century, and the beginning of the fifih, many among the Latin christians neglected the distinction of meats, and likewise understood... | |
| George Campbell - Theology - 1840 - 478 pages
...pastor would be entitled to preside. Another witness whom I shall adduce is Jerome, who wrote about the end of the fourth century, and the beginning of the fifth. The testimony which I shall bring from him, regards the practice that had long subsisted at Alexandria.... | |
| Moses Margoliouth - Judaism - 1843 - 330 pages
...Phylacteries, which modern Jews use, were used in the time of our Lord ; for St. Jerome (who flourished in the end of the fourth century and the beginning of the fifth, and went to Jerusalem, for the purpose of acquiring a complete knowledge of the Hebrew, and also travelled... | |
| François Guizot, Guizot (M., François) - Civilization - 1850 - 330 pages
...first, the system of munir:pal corporations, its habits, its regulations, its principle o( libeiiy-— a general civil legislation, common to all ; secondly,...had formed itself into a corporate body. It had its 4 That the municipal spirit should have been stronger than any more general sentiment binding the citizens... | |
| François Guizot - Civilization - 1850 - 330 pages
...of a very different nature, founded upon different principles, animated by different sen» timents, and which has brought into European civilization elements...longer a simple belief, it was an institution — it hud formed itself into a corporate body. It had its 4 That the municipal spirit should have been stronger... | |
| Guizot (M., François) - Civilization - 1854 - 338 pages
...first, the system of municipal corporations, its habits, its regulations, its principle of libeiiy — a general civil legislation, common to all ; secondly,...had formed itself into a corporate body. It had its 4 That the municipal spirit should have been stronger than any more general sentiment binding the citizens... | |
| John Kitto - Bible - 1863 - 524 pages
...therefore say a few words about. The first is what is called the Catalogue of Innocent I., who belongs to the end of the fourth century and the beginning of the fifth. This list occurs in what affects to be an Epistle to Exuperius, bishop of Toulouse, which, in a copy... | |
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