Maassen, Friedrich Bernard Christian Professor of law (1823-1900)



Download 478.24 Kb.
Page8/12
Date09.06.2018
Size478.24 Kb.
#53614
1   ...   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   11   12

O'Curry, Eugene - Irish scholar (1796-1862)

O'Daly, Daniel - Diplomat and historian (1595-1662)

O'Daly, Donogh Mór - Irish poet (d. 1244)

Odense, Ancient See of Odense - Former diocese located in Denmark

Odescalchi, Carlo - Cardinal, prince, archbishop, and Jesuit (1786-1841)

O Deus Ego Amo Te - The first line of two Latin lyrics sometimes attributed to St. Francis Xavier

O'Devany, Cornelius - Bishop of Down and Connor, Ireland (1532-1612)

Odilia, Saint - Patroness of Alsace, d. 720, founded the convent of Hohenburg

Odilo, Saint - Abbot of Cluny. He died in 1048

Odin, John Mary - Lazarist missionary and bishop (1801-1870)

Odington, Walter - English Benedictine (d. 1330)

Odo, Saint - Second abbot of Cluny, died 942

Odo, Saint - Benedictine monk, Archbishop of Canterbury, died in 959

O'Donnell, Edmund - The first Jesuit executed by the English government (1542-1575)

O'Donovan, John - Irish historian and antiquarian (1806-1861)

Odo of Cambrai, Blessed - Benedictine abbot, bishop of Cambrai, exiled for political reasons, d. 1113

Odo of Canterbury - Abbot of Battle (d. 1200)

Odo of Cheriton - Preacher and fabulist (d. 1247)

Odo of Glanfeuil - Abbot and ninth-century hagiographer

O'Dugan, John - Irish writer (d. 1372)

O'Dwyer, Joseph - American physician, inventor of intubation (1841-1898)

Œcolampadius, John - Protestant theologian and organizer of Protestantism at Basle (1482-1531)

Œconomus, Episcopal - An individual who is appointed to take charge of the temporal goods of a church or monastery

Œcumenius - Biblical commentator (c. 990)

Oertel, John James Maximilian - Bavarian journalist (1811-1882)

Oettingen - Abbey in Bavaria

Offa - King of Mercia (d. 796)

Offerings - Covers the Jewish and Christian practices of offerings and tithes

Offertory - The rite by which the bread and wine are presented to God before they are consecrated

Office, Divine - Brief essay on the historical development of the Liturgy of the Hours

Office of the Dead - Historical article on a special set of prayers for the deceased

O'Fihely, Maurice - Archbishop of Tuam (1460-1513)

O Filii et Filiæ - The first line of a hymn celebrating the mystery of Easter.

Ogdensburg, Diocese of - Diocese in upstate New York

Oggione, Marco D' - Milanese painter (1470-1549)

Ogilvie, John, Venerable - Scotsman, raised Calvinist, converted to Catholicism, became a Jesuit priest and missionary to his native land, was tortured and martyred in 1615

Ogliastra - Diocese in Sardinia, Italy

O'Growney, Eugene - Irish-American priest, patriot, and scholar (1863-1899)

O'Hagan, John - Irish lawyer and man of letters (1822-1890)

O'Hagan, Thomas - First Baron of Tullyhogue (1812-1885)

O'Hanlon, John - Irish-American priest (1821-1905)

O'Hara, Theodore - American writer (1822-1867)

O'Hely, Patrick - Bishop of Mayo, Ireland (d. 1579)

O'Herlahy, Thomas - Bishop of Ross, Ireland (d. 1579)

O'Higgins, Ambrose and Bernard - South American patriots of Irish background

Ohio - The seventeenth state of the American Union

Ohler, Aloys Karl - German educationist (1817-1889)

O'Hurley, Dermond - Archbishop of Cashel, Ireland (d. 1584)

O'Hussey, Maelbrighte - Franciscan friar (d. 1614)

Oil of Saints - An oily substance which flows from the relics or burial places of certain saints

Oils, Holy - Oil is a product of great utility the symbolic signification of which harmonizes with its natural uses. It serves to sweeten, to strengthen, to render supple; and the Church employs it for these purposes in its rites

Ointment in Scripture - That the use of oily, fragrant materials to anoint the body is a custom going back to remote antiquity is evidenced by the Old Testament as well as other early literatures. . .

Ojeda, Alonso de - Spanish explorer (1466-1508)

Okeghem, Jean d' - Contrapuntist, founder and head of the second Netherland school (1430-1495)

Oklahoma - The forty-sixth state of the Union

Olaf Haraldson, Saint - Martyr and King of Norway, d. 1030

Oláh, Nicolaus - Hungarian archbishop (1493-1568)

Olba - Titular see in Isauria, suffragan of Seleucia.

Old Catholics - The sect organised in German-speaking countries to combat the dogma of Papal Infallibility.

Old Chapter, The - The origin of the body, fomerly known as the Old Chapter, dates from 1623 . . .

Oldcorne, Ven. Edward - Englishman, Jesuit priest, martyred in 1606. Biography

Oldenburg - A grand duchy, one of the twenty-six federated states of the German Empire.

Old Hall (St. Edmund's College) - Founded in 1793 in Hertfordshire, England

Oldham, Hugh - Bishop of Exeter (d. 1519)

Oldoini, Augustino - Historian and bibliographer (1612-1683)

Old Testament - The Apostle St. Paul declares himself (II Cor., iii, 6) a minister 'of the new testament', and calls (iii, 14) the covenant entered into on Mount Sinai 'the old testament'

Old Testament, Canon of the - Signifies the authoritative list or closed number of the writings composed under Divine inspiration, and destined for the well-being of the Church

O'Leary, Arthur - Irish Franciscan, preacher, polemical writer (1729-1802)

Olenus - Titular see and suffragan of Patras, in Achaia Quarta

Olesnicki, Zbigniew - Polish cardinal and statesman (1389-1455)

Olier, Jean-Jacques - Founder of the seminary and Society of St-Sulpice (1608-1657)

Olinda - Diocese in Brazil

Oliva - Suppressed Cistercian abbey near Danzig, founded sometime between 1170-78.

Oliva, Gian Paolo - Genoese Jesuit (1600-1681)

Olivaint, Pierre - French convert (b. 1816)

Oliver, George - English priest (1781-1861)

Olivet, Mount - A hill immediately east of Jerusalem

Olivetans - A branch of the white monks of the Benedictine Order, founded in 1319.

Olivi, Pierre Jean - Spiritual Franciscan and theological author (1248-1298)

Olivier de la Marche - Belgian chronicler and poet (1426-1501)

Ollé-Laprune, Léon - French Catholic philosopher (1839-1898)

Olmütz - Archdiocese in Moravia

O'Loghlen, Michael - Irish jurist (1789-1846)

Olympias, Saint - Widow, deaconess, renowned for her almsgiving, and a staunch supporter of St. John Chrysostom

Olympus - Titular see of Lycia in Asia Minor.

Omaha - Diocese in Nebraska, United States

Ombus - Titular see and suffragan of Ptolemais in Thebais Secunda.

O'Meara, Kathleen - Irish novelist and biographer (1839-1888)

Omer, Saint - Swiss-born bishop of Terouenne in Belgic Gaul, founder of a monastery. He died in about 670

Omission - The failure to do something one can and ought to do

Omnipotence - The power of God to effect whatever is not intrinsically impossible

O'Neill, Hugh - Earl of Tyrone (1550-1616)

O'Neill, Owen Roe - Soldier (1582-1649)

Onias - Name of several Jewish high priests who lived two and three centuries before Christ

Ontario - A province in Canada

Ontologism - An ideology which maintains that God and divine ideas are the first object of our intelligence and the intuition of God the first act of our individual knowledge

Ontology - An article on 'the science of being'

Oostacker, Shrine of - Miraculous shrine of the Blessed Virgin in Belgium

Opening Prayer (in the Mass) - The name now used only for short prayers before the Epistle in the Mass, which occur again at Lauds, Terce, Sext, None, and Vespers

Ophir - A people and a country mentioned in the Bible

Oporto - Diocese in Portugal

Oppenordt, Gilles-Marie - French rococo artist (1672-1742)

Oppido Mamertina - Diocese of Oppido Mamertina in Reggio Calabria, Italy

Optatus, Saint - Fairly long essay on the life and writings of this bishop, who argued against the Donatists. He died in about 387

Optimism - A metaphysical theory or an emotional disposition.

Option, Right of - In canon law, a way of obtaining a benefice or a title, by the choice of the new titulary himself.

O'Queely, Malachias - Archbishop of Tuam, Ireland (d. 1645)

Oracle - A Divine communication given at a special place through specially appointed persons; also the place itself.

Oran - Diocese in Algeria

Orange, Councils of - Two councils that were held in southern France

Orange Free State - One of the four provinces of the Union of South Africa

Orange River - Vicariate apostolic in South Africa

Orans - An iconographic type, commonly found in the Roman catacombs, of a female figure praying with extended arms

Orate Fratres - The exhortation addressed by the celebrant to the people before the Secrets in the Roman Mass

Oratorio - A musical composition for solo voices, chorus, orchestra, and organ, to a religious text generally taken from Holy Scripture.

Oratory - A structure other than a parish church, set aside by Church authority for prayer and the celebration of Mass

Oratory of Saint Philip Neri, The - Italian, Spanish, English, and other communities, which follow the rule of St. Philip Neri.

Oratory, French Congregation of the - Congregation founded in Paris at the beginning of the seventeenth century by Cardinal Pierre de Berulle

Orbellis, Nicolas d' - Franciscan theologian and philosopher and Scotist (1400-1475)

Orcagna - Florentine poet, artist and architect (d. 1368)

Orcistus - Titular see in Galatia Secunda.

Ordeals - A means of obtaining evidence by trials, through which the guilt or innocence of an accused person was supposedly established

Ordericus Vitalis - Norman historian (1075-1143)

Orders, Holy - The sacrament by which grace and spiritual power for the discharge of ecclesiastical offices are conferred.

Orders, The Military - A historical review of dozens of military orders

Ordinariate - This term is used in speaking collectively of all the various organs through which an ordinary, and especially a bishop, exercises the different forms of his authority.

Ordinary - Denotes any person possessing or exercising ordinary jurisdiction

Ordines Romani - The brief conspectus of the daily Office and Mass as adapted to the local calendar

Oregon - One of the Pacific Coast States

Oregon City - Former archdiocese in Oregon, United States

O'Reilly, Bernard - Irish-American historian (1820-1907)

O'Reilly, Edmund - Archbishop of Armagh (1616-1669)

O'Reilly, Edmund - English theologian (1811-1878)

O'Reilly, Hugh - Archbishop of Armagh (b. 1580)

O'Reilly, John Boyle - Poet, novelist, and editor (1844-1890)

O'Reilly, Myles William Patrick - Irish soldier, publicist, litterateur (1825-1880)

Oremus - Invitation to pray, said before collects and other short prayers and occurring continually in the Roman Rite.

Orense - Diocese and suffragan of Compostela in Spain

Oresme, Nicole - Article by Pierre Duhem on this medieval scientific thinker

Organ - A musical instrument which consists of one or several sets of pipes, each pipe giving only one tone, and which is blown and played by mechanical means.

Organic Articles, The - A name given to a law regulating public worship, comprising 77 articles relative to Catholicism, and 44 relative to Protestantism, presented by order of Napoleon to the Tribunate and the legislative body at the same time that he made these two bodies vote on the Concordat itself

Oria - Diocese near Brindisi in Italy

Oriani, Barnaba - Italian Barnabite and astronomer (1752-1832)

Oriental Study and Research - Comprises the scientific investigation and discussion of all topics -- linguistics, archaeology, ethnology, etc. -- connected with the East

Orientation of Churches - According to Tertullian the Christians of his time were, by some who concerned themselves with their form of worship, believed to votaries of the sun. . .

Orientius - Christian Latin poet of the fifth century.

Oriflamme - Legendary banner

Origen and Origenism - Provides a biography and review of his works, as well as commentary on posthumous influences and the Origenistic Crises

Original Sin - Original sin is (1) the sin that Adam committed; (2) a consequence of this first sin, the hereditary stain with which we are born on account of our origin or descent from Adam.

Orihuela - Diocese in Spain

Oriol, Saint Joseph - Earned a doctorate in theology, served as a parish priest, renowned for gifts of prophecy and miracles. St. Joseph died in 1702

Oristano - Diocese in Sardinia, Italy

Orkneys - A group of islands lying to the north of Scotland

Orlandini, Niccolò - Italian Jesuit (1554-1606)

Orléans - Diocese in France, suffragan of Paris

Orléans, Councils of - Six national councils held in the Merovingian period.

Orley, Barent Van - Belgian painter (1491-1542)

Orme, Philibert de l' - French architect (1512-1570)

Oropus - Titular see, suffragan of Anazarbus in Cilicia Secunda.

O'Rorke, Patrick Henry - Irish-American soldier, killed at Gettysburg (1837-1863)

Orosius, Paulus - Historian and Christian apologist (b. c. 380)

Orphans and Orphanages - The death of one or both parents makes the child of the very poor a ward of the community. . .

Orsi, Giuseppe Agostino - Florentine cardinal, theologian, and church historian (1692-1761)

Orsini - One of the most ancient and distinguished families of the Roman nobility, whose members often played an important role in the history of Italy

Orsisius - Egyptian monk of the fourth century

Ortelius, Abraham - Belgian cartographer, geographer and archeologist (1527-1598)

Orthodox Church - The body of Christians in union with the Patriarch of Constantinople but in schism with the Pope of Rome.

Orthodoxy - Right belief or purity of faith.

Orthodoxy, Feast of - Eastern feast that commemorates the restoration of the holy icons to the churches in 842

Orthosias - Titular see of Phoenicia Prima, suffragan of Tyre.

Ortolano Ferrarese - Painter of the Ferrara School (1490-1525)

Orval - Former Cistercian abbey in Luxemburg

Orvieto - Diocese in central Italy

Ory, Matthieu - French inquisitor and theologian (1492-1557)

Osaka - Large city in Japan

O Salutaris Hostia - Hymn used for the Benediction of the Most Blessed Sacrament

Osbald - King of Northumbria (d. 799)

Osbaldeston, Edward, Venerable - Profile of the English priest and martyr, who was executed at York in 1594

Osbern - English hagiographer (d. c. 1090)

Oscott (St. Mary's College) - Founded in England in 1793

Osee - The prophet and his book

Osimo - Diocese in Ascoli Piceno, Italy

Oslo, Ancient See of - Former diocese located in Norway

Osma - Diocese in Spain

Osmund, Saint - A Norman by birth, Osmund became bishop of Salisbury, and died in 1099

Osnabrück - Diocese in Germany, directly subject to the Holy See

Ossat, Arnaud d' - French cardinal, diplomat, and writer (1537-1604)

Ossory, Diocese of - Diocese in Ireland

Ostensorium - A vessel designed for the exhibition of some object of piety

Ostia and Velletri - Suburbicarian diocese near Rome

Ostiensis - Benedictine chronicler (1045-1115)

Ostracine - Titular see and suffragan of Pelusium in Augustamnica prima.

Ostraka, Christian - Inscriptions on clay, wood, metal, and other hard materials.

Ostrogoths - One of the two chief tribes of the Goths

O'Sullivan Beare, Philip - Irish writer (1590-1660)

Oswald, Saint - Archbishop of York, d. 992 while washing the feet of the poor, as was his daily custom during Lent

Oswald, Saint - King of Northumbria and martyr, d. 642

Oswin, Saint - Biography of the king and martyr, who was murdered in 651

Otfried of Weissenburg - The oldest German poet known by name (9th century)

Othlo - Benedictine monk of Ratisbon (1013-1072)

Othmar, Saint - First abbot of St. Gall. He died in prison in 759

Otho, Marcus Salvius - Details on the reign of Roman Emperor

O'Toole, Saint Lawrence - Confessor, abbot, and the first Irish-born bishop of Dublin, d. 1180

Otranto - An archdiocese and city in Apulia, southern Italy

Ottawa, Archdiocese of - Archdiocese of Ottawa in Canada

Ottawa, University of - Conducted by the Oblates of Mary Immaculate; founded in 1848.

Otto, Saint - Swabian courtier, was named bishop of Bamberg in 1102, and founded over twenty monasteries

Otto I, the Great - Roman emperor and German king (912-973)

Otto II - King of the Germans and Emperor of Rome (955-983)

Otto III - German king and Roman emperor (980-1002)

Otto IV - German king and Roman emperor (1182-1218)

Ottobeuren - Benedictine abbey in Bavaria

Otto of Freising - Bishop and historian (1111-1158)

Otto of Passau - Franciscan theologian

Otto of St. Blasien - German chronicler (d. 1223)

Ouen, Saint - Seventh-century Archbishop of Rouen, founder of several monasteries, devoted to theological studies, friend of St. Eloi

Our Father, The - Although the Latin term oratio dominica is of early date, the phrase 'Lord's Prayer' does not seem to have been generally familiar in England before the Reformation. During the Middle Ages the 'Our Father' was always said in Latin, even by the uneducated. Hence it was then most commonly known as the Pater noster

Our Lady, Help of Christians, Feast of - The invocation 'Help of Christians' originated in the sixteenth century.

Our Lady of Charity of the Good Shepherd - The aim of this institute is to provide a shelter for girls and women of dissolute habits, who wish to do penance for their iniquities and to lead a truly christian life

Our Lady of Good Counsel, Feast of - Feast honoring a popular Marian devotion

Our Lady of the Fields, Brothers of - A Canadian congregation founded in 1902 in the Diocese of Quebec by Father Brousseau.

Our Lady of the Snow - Feast commemorating the dedication of the church of Santa Maria Maggiore in Rome

Our Lady of Perpetual Help - A famous Byzantine-style picture painted on wood, with a background of gold

Our Lady of Perpetual Succour - A famous Byzantine-style picture painted on wood, with a background of gold

Overbeck, Friedrich - Convert and religious painter (1789-1869)

Overberg, Bernhard Heinrich - German ecclesiastic and educator (1754-1826)

Overpopulation, Theories of - Down to the end of the eighteenth century, very little attention was given to the relation between increase of population and increase of subsistence. . .

Oviedo - Diocese in Spain

Owen, Saint - Seventh-century Archbishop of Rouen, founder of several monasteries, devoted to theological studies, friend of St. Eloi

Owen, Saint Nicholas - A Jesuit lay brother, skilled in building hiding places for priests. He died under torture in 1606

Oxenford, John - English dramatist, critic, translator, and song-writer (1812-1877)

Oxenham, Henry Nutcombe - English controversialist and poet (1829-1888)

Oxford - Oxford, one of the most ancient cities in England, grew up under the shadow of a convent, said to have been founded by St. Frideswide as early as the eighth century. . .

Oxford, University of - Famous institution in England

Oxford Movement, The - Lengthy historical article on the Tractarian Movement includes information on John Henry Newman, as well as on other leading lights of this nineteenth-century Anglo-Catholic campaign, such as John Keble and Hurrell Froude

Oxyrynchus - Titular archdiocese of Heptanomos in Egypt.

Ozanam, Antoine-Frédéric - Great grand-nephew of Jacques Ozanam (1813-1853)

Ozanam, Jacques - French mathematician (1640-1717)

Ozias - Name of six Israelites mentioned in the Bible

P

Pacandus - Titular see, recorded under 'Pacanden.'



Pacca, Bartolommeo - Cardinal, scholar and statesman (1756-1844)

Pachomius, Saint - Hermit who founded a cenobitical community, d. 346. Some speculation on how and why St. Pachomius came up with the idea of the cenobitical life

Pachtler, George Michael - Controversial and educational writer (1825-1889)

Pacificus - Disciple of St. Francis of Assisi (d. 1234)

Pacificus of Ceredano, Blessed - Franciscan Observant priest, d. 1482

Pacificus of San Severino, Saint - Italian Franciscan. Hampered by blindness, deafness, and lameness for almost 29 years. Died 1721

Pacioli, Lucas - Tuscan mathematician (d. c. 1509)

Paderborn - Suffragan diocese of Cologne, Germany

Padilla, Juan de - Sixteenth-century protomartyr of the United States

Padua - Diocese in northern Italy

Padua, University of - University that dates, according to some anonymous chronicles, from 1222

Paganism - Paganism, in the broadest sense includes all religions other than the true one revealed by God, and, in a narrower sense, all except Christianity, Judaism, and Islam

Pagano, Mario - Jurisconsult and man of letters (1748-1799)

Page, Venerable Anthony - Biographical sketch of the English priest and martyr, who died in 1593

Pagi, Antoine - French ecclesiastical historian (1624-1699)

Pagi, François - French ecclesiastical historian, nephew of Antoine Pagi (1654-1721)

Pagnino, Santes - Italian Dominican (1470-1541)

Painting, Religious - Painting has always been associated with the life of the Church. . .

Pakawá Indians - Indian tribe in the region of Texas

Palæography - The art of deciphering ancient writing in manuscripts

Palæontology - Paleontology, the science of fossils, deals with extinct or prehistoric animals and plants

Palafox y Mendoza, Juan de - Spanish priest (1600-1659)

Palasor, Venerable Thomas - English priest and martyr. Article also has some details on the his companions in martyrdom the Bl. John Norton and John Talbot. Died in 1600

Palatinate, Rhenish - A former German electorate

Palatini - The designation, primarily, of certain high officials in the papal court

Palawan - Prefecture Apostolic in the Philippine Islands; comprises Palawan, Cuyo, Culion, Twahig, and Calamines Islands.

Palencia - Diocese in Spain

Paleopolis - Titular see of Asia Minor, suffragan of Ephesus

Paleotti, Gabriele - Cardinal and Archbishop of Bologna (1522-1597)

Palermo - City and archdiocese in Italy

Palermo, University of - The Convent of St. Dominic of Palermo may be considered the nucleus of the future University of Palermo. . .

Palestrina - Diocese and town in central Italy, near Rome

Palestrina, Giovanni Pierluigi da - The greatest composer of liturgical music of all time (1514-1594)

Paley, Frederick Apthorp - Classical scholar (1815-1888)

Pall - A heavy, black cloth, spread over the coffin in the church at a funeral, or over the catafalque at other services for the dead.

Pall, Funeral - A black cloth usually spread over the coffin while the obsequies are performed for a deceased person

Palladio, Andrea - Italian architect (1508-1580)

Palladius, Saint - Sent from Rome to Ireland in the mid-fifth century as a bishop

Palladius - Galatian writer (368-431)

Pallavicino, Pietro Sforza - Italian cardinal (1607-1667)

Pallium - A circular band about two inches wide, worn about the neck, and having two hanging pendants

Pallotti, Vincent Mary - Biography of the founder of the Pious Society of Missions, who are commonly known as the Pallottine Fathers. He died in 1850



Download 478.24 Kb.

Share with your friends:
1   ...   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   11   12




The database is protected by copyright ©ininet.org 2024
send message

    Main page