, Brepols, 2023 Paperback, 348 pages, Size:156 x 234 mm, Illustrations:2 b/w, 2 tables b/w., Language(s):English, French. ISBN 9782503607726.
Summary This volume is the result of a workshop organized in Leuven within the context of the Australian Catholic University-KU Leuven-Tilburg University project on Vatican II (1962-1965). This volume focuses on the preparatory period of the Council and its broader context, for many renewal movements were underway decades before the Council's opening. The preparation of the Council was also a period of intense consultation of bishops and male superiors of religious orders and congregations. Indeed, John XXIII aimed at introducing an aggiornamento in the Roman Catholic Church, taking into account the wishes and the needs of bishops and superiors. The volume presented here offers new insights about this period on the basis of archives and other materials insufficiently consulted to date. The papers presented are the result of research by both senior scholars and junior researchers. They focus on the following issues: revelation, ecclesiology, ecumenism, and education. TABLE OF CONTENTS List of Contributors Introduction Part One: Historiography of Vatican II Chapter One: Historia, quae vitae magistra est (John XXIII): The History of Vatican II between Past and Future of Christian Faith Michael Quisinsky Part Two: Revelation Chapter Two: Some Pre-Conciliar Background to Dei Verbum: The Neo-Scholastic Manuals and Their Implied Models Ormond Rush Chapter Three: 'Throwing the Faith to Relativism?' On Understanding Scripture, Tradition, and Authority in the Long Run to Vatican II Karim Schelkens Chapter Four: Beyond the Scripture Sufficiency Debate: The Contribution of Yves Congar Andrew Meszaros Part Three: Church Chapter Five: The Vota of the Prelates of the Southern Cone Region on Ecclesiology and Laity Sandra Arenas Chapter Six: The Vota of the Episcopate of the Andean Region on Ecclesiology and Laity Rolando Iberico Ruiz Chapter Seven: The Australian Pre-Conciliar Ecclesiological Imagination: Exploring Metaphors of the Church from Vatican I to Vatican II in the Australian Landscape Antonia Pizzey Part Four: Eastern Catholic Churches and Ecumenism Chapter Eight: Le Cardinal Liénart et le Tout Action Catholique Catherine Masson Chapter Nine: The Vota of the Eastern Catholic Churches and the Reform of Eastern Canon Law Jose Maripurath Devassy, Astrid Kaptijn, Peter De Mey Chapter Ten: Universality in Time and Space: The Salvation Historical Turn in Catholic Ecclesiology against the Background of Pre-Conciliar Ecumenism Simon Beentjes Chapter Eleven: The Catholic Conference for Ecumenical Questions: A Representative Summa of Pre-conciliar European Catholic Ecumenism? Saretta Marotta Part Five: Education Chapter Twelve: Religious Education and the Re-Christianization of Western Europe in the Long 1950s: A Missed Opportunity? Stephen G. Parker Chapter Thirteen: Catechesis, Seminary Formation, and Schools on the Threshold of Vatican II: Expectations within the Vota Antepraeparatoria Isaak Deman Chapter Fourteen: De Scholis Catholicis: The Preparation of the Decree on Catholic Schools in the Preparatory Period Mathijs Lamberigts Index of Names
Matteo Favaretti Camposampiero, Mariangela Priarolo, Emanuela Scribano (eds)
Reference : 66060
, Brepols, 2019 Paperback, 293 pages, Size:156 x 234 mm, Illustrations:5 tables b/w., Languages: English, French. ISBN 9782503578170.
Summary Traditionally interpreted as an outcome of Cartesian dualism, in recent years occasionalism has undergone serious reassessment. Scholars have shifted their focus from the post-Cartesian debates on the mind-body problem to earlier discussions of body-body issues or even to the problem of causation as such. Occasionalism appears less and less a cheap solution to the mind-problem and more and more a family of theories on causation, which share the fundamental claim that all genuine causal powers belong to God. So why did the most spectacular emergence of occasionalism take place precisely in the post-Cartesian era? How did the scientific revolution and the need to fight back against the early modern resurgence of naturalism contribute to the success of occasionalist doctrines? This book provides a historical and theoretical map of occasionalism in all its various forms, with a special focus on its seventeenth-century supporters, adversaries, and polemical targets. These include not only canonical authors such as Cordemoy, La Forge, Malebranche, Spinoza, and Leibniz, but also less explored figures such as Clauberg, Clerselier, Fénelon, Fernel, Régis, and Regius. Furthermore, the book covers the earlier Arabic and Scholastic sources of occasionalism and its later developments in Berkeley, Wolff, and Hume. TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction (Matteo Favaretti Camposampiero, Mariangela Priarolo, Emanuela Scribano) I. God and the World God's Qudra (Power) and Natural Causality: Between Falsafa and Islamic Occasionalism (Cecilia Martini Bonadeo) Continuous Creation and Cartesian Occasionalism in Physics (Tad M. Schmaltz) Conservation as Continuous Creation: Just Like Creation but Not Necessarily Recreation (Sukjae Lee) Neither with Occasionalism nor with Concurrentism: The Case of Pierre-Sylvain Régis (Andrea Sangiacomo) II. Causality and the Laws of Nature Force de Loi: The Debate on the Laws of Nature and Malebranche's Occasionalism (Mariangela Priarolo) Malebranche, Occasionalism, and the Janus Faces of Law (Nicholas Jolley) III. Minds and Bodies Des trois notions primitives à Dieu: Le problème corps-esprit chez La Forge et chez Cordemoy (Sandrine Roux) La Forge's Mind-Body Problem: A Guide for the Perplexed (Steven Nadler) The Direction of Motion: Occasionalism and Causal Closure from Descartes to Leibniz (Matteo Favaretti Camposampiero) IV. Malebranche Reconsidered The Motivation of Malebranche's Occasionalism (Thomas M. Lennon) Extensions du domaine de l'occasionalisme: Les miracles de l'Ancien Testament et la distribution de la grâce dans le Traité de la nature et de la grâce de Malebranche (Denis Moreau) Connaissance et causalité: Les adversaires de Malebranche (Emanuela Scribano) Index
, Brepols, 2022 Hardback, 516 pages, Size:156 x 234 mm, Illustrations:36 tables b/w., Language: English. ISBN 9782503589664.
Summary This book explores the transmission of the letters of Leo the Great (pope, 440-461). After setting out the contours of Leo's papacy and the factors contributing to the sending and subsequent transmission of his letters to posterity, it deals in detail with around sixty collections of Leo's letters and over 300 manuscripts ranging in date from the sixth up to the sixteenth century. Each period of the Middle Ages is introduced as the context for collecting and copying the letters, and the relationships between the letter collections themselves are traced. The result is a survey of the impact of Leo the Great upon Latin Christendom, an impact that was felt in theology and canon law, especially from the age of the Emperor Justinian to the Council of Ferrara-Florence, and moving through the major monasteries of Europe from Corbie to Clairvaux. At every cultural Renaissance, Leo was a presence, being copied, rearranged, interpreted, and eventually printed. This book is a testament to the legacy of one of the mid-fifth century's most influential figures. TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction Chapter 1: Leo's Letters in History, Canon Law, and Theology 1.1 Leo's Letters in History and Canon Law; 1.2 Leo's Letters and the History of Theology Chapter 2: Editing Leo's Letters 2.1 Giovanni Andrea Bussi; 2.2 The Sixteenth Century; 2.3 The Seventeenth Century; 2.4 Pasquier Quesnel; 2.5 Giacomo and Pietro Ballerini; 2.6 Epistolae Arelatenses genuinae (MGH Epist. 3), ed. Gundlach; 2.7 Collectio Avellana I (CSEL 35), ed. Günther; 2.8 The Tome of Pope Leo the Great, by Blakeney; 2.9 Eduard Schwartz; 2.10 Carlos Silva-Tarouca; 2.11 Hubert Wurm; 2.12 Benedikt Vollmann; 2.13 Corpus Fontium Manichaeorum Series Latina 1; 2.14 The Case for a New, Complete, Critical Edition Chapter 3: Pre-Carolingian Canonical Collections 3.1 The Earliest, Unknown Period of Transmission 3.2 Pre-Carolingian Canonical Collections and the renaissance gélasienne: a. Collectio Frisingensis Prima (F); b. Collectio Diessensis (Di); c. Collectio Quesnelliana (Q); d. Collectio Vaticana (L); e. Collectio Sanblasiana (Sa); f. Collectio Dionysiana (D); g. Collectio Dionysiana Bobiensis (D-b); h. Cresconius, Concordia canonum; i. Collectio Teatina (Te); j. Collectio Corbeiensis (C); k. Collectio Pithouensis (P); l. Collectio (ecclesiae) Thessalonicensis (T); m. Collectio Avellana; n. Collectio Arelatensis (Ar); o. Collectio Albigensis (Al); p. Collectio Remensis (Re); q. Collectio Coloniensis (K); r. Collectio Sancti Mauri (M); s. Collectio Vetus Gallica; t. Epitome Hispana; u. Collectio Hispana (S); v. Collectio Hispana Systematica; w. Ragyndrudis Codex (Codex Bonifatianus II) Chapter 4: Chalcedonian Collections Context of the Collections; 4.1 Latin Chalcedonian Collections: a. Ballerini Collection 17 (Early Latin Acta; Ac); b. Collection of Vat. lat. 1322 (A); c. Rusticus' Acta (Ru); d. Versio Gestorum Chalcedonensium antiqua correcta (Ch); e. Collectio Novariensis (N); f. Collectio Casinensis (Ca); g. Collectio Grimanica (G); h. Codex Encyclius; i. Verona LIX (57); j. A Carolingian fragment of the Tome 4.2 The Greek Transmission of Leo's Letters: a. Collection M; b. Collection B; c. Collection H Chapter 5: The Carolingian Tradition of Manuscripts 5.1 The Carolingian Context 5.2 Carolingian Canonical Collections: a. Collectio Dionysio-Hadriana (D-h); b. Collectio Hadriano-Hispanica (H-s); c. Collectio Dionysiana adaucta (D-a); d. Collectio Hispana Gallica (S-g); e. Collectio Hispana Gallica Augustodunensis (S-ga); f. Pseudo-Isidorus Mercator, Decretales (I); i. Context; ii. Hinschius' Classification System; iii. Hinschius A/B & B (Ballerini Collection 10; I-b); iv. Hinschius A1 (I-a); v. The Cluny Recension, or Yale Pseudo-Isidore (Y); vi. Hinschius Class C (I-c); g. The canon law manuscript Vat. Reg. lat. 423; h. Systematic as well as Unorganised Collections of Extracted Canons 5.3 Other Carolingian Collections; a. Collectio Bobbiensis (B); b. Collectio Ratisbonensis (E); c. Ep. 28 in the Roman Homiliary; d. Ep. 28 in the Homiliary of Agimond Chapter 6: Post-Carolingian Collections and the Age of Reform 6.1 Introduction to the High and Late Mediaeval Contexts 6.2 Post-Carolingian Canonical Collections: a. Collectio Lanfranci; b. Collectio Britannica; c. The Collection of William of Malmesbury; d. Systematic as well as Unorganised Collections of Extracted Canons Before Gratian; e. The Concordia discordantium canonum (Decretum) of Gratian 6.3 Other Post-Carolingian Collections: a. Ballerini Collection 20; b. Ballerini Collection 21 (Y-a); c. Ballerini Collection 22 (22); d. Ballerini Collection 23 (23); e. Ballerini Collection 24 (24); f. Collectio Florentina (Ballerini Collection 13; m); g. Collection of 73 Letters (73); h. Ashburnham 1554; i. Collection of Vat. Reg. lat. 293; j. An eleventh-century pair of Leo's letters; k. Milanese Sermon Collection D; l. Ambrosiana C.50.inf.; m. Vat. Ross. 159; n. Eugenius IV's collection; o. Later Manuscripts of the Tome; p. Other high and late medieval manuscripts with only one Leo letter Chapter 7: Conspectus of the Letters of Pope Leo the Great Conclusion Appendix: Proto-Collections Analysed in this Book Bibliography of Primary Sources Bibliography of Secondary Works
MAUDUY, Jacques ; HENRIET, Gérard (préface de Philippe Joutard)
Reference : 90873
(1989)
1989 Editions Nathan-Université, Coll. "Cinéma et image" - 1989 - In-8 broché couverture illustrée - 252 pages
Bon état - coin inférieur droit corné - légère insolation sur le dos Bon
, Brepols, 2021 Paperback, xvi + 140 pages, Size:216 x 280 mm, Illustrations:107 b/w, Language: English. ISBN 9782503591261.
Summary During the Roman era, when the ancient city of Palmyra was at the height of its powers, several thousand funerary portraits were sculpted, each carefully crafted to represent the men, women, and children who had once lived there as members of the Palmyrene elite. In their commemorative monuments, these individuals were given specific attributes to express their social status, wealth, identity, and skills. This volume provides an in-depth exploration of different aspects of these funerary portraits, and illuminates in particular the addition of attributes and how and why they were used by both artists and their patrons. The eight contributions gathered here examine the range of choices available to commissioners of art works in Palmyra, the prevalence or rarity of specific attributes, and the ways in which the variation and selection of attributes could be used in funerary, religious, or public contexts to express social cohesion and group identity, as well as to demonstrate individuality. Crucially, while these funerary monuments may be closely associated with Palmyra, they in fact provide clear evidence of the city's relationships across the wider region: examination of the different attributes suggests that the Palmyrenes were aware of how these were used, perceived, and adapted by neighbouring people as a way of transmitting various social meanings and expressing their own values. TABLE OF CONTENTS Table of Contents List of Illustrations Attributes in Palmyrene Funerary Sculpture: Functions and Meanings - MAURA HEYN AND RUBINA RAJA The 'Fringed' Mantle and its Relation to Gender in Palmyrene Funerary Sculpture - FRED ALBERTSON Plants in Palmyrene Funerary Iconography of Adults - OLYMPIA BOBOU Unlocking a Mystery? The Keys in Palmyrene Funerary Portraiture - RIKKE RANDERIS THOMSEN Significance of the Drinking Attributes in Palmyrene Banquet Scenes - MAURA HEYN Adornment and Jewellery as a Status Symbol in Priestly Representations in Roman Palmyra: The Palmyrene Priests and their Brooches - RUBINA RAJA A Symbol of a City. The Iconography of the Palmyrene Coinage - NATHALIA B. KRISTENSEN Why No Attributes? Expressions of Status and Social Realities in the Epigraphy of Palmyra - JEAN-BAPTISTE YON Index
, Brepols, 2023 Paperback, xiv + 180 pages, Size:216 x 280 mm, Illustrations:45 b/w, 63 col., 1 tables b/w., 1 maps b/w, Language: English. ISBN 9782503603964.
Summary The funerary art that was produced in Roman Palmyra, a caravan city in the Syrian steppe desert, is rightly world-renowned. The frontal depictions of the deceased, featured in torso-length portraits, and the large-scale banqueting scenes are iconic, and lent an added mystique by the absence of any literary sources that might aid in their interpretation. But while from a distance these exquisite portraits might seem rather formulaic, when examining more closely, it is clear that these scenes reveal a surprisingly rich and varied funerary décor. Alongside the more popular iconographic choices are singular scenes, motifs, and elements that deviate from the norm, while new patterns and connections between Palmyra and its surroundings are identifiable. This volume, which draws on the vast materials gathered under the auspices of the Palmyra Portrait Project directed by Professor Rubina Raja, explores the 'oddities' raised by the Palmyrene corpus; it examines one-off scenes or elements, and unusual or unparalleled iconographical choices, and it questions how and why such unusual choices should be interpreted. The chapters gathered here not only focus on these visual 'hapax legomena' in Palmyra, but also explore the city's connections with the art of Roman centres to the west, as well as the nearby Hellenistic city states, regional centres of production, and Parthian and Persian sites to the east. Through this approach, the authors engage with the visual richness and sheer amount of choice that existed in Palmyrene funerary art, while also providing unique insights into the knowledge culture that existed within Palmyrene society. TABLE OF CONTENTS List of Illustrations Abbreviations 1. Unusual Iconographies, Choices, Musts, and Sculptural Traditions in Palmyra Maura K. Heyn and Rubina Raja 2. Hunting with Birds in Palmyra: Iconographic Evidence for the Activities of Elite Youths in the Period AD 100-200 Olympia Bobou 3. Playing Games in the Palmyrene Tomb Maura K. Heyn 4. The Phrygian Cap in Palmyrene Art Fred C. Albertson 5. Representation of Fish in the Palmyrene Tesserae Aleksandra Kubiak-Schneider 6. A Palmyrene Relief of Nemesis from Dura-Europos Lisa R. Brody 7. Anomalies in Funerary Representation Encountered in the Course of the WPAIP's Research Jeremy M. Hutton 8. Luxury Jewellery in Palmyrene Funerary Art: Necklaces with Portrait Busts Carried by Women Represented in the Funerary Sculpture Rubina Raja 9. As Close as You Can Get: Mourning Women in Palmyrene Funerary Art Rubina Raja 10. Palmyrene Double Reliefs and their Value Julia Steding Index
Flammarion 1947 170 pages in12. 1947. Cartonné. 170 pages.
Etat Correct coiffe haut abimée
Editions Flammarion, 1944, illustrations hors texte de Pierre NOEL, couverture à rabats illustrée en couleurs, broché, 224pp. pliure discrète au premier plat, bon état général, 190x120 . (p2)
Phone number : 33 05 49 26 70 36
Editions Hemma, 1967, cartonnage pelliculé éditeur, couverture illustrée, 126pp. bon état, 230x165. (p3)
Illustrations couleurs hors texte et dans le texte en noir de OKLEY .
Phone number : 33 05 49 26 70 36
Cinéma-Bibliothèque n° 295 - TALLANDIER (1930) - Fascicule in-8 broché (16 x 24) de 96 pages - Couverture photo couleurs - Avec 29 pages hors-textes d'après les photographies du film édité par Aubert-Franco-Film - Très bon état
Super Noire n° 74 - GALLIMARD (1977) - Broché de 248 pages - Couverture photo noir et blanc de Gérard BOUSQUET - Traduit de l'américain par France-Marie WATKINS - Etat neuf
Collection dirigée par Marcel DUHAMEL
Collection Western n° 106 - Librairie des Champs-Elysées (1974) - In-12 broché de 192 pages - Couverture en couleurs - Traduit de l'américain par Jean-André Rey - Très bon état
Oxford University Press USA 2000 240 pages 13 92x1 83x20 85cm. 2000. Broché. 240 pages. Ce livre de James McEvoy est une introduction accessible à la vie et à la pensée de Robert Grosseteste (c.1168-1253) une figure majeure du Moyen Âge anglais. Il présente Grosseteste comme l'initiateur de la tradition scientifique anglaise l'un des premiers chanceliers de l'Université d'Oxford et un commentateur important des œuvres d'Aristote
Très Bon Etat proche du neuf
Oxford University Press U.S.A 1987 584 pages 13 6x3 6x21 4cm. 1987. Broché. 584 pages.
Très Bon Etat de conservation intérieur propre bonne tenue tranche du bas un peu ternie
Couverture souple. Broché. Format de poche. 188 pages.
Livre. Traduit de l'américain par Jean-André Rey. Librairie des Champs-Elysées (Collection : Western. N° 134), 1975.
Collection Western n° 134 - Librairie des Champs-Elysées (1975) - In-12 broché de 192 pages - Couverture en couleurs - Traduit de l'américain par Jean-André Rey - Très bon état
Cambridge University Press 1990 286 pages 15 24x22 86x1 8288cm. 1990. Broché. 286 pages.
Bon état dos un peu creusé et ridé intérieur propre
1948 Éditions "Aventures et Voyages", collection "Mon Journal présente" N°1 - 1948 - Publication mensuelle - In-4, broché, couverture illustrée en couleurs - 11 planches en N&B - Édition originale
Très bel état de collectionneur, très rare en cet état - Une marque de pli sur la première de couverture Bon
1949 Éditions "Aventures et Voyages", collection "Mon Journal présente" N°3 - 1949 - Publication mensuelle - In-4, broché, couverture illustrée en couleurs - 11 planches en N&B - Édition originale
Bon état - Couverture frottée Bon
1949 Éditions "Aventures et Voyages", collection "Mon Journal présente" N°5 - 1949 - Publication mensuelle - In-4, broché, couverture illustrée en couleurs - 11 planches en N&B - Édition originale
Bon état - Couverture frottée Bon
Metropolitan Museum of Art 1986 22 606x3 81x29 972cm. 1986. Broché.
Très Bon Etat de conservation intérieur propre bonne tenue quelques rides sur le dos bords un peu frottés
Casterman Album cartonné 2014 In-4 (24 x 32 cm), album cartonné, 110 pages, dédicace de Metter ; très bel état. Livraison a domicile (La Poste) ou en Mondial Relay sur simple demande.
EUD 2008 288 pages 13 208x1 778x21 336cm. 2008. Broché. 288 pages.
Bon état notes sur l'achevé d'imprimer intérieur propre par ailleurs
, Brepols, 2019 Paperback, xviii + 232 pages, Size:216 x 280 mm, Illustrations:229 col., 1 tables b/w., Language: English. ISBN 9782503576336.
Summary This volume provides a unique survey of locally produced funerary representations from across regions of ancient Syria, exploring material ranging from reliefs and statues in the round, to busts, mosaics, and paintings in order to offer a new and holistic approach to our understanding of ancient funerary portraiture. Up to now, relatively little attention has been paid to the way in which local and regional production of material in this area formed part of a broader pattern of sculptural and iconographical development across the Roman Near East. By drawing on material from an area encompassing modern Lebanon, Jordan, Syria, and Turkey, as well as Egypt and Achaia, the contributions in this book make it possible for the first time to take a wider perspective on the importance of funerary portraiture within Greater Roman Syria, and in doing so, to identify influences, connections, and iconographical analogies present throughout the region, as well as local differences, larger-scale boundaries, and ruptures in traditions that occurred across time and place. TABLE OF CONTENTS Michael Blömer & Rubina Raja, Funerary Portraits in Roman Greater Syria - Time for a Reappreciation Michael Blömer & Rubina Raja, Shifting the Paradigms: Towards a New Agenda in the Study of the Funerary Portraiture of Greater Roman Syria Andrea U. De Giorgi, 'Til Death Do Us Part: Commemoration, Civic Pride, and Seriality in the Funerary Stelai of Antioch on the Orontes Michael Blömer, The Diversity of Funerary Portraiture in Roman Commagene and Cyrrhestice Jutta Rumscheid, Different from the Others: Female Dress in Northern Syria Based on Examples from Zeugma and Hierapolis Michael A. Speidel, Roman Soldiers' Gravestones in Greater Syria: Thoughts on Designs, Imports, and Impact Rubina Raja, Funerary Portraiture in Palmyra: Portrait Habit at a Crossroads or a Signifier of Local Identity? Signe Krag, Palmyrene Funerary Female Portraits: Portrait Tradition and Change Achim Lichtenberger & Rubina Raja, Portrait Habit and the Funerary Portraiture of the Decapolis Karl-Uwe Mahler, Funerary Portraiture from the Coastal Region of Roman Syria Bilal Annan, Petrified Memories: On Some Funerary Portraits from Roman Phoenicia C. H. Hallett, Mummies with Painted Portraits from Roman Egypt and Personal Commemoration at the Tomb Sheila Dillon, Attic Funerary Portraiture in the Roman Period
Le Masque, collection "Western", n° 18, 1968. Format poche.Tres bon etat.