• 12th-century legal schools in Italy, France and Germany are identified as glossators in a specific sense. They studied Roman law based on the Digesta, the...
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    Institute. 2020-10-19. Retrieved 2021-02-09. "Glossator 11, Cristina Campo: translation/commentary". Glossator. 2021-07-01. Retrieved 2021-08-06. "The Unforgivable...
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  • Aldred the Scribe (also known as Aldred the Glossator) is the name by which scholars identify a tenth-century priest, otherwise known only as Aldred,...
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    which appears in medieval Roman law and is credited to 13th-century glossator Accursius; it was notably popularized in common law in Commentaries on...
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    1263, ending the early scholastics. The successors of the Glossators were the Post-Glossators or Commentators. They looked at a subject in a logical and...
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    Placentinus (died 1192) was an Italian jurist and glossator. Originally from Piacenza, he taught at the University of Bologna. From there he founded the...
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    while the monsters he battles were regarded as moral obstacles. One glossator noted that when Hercules became a constellation, he showed that strength...
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    four famous legal scholars in the 11th century who were students of the glossator school in that city. This served as the model for other law schools of...
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  • degrees were doctorates. The foundations of the first universities were the glossators of the 11th century, which were also schools of law. The first university...
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  • Nicola Masciandaro (ed.). Hideous Gnosis: Black Metal Theory Symposium. Glossator. pp. 106–108. "An Interview w/ Wolves in the Throne Room's Aaron Weaver"...
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    of Handiworks, Applied to the Art of Printing. Cisco, Michael (2013). Glossator: Practice and Theory of the Commentary. Vol. 8. CreateSpace Independent...
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    originated as a centre for the study of medieval Roman law under major glossators, including Irnerius. It numbered Dante, Boccaccio and Petrarch among its...
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    (1225–1293) was an Italian lawyer, the son of the celebrated jurist and glossator Accursius. The two are often confused. Born in Bologna, Franciscus was...
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    to Old English Literature. p. 278 Sauer, Hans (2008). "How Anglo-Saxon Glossators Adapted Latin words and their world". The Journal of Medieval Latin. 18:...
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  • 2015-03-11. Retrieved 2020-03-16. Hideous Gnosis – Transcendental Black Metal. Glossator. 8 March 2010. p. 53. Retrieved 6 June 2011. Castillo, Arielle (3 March...
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    glosses is a glossary. A collection of medieval legal glosses, made by glossators, is called an apparatus. The compilation of glosses into glossaries was...
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    ("lantern of the law"), was an Italian jurist, and founder of the School of Glossators and thus of the tradition of medieval Roman Law. He taught the newly recovered...
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    the recovery and annotation of Justinian's Corpus Juris Civilis by the glossators and their successors the commentators in the 11th–14th centuries. Particularly...
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  • Thumbnail for Lag BaOmer
    Aruch (Orach Chaim 493:2, and cf. 489:1 where BaOmer is inserted by a glossator). (The form Lag B'Omer ["33rd day of an Omer"] is also sometimes used...
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    "The Passion of Occitan", in Anna Klosowska and Valerie Wilhite (eds.), Glossator: Practice and Theory of the Commentary, Vol. 4: Occitan Poetry (2011)...
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    Susa (Hostiensis); Pope Innocent IX Irnerius, founder of the School of Glossators Joaquín Chapaprieta, former Prime Minister of Spain. Juan Fernando López...
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  • Pollen. Barque Press, 2006. "Tintern Abbey, Once Again," by J. H. Prynne. Glossator 1 (2009). "Difficulties in the Translation of 'Difficult' Poems" by J...
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    Notably in his work on Shams al-Din al-Khafri (died 1550), a Safavid glossator of the writings of the astronomers of Maragha, about whom Saliba writes:...
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  • contradictions. The commentators of the 12th and early 13th centuries, called glossators, such as Azo of Bologna and Accursius, produced large-scale harmonization...
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    or less forcefully reinterpreted as epithets of trees by the medieval glossators. McManus (1991, §3.15) discusses possible etymologies of all the letter...
    42 KB (5,534 words) - 11:52, 10 May 2024
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    influential Italian jurist and a member of the school of the so-called glossators. Born circa 1150 in Bologna, Azo studied under Joannes Bassianus and became...
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  • General of the Dominican order Johannes Teutonicus Zemeke (d. 1245) - glossator on the Decretum Gratiani, see Glossa Ordinaria This disambiguation page...
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  • doctorates. The foundations of the first universities in Europe were the glossators of the 11th century, which were schools of law. The first European university...
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  • Thumbnail for Wycliffe's Bible
    of Glossing: The Lord's Prayer (Pater noster) from Lindesfarne Gospels (698) with word-for-word Old English glosses (ca.970) by Aldred the Glossator...
    60 KB (7,369 words) - 03:25, 11 May 2024
  • 1245), also Joannes Simeca Teutonicus and John Zimeke, was a Decretist glossator, best known for his glosses on Gratian's Decretum in collaboration with...
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