Religion and Spirituality
Subcategories
Browse by subcategory.
- 0117 linksBrowse
- 025 linksBrowse
- 038 linksBrowse
- 044 linksBrowse
- 054 linksBrowse
- 0614 linksBrowse
- 0713 linksBrowse
- 08144 linksBrowse
- 095,784 linksBrowse
- 101 linksBrowse
- 111 linksBrowse
- 121 linksBrowse
- 1399 linksBrowse
- 148 linksBrowse
- 15123 linksBrowse
- 161 linksBrowse
- 171 linksBrowse
- 187 linksBrowse
- 197 linksBrowse
- 2084 linksBrowse
- 219 linksBrowse
- 221 linksBrowse
- 232 linksBrowse
- 24104 linksBrowse
- 252 linksBrowse
- 26198 linksBrowse
- 2710 linksBrowse
- 285 linksBrowse
- 297 linksBrowse
- 305 linksBrowse
- 3179 linksBrowse
- 327 linksBrowse
- 332 linksBrowse
- 341 linksBrowse
- 3569 linksBrowse
- 3683 linksBrowse
- 373 linksBrowse
- 3843 linksBrowse
- 393 linksBrowse
- 407 linksBrowse
- 411 linksBrowse
- 423 linksBrowse
- 4321 linksBrowse
- 445 linksBrowse
- 459 linksBrowse
- 462 linksBrowse
- 4735 linksBrowse
- 4834 linksBrowse
- 4987 linksBrowse
- 504 linksBrowse
- 51166 linksBrowse
- 521 linksBrowse
Listings
All links in this category.
Showing 3,501–3,550 of 7,334 editor-approved links.
Brother of St. Bridget the Younger and archdeacon of Fiesole, d. about 877.
Entered the convent at the age of 9, commissioned by the pope to found a monastery at the age of 13 (and 2 years later she was made its superior), also founded a Dominican convent, d. 1317.
Archbishop of Florence, Dominican reformer, moral theologian, d. 1459.
Sister or niece of Pepin of Landen. Amalberga was married to Witger; they both entered monastic life. Also called St. Amelia.
Deacon, founder of the English Franciscan Province, d. 1236.
Polish Jesuit priest and missionary, martyred in 1657.
Counselor to the King of Sicily, joined the Augustinians, renowned for his knowledge of civil and ecclesiastical law, served as the pope's confessor, was General of his Order.
Huron missionary, born at Dieppe, in Normandy, 27 May 1601, slain by the Iroquois.
A Hebrew word signifying: ruin, destruction (Job 31:12); place of destruction; the Abyss, realm of the dead (Job 26:6; Proverbs 15:11).
A titular see in the province of Rhodope on the southern coast of Thrace, now called Bouloustra.
Apocryphal writer.
Indian tribe, linguistically of Guaycuru stock.
Covers definition, causes, and physical effects.
French bishop, born at the Château de Raconis in 1580 of a Calvinistic family; died 1646.
A learned Maronite, born in Hekel, or Ecchel (hence his surname), a village on Mount Lebanon, in 1600; died 1664 in Rome.
A titular see of Troas in Asia Minor, suffragan of Cyzicus in the Hellespontic province.
Historical and bibliographical notes concerning the more important of these associations of learned men.
Son of Amri and King of Israel.
Philologist, Latin poet, and convert to the Catholic Church. (1567-1595)
Name of several Italian cardinals.
A poem the initial or final letters of whose verses form certain words or sentences.
An English chronicler of about the middle of the fourteenth century.
Located in Denmark.
Spanish novelist and poet. (1833-1891)
Adoption, as defined in canon law, is foreign to the Bible.
An Italian bishopric, suffragan to Venice.
According to 1907 usage, a period beginning with the Sunday nearest to the feast of St. Andrew the Apostle and embracing four Sundays.
Reigned 867-872.
A series of enactments concerning ecclesiastical matters, drawn up by Matthew Parker, Archbishop of Canterbury (1559-75).
A Neo-Platonic philosopher, a convert to Christianity, who flourished towards the end of the fifth century.
A Roman general, patrician, and consul, b. towards the end of the fourth century; d. 454.
One of the names given by the Donatists to those of their followers who went through cities and villages to disseminate the doctrine of Donatus.
Archiepiscopal see of the ancient kingdom of Croatia, in Austria, founded towards the end of the eleventh century as a suffragan of Kalocsa in Hungary, and made an archdiocese in 1852.
Theories and movements intended to benefit the poorer classes of society by dealing in some way with the ownership of land or the legal obligations of the cultivators.
Bishop of Carthage at the close of the second and beginning of the third century.
Composer. (1779-1867)
A city of Upper Egypt, situated on the banks of the Nile.
Theologian. (1549-1624)
Manichæan heretics who lived in Albania, probably about the eighth century.
Italian family said to be descended from Albanian refugees of the fifteenth century. Includes information on six family members.
Diocese comprising seventy-nine towns in the province of Port Maurice and forth-five in the province of Genoa, suffragan to the Archdiocese of Genoa, Italy.
Archbishop, of Trier born about 1080; died 1152.
First Archbishop of San Francisco. (1814-1888)
Diocese made up of 42 communes in the province of Cagliari, Archbishopric of Oristano, Italy.
Reigned 1254-61.
Tragic poet of Italy. (1749-1803)
A learned Greek of the seventeenth century. (1586-1669)
A Milanese Dominican who won distinction as a historian, archaeologist, and antiquary. (1715-1785)
One of the English priests who were victims of the plots of 1679-80.
Jesuit missionary. (1571-1653)