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 3,651–3,700 of 7,334 editor-approved links.
First Bishop of Merseburg, in the present Prussian Province of Saxony, and Apostle of the Wends, d. November, 970.
French bishop and orator. (1627-1704)
A titular see situated in Phoenicia.
French Jesuit. (1690-1743)
One of the medieval English names for Palm Sunday.
French writer of memoirs, b. in 1539, or a little later; d. 15 July, 1614.
In the Christian liturgy bread is used principally as one of the elements of the Eucharistic sacrifice.
Diocese situated in the Dutch province of Brabant and suffragan of Utrecht.
German historian, born at Puffendorf in Germany, 6 September, 1640; died at the same place about 1713.
Known also as Aquapontanus, historian of the Catholic confessors under Queen Elizabeth, born in Yorkshire about 1532; died probably at Trier, about 1596.
These publications derive their origin and their title from the Rev. Francis Henry Egerton, eighth and last Earl of Bridgewater.
Flemish painter and engraver, born at Antwerp, 1556; died in Rome, 7 October, 1626.
Called by the Romans Brundusium or Brundisium, by the Greeks Brentesion, a city of in the province of Lecce, in Apulia, on a rocky peninsula which extends into the Adriatic.
Historian, b. in Portugal, 1496; d. 20 October, 1570.
Church historian, born at Horb in Würtemberg in 1819, studied theology at the University of Tubingen, was appointed parish priest of Buhl near Rottenburg in 1853, where he died in 1897.
French statesman and historian. (1821-1901)
A Jesuit missionary, born 1724 at Magnac, Angoumois, France; died 1782.
A versatile and voluminous writer. (1814-1893)
A soldier, diplomatist, and author, born 1610; died 1711.
A European kingdom in the northeastern part of the Balkan Peninsula.
Dominican historian and theologian. (1673-1747)
A receptacle in which, for reasons of convenience xnd reverence, the folded corporal is carried to and from the altar.
One of the most celebrated Benedictine monasteries in Germany in the Middle Ages. Founded in 1093 by Duke Henry of Nordheim and his wife Gertrude.
Irish Abbess. (1641-1723)
Friar Minor and missionary, d. 1474 or 1477.
Martyr and parish priest of Our Lady's Church at Calais, accused of being concerned in a plot to betray Calais to the French.
Suffragan diocese of the Archdiocese of Olmutz, embracing the south-western part of Moravia.
A notable Florentine painter, b. in Florence, 14 October, 1427; d. there, 29 August, 1499.
A group in the western part of the Mediterranean belonging to Spain and consisting of four larger islands, Majorca, Minorca, Iviza, and Formentera, and eleven smaller islands of rocky formation.
A noted canonist, b. at Guimaraens, Portugal, in 1589; consecrated in Rome, 22 March, 1649, Bishop of Ugento in Otranto, Italy, died seven months later.
Scottish ecclesiastic and author of "The Bruce", a historical poem in the early Scottish or Northern English dialect, b. about 1320; d. 1395.
An outgrowth of the ecclesiastical schools founded in the eleventh century.
Canonist, and man of letters, b. at San Concordia, near Pisa about 1260; d. at Pisa, 11 June, 1347.
The name given to Armenian monks who sought refuge in Italy after the invasion of their country by the Sultan of Egypt in 1296.
Priests of the Community of St. Basil.
Bishop and ecclesiastical writer, date of birth uncertain; d., probably, between 458 and 460.
Regular Canon and economist, b. at Amboise, France, 25 April, 1730; d. in 1792.
Franciscan, who taught theology and metaphysics at the convent of St. Francis of Mexico.
A French Bishop, b. in 1527, at Tours; d. 1606 in Paris.
Knight; b. 1509; d. 1583.
Known also as Albertus Bohemus.
Bishop of Osnabrück.
French theologian. (1715-1790)
Archbishop of Bordeaux. (1375-1457)
Capital of the German Empire and of the Kingdom of Prussia.
Article provides religious and historic information.
French Bishop. (1762-1806)
A French cardinal and statesman, b. 1715 at Saint-Marcel-d'Ardèche; d. at Rome, 1794.
Article covers a French Cardinal, theologian, and canonist, b. 1280 at Annonay in Vivarais, and a French cardinal, nephew of the foregoing, whose name he adopted, b. in 1279, at Colombier in Vivarais.
A Franciscan missionary, b. at Betanzos in Galicia; d. at Chomez, Nicaragua, 1570.