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596

A Wisdom Archive on 596

596

A selection of articles related to 596

More material related to 596 can be found here:
Index of Articles
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596
596

ARTICLES RELATED TO 596

596: Encyclopedia - Augustine of Canterbury

Augustine of Canterbury (birth unknown, died May 26, 604) was the first Archbishop of Canterbury, sent to Ethelbert of Kent, Bretwalda of England by Pope Gregory the Great in 597. He was accompanied by Laurence of Canterbury, the second archbishop. In 596, Augustine was praepositus (prior) of the monastery of Saint Andrew, founded by Pope Gregory I, and was sent by Gregory at the head of forty monks to preach to the Anglo-Saxons. They lost heart on the way and Augustine went back to Rome from Provence and asked that the mission be given up. The pope, however, commanded and encouraged them to proceed, ...

Read more here: » Augustine of Canterbury: Encyclopedia - Augustine of Canterbury

596: Encyclopedia - Archbishopric of Trier

The Bishopric and Archbishopric of Trier was one of the important ecclesiastical principalities of the Holy Roman Empire. Unlike the other Rhenish archbishoprics— Mainz and Cologne— Trier, as the important Roman provincial capital of Augusta Treverorum, had been the seat of a bishop since Roman times. It was raised to to archepiscopal status during the reign of Charlemagne, whose will mentio ...

Including:

Read more here: » Archbishopric of Trier: Encyclopedia - Archbishopric of Trier

596: Encyclopedia - Canterbury

Canterbury is a cathedral city in the City of Canterbury district of Kent in South East England. Canterbury is the seat of the Archbishop of Canterbury, the primate of the Church of England, and head of the world-wide Anglican Communion. In this latter role, he is the second most important Christian leader in Europe. Canterbury - History. Canterbury - Early history. There has been a settlement in Canterbury since prehistoric times. Bronze Age finds, and Neo ...

Including:

Read more here: » Canterbury: Encyclopedia - Canterbury

596: Encyclopedia - Bede

Bede (Latin Beda), also known as Saint Bede or, more commonly, the Venerable Bede (ca. 672 – May 27, 735), was a monk at the Northumbrian monastery of Saint Peter at Wearmouth (today part of Sunderland), and of its companion monastery, Saint Paul's, in modern Jarrow. He is well known as an author and scholar, whose best-known work, Historia ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum (The Ecclesiastical History of the English People) gained him the title "The father of English History". Bede wrote on many other ...

Including:

Read more here: » Bede: Encyclopedia - Bede

596: Encyclopedia - Year 2038 problem

In computing, the year 2038 problem may cause some computer software to fail in or about the year 2038. The problem affects programs that use the POSIX time representation, which represents time as the number of seconds (ignoring leap seconds) since January 1, 1970. This representation is standard in Unix-like operating systems and also affects software written for most other operating systems because of the broad deployment of C. On most 32-bit systems, the time_t data type used to store this second count is a signed 32-bit ...

Read more here: » Year 2038 problem: Encyclopedia - Year 2038 problem

596: Encyclopedia II - Pope Gregory I - Lombards

Gregory's independent action in appointing governors to cities, providing munitions of war, giving instructions to generals, sending ambassadors to the Lombard king, and even negotiating a peace without consulting the Emperor's legate, Romanus, Exarch of Ravenna, mark the decisive acts that revealed the papacy as an independent temporal power. Gregory's childhood in the disasters of the Gothic War, his secular cursus honorum, his sojourn in Constantinople, and doubtless his personal assessment of the Exarch, convinced him that no help ...

See also:

Pope Gregory I, Pope Gregory I - Confrontation with Eutychius, Pope Gregory I - Gregory as pope, Pope Gregory I - Lombards, Pope Gregory I - Servus servorum Dei, Pope Gregory I - Works, Pope Gregory I - Bibliography

Read more here: » Pope Gregory I: Encyclopedia II - Pope Gregory I - Lombards

596: Encyclopedia II - Henana of Adiabene - Christological dispute

Theodore held that a union of the two natures in Christ was unthinkable. Henana on the other hand favored a union of the two natures, the divine and the mortal, in Christ in one hypostasis, as specified in Chalcedon in 451. Accordingly, he believed in God's suffering on the Cross, impossible without a union between the two natures, and he accepted the decisions of Ephesus and believed that the term 'mother of God' was appropriate for the Virgin Mary. Theodore had taught that man was created mortal. Henana believed that Adam was initia ...

See also:

Henana of Adiabene, Henana of Adiabene - Christological dispute, Henana of Adiabene - Origenism, Henana of Adiabene - Growing opposition, Henana of Adiabene - Legacy of Henana

Read more here: » Henana of Adiabene: Encyclopedia II - Henana of Adiabene - Christological dispute

596: Encyclopedia II - History of the Roman Catholic Church - Prologue: The ministry of Jesus of Nazareth c. 4 BC – AD 33

The Roman Catholic Church was founded on the person and teachings of Jesus of Nazareth, known as Jesus Christ, "Christ" meaning the same as "Messiah". Jesus was a carpenter from the region of Galilee and observed the Jewish faith. Roman Catholicism thus considers itself a successor religion to Judaism with the Christian God and the God of the Jews seen as one and the same. Some suppose that Jesus, when twelve years old, experienced a revelation in Herod's Temple in Jerusalem, realizing that he was the Son of God. This is an interpreta ...

See also:

History of the Roman Catholic Church, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Prologue: The ministry of Jesus of Nazareth c. 4 BC – AD 33, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Early Catholic Church 34 AD – 313 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Roman Empire 313 AD – 476 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Dark Ages 476 AD – 850 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Middle Ages 800 AD – 1499 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Renaissance 1500 AD – 1629 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Age of Reason 1630 AD – 1799 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - 19th Century Catholic Church 1800 AD – 1899 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - 20th Century Catholic Church 1901 AD – 2000 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - 21st Century Catholic Church 2001 AD – PRESENT, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates

Read more here: » History of the Roman Catholic Church: Encyclopedia II - History of the Roman Catholic Church - Prologue: The ministry of Jesus of Nazareth c. 4 BC – AD 33

596: Encyclopedia II - Giotto mission - Mission

On March 13, 1986, Giotto approached at a 596 kilometre distance from Halley's nucleus. The spaceprobe "Giotto" from the European Space Agency was designed to study Halley's Comet. The spacecraft was named after the medieval Italian painter Giotto di Bondone. He had observed Halley's Comet in 1301 and was inspired to depict it as the star of Bethlehem in his painting The Christmas Story. Originally a United States partner probe was planned that would accompany Giotto, but this fell through due to budget cuts at NASA. There were ...

See also:

Giotto mission, Giotto mission - Mission, Giotto mission - The craft, Giotto mission - Timeline, Giotto mission - Results, Giotto mission - External link

Read more here: » Giotto mission: Encyclopedia II - Giotto mission - Mission

596: Encyclopedia II - History of the Roman Catholic Church - Prologue: the ministry of Jesus of Nazareth c 4 BC – 33 AD

The Roman Catholic Church was founded on the teachings of Jesus of Nazareth, also known as Jesus Christ. Jesus, himself, was a carpenter from the region of Galilee and practiced as a member of the Jewish faith. Roman Catholicism, therefore, considers itself to be a successor religion to Judaism with the Christian God and the God of the Jews seen as one and the same. The development of the religion which would eventually become Christianity began for Jesus at a young age. Church tradition holds that, sometime in his early teens, Jesus ...

See also:

History of the Roman Catholic Church, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Prologue: the ministry of Jesus of Nazareth c 4 BC – 33 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Early Catholic Church 34 AD – 313 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Roman Empire 313 AD – 476 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Dark Ages 476 AD – 850 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Middle Ages 800 AD – 1499 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Renaissance 1500 AD – 1629 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Age of Reason 1630 AD – 1799 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - 19th Century Catholic Church 1800 AD – 1899 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - 20th Century Catholic Church 1901 AD – 2000 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - 21st Century Catholic Church 2001 AD – PRESENT, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates

Read more here: » History of the Roman Catholic Church: Encyclopedia II - History of the Roman Catholic Church - Prologue: the ministry of Jesus of Nazareth c 4 BC – 33 AD

596: Encyclopedia II - History of the Church of England - The Augustinian Mission

Ethelbert of Kent's wife Bertha, daughter of Charibert, one of the Merovingian kings of the Franks, had brought a chaplain (Liudhard) with her. Bertha had restored a church from Roman times to the east of Canterbury and dedicated it to Saint Martin of Tours, the patronal saint for the Merovingian royal family. Ethelbert himself, though a pagan, allowed his wife to worship God her own way. Probably under influence of his wife, Ethelbert asked Pope Gregory I to send missionarie ...

See also:

History of the Church of England, History of the Church of England - The Augustinian Mission, History of the Church of England - Medieval consolidation, History of the Church of England - Separation from Papal Authority, History of the Church of England - Protestant Influences, History of the Church of England - Brief reunion with Rome, History of the Church of England - The second schism, History of the Church of England - Puritanism and the Restoration, History of the Church of England - 18th century, History of the Church of England - 19th century, History of the Church of England - Recent history

Read more here: » History of the Church of England: Encyclopedia II - History of the Church of England - The Augustinian Mission

596: Encyclopedia II - General Motors streetcar conspiracy - The legal case

Government attorney Bradford Snell has written that in 1949 GM and its partners in NCL were convicted in U.S. District Court in Chicago of criminal conspiracy in this matter and fined $5,000 each for anti-trust violations (contracts in restraint of trade, i.e. forcing subsidiaries to buy products from their owners: GM buses, Firestone tires, Standard and Phillips oil). The claim above is often repeated and is bas ...

See also:

General Motors streetcar conspiracy, General Motors streetcar conspiracy - The legal case, General Motors streetcar conspiracy - The case for the conspiracy, General Motors streetcar conspiracy - The case against the conspiracy, General Motors streetcar conspiracy - Framing the arguments

Read more here: » General Motors streetcar conspiracy: Encyclopedia II - General Motors streetcar conspiracy - The legal case

596: Encyclopedia II - Canterbury - History

Canterbury - Early history. There has been a settlement in Canterbury since prehistoric times. Bronze Age finds, and Neolithic round barrows have been discovered in the area; and before the Roman arrival Durovernum was the most important settlement in Kent. Canterbury (known in Latin as Durovernum Cantiacorum) became a Roman administrative centre: it lay at the junction of three roads from their ports of Regulbium (Reculver), Dubris (Dover) and Lemanis (Lympne); and it stood on what has become known as Watling Street. The city w ...

See also:

Canterbury, Canterbury - History, Canterbury - Early history, Canterbury - Religious significance, Canterbury - Later history, Canterbury - Demographics, Canterbury - Government, Canterbury - Transport, Canterbury - Railway, Canterbury - Road, Canterbury - Educational establishments, Canterbury - Sundry information

Read more here: » Canterbury: Encyclopedia II - Canterbury - History

596: Encyclopedia II - Bede - Work

His works show that he had at his command all the learning of his time. It was thought that the library at Wearmouth-Jarrow was between 300-500 books, making it one of the largest in England. It is clear that Biscop made strenuous efforts to collect books on his extensive travels. Bede was proficient in patristic literature, and quotes Pliny the Younger, Virgil, Lucretius, Ovid, Horace, and other classical writers, but with some disapproval. He knew some Greek but no Hebrew. His Latin is generally clear and without affectation, and he was a skillful story-teller. However, his style can be considerably more obscure ...

See also:

Bede, Bede - Life, Bede - Work, Bede - Historia Ecclesiastica, Bede - Other historical and theological works, Bede - Vernacular poetry

Read more here: » Bede: Encyclopedia II - Bede - Work

596: : Popular Topic Pages II - 17

This is a sitemap for popular topic pages at Global Oneness. Click on a link and you will find multiple articles related to the topic:

 

Alternative Health Dictionary , Hinduism Dictionary , Spiritual Dictionary, Sanskrit Dictionary , Parapsychology Dictionary, Paganism Dictionary,
Mysticism Dictionary , Theosophy Dictionary ,

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Read more here: » Popular Topic Pages II - 17

596: Encyclopedia II - Canterbury - Transport

Canterbury - Railway. Canterbury has two railway stations, Canterbury West and Canterbury East, the services from these are operated by South Eastern Trains. Canterbury West is served primarily from London Charing Cross with limited services from Victoria as well as by trains to Ramsgate and Margate. Canterbury East is on the service from London Victoria (journey time around 88 minutes) to Dover. The West station was the earliest to be built. It was opened by the South Eastern Railway from Ashford on 6 February 1 ...

See also:

Canterbury, Canterbury - History, Canterbury - Early history, Canterbury - Religious significance, Canterbury - Later history, Canterbury - Demographics, Canterbury - Government, Canterbury - Transport, Canterbury - Railway, Canterbury - Road, Canterbury - Educational establishments, Canterbury - Sundry information

Read more here: » Canterbury: Encyclopedia II - Canterbury - Transport

596: Encyclopedia II - History of the Roman Catholic Church - 21st Century Catholic Church 2001 AD – PRESENT

The Roman Catholic Church began the 21st century by celebrating the third Christian millennium with the motto "Jesus Christ is the same yesterday, today and forever." It faces the challenge of upholding its religious doctrine in a typically liberal society, in which it comes under heavy criticism from some quarters for its traditional teaching on such issues as birth control, abortion, and women in the priesthood. While still maintaining that the Church "is necessary for salvation", and that "they could not be saved who, knowin ...

See also:

History of the Roman Catholic Church, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Prologue: The ministry of Jesus of Nazareth c. 4 BC – AD 33, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Early Catholic Church 34 AD – 313 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Roman Empire 313 AD – 476 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Dark Ages 476 AD – 850 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Middle Ages 800 AD – 1499 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Renaissance 1500 AD – 1629 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Age of Reason 1630 AD – 1799 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - 19th Century Catholic Church 1800 AD – 1899 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - 20th Century Catholic Church 1901 AD – 2000 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - 21st Century Catholic Church 2001 AD – PRESENT, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates

Read more here: » History of the Roman Catholic Church: Encyclopedia II - History of the Roman Catholic Church - 21st Century Catholic Church 2001 AD – PRESENT

596: Encyclopedia II - Canterbury - Educational establishments

The city has many students as it is home to several Higher Education institutions and other colleges. The University of Kent at Canterbury stands on a hill about two miles outside the city centre. Chaucer College is an independent graduate college for Japanese students within the campus of the University. Near the University of Kent is the Franciscan International Study Centre [1], a place of study for the worldwide Franciscan Order. Canterbury Christ Church University [2] is located in the city as is one of the campuses of the University College for the Creative Arts. There is al ...

See also:

Canterbury, Canterbury - History, Canterbury - Early history, Canterbury - Religious significance, Canterbury - Later history, Canterbury - Demographics, Canterbury - Government, Canterbury - Transport, Canterbury - Railway, Canterbury - Road, Canterbury - Educational establishments, Canterbury - Sundry information

Read more here: » Canterbury: Encyclopedia II - Canterbury - Educational establishments

596: Encyclopedia II - History of the Roman Catholic Church - 21st Century Catholic Church 2001 AD – PRESENT

The 21st century Roman Catholic Church faces the challenge of maintaining conservative religious doctrine in a typically liberal society. The modern day church has also come under heavy criticism from some quarters for maintaining traditional teaching on such issues as birth control, abortion, and women in the priesthood. The Roman Catholic Church, however, has adopted more lenient stances on certain issues, in particular the statement that one does not have to be a Catholic to receive access to God’s grace; the intent being that ot ...

See also:

History of the Roman Catholic Church, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Prologue: the ministry of Jesus of Nazareth c 4 BC – 33 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Early Catholic Church 34 AD – 313 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Roman Empire 313 AD – 476 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Dark Ages 476 AD – 850 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Middle Ages 800 AD – 1499 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Renaissance 1500 AD – 1629 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Church of the Age of Reason 1630 AD – 1799 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - 19th Century Catholic Church 1800 AD – 1899 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - 20th Century Catholic Church 1901 AD – 2000 AD, History of the Roman Catholic Church - 21st Century Catholic Church 2001 AD – PRESENT, History of the Roman Catholic Church - Key Dates

Read more here: » History of the Roman Catholic Church: Encyclopedia II - History of the Roman Catholic Church - 21st Century Catholic Church 2001 AD – PRESENT

596: Encyclopedia II - Canterbury - Government

The local government district City of Canterbury covers an area some 13 times larger than the city of Canterbury itself, and includes Herne Bay and Whitstable. The city contains the district wards of Barton, Northgate, St Stephens, Westgate and Wincheap, plus part of the University of Kent (which straddles the city boundary) in the otherwise rural Blean Forest ward. Since October 7, 2004 the 5 wards entirely within the city have been represented by 9 Liberal Democrat, 3 Conservative and 2 Labour councillors, out of the ...

See also:

Canterbury, Canterbury - History, Canterbury - Early history, Canterbury - Religious significance, Canterbury - Later history, Canterbury - Demographics, Canterbury - Government, Canterbury - Transport, Canterbury - Railway, Canterbury - Road, Canterbury - Educational establishments, Canterbury - Sundry information

Read more here: » Canterbury: Encyclopedia II - Canterbury - Government

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