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  1. 100 I am wiser than the elders, *. because I observe your commandments. 101 I restrain my feet from every evil way, *. that I may keep your word. 102 I do not shrink from your judgments, *. because you yourself have taught me. 103 How sweet are your words to my taste! they are sweeter than honey to my mouth.

  2. Há 5 dias · London Record Society, volume 39. The first part contains the text of the roll and the second part provides an index to the nearly 7000 names of those who were members of the fraternity between 1449 and 1521. These included not only the clerks themselves and their wives, but also members of the nobility and high-ranking clergy.

  3. Há 1 dia · The third published edition of an anonymous Middle English translation of Christine de Pisan’s L’Epistre d’Othéa, a story based in the legend of Troy, is edited from a single surviving fifteenth-century manuscript (London, British Library, MS Harley 838) and titled for the first time An Epistle of Noble Poetrye.

  4. Há 1 dia · The ordination of women in the Anglican Communion has been increasingly common in certain provinces since the 1970s. Several provinces, however, and certain dioceses within otherwise ordaining provinces, continue to ordain only men. Disputes over the ordination of women have contributed to the establishment and growth of progressive tendencies ...

  5. Há 4 dias · Capgrave says, that St. Cuthbert founded a nunnery at Carlisle, and placed an abbess in it, when he visited that city; but this is erroneous, for it appears by Bede's Life of Cuthbert, that the nunnery was of older date; that author, who was his contemporary, relates, that the object of his journey was to obtain an audience of Queen Ermengard, (wife of Egfrid King of Northumberland,) who was ...

  6. Há 4 dias · Share & Embed "Adam" Please copy and paste this embed script to where you want to embed

  7. Há 4 dias · Julius Caesar mentioned them in his writings. They may have derived their name from Brutus’ capital. According to Bede’s History of the English Church and People, completed in 731, “the strong city of Trinovantum and its commander Androgius surrendered to Caesar” (Book 1, chap. 2, translated by Leo Sherley-Price, 1955).