Ad
related to: vincent of lerins family
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Vincent of Lérins was born in Toulouse, Gaul, [4] to a noble family, and he is believed to be the brother of Lupus of Troyes. [3] In his early life he engaged in secular pursuits; it is unclear whether these were civil or military, though the term he uses, secularis militia, may imply the latter.
Charles Heurtley introduced the Commonitory, in his translation, as Vincent's personal reference to "distinguish Catholic truth from heresy" based on the authority of Holy Scripture by which "all questions must be tried in the first instance" and "supplemented by an appeal to that sense of Holy Scripture which is supported by universality ...
Church and monastery of the Lérins Abbey. Panoramic picture taken from the fortified monastery. The Lérins Islands with Saint-Honorat on the left Plan of Lérins Abbey. ...
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Saint_Vincent_of_Lérins&oldid=70620498"
Salonius (c. 400 – 28 September 475) known as Salonius of Geneva was a confessor and bishop of the 5th century. [1] He was a son of Eucherius of Lyon and Galla.He was educated at Lérins Abbey, first by Hilary of Arles, then by Salvianus and Vincent of Lérins.
The Waie home to Christ and Truth leadinge from Antichrist and Errour, 1556, dedicated to Queen Mary; reissued, without dedication, 1565; this is a translation of the Liber de Catholicæ fidei antiquitate, by Vincent of Lérins.
Vincent was known to have had the intention of filling out at length a confession of faith in the mysteries of the Trinity and the Incarnation; this, taken in conjunction with the similarity of style and expression between the Athanasian Creed and the writings of Vincent, is the foundation of Anthelmi's argument.
Petrus Opmeer (1526–1594) was a Dutch Catholic historian and controversialist. According to his biographer Valerius Andreas, Opmeer was a friend of "painters, sculptors and architects", including Maarten van Heemskerck, Pieter Aertsen, Willem Danielsz van Tetrode, Frans Floris, Antonis Mor and Philip Galle.