Difference between revisions of "Anselm"

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Anselm <ref name="term_20353" />
Anselm <ref name="term_20391" />
<p> St., called Baduarius after the name of his family (Badagio), was born at Milan, 1036. He succeeded, in 1061, his uncle, [[Pope]] [[Alexander]] II, as bishop of Lucca, which see he resigned in order to be. come a monk at Clugny. He returned to his see at the express order of Pope [[Gregory]] VI, who employed him for important embassies, and made him a cardinal. He tried to prevail on the canons of his cathedral church to submit to the common life, but met with so decided a resistance that he had to leave again his see. Leo IX sent him as his legate to Lombardy, where he died at Mantua, March 18, 1086. He wrote an apology of Gregory VII, a refutation of the claims of the anti-pope Guibert, and a treatise against the right of the secular princes to dispose of the property of the church. The two former may be found in Canisins, Antiquae Lectiones, and in the Bibl. Patrum. The life of [[Anselm]] was written by the [[Jesuit]] Bota (Notiz di San Anselmo, Verona, 1773, 8vo). </p>
<p> dean of the cathedral church of Laon, flourished at the end of the 11th century. He died July 15, 1117. He illustrated the entire Old and New Testaments with an Interlineary Glossary, compiled from the fathers, which has been several times printed, with the additions of [[Lyra]] and others, especially at Antwerp, in 1634; also, the [[Commentary]] on St. Matthew, and Explanations of various Passages in the Gospels, [[Epistles]] of St. Paul, Apocalypse, etc., which are printed under the name of [[Anselm]] of Canterbury, are attributed by many writers to this author. But Dupin asserts that they are from the pen of Herveus, a monk of Bourg, near Dol. </p> <p> '''''—''''' Cave, Hist. Lit. anno 1103;. Dupin, Hist. Eccl. Writers, 2, 364. </p>


== References ==
== References ==
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<ref name="term_20353"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/cyclopedia-of-biblical-theological-and-ecclesiastical-literature/anselm Anselm from Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature]</ref>
<ref name="term_20391"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/cyclopedia-of-biblical-theological-and-ecclesiastical-literature/anselm+(7) Anselm from Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature]</ref>
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Latest revision as of 08:53, 15 October 2021

Anselm [1]

dean of the cathedral church of Laon, flourished at the end of the 11th century. He died July 15, 1117. He illustrated the entire Old and New Testaments with an Interlineary Glossary, compiled from the fathers, which has been several times printed, with the additions of Lyra and others, especially at Antwerp, in 1634; also, the Commentary on St. Matthew, and Explanations of various Passages in the Gospels, Epistles of St. Paul, Apocalypse, etc., which are printed under the name of Anselm of Canterbury, are attributed by many writers to this author. But Dupin asserts that they are from the pen of Herveus, a monk of Bourg, near Dol.

Cave, Hist. Lit. anno 1103;. Dupin, Hist. Eccl. Writers, 2, 364.

References