Kirjahaku
Etsi kirjoja tekijän nimen, kirjan nimen tai ISBN:n perusteella.
1000 tulosta hakusanalla Antoine Chalvin
Les Vies De Jean Calvin, Et De Theodore De Beze (1681)
Antoine De La Faye
KESSINGER PUBLISHING, LLC
2009
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Grammaire De L'idiome Niçois, Par A.-L. Sardou Et J.-B. Calvino
Antoine Lã(c)Andre Sardou; J B Calvino
Hutson Street Press
2025
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Grammaire De L'idiome Niçois, Par A.-L. Sardou Et J.-B. Calvino
Antoine Lã(c)Andre Sardou; J B Calvino
Hutson Street Press
2025
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Grammaire De L'Idiome Nicois (1881)
Antoine Leandre Sardou; Jean Baptiste Calvino
KESSINGER PUBLISHING, LLC
2010
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Antoine Martin, the man with many names and secrets, escaped the devastating violence of World War II to come to America as a stowaway with a tiny suitcase, a big dream, and an even bigger heart. Born in 1922 to a poor Sephardic Jewish family in Salonika, Antoine spent his first dozen years in Greece before his family moved to France and then Spain to escape poverty. Caught up in the Spanish revolution, his parents sent him back to France in 1938 to live with relatives, but circumstances forced him to join the French Foreign Legion as a sixteen-year-old. The Germans captured Antoine's unit early in World War II and sent him to POW camps in Germany and Poland where he had to conceal his Jewish identity for four years. After multiple escape attempts, he finally succeeded and joined the Polish and later the French underground to fight. After the war Antoine traveled to America hidden in a freighter with hopes to begin a new life in New York where he knew nobody. Kind strangers helped him start his quest of the American dream. Until he gained legal residency and eventually citizenship, he lived with the fear of deportation-and a scornful woman who threatened to expose him. This book is Antoine's account of how he did whatever it took to stay alive through uncertain times. It includes his struggles as well as the endearing and spicy sides of his life. His story reflects the history of the 20th century for both Jews and Gentiles. It's a story of chasing dreams. And it's a story that's timeless, of the will and strength to survive and prosper in spite of the odds. Antoine's photographs from the French Foreign Legion, POW camps, and documents he used to hide his true identity from the Germans augment this powerful story.
Offering the first study in any language dedicated to the influential publications of the French Reformed theologian Antoine de Chandieu (1534-1591), Theodore Van Raalte begins by recalling Chandieu's reputation as it stood at the death of Theodore Beza in 1605. Poets in Geneva mourned the end of an era of star theologians, reminiscing about Geneva's Reformed triumvirate of gold, silver, and bronze: gold represented Calvin; silver Chandieu; and bronze Beza. Van Raalte's work sets Chandieu within the context of Reformed theology in Geneva, the wider history of scholastic method in the Swiss cantons, and the gripping social and political milieus. Chandieu was far from a mere ivory tower theologian: as a member of French nobility in possession of many estates and castles in France, he and his family acutely experienced the misery and triumph of the French Huguenots during the Wars of Religion. Connected to royalty from at least the beginning of his career, Chandieu later served the future Henry IV as personal military chaplain and cryptographer. His writings run the gamut from religious poetry (put to music by others in his lifetime) to carefully-crafted disputations which saw publication in his posthumous Opera Theologica in five editions between 1592 and 1620. Chandieu had developed a very elaborate form of the medieval quaestio disputata and made liberal use of hypothetical syllogisms. Van Raalte argues that Chandieu utilized scholastic method in theology for the sake of clarity of argument, rootedness in Scripture, and certainty of faith.
Antoine Busnoys
Clarendon Press
1999
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This volume brings together twenty original essays by distinguished scholars of late medieval music on the life, works, and cultural context of the composer Antoine Busnoys (c.1430-1492), musician to Charles the Bold, Duke of Burgundy, and one of the most celebrated composers of the fifteenth century. The essays present the results of much new research on music, ceremony, and ritual in the late Middle Ages; intertextual, contextual, and hermeneutic approaches to the music of Busnoys and his contemporaries; methods for assessing issues of authorship and anonymity; readings of theorists on compositional procedures and the performance of fifteenth-century music; and assessments of Busnoys's legacy to the musical culture of the late Middle Ages. Particularly noteworthy are the studies providing new light on the origins of L'homme armé mass tradition; unpublished documents on Busnoys's activity in churches in Poitiers and Brussels; previously unidentified liturgical sources for his plainchant cantus firmi; and studies and complete editions of several anonymous works newly attributed to Busnoys. These widely ranging essays offer a wealth of novel approaches to the study of musical culture in the late Middle Ages that is of interest not only to medievalists, but to students of all fields of music historical inquiry.
Raymond Sickinger's biography of Antoine Frédéric Ozanam is more than a chronological account of Ozanam's relatively brief but extraordinary life. It is also a comprehensive study of a man who touched many lives as a teacher, writer, and principal founder of the Society of St. Vincent de Paul. Ozanam's life encompassed a particularly turbulent time in French history, and he was a witness to two major political upheavals—the overthrow of the Bourbon dynasty that brought Louis Philippe to power in 1830, and the end of Louis Philippe's "Bourgeois Monarchy" as a result of the 1848 Revolutions. This book examines Ozanam's life in a number of ways. First, it explores the various roles he played throughout his life—son, sibling, student, member of and an inspiration for the Society of St. Vincent de Paul, spouse and father, scholar, and spokesperson for the common people. Second, it examines the lessons he learned in his life, including the importance of friendship, the meaning of solidarity, and the role and purpose of suffering, among many others that he shares with those who study his thought and work. It concludes with an account of Ozanam's enduring legacy. Antoine Frédéric Ozanam feared that he would not have a fruitful career, but his legacy remains a powerful testimony to his greatness. This book will interest scholars wishing to know more about Ozanam and the period in which he lived, as well as a wider audience, including those who are aware of or are members of the Society of St. Vincent de Paul.
Raymond Sickinger's biography of Antoine Frédéric Ozanam is more than a chronological account of Ozanam's relatively brief but extraordinary life. It is also a comprehensive study of a man who touched many lives as a teacher, writer, and principal founder of the Society of St. Vincent de Paul. Ozanam's life encompassed a particularly turbulent time in French history, and he was a witness to two major political upheavals—the overthrow of the Bourbon dynasty that brought Louis Philippe to power in 1830, and the end of Louis Philippe's "Bourgeois Monarchy" as a result of the 1848 Revolutions. This book examines Ozanam's life in a number of ways. First, it explores the various roles he played throughout his life—son, sibling, student, member of and an inspiration for the Society of St. Vincent de Paul, spouse and father, scholar, and spokesperson for the common people. Second, it examines the lessons he learned in his life, including the importance of friendship, the meaning of solidarity, and the role and purpose of suffering, among many others that he shares with those who study his thought and work. It concludes with an account of Ozanam's enduring legacy. Antoine Frédéric Ozanam feared that he would not have a fruitful career, but his legacy remains a powerful testimony to his greatness. This book will interest scholars wishing to know more about Ozanam and the period in which he lived, as well as a wider audience, including those who are aware of or are members of the Society of St. Vincent de Paul.
Mémoires de Victor Alfieri, d'Asti, écrits par lui-même, et traduits de l'italien par Antoine de Latour
Antoine De LaTour; Vittorio Alfieri
Wentworth Press
2018
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