- A
hagiography (/ˌhæɡiˈɒɡrəfi/; from
Ancient Gr**** ἅγιος, hagios 'holy' and -γραφία, -graphia 'writing') is a
biography of a
saint or an ecclesiastical...
- held
during Holy W**** on the
island of Marinduque, the Philippines.
Hagiographical fragments on St.
Longinus from 11th–13th
century found in Dubrovnik...
-
Hagiography is the
literary genre of
biographies about holy people. In
Islamic Persia,
hagiography developed as a
genre during the
eleventh century CE...
-
definite spot. Thus one may
speak of the
legend of
Alexander or of Caesar."
Hagiography (accounts of the
lives of saints) is not
intended to be history, but...
- The
permissibility of
depictions of
Muhammad in
Islam has been a
contentious issue. Oral and
written descriptions of
Muhammad are
readily accepted by all...
-
Becket arose after his canonisation.
Though they tend
towards typical hagiography, they also
display Becket's well-known gruffness. "Becket's Well", in...
-
allegiance from
Advaitic Agamic Shaivism to
Brahmanical Advaita orthodoxy.
Hagiographies dating from the 14th-17th
centuries deified him as a ruler-renunciate...
- al-Mustapha (The
Antidote in
knowing the
rights of the
Chosen Prophet),
hagiographied Abu ‘Imran al-Fasi in his
Tadrib a-Madarik (Exercising Perception),...
-
created thing instead of God.(p23)
Although jinn
frequently appear in
hagiographic Sufi
literature and
their existence is
never doubted, they do not play...
- The
Hagiography of St.
Simeon (Serbian: Житије светог Симеона, romanized: Žitije
svetog Simeona), or Life of
Stefan Nemanja, is a
hagiography (or biography)...