-
phrase was
first expressed in the
Latin phrase "Amicus meus,
inimicus inimici mei" ("my friend, the
enemy of my enemy"),
which had
become common throughout...
-
Ulrich Han translation. In 1519,
Hieronymus Emser translated De
capienda ex
inimicis utilitate (wie ym
eyner seinen veyndt nutz
machen kan, Leipzig). The biographies...
- useful, was not
necessary for the
attainment of salvation." The
phrase (
inimici gratiae) was
repeated more than
fifty times in Augustine's anti-Pelagian...
- 14:42: "Nolite ascendere: non enim est
Dominus vobis****: ne
corruatis coram inimicis vestris." (Hebrew Ayn
adonai b'qirb'chem) The
expression in
Hebrew means...
- barbatus,
Balthasar nomine,
habens tunicam rubeam, albo vario,
calceamentis inimicis amicus: per
myrrham filium hominis moriturum professus est. ("The third...
- Vulgate, this
psalm is
Psalm 58. In Latin, it is
known as "Eripe me de
inimicis meis Deu". It is
described as "a
prayer composed when Saul sent messengers...
-
around the
outside of the coin is the
legend EXURGAT DEUS
DISSIPENTUR INIMICI – Let God
arise and His
enemies be scattered. This coin also
appears dated...
- est per os sanctorum, qui a
saeculo sunt,
prophetarum eius,
salutem ex
inimicis nostris, et de manu omnium, qui
oderunt nos; ad
faciendam misericordiam...
-
Christ as my protector".
Coins of
Charles I.
EXURGAT DEUS
DISSIPENTUR INIMICI "May God rise up, may [his]
enemies be scattered".
Coins of
Charles I,...
-
videlicet infidelium sensus exhorret, ita ut
nonnulli modicae fidei vel
potius inimici verae fidei, credo,
metuentes peccandi impunitatem dari
mulieribus suis...