-
Codicem (Lyons, 1480)
Lecturae in
Digestum Vetus (Paris, 1504)
Summa de
libellis formandis (Str****burg, 1510)
Lecturae in Tres
Libros (Venice, 1514) Elucidatio...
- The
Latin expression Pro
captu lectoris habent sua fata
libelli (literally, "According to the
capabilities of the reader,
books have
their destiny"),...
-
Hyacinthe Libelli, O.P. (1616 – 23
October 1684) was a
Roman Catholic prelate who
served as
Archbishop of
Avignon (1673–1684).
Hyacinthe Libelli was born...
- The
Palazzo Marsili Libelli is a
Gothic style urban palace localized on Via di Città #136-142, in the
Terzo di Città, in the city of Siena,
region of...
- or
probably Dalmatia.
Possibly from 223 to 225 AD he was
secretary a
libellis under Emperor Alexander Severus, and
about 228 he was
praefectus vigilum...
- A
libellus (plural
libelli) in the
Roman Empire was any
brief do****ent
written on
individual pages (as
opposed to
scrolls or tablets),
particularly official...
-
dignam eximio fecit amante fides. Si
numeros geniumque sacris dedit illa
libellis Causa ego ne sævis
muribus esca forent.
Arcebam sacro vivens a
limine mures...
- postremo, etc." Dümmler,
Ernst Ludwig (1891). "Monumenta
Germaniae Historica,
Libelli de lite". I (Bonizonis
episcopi Sutriensis:
Liber ad ami**** ed.). Hannover:...
-
attached to the
publication of
defamatory books and writings, the
libri or
libelli famosi, from
which is
derived the
modern use of the word libel; and under...
- rationibus) existed. In the
Third century the
offices of a
libellis and a
censibus or a
libellis and a
cognitionibus were merged.
Marcius Agrippa was a cognitionibus...