-
indicate that a
nutrix would be
proud of her profession. One even
records a
nutritor lactaneus, a male "milk nurse" who
presumably used a bottle. Gr**** nurses...
-
Northern France,
which dates to the year 800.
References to
Joseph as
nutritor Domini ("educator/guardian of the Lord") from the 9th to the 14th centuries...
-
following for
Saint Joseph date to the year 800 and
references to him as
Nutritor Domini (educator/guardian of the Lord)
began to
appear in the 9th century...
-
written as a
praise of Charlemagne, whom he
regarded as a foster-father (
nutritor) and to whom he was a
debtor "in life and death". The work thus contains...
- as the
feast day of
Saint Joseph, who is
referred to as the
fatherly Nutritor Domini ("Nourisher of the Lord") in
Catholicism and "the ****tive father...
- of authorship.
Terrae vero et mari
dominatur Iupiter Plutonius, et hic
nutritor est
animantium mortalium et
fructiferarum (Asclepius 27),
noted by G.F...
-
intercession of
archbishop Man****es I of Reims. Huysmans,
Ortwin (2016).
Tutor ac
Nutritor.
Episcopal Agency,
Lordship and the
Administration of
Religious Communities...
- 7th-century
hagiographic life of Columba; he
served as foster-father or
tutor (
nutritor) to the
young Columba before the
latter went on to
study with Gemmán in...
-
carinifer (Thomson, 1889)
Diaparsis multiplicator Aubert, 1969
Diaparsis nutritor (Fabricius, 1804)
Diaparsis stramineipes (Brischke, 1880)
Dicaelotus cameroni...
- Latin. Or alcaide, from the
Arabic qāʾid,
meaning "commander. The
title nutritor regis (king's tutor) was the
usually title given to
those entrusted with...