-
Furius Dionysius Filocalus was a
Roman scribe and
stone engraver,
specialized in
epigraphic texts, who was
active in the
second half of the
fourth century...
-
sixth part,
which is the
Calendar itself.
Other versions of the
names ("
Philocalus", "Philocalian", "Codex-Calendar of 354", etc.) are
occasionally used...
- all, even slaves.
Coins and nuts were the stakes. On the
Calendar of
Philocalus, the
Saturnalia is
represented by a man
wearing a fur-trimmed coat next...
- is disputed. The
Natalis Invicti is
mentioned only in the
Calendar of
Philocalus,
which dates to 354 CE. When
Julius Caesar introduced the
Julian Calendar...
-
Facsimile of a
Damasan inscription by the late 4th-century
lapicide Philocalus in the
Catacombs of
Saint Agnes beneath the
Constantinian basilica of Sant'Agnese...
- hunts. A
single late
primary source, the
Calendar of
Furius Dionysius Philocalus for 354,
shows how
seldom gladiators featured among a
multitude of official...
-
consistent with the
oldest of
Christian calendars, e. g. the
Almanac of
Philocalus for the year 354, the
inventory of
which contains the prin****l feasts...
- a "collection of
tracts ..
edited (apparently by one
Furius Dionysius Philocalus) in 354". The
Liberian Catalogue is
clearly the work of a
compiler using...
-
Translated by
David McLintock. New York:
Basic Books. p. 477. "Calendar of
Philocalus". tertullian.org.
Retrieved 15
February 2017. ad
viles trivialesque personas...
- 1867) page 380 note 1. The
Chronography of 354, Part 6: The
calendar of
Philocalus A–G is the
seven day w**** and A–H is the
nundinal cycle. "Canon 29 of...