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Sichard (Latin: Sichardus; Italian: Sicardo) was a 9th
century Italian monk. He was the
Abbot of
Farfa from c. 830 to 842. His
tenure corresponds with...
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codes of the Alamanni. They were
first edited in
parts in 1530 by
Johannes Sichard in Basel. The
Pactus Alamannorum or
Pactus legis Alamannorum is the older...
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Sichardus (1499 Tauberbischofsheim – 1552 Tübingen, also
known as Sichart,
Sichard, Sichardt) was a humanist,
jurist and law
professor at the
University of...
- ever published, no
longer exists.
Nomine et
verbo was
published by
Johann Sichard at
Basel in 1528 and subsequently, in a much more
complete form, in the...
- Sicardus,
Sichard or
Sicart is a
given name of
Germanic origin. It may
refer to:
Sicard of
Benevento (died 839),
prince of
Benevento Sichard (died 842)...
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Neglected Witnesses 1877, p. 515. The work was
originally published in 1528 by
Sichard as
Idacius Clarus Hisp****, Otto Bardenhewer, Patrology, the
Lives and...
- to the
original Carolingian buildings. Inside, at the
lower end,
Abbot Sichard had an
oratory built.
Thomas of
Maurienne (680/700 – c. 720)
Aunepert (720–24)...
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priests and
monks (ii. 8–10). The Ad
ecclesiam was
first printed in
Sichard's Antidoton (Basel, 1528); the De
gubernatione by Br****ican (Basel, 1530)...
- IV "refused to do anything" (facere noluit).
Ingoald was
succeeded by
Sichard.
Marios Costambeys,
Power and
Patronage in the
Early Medieval Italy: Local...
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Edited by
Johannes Sichardus as an
appendix to an
edition of Ovid's works.
Sichard claims to have
personally found the m****cript of the text in the Lorsch...