Arthaud (8/2022)
Reference : SVALIVCN-9782081485853
LIVRE A L’ETAT DE NEUF. EXPEDIE SOUS 3 JOURS OUVRES. NUMERO DE SUIVI COMMUNIQUE AVANT ENVOI, EMBALLAGE RENFORCE. EAN:9782081485853
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M. Alexandre Bachmann
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Switzerland
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, Brepols, 2021 Hardback, 339 pages, Size:156 x 234 mm, Illustrations:1 b/w, 3 col., 13 tables b/w., 1 maps b/w, Language(s):English, Latin. ISBN 9782503577913.
Summary As one of the most widely used products of Charlemagne's religious and cultural reforms, the homiliary of Paul the Deacon is a unique monument in the history of Western Europe. Completed around AD 797, this collection of patristic homilies and sermons shaped the religious faith and liturgical practices of the churches in Carolingian Europe and those of countless other churches over the course of a millennium of use. Until now, scholarly study of the homiliary has rested on seven partial witnesses to the collection. This study, however, draws on over 80 newly identified witnesses from the Carolingian period, while providing a brief guide and handlist to hundreds of later manuscripts. It replaces the current scholarly reconstruction of the homiliary, discusses the significance of the collection's liturgical structure and provisions, and considers the composition of the homiliary in the context of Charlemagne's reforms and Paul's patron-client relationships. The study also brings together evidence for the production and use of this text in thirty-three Carolingian monasteries, cathedrals, and churches. The book then addresses the homiliary's theological character: the contents of the homiliary reflected a concern for expressing and defending orthodox doctrine at Charlemagne's court against Trinitarian and Christological heresies, as well as an urgent attention to moral reform in the light of a belief in the imminence of divine judgement. Finally, the study demonstrates the varied uses of Paul's collection and its historical legacy. TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction 0.1: The homiliary in scholarship: editions and reconstructions 0.2: The homiliary in scholarship: The nature of the Epistola Generalis 0.3: The homiliary in scholarship: The history of preaching 0.4: The homiliary in scholarship: Anglo-Saxon England 0.6: Manuscript identifications and the advent of digital research 0.7: The Carolingian witnesses to Paul's homiliary 0.8: Outline of the Book's Argument Chapter 1: Curae Nobis Est: The manuscript witnesses and Paul's text 1.1: The manuscript base 1.2: General features of the extant manuscripts 1.3: The witnesses transmitting the prefatory material and Carolingian witnesses 1.4: The original structure of PD: the winter volume 1.5: The winter volume: contested entries 1.6: The original structure of PD: the summer volume 1.7: Conclusion Chapter 2: Per totius anni circulum: Paul's liturgical year 2.1: 'Individual Sundays and the rest of the divine feasts' 2.2: The sanctoral cycle 2.3: The purpose of a limited sanctoral cycle 2.4: 'Diverse fasts' and other occasions 2.5: The greater and lesser litanies 2.6: In traditione symboli: Catechesis and creed in Lent 2.7: Anniversaries of death 2.8: The Sundays after Pentecost 2.9: Paul's work, the Christian year, and the influence of other liturgical books 2.10: A?specific liturgical year? (786-787 and 797-798) 2.11: Conclusion 2.12: Outline of the Winter?Volume: Advent to Holy Saturday 2.13: Outline of the Summer?Volume (A): Easter to Saint Matthew 2.14: Outline of the Summer?Volume (B): Commune sanctorum (The Common of Saints) Chapter 3: En iutus patris Benedicti: the composition of the homiliary 3.1: Paul's representation of his work in the preface 3:2: The dedicatory verse (Summo apici rerum) 3.3: The prefatory letter (Epistola Generalis) 3.4: The descriptive introduction (Incipiunt omeliae) 3.5: The homiliary's organisational features: Rubrics, readings, authors 3.6: The collection's contents: Homilies and sermons from surprising Fathers 3.7: The origins of Paul's texts: The state of Carolingian libraries 3.8: A?wandering monk? Paul on the road and in the scriptorium 3.9: Paul and patronage, earthly and heavenly 3.10: Dating Paul's collection: the late 790s Chapter 4: Per sacra domicilia Christi: the dissemination of the homiliary 4.1: The Epistola Generalis and dissemination 4.2: Capitulary legislation and the homiliary's dissemination 4.3: Manuscript production, the physical constraints on dissemination 4.4: Difficulties for 'mass production': The example of Tours, the setting of the court 4.5: Varied evidence for dissemination 4.6: Literary evidence 4.7: St?Wandrille and Benediktbeuern 4.8: St?Riquier 4.9: Lorsch 4.10: St?Gall 4.11: Reichenau 4.12: Bobbio 4.13: Passau 4.14: Monte Cassino 4.15: St?Calixtus 4.16: Fulda 4.17: Lyon 4.18: Weissenburg 4.19: Many inconclusive references, but 14 probable 4.20: Manuscript evidence (A): 22 clear palaeographical identifications, 12 unclear 4.21: Manuscript Evidence (B): Transmission of textual variants implies further copies 4.22: Textual variants in the summer volume 4.23: Textual variants in the winter volume 4.24: Paul's two volumes often circulated separately 4.25: Conclusion Chapter 5: Optima decerpens: the theology of Paul's selections 5.1: The emphases of the collection: Gospel exegesis, doctrinal sermons 5.2: The Bible in Paul's collection: texts and theory 5.3: The Admonitio Generalis and Carolingian theology 5.4: God the Trinity 5.5: Definitions of the Trinitarian relations 5.6: Christology and Chalcedon 5.7: Looser Christological formulations: Origen and 'Maximus?II' 5.8: Eschatology 5.9: Gregory the Great on the impending judgment 5.10: The resurrection of the dead: Flesh and hope 5.11: Eschatology in PD and the Admonitio Generalis 5.12: Ethics and imitation 5.13: Christian ethical practices: fasting, confession, almsgiving, care for the dead 5.14: Conclusion Chapter 6: Tradimus: The use of the homiliary 6.1: Crafting new collections 6.2: Amplified homiliaries (a): more of Paul's 'canon' of Fathers 6.3: Expanded homiliaries (b): more Augustine 6.4: Expanded homiliaries (c): new authors, new collections 6.5: Abbreviated homiliaries (a): one entry per occasion 6.6: Abbreviated homiliaries (b): special feast days only 6.7: Abbreviated homiliaries (c): Sundays only 6.8: Abbreviated homiliaries (d): saints only 6.9: Abbreviated homiliaries (e): sermons only 6.10: Extraction 6.11: Abbreviated readings 6.12: Decorated texts and the 'economy' of monasticism 6.13: Private study or meditation? 6.14: Dwellings and travel of intellectual elite in places PD was known 6.15: Study and annotation 6.16: Private study certain 6.17: Preaching and regulatory material (capitularies, councils, statutes, rules) 6.18: Preaching and the manuscript evidence 6.19: Liturgical reading 6.20: Liturgical reading and manuscript evidence 6.21: Other uses: storing prayers and community memory 6.22: Conclusion Conclusion Appendix 1: Paul's dedicatory verse, Summo apici rerum Appendix 2: Charlemagne's prefatory letter, the Epistola generalis Appendix 3: the descriptive introduction, incipiunt omeliae Appendix 4: Paul's laudatory verse, Utere felix Appendix 5: Critical edition of crucial rubrics PD Appendix 6: The manuscript witnesses of Paul the Deacon's homiliary Bibliography Index of Manuscripts General Index
, Brepols Publishers, 2019 softcover, 377 pages ., 230 x 290 mm,_English. ISBN 9782930054346.
Proceedings of the International Symposium Paul Coremans Held in Brussels, 15-17 June 2015 In June 2015, the Royal Institute for Cultural Heritage (KIK-IRPA) organized an international symposium in honour of its founder and first director Paul Coremans (1908-1965). Exactly fifty years after his death, it was a unique opportunity to look back on his extraordinary career and the impact of his innovative ideas and vision on the conservation and restoration of works of art. His ground-breaking insights have been widely recognized in Belgium and all over the world. Paul Coremans? fields of interest were broad: the conservation of works of art in museums, preventive conservation and climate control, the protection of cultural heritage in times of war ? a highly topical issue -, as well as the status and role of the restorer, the importance of photographic documentation and scientific research, or the detection of art forgeries. Coremans? belief in the importance of an interdisciplinary approach to the study of works of art still inspires many art historians, conservator-restorers and scientists today. This book ? the Proceedings of the 2015 Brussels Symposium ? presents twenty original contributions that reveal Coremans? multi-faceted personality and action. It is the first monograph devoted to this visionary Belgian scientist and Monuments Man. Table of Contents Foreword Hilde De Clercq Director General a.i. of the Royal Institute for Cultural Heritage Introduction Marie-Christine Claes et Dominique Vanwijnsberghe Part 1 An Inspiring Scientist 1 Early Museum Laboratories and the Pursuit of Objectivity Geert Vanpaemel 2 Paul Coremans (1908-1965): A Pioneer Chemist in the Application of Scientific Techniques to the Visual Arts Hendrik Deelstra and Duncan Thorburn Burns 3 Vijftig jaar 14C-dateringen aan het Koninklijk Instituut voor het Kunstpatrimonium (KIK-IRPA) te Brussel Mark Van Strydonck 4 Paul Coremans et la restructuration du Laboratoire du Musée du Louvre dans l?après-guerre Camille Bourdiel 5 The Royal Institute for Cultural Heritage: Design and Realisation of a Ground-Breaking Building Gertjan Madalijns Part 2 A Monuments Man 6 Paul Coremans, l?inventaire photographique du patrimoine artistique belge et ses relations avec l?occupant, 1940-1945 Christina Kott 7 Paul Coremans et ses actions en faveur de la sauvegarde des peintures murales Ilona Hans-Collas Part 3 Flanders in the Fifteenth Century 8 Construction of a Vision: Coremans? Approach to the Study of Flemish Primitives before the Restoration of the Adoration of the Mystic Lamb (The Ghent Altarpiece) Hélène Dubois and Dominique Deneffe 9 Le quotidien d?un idéal : l?Agneau mystique, catalyseur de l?interdisciplinarité Marie-Christine Claes, Hélène Dubois et Jana Sanyova 10 Paul Coremans, Edgar Richardson and the 1960 Flemish Art Show: A Transatlantic Friendship Forged by a Transatlantic Exhibition Yao-Fen You Part 4 The Van Meegeren Affair 11 D.G. van Beuningen?s Crusade against Paul Coremans Arjan de Koomen 12 Expertise in the Van Meegeren Case: the Contributions by Coremans, Froentjes and De Wild Arie Wallert and Michel van de Laar 13 The Amsterdam X-Rays for Coremans and Van Schendel Rick F.E.D. Hartmann Part 5 Friendships 14 Paul Coremans and Sheldon and Caroline Keck: A Collegial Friendship that Influenced the Development of Conservation Education in North America Jean D. Portell 15 Arthur van Schendel: Friend and Companion in the World of Museums and Conservation Jan Piet Filedt Kok 16 « Dear Paul | Cher Pan » Paul Coremans et Erwin Panofsky : histoire d?une amitié Dominique Vanwijnsberghe Part 6 Global Activities 17 At ICCROM?s Cradle: Paul Coremans and the Beginning of the ?Rome Centre? Stefano De Caro 18 Paul Coremans, un expert de l?UNESCO au Brésil : aperçu de sa contribution au développement du patrimoine brésilien Diogo de Souza Brito 19 Borobudur: the Alchemy of a World Heritage Site The Expert and the Student: Shared Views Nicole Gesché-Koning 20 Museum Policy Concerning the Conservation and Restoration of Artworks and the Rubens and Ensor Research Projects at the Royal Museum of Fine Arts Antwerp Karen Bonne, Elsje Janssen, Christine Van Mulders, Herwig Todts Part 7 Tributes to the ?Patron? 21 Un inoubliable meneur d?hommes Pierre Colman 22 La formation des restaurateurs Nicole Goetghebeur 23 Paul Coremans, Personal Memories Liliane Masschelein-Kleiner Bibliography Abbreviations Authors Index of Persons Photographic Credits Review "A Man of Vision: Paul Coremans and the Preservation of Cultural Heritage est un ouvrage indispensable à l?histoire de la conservation-restauration ; richement illustré et documenté, il fournit un éclairage sur une période charnière, en Belgique comme au niveau international. Bien au-delà de l?approche biographique, il permet d?appréhender les connexions, les échanges qui permettent aux disciplines de se développer, et au savoir de se construire." (Muriel Verbeeck-Boutin, CeROArt (Online), 11/2019, URL: http://journals.openedition.org/ceroart/6849)
SOCIETE DE BORDA. 1982. In-8. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. Environ 260 pages illustrées de figures dans le texte. (stock 4, un exemplaire avec manque sur le dos.). . . . Classification Dewey : 908.447-Régionalisme : Aquitaine
"SOMMAIRE : Allocution d’ouverture, par Ch. BLANC ..Etat actuel des Etudes vincentiennes, par André DODIN .La date de naissance de St-Vincent de Paul, par le P. Raymond CHALUMEAU ..St-Vincent de Paul et le diocèse de Dax, par M. GAYON-MOLINIÉ . . Les études de St-Vincent de Paul à Toulouse, par Michel BIGONNEAU Une étaDe inconnue dans l’apostolat de St-Vincent de Paul, parR. DARRICAU ..St-Vincent de Paul, Alain de Solminihac et l'épiscopat du Sud-Ouestde la France (1643-1658), par Jean VALETTE .Aux origines de la Cis des Filles de la Charité, par le R.P. MichelLLORET ..St-Vincent de Paul et le renouvellement des missions paroissiales,par Michel PEYROUS Monsieur Vincent et la Bible, par Maurice VANSTEENKISTE .Monsieur Vincent malade, par le Dr J. PEYRESBLANQUES .Iconographie de St-Vincent de Paul dans les Eglises du diocèse d'Aireet Dax, par F. LALANNE .Les représentations de St-Vincent de Paul sur des objets de la viequotidienne au XIX* siècle, par X. PETITCOL ..Notes sur deux portraits de St-Vincent de Paul, par X. PETITCOL . . Un portrait inconnu de St-Vincent de Paul, par Jacques DUMONTEILDeux peintres de St-Vincent de Paul, par Ch. BLANC St-Vincent de Paul et la Pologne, par Frère Odilon LEMAIRE Un curé de campagne au XVII* siècle, Pierre de Lartigau, curé deVielle en Marensin, par Mmc B. SUAU .Craintes et préoccupations quotidiennes dans les milieux ruraux des pays de l'Adour au temps de St-Vincent de Paul, par leD E. LABEYRIE Monsieur Vincent et Bertrand Du Lou, par M* Laurent DESCOUBESBertrand Ducournau (1614-1670), par R. COUDANNE ..Compte rendu Messe à Buglose et visite Exposition ..Omatye a Sent Bincens de Paul, par Jean CANDAU .M, SAMARAN : Eloge funèbre .Compte rendu du Colloque des 18-19 septembre 1982 sur le Millénairede la bataille de Taller .Chronique : Compte rendu de la Séance du 20 octobre 1982 Bibliographie Landaise : Un grand serviteur de la Gascogne, l’intendant d’Etigny, de M. BORDES, par Michel MASSIE ; les Princes de Gascogne, de M R. MUSSOT-GOULARD, par M""* B. LEROY Table des Matières .. Classification Dewey : 908.447-Régionalisme : Aquitaine"
Paris, Deslestre, 1903. 300 g In-8 broché, [2] ff., iii-140 pp., fac-similés.. Catalogue de 668 numéros, prix notés au crayon pour les 525 premeirs numéros. Couverture insolée. . (Catégories : Autographes, )
Toulouse, Delboy, 1847. 1570 g Grand in-8, demi chagrin vert, dos orné à faux-nerfs, plats de percaline verte encadrés d'un décor romantique, tranches dorées, [2] ff., cxic-604-xlvii pp.. Illustré de 16 planches lithographiées hors-texte sous serpentes y compris un portrait en frontispice. Les derniers feuillets sont occupés par le Dictiounari moundi ou Dictionnaire de la langue toulousaine, contenant principalement les mots les plus éloignés du français, avec leur explication. Belle édition des oeuvres du poète toulousain, Pierre Godolin ou Goudelin (1580-1649). Rousseurs sur les serpentes, légers frottements. Bel exemplaire. . (Catégories : Littérature, Languedoc, )