Justinian, whose celebrated code (called the Pandects) forms the basis of the Civil and Canon Law, was emperor of the Eastern Empire in 527.
Warton speaks of 'Petrus de Riga, canon of Rheims, whose Aurora, or the History of the Bible allegorised, in Latin verses .
William of Saint-Amour, a doctor of the Sorbonne, and a canon of Beauvais, about A.
The great falls of the Yellowstone were roaring within three hundred yards, and the awful canon yawned almost at my feet; but they had lost all charm for me.
No friendly gorge or gully or canon invited such an effort as I could make to scale this rocky barrier.
Seated near the verge of the great canonbelow the falls, I anxiously awaited the appearance of the sun.
The earliest canon consisted simply of these four books.
It was possibly during the prosperous reign of Simon, when the temple service was enriched and established on a new basis, that its canon was finally closed.
Some, like the Psalter, were, as we have seen, probably canonized as early as the Prophets; although the final canon of the Old Testament was not closed until 100 A.
Probably the Church, will ultimately restore to its larger working Old Testament canon the beautiful Prayer of Manasses, already largely adopted in the prayer-book of the Anglican Church.
If the final canon of the Old Testament had been completed before the days of Josiah, there is every reason to believe that it also would have contained little beside prophetic writings.
Sidenote: Secondary sources of its authority] The ultimate basis of that authority, however, is not their presence in the canon of the Old Testament.
The last decade or two, however, has witnessed a significant revival of interest among the scholars of Christendom, and the wholesome tendency to restore certain of the Apocrypha to the working Old Testament canon is very marked.
That they also bear the marks of late priestly revision, is direct evidence of the esteem in which they were held by the late priestly school that completed the canon of the Law.
Canon of Bayeux cathedral in the beginning of the nineteenth century when he "guided the consciences" of Mme.
The mass was celebrated by Canon Pousset, of the cathedral of Notre-Dame.
Canon Bourne remembers hearing of the matter the day it happened.
The other phantasmal appearance of Canon Bourne chanced to affect only one percipient, but was of precisely the same character; and of course adds, so far as it goes, to the plausibility of the above explanation.
Thus appearances such as Canon Bourne's are in my view exactly parallel to the hauntings ascribed to departed spirits.
In Mrs. Hawkins's first case there were two simultaneous percipients, and in Canon Bourne's first case (given in Appendix VI.
One of the best instances of the flash of vision is Canon Warburton's, which I quote from Phantasms of the Living, vol.
Let us apply this view to one of our most bizarre and puzzling cases--that of Canon Bourne (see Appendix VI.
In contrast to the ideal of repose which was the leading canon of the Greeks, his chosen ideal was one of action.
As an example of this, take the following passage from the monologue of the Canon Caponsacchi.
If the occasion there is not so dramatic nor the surroundings at once so poignant and so beautiful, the pilgrimage progresses with the tales and allows of such a dramatic entry as that of the Canon and the Canon's yeoman at Boghton-under-Blee.
No, for us there remains the received canon of Boccaccio's Rime to which no doubt can attach, and that consists of one hundred and four sonnets, namely, Nos.
We may dismiss Baldelli's argument, for we have decided that Boccaccio was in Naples in 1329, when he began the study of Canon Law.
But he forced me, in vain, to give my mind to money-making, and to such a paying thing as the Canon Law.
By this time, however, Boccaccio was already studying Canon Law.
And if we ask ourselves what was this highway, we may answer his way of life; and the things already begun--his study of the Canon Law.
Mahayanas have additional scriptures beyond the Pali Canon and believe the Buddha is eternal and still teaching.
Theravadans follow the Pali Canon of Buddha's teachings, and believe that one may escape the cycle of rebirth, worldly attachment, and suffering for oneself; this process may take one or several lifetimes.
Camp was made at noon outside an immense ravine which Rex knew by hearsay to be the great canon of the Klondike.
Rex thought this canon was the most potent symbol of a potent land that could be imagined.
Rex strained his eyes on the distant mouth of the canonto mark who came out, but he watched in vain.
He was a graduate of Osuna in canon law; but even if he had been of Salamanca, it was the opinion of most people that he would have been mad all the same.
I, sirs, for my sins have studied canon law at Salamanca, and I rather pique myself on expressing my meaning in clear, plain, and intelligible language.
The above programme of social legislation is urged as a step towards realizing that canon of social justice which demands for all equal industrial opportunities.
The right to bequeath property to the church was long a point on which civil law and canon law were at variance.
On this canonthe French writer calculates the inhabitants of Rome at that time.
This, I am afraid, is a just, though mortifying, canon of criticism.
Footnote 97: According to the discipline of St. Basil, (Canon lvi.
Footnote 56: The sixth general council (the Quinisext in Trullo, Canon xlvii in Beveridge, tom.
It is evident that there was no idea, in selecting the works to be read at the weekly assembly of Christians, of any {168} Canon of a New Testament.
Canon Westcott's assertion that Theodoret regarded it as a compilation of our four Gospels is most arbitrary.
The whole history of the Canonand of Christian literature in the second and third centuries displays the most deplorable carelessness and want of critical judgment on the part of the Fathers.
It is impossible to pass from the Synoptic Gospels to that of St John," says Canon Westcott, "without feeling that the transition involves the passage from one world of thought to another.
The north transept contained the fine monument of the Canon Jehan Wyts, who died in 1523.
Here there was much intricate Flamboyant tracery framing some scenes in the life of St. James the Great, of the sixteenth century style, presented by Canon Guillaume Aucouteaux.
We cannot but lament the loss to art of these reliquaries; whether, reading over the list in full of the relics given by Canon Morand, we need sigh over their destruction, is another matter.
Louis is the Sorbonne, actually founded in 1250 by Robert de Sorbon, a canon of Paris, for sixteen poor students in theology.
They clattered out of the canon at last, well behind the train, and then swerved directly west to escape the dust-shrouded herd.
I am a doctor of theology and of canon law, and but for the weak state of my health I should be sitting to-day in the chair of canon law at the University of Pavia.
At table sat Farnese with two of his gentlemen, one of whom was the Marquis Sforza-Fogliani, the other a doctor of canon law named Copallati.
Canon Ellacombe writes that it has been banished in England to the gardens of cottages and old farm-houses; it had a waning popularity in America, but was never wholly despised.
These are easily led in fulness of detail, exactness of information, and delightful literary quality by that truly perfect book, beloved of all garden lovers, The Plant Lore and Garden Craft of Shakespeare, by Canon Ellacombe.
The chancel has already been restored, and Canon McLarney hopes to collect a thousand pounds to complete the work on the nave.
To this workCanon McLarney, the present rector of Clonfert, has set his hand.
It is a canon of interpretation, according to Alford, that "a figurative sense of words is never admissible except when required by the context.