Bartholomeus de proprietatibus rerum' are cut in enormous letters on a wooden board; indeed the whole block was so large that hardly any copy contains the whole.
Stephen Batman, one of the Archbishop's domestic chaplains, editor of De Proprietatibus Rerum, by Bartholomeus Anglicanus.
De Proprietatibus Rerum", which belonged to the Carthusian Monastery of the Holy Trinity, at Dijon.
This was an English rendering of the "De Proprietatibus Rerum" of Bartholomæus Anglicus (fl.
Later predecessors were the English Franciscan Bartolomaeus, whose encyclopaedic De proprietatibus rerum was written a little before the middle of the twelfth century (see Felder, Studien in Franciscanerorder, etc.
Batman's translation of Bartholomaeus de Proprietatibus Rerum, to the effect that the symphonie was 'an instrument of musyke .
The idea is old, and may be found gravely stated as a fact in Bartolomaeus De Proprietatibus Rerum (14th century).
That it was in Cologne rather than elsewhere, is confirmed by the oft-quoted stanza added by Wynkyn de Worde as a colophon to the English edition of Bartholomæus de proprietatibus rerum.
We meet with the large Gothic type again in 1535, in an edition of the De Proprietatibus Rerum of Bartholomæus Anglicus, which Berthelet printed in that year.
The last was published under the title of Batman uppon Bartholome, his Booke de proprietatibus rerum, &c.
The frequent use which has been made in the course of these remarks of a work cited under the title of Bartholomæus de proprietatibus rerum, may require that a more particular description of it should be given.
In conformity with this opinion, we are told in the English translation of Bartholomæus De proprietatibus rerum, lib.
Bartholomew Anglicus became known as "Magister de Proprietatibus Rerum," and his book was on the list of those which students could borrow from the University chest.
The subject in treating of which he is referred to was an elephant belonging to the Emperor; and Salimbene quotes a passage on the elephant from his De Proprietatibus Rerum.
John of Trevisa, an Oxford scholar, was the first to English an important historical work, and a book of popular science, the Polychronicon of Higden and the De Proprietatibus Rerum of Bartholomew.
Bartholomew the Englishman, in his "De Proprietatibus Rerum," book xv.
De Proprietatibus Rerum of Bartholomaeus Anglicus was "newly corrected, enlarged, and amended" in 1582.
Though not strictly a herbal, the above is included in this list, as this and Liber de Proprietatibus Rerum are the earliest printed books containing a section on herbs.
But much of the matter was absorbed into encyclopaedic works like the De Proprietatibus Rerum of Bartholomaeus, which Trevisa translated.
In 1398 he brought to an end another long work, the translation of Bartholomaeus de Proprietatibus Rerum, the great encyclopaedia of natural science at this time.
From the old translation of Glanville’s work, De Proprietatibus Rerum, by John Trevisa, Vicar of Barkley.
John Trevisa has rendered the lepra of Glanville by “meselry,” in translating, in 1398, the treatise De Proprietatibus Rerum.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "proprietatibus" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.