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Your search for 'dc_creator:( "Tinnefeld, Franz (Munich)" ) OR dc_contributor:( "Tinnefeld, Franz (Munich)" )' returned 132 results. Modify search
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Vitalis
(47 words)
[German version] Army leader in the war between the Eastern Roman empire and the Goths in Italy, recorded only in Procopius [3] (Goth. 3,10,2) under the name Βιτάλις/
Bitális as
magister militum per Illyricum
c. AD 539-544. PLRE 3, 1380 f., no. 1 (s. v. Vitalius). Tinnefeld, Franz (Munich)
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Historia Monachorum
(73 words)
[German version] Account, partly from secondary sources, of the journey that some Palestinian monks took to monastery centres in the Nile valley from the Thebaid to the Delta, composed
c. AD 395 by one of the travellers, often transmitted together with the
Historia Lausiaca of Pa…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Mundilas
(74 words)
[German version] (Μουνδίλας;
Moundílas). Eastern Roman officer in the body-guard of Belisarius during the Gothic War, attested between AD 537-539. M. was at Belisarius' side when he was besieged at Rome by the Gothic King Vitigis in 537-538, and he held Milan for nine months in 538 until finally forced to surrender to the Gothic besiegers and taken captive to Ravenna. Thereafter, he vanishes from history (PLRE 3, 901-903).…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Tatianus
(689 words)
I. Greek [German version] [I 1] Christian apologist and theologian, 2nd cent. (Τατιανός;
Tatianós). Christian apologist and theologian (born
c. AD 120). By his own account, T. was from the East Syrian/North Mesopotamian region (Or. 42). His work betrays a knowledge of classical authors relying upon Hellenistic scholarly tradition. His travels brought T. into contact with a variety of the philosophical and religious systems of his period (
i.a. participation in mystery cults, which he fails to define more precisely). In Rome, study of the Bible finally brought hi…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Hesychius
(1,271 words)
(Ἡσύχιος;
Hēsýchios). [German version] [1] Alex. scholar, author of a lexicon Alexandrian scholar, author of an alphabetically arranged lexicon, which has passed down to us numerous fragments (primarily of poetry), allows many text variants to be restored, and is of special significance to the study of ancient classical exegesis, of dialects, and of the history of the Greek language. The basis for dating him is the
Epistula ad Eulogium, which introduces the lexicon: some scholars identify the addressee with Eulogius Scholasticus (5th cent. AD), others, including Latte [3], dispute this hypothesis, nevertheless the dating cannot be later than the 6th cent. The same
Epistula declares that the main source of the work is the lexicon of Diogenianus [2] of Heraclea or perhaps an adaptation of it (H. cites this not as ‘All Kinds of Expressions’, Παντοδαπὴ λέξις, but under the strange title Περιεργοπένητες:
Periergopénētes). Furthermore H. states that he added glosses by Aristarchus [4] of Samothrace, Apion, and Helodorus and proverbs and orthographic rules by Herodianus. This lexicon has been handed down via the Codex Marcianus Graecus 622 (15th cent.) in a highly abridged and interpolated version …
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Michael
(1,757 words)
(Μιχαήλ/
Michaḗl; Mîkāēl). [German version] [1] Archangel Archangel, [1] One of the most prominent angels (cf. the description
archistratēgós, ‘supreme commander’ of the heavenly host, Joseph of Aseneth 14,8, cf. Slavonic Hen 22,5; 33,10), one of the seven (Ethiopic Hen 20,5) or four (Ethiopic Hen 9,1; 10,11) archangels (cf. [1]). The name means ‘who is like God’ or ‘who is victorious like God’. M., who was first mentioned in the ‘Book of Watchers (Ethiopic Hen 1-36, end of the 4th/beginning of the 2nd cent. BC), played an important role in early extra-canonical Judaic scripture, primarily on account of his collective and individual …
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Paroikoi
(244 words)
(πάροικοι;
pároikoi). [German version] [1] Free non-citizens in Hellenistic states and Roman provinces In the Hellenistic states of Asia Minor and the Near East and the Roman provinces that arose out of them, free people, mostly indigenous but without citizenship, living in
kṓmai (
kṓmē ) in the territory of a
pólis were predominantly called
paroikoi. In emergency situations, freed and non-free people, particularly those belonging to the (royal) farmers (
láoi), could be made
paroikoi, and
paroikoi from a
pólis's
synoikismós could be made citizens of that
pólis. In legal status with respect to the
…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Constantianus
(133 words)
[German version] [1] Brother-in-law of Valentinian I, died c. 370 AD Brother-in-law of Valentinian I. He led the fleet of the Euphrates in 363 in Julian’s Persian campaign (Amm. Marc. 23,3,9; Zos. 3,13,3). In 370 when
tribunus stabuli in Valentinian’s Gaulish campaigns he was killed in an ambush (Amm. Marc. 28,2,10).
PLRE 1,221. …
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Basileus
(3,191 words)
(βασιλεύς;
basileús). I. Mycenaean period up to the Hellenistic Monarchies …
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly