Ambrosian Hymnography
The term implies no attribution of authorship, but rather a poetical form or a liturgical use.
Ambrosian Library
Founded between 1603 and 1609 by Cardinal Federigo Borromeo at Milan.
Ambrosian Liturgy and Rite
The liturgy and Rite of the Church of Milan, which derives its name from St. Ambrose, Bishop of Milan (374-397).
Ambrosians
The Order of St. Ambrose was the name of two religious congregations, one of men and one of women, founded in the neighbourhood of Milan during the fourteenth and fifteenth centuri…
Ambrosiaster
The name given to the author of a commentary on all the Epistles of St. Paul, with the exception of that to the Hebrews.
Ambulatory
A cloister, gallery, or alley; a sheltered place, straight or circular, for exercise in walking; the aisle that makes the circuit of the apse of a church.
Amelote, Denis
Ordained in 1631, a Doctor of the Sorbonne, and member of the French Oratory. (1609-1678)
Amende Honorable
An obsolete form of honorary satisfaction, customary in the Church in France as late as the seventeenth century.
Amerbach, Veit
Humanist and convert from Lutheranism to the Catholic Church. (1503-1557)
American College at Louvain, The
An institution for the education of priests founded in 1857.
American College in Rome, The
Owes its existence chiefly to Archbishop Hughes, of New York, and Archbishop Kenrick of Baltimore.
American College in Rome, The South
The Rev. Ignatius Victor Eyzaguirre went to Rome, in 1857, and proposed to the Pope the erection of a college for students from Latin American countries.
Amico, Antonio
Canon of Palermo, and ecclesiastical historian of Syracuse and Messina, (d. 1641).
Showing 601–620 of 1,278 results