In the centuries following his death, Jerome (c.347-420) was venerated as a saint and as one of the four Doctors of the Latin church. In his own lifetime, however, he was a severely marginalized figure whose intellectual and spiritual authority did not go unchallenged, at times not even by those in his inner circle. His ascetic theology was rejected by the vast majority of Christian contemporaries, his Hebrew scholarship was called into question by the leading Biblical authorities of the day, and the reputation he cultivated as a pious monk was compromised by allegations of moral impropriety with some of his female disciples. In view of the extremely problematic nature of his profile, how did Jerome seek to bring credibility to himself and ...
Esta dissertação compreende a tradução, descrição, análise e anotação crítica das cartas que compõem...
Jerome\u2019s quoting epistolary brevitas in letter 26 to Marcella could betray his knowledge of Ori...
The study focuses on a hidden classical allusion that has remained undetected in the biography of St...
In Jerome and the Monastic Clergy, Andrew Cain provides the first full-scale commentary on the famou...
his book assembles eighteen studies by internationally renowned scholars that epitomize the latest a...
Epistula (Letter) 108, one of the longest of Jerome’s letters, was written in 404 AD to console Eust...
Jerome's translation of the Bible from Hebrew into Latin is often ignored in discussions concerning ...
The question of Christian almsgiving in late antiquity is one that has received fresh treatment rece...
Jerome’s Epistula prima is a remarkably hybrid text. It contains a miraculous account of the trial a...
This thesis consists of a commentary on Jerome, Letters 1, 60, and 107, literary pieces which readi...
Jerome, like most of the early Christian exegetes (Origen, Didymus the Blind, Hilarius of Poitiers, ...
This paper commemorates the 1600th year anniversary of Jerome’s death starting with a short mention ...
Includes an improved Latin text of Jerome's Vita Malchi with an original English translation<p>...
The paper presents a preliminary study on the linguistic elements and the diversity of Jerome's Lati...
A diagram in the first quire of the Codex Amiatinus features five textual captions arranged in cruci...
Esta dissertação compreende a tradução, descrição, análise e anotação crítica das cartas que compõem...
Jerome\u2019s quoting epistolary brevitas in letter 26 to Marcella could betray his knowledge of Ori...
The study focuses on a hidden classical allusion that has remained undetected in the biography of St...
In Jerome and the Monastic Clergy, Andrew Cain provides the first full-scale commentary on the famou...
his book assembles eighteen studies by internationally renowned scholars that epitomize the latest a...
Epistula (Letter) 108, one of the longest of Jerome’s letters, was written in 404 AD to console Eust...
Jerome's translation of the Bible from Hebrew into Latin is often ignored in discussions concerning ...
The question of Christian almsgiving in late antiquity is one that has received fresh treatment rece...
Jerome’s Epistula prima is a remarkably hybrid text. It contains a miraculous account of the trial a...
This thesis consists of a commentary on Jerome, Letters 1, 60, and 107, literary pieces which readi...
Jerome, like most of the early Christian exegetes (Origen, Didymus the Blind, Hilarius of Poitiers, ...
This paper commemorates the 1600th year anniversary of Jerome’s death starting with a short mention ...
Includes an improved Latin text of Jerome's Vita Malchi with an original English translation<p>...
The paper presents a preliminary study on the linguistic elements and the diversity of Jerome's Lati...
A diagram in the first quire of the Codex Amiatinus features five textual captions arranged in cruci...
Esta dissertação compreende a tradução, descrição, análise e anotação crítica das cartas que compõem...
Jerome\u2019s quoting epistolary brevitas in letter 26 to Marcella could betray his knowledge of Ori...
The study focuses on a hidden classical allusion that has remained undetected in the biography of St...