Results 181 to 190 of about 54,705 (230)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
The Journal of Ecclesiastical History, 1955
Nothing could be more fitting than to begin a Liturgical Review with a notice of Dr. Oscar Cullmann's Early Christian Worship (Studies in Biblical Theology No. 10. Pp. 124. London: S.C.M. Press, 1953. 8s.). The English book is in two parts: the first entitled ‘Basic Characteristics of the Early Christian Service of Worship’, being a translation of ...
openaire +1 more source
Nothing could be more fitting than to begin a Liturgical Review with a notice of Dr. Oscar Cullmann's Early Christian Worship (Studies in Biblical Theology No. 10. Pp. 124. London: S.C.M. Press, 1953. 8s.). The English book is in two parts: the first entitled ‘Basic Characteristics of the Early Christian Service of Worship’, being a translation of ...
openaire +1 more source
Liturgical Books and Plainchant Sources
1993Abstract The books in which the plainchant has been recorded since Carolingian times are diverse in nature and complex in content. This is chiefly because different books contain material for different parts of the liturgical round and for the use of different personages involved in the celebration.
openaire +1 more source
1997
The article analyses the Byzantine liturgical books. For the first time in the liturgical scholarship they are dealt with in their origin and history as products of the local forms of christian worship. Two principal centers of liturgical production, Jerusalem and Constantinople, and two main forms of liturgy, cathedral and monastic, have interacted in
openaire +1 more source
The article analyses the Byzantine liturgical books. For the first time in the liturgical scholarship they are dealt with in their origin and history as products of the local forms of christian worship. Two principal centers of liturgical production, Jerusalem and Constantinople, and two main forms of liturgy, cathedral and monastic, have interacted in
openaire +1 more source
Carolingian liturgical books: problems of categorization
Gazette du livre médiéval, 2016Fragments of liturgical books made in the late eighth and ninth centuries demonstrate that individual liturgical manuscripts may not fit simple narratives or general outlines : that booktype in which prayers, readings and chants for the divine office were collected together— long considered not to have existed before the eleventh century— can be traced
openaire +2 more sources
Acoustical study of Toledo Cathedral according to its liturgical uses
Applied Acoustics, 2014Antonio Pedrero +2 more
exaly

