Results 71 to 80 of about 481,789 (245)

Liturgical monody as a subject of musicological research - an athempt at synthesis

open access: yesSeminare, 2019
Until the Second Vatican Council, Gregorian chant was the only type of sacred song classified as the liturgical monody. Currently, the liturgical monody covers various genres of music, from Gregorian chants to contemporary compositions contained in ...
Piotr Wiśniewski
doaj  

How Safe Is Your Church? What Can We Learn From Children and Young People About Safeguarding in the Church of England?

open access: yesChild Abuse Review, Volume 34, Issue 6, November/December 2025.
ABSTRACT This participatory research sought the views of children and young people on their feelings of safety in church youth groups. Thirty‐two young people, aged 9–19 years, participated in five focus groups. The research approach was designed in consultation with a young persons' steering group, who also helped in the coding and analysis of the ...
Peter Sidebotham
wiley   +1 more source

The Sounds of Vatican II: Musical Change and Experimentation in Two U.S. Trappist Monasteries, 1965−1984 [PDF]

open access: yes, 2014
The Second Vatican Council impacted the use of liturgical music within religious communities. Two U.S. Trappist monasteries, New Melleray Abbey in Dubuque, Iowa, and Gethsemani Abbey in Bardstown, Kentucky, evidenced distinctive approaches to the musical
Eden, Bradford Lee
core   +3 more sources

Commemorating Festive Performances in Popular Print in Sixteenth‐Century Italy☆

open access: yesRenaissance Studies, Volume 39, Issue 5, Page 632-657, November 2025.
Abstract The aim of this article is to show that the popular print sold and distributed during and after festive events, such as Carnival, had an impact on the commemoration and shaping of festive culture in early modern Italy. That is, the mass medium of print that had begun to shape European cultures, especially in Italy where Venice was one of ...
Rozanne Versendaal
wiley   +1 more source

Early music printing in german-speaking lands [PDF]

open access: yes, 2018
Printing was first established in Mainz, the seat of the archbishop who was the most important of the seven Electors of the Holy Roman Empire and head of the largest ecclesiastical province of that Empire, containing 17,000 clerics who made a perfect ...
Elisabeth Giselbrecht, Grantley McDonald
core   +1 more source

Becoming Religious as an Education of Attention

open access: yesJournal for the Scientific Study of Religion, Volume 64, Issue 3, Page 279-290, September 2025.
ABSTRACT A vast literature in the social scientific study of religion demonstrates that religious people are made not born. More specifically, researchers have shown that becoming religious is something that people must learn how to do. Adding to this well‐established focus on the socialization of religious subjects, I argue that becoming religious ...
Daniel Winchester
wiley   +1 more source

Corpus Troporum Dataset: A Digital Catalog of Trope Elements in Medieval Chant

open access: yesJournal of Open Humanities Data
We present a dataset of occurrences of so-called trope elements in manuscripts of European medieval chant. Trope elements are short melodic phrases interpolated in a fixed liturgical music repertoire and reflect changes and additions to liturgical chants
Tim Eipert   +2 more
doaj   +1 more source

Ohrid Literary School in the Period of Tzar Samoil and the Beginnings of the Russian Church Literature

open access: yes, 2017
The article is concerned with the role of St. Clement’s Church in the preservation and the spread of Cyril and Methodius’s literary tradition and Slavic church services.
Pop-Atanasov, Gjorgi
core  

The Cost of Making Disciples [PDF]

open access: yes, 1996
(Excerpt) Christians, wrote Tertullian in the second century, are made, not born. Fortunately, we have a description of how they were made from the Apostolic Tradition of Hippolytus.l Exposed to the gospel through lives of committed Christians ...
Huffman, Walter
core   +1 more source

Mood Selection in the Old Northumbrian Gloss to Durham MS A.iv.19

open access: yesTransactions of the Philological Society, Volume 123, Issue 2, Page 189-212, July 2025.
Abstract The aim of this article is to examine the use of the subjunctive in the 10th‐century Old Northumbrian gloss to Durham MS A.iv.19. We assess whether there is evidence for a weakening of the indicative/subjunctive opposition, as has been argued for the earlier gloss to the Lindisfarne Gospels, which was the work of the same glossator, Aldred of ...
Julia Fernández Cuesta   +1 more
wiley   +1 more source

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