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Cardinal and statesman, b. about 1442, in the village of Erdoed, county Szatmar, Northeastern Hungary; d. 15 June, 1521.
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Second Bishop of Savannah. (1799-1859)
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Ordained priest 17 March, 1832, considered the second founder of the Norbertine Abbey of Tongerloo.
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First Bishop of Portland, Maine. (1813-1874)
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An English Carmelite and theologian, born towards the end of the thirteenth century.
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Town in Syria; also called Heliopolis.
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The word is derived from the Babylonian bab-ilu, meaning "gate of God".
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German philosopher and theologian; vice-chancellor of the University of Salzburg; born 1660 at Teining in Bavaria; died 5 April, 1726, at the Benedictine monastery of Ettal.
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French physicist. (1794-1872)
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The curial title of a Latin archbishopric, also of a Chaldean patriarchate, and of a Syrian archbishopric.
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Includes geography, history, and biblical references.
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This meeting was rather a witenagemot, or Parliament, than an ecclesiastical synod, presided over by Wihtred, King of Kent.
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Bishop of Corinth.
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An early fifth-century writer, known only through two treatises which warrant the conjecture that he was a monk, possibly an abbot, and a Spaniard.
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Catholic theological controversialist, born at Chemnitz, Saxony, about 1466.
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