The Belgian Jesuit Hippolyte Delehaye (1859-1941) was a distinguished member of the Society of Bollandists, named for the seventeenth-century Jesuit Jean Bolland, who was assigned the task of collating and editing the various versions of the lives of saints and martyrs. This work in French was published in 1909, and considers the various legends, originating in the Greek Orthodox Church, about the lives of soldier-saints, from the most famous, such as St George and St Theodore, to those, such as St Procopius of Scythopolis, where there is not unanimous agreement that they were soldiers at all. A long appendix gives the Greek texts (with variants) of several versions of the lives and martyrdoms of Sts Theodore, Eutropius, Procopius, Mercurius and Demetrius. Delehaye in his introduction points out that Christianity spread rapidly through the Roman army, and that this accounts in part for its dissemination across the Roman world.
Dans ce quatrième volume de martyrologe, l'abbé Charles Profillet explore les vies et les actions de plusieurs saints militaires vénérés par l'Église catholique. Les lecteurs découvriront les...
L'artillerie lourde avait commencé à tirer sur la périphérie de Léningrad, à dix kilomètres à peine de la ligne de front. L'immense ville, assiégée depuis plusieurs mois par les divisions de fer de...
This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important, and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it.This work is in the "public domain in the United States of...