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Articles de revues sur le sujet "Christ Church (University of Oxford). Library"

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Mateer, David. « Oxford, Christ Church Music MSS 984–8 : An Index and Commentary ». Royal Musical Association Research Chronicle 20 (1987) : 1–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14723808.1987.10540916.

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Robert Dow, the original owner of Oxford, Christ Church (Och) MSS 984–8, was the eldest son of Robert Dow (1517–1612), citizen and Merchant Taylor of London. According to the 1568 Heraldic Visitation of London, Robert junior was fifteen at that time, and so was born in 1553; he had four brothers, John, Henry, Thomas and Richard, aged twelve, ten, five and two and a half years respectively. Since both John and Henry attended Merchant Taylors’ School, it is probable that Robert did likewise, though we cannot be certain of this since no accurate register of pupils was kept until Robert Dow senior instituted the School's Probation Books in 1607. Another not unreasonable expectation would be that the young Robert went up to St John's College, Oxford, given his father's munificience towards that College and its strong links with the Merchant Taylors’ Company. However, such an assumption would be unwarranted, and indeed, no Oxford college has any official record of him as an undergraduate. Fortunately in the British Library there are three holograph letters in Latin from Dow to Lord Burghley, dated 20 September, 4 October and 8 November 1573, written ‘Oxoniae (Oxonij), in Collegio Corporis Christi’. Since he does not sign himself ‘discipulus’ or ‘alumnus’, it is hardly surprising that there is no mention of his name in the College's Registers, and therefore the most likely explanation for his presence at Corpus Christi is that he was a gentleman-commoner, though this cannot be verified. Whatever his status, we know that Robert Dow definitely proceeded B.A., for the Oxford University Register of Congregation and Convocation 1564–82 has the following entry for 12 October 1573 recording his supplication for that degree: Supplicat etc. Robertus Dowe scholaris facultatis artium quatenus in studio dialectices quatuor annos posuerit generalis creatus fuerit bacchalaurio xlma respondent ceteraque omnia perfecerit quae per nova statuta requiruntur ut haec ei sufficiant ut admittatur ad aliquem librum logices legendum. Concessa [est] modo determinet proxima xlma 7.
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VáZquez, Nila. « Scribal Intrusion in the Texts of Gamelyn ». Studia Anglica Posnaniensia 46, no 2 (1 janvier 2010) : 3–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/v10121-009-0033-2.

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Scribal Intrusion in the Texts of Gamelyn One of most important steps in the process of editing a manuscript is the identification and correction of the mistakes made by the scribe or scribes involved in its copying process in order to obtain the best text. In some cases, the changes introduced by the scribe, or by the editor who was supervising his work, can easily be noticed because we find out "physical" elements throughout the folio, such as dots under a word as a sign of expunction or carets indicating that a missing word is being added. However, there are many instances of scribal intrusion where only a detailed analysis of the text itself, or even the comparison of different manuscripts, can lead us to the identification of a modified reading. For instance, orthographical changes due to the dialectal provenance of the copyist, or altered lines with a regular aspect. The purpose of this article is to analyse the scribal amendments that appear in some of the earliest copies of The tale of Gamelyn: Corpus Christi College Oxford MS 198 (Cp), Christ Church Oxford MS 152 (Ch), Fitzwilliam Museum McClean 181 (Fi), British Library MS Harley 7334 (Ha4), Bodleian Library MS Hatton Donat. 1 (Ht), British Library MS Lansdowne 851 (La), Lichfield Cathedral MS 29 (Lc), Cambridge University Library Mm. 2.5 (Mm), Petworth House MS 7 (Pw) and British Library MS Royal 18 C.II (Ry2).
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Brown, Michelle P. « Paris, Bibliothèque Nationale, lat. 10861 and the scriptorium of Christ Church, Canterbury ». Anglo-Saxon England 15 (décembre 1986) : 119–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0263675100003720.

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The primary purpose of this article is to draw attention to a little-known Anglo-Saxon manuscript of the early ninth century, now Paris, Bibliothèque Nationale, lat. 10861, a collection of Latin saints' lives or passions. My interest was first drawn to this manuscript by the brief remarks of J. J. G. Alexander and J. E. Cross (the latter incorporating the personal communication of Bernhard Bischoff), both of whom associated the manuscript with the more famous Book of Cerne (Cambridge, University Library, Ll. 1.10) by virtue of its script and decoration. Closer examination of the manuscript reveals far more complex connections and implications. In particular, the script of BN lat. 10861, which incorporates several distinctive calligraphic features, relates it closely to a group of charters produced at Christ Church, Canterbury, and dated between c. 805 and c. 825. There have hitherto been few attempts to link Anglo-Saxon documentary and book hands, with the notable exceptions of the link between Oxford, Bodleian Library, Bodley 426 (Philippus, Expositio in Iob), which has been dated to the mid-ninth century on the basis of its association with two charters (London, British Library, Cotton Augustus ii. 37, dated 838, and Cotton Charter viii. 36, dated 847) thought to have been written in Wessex, probably at Sherborne or Winchester, and the association of London, BL, Royal 1. E. VI and BL, Add. Ch. 19789, a ninth-century forgery of a document dated 759, recently advanced by Mildred Budny. The establishment of such relationships offers potential for a firmer assessment of the date and place of origin of a particular manuscript than might otherwise be possible; it may also provide a valuable insight into the workings of the scriptorium in question. If, as I believe, a reasonably accurate dating may be advanced for BN lat. 10861 through its association with charter material, further chronological implications may arise, for the decoration of this manuscript places it firmly within the ‘Canterbury’ or ‘Tiberius’ group of manuscripts, and the dating of any one member of the group offers scope for the relative dating of others.
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Weeks, James. « The Architects of Christ Church Library ». Architectural History 48 (2005) : 107–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0066622x00003749.

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Architecture in Oxford between the Civil War and the early Georgian period presents a fascinating picture of great stylistic change and originality, as vernacular building traditions largely inherited from the Gothic of the Middle Ages were superseded by new design philosophies derived from Renaissance interpretations of classical architecture. The new architecture was driven by an increasingly élite and academic taste, largely dependent upon expensive foreign books and even more costly foreign travel, and necessitated fundamental changes to the established building practices of the colleges, which had hitherto relied largely on local master masons for both construction and design. As architecture ‘was something outside the ken of the average Oxford don’, knowledgeable men, especially those who had travelled abroad and seen modern buildings, became important arbiters of taste, and often drifted into architecture as a result. The first and most famous Oxford man to take this path was Christopher Wren of Wadham College in the 1660s, but he was followed a generation later by Henry Aldrich, Dean of Christ Church, after whose death in 1710 the mantle passed to George Clarke of All Souls College. It is with the significance of the latter two men’s activities at Christ Church that we will presently be concerned.
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Elliott, John R., et John Buttrey. « The Royal Plays at Christ Church in 1636 : A New Document ». Theatre Research International 10, no 2 (1985) : 93–106. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0307883300010646.

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On 29 August 1636, King Charles I and his Queen, Henrietta Maria, paid a royal visit to the University of Oxford at the invitation of Archbishop Laud, Chancellor of the University. They lodged in Christ Church, a royal foundation and the largest of the Oxford colleges, which was to become the seat of their court during the Civil War. During the two days they spent in Oxford on this occasion, the King and Queen and their entourage were entertained with three plays: William Strode's The Floating Island, in Christ Church hall on the night of 29 August; George Wilde's Love's Hospital, in St. John's College hall on the afternoon of 30 August; and William Cartwright's The Royal Slave, again in Christ Church hall on the night of 30 August.
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Sánchez-Martí, Jordi. « A Newly Discovered Edition of the English Palmerin D'oliva ». Library 21, no 2 (1 juin 2020) : 226–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/library/21.2.226.

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Abstract This note examines the fragments of the English Palmerin d'Oliva discovered in the library of Christ Church, Oxford, in 2017. First, it briefly discusses the course the Castilian Palmerín de Olivia followed on the Continent until it crossed to England, where Anthony Munday's translation appeared in 1588. After explaining how the fragments were located, their placement, nature and contents are described. The text in the Christ Church fragments is collated with the other editions of the English Palmerin d'Oliva. The ESTC conjecturally states that the newly discovered edition was printed c. 1600 by Thomas Creede and Bernard Alsop. This article, however, argues that the available textual, typographical and bibliographical evidence suggests that this edition must have been printed c. 1609 by Creede, without the participation of Alsop. Finally, note is taken of the presence on the pages of the handwriting of Henry Aldrich, the seventeenth-century dean of Christ Church.
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Milton, J. R. « Locke, William III, and the Reform of the Universities ». Locke Studies 9 (31 décembre 2009) : 123–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.5206/ls.2009.906.

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Most of the major early modern philosophers attended university, but before Kant none of them spent a lifetime as a university teacher. Locke’s connections with the academic world were closer than most: he went up to Oxford in 1652, at the age of twenty, as a newly elected student of Christ Church, and he stayed there for nearly fifteen years. Though only intermittently in residence there- after, he retained his studentship until he was expelled by royal command in 1684. After the Revolution he drafted a petition to the king to have his place restored to him, but then withdrew it; according to Lady Masham he did not wish someone else to be deprived to make room for him. Locke wanted a public acknow- ledgement that he had been wronged, but he had no intention of returning to Christ Church and living again in the college. Neither his journal nor his letters contain any indication that he ever went back to Oxford.
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Gustafson, Bruce, et Candace Bailey. « Late-Seventeenth-Century English Keyboard Music : Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS. Mus. Sch. D. 219 ; Oxford, Christ Church, Mus. MS. 1177 ». Notes 55, no 2 (décembre 1998) : 470. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/900215.

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Gillespie, Stuart, et Christopher Pelling. « The Greek Translations of Francis Hickes (1565/6–1631) ». Translation and Literature 25, no 3 (novembre 2016) : 315–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/tal.2016.0261.

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Francis Hickes has always had a small place in English literary history as an early translator of Lucian. Two manuscripts in the library of Christ Church, Oxford, show that his work in Greek translation went much further: he produced unprinted versions of the complete histories of Thucydides and Herodian too. After reconstructing what can be known of Hickes' life, this article undertakes detailed comparisons between his productions and the contemporary printed ones by James Maxwell (Herodian) and Thomas Hobbes (Thucydides). Hickes, it is demonstrated, is a much more successful translator than Maxwell, and his Thucydides is much more than a mere curiosity when placed alongside Hobbes' much-admired Peloponnesian War.
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NOWAK-KEMP, MAŁGOSIA, et UWE FRITZ. « Chelonian type specimens at the Oxford University Museum ». Zootaxa 2604, no 1 (7 septembre 2010) : 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.2604.1.1.

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In the present paper, the history of the chelonian collection of the Oxford University Museum is summarized and extant type specimens are identified. Currently, there are 46 name-bearing types of 25 chelonian taxa and paralectotypes of three taxa described by Georg Baur, Thomas Bell, André Marie Constant Duméril & Gabriel Bibron, and John Edward Gray from the families Emydidae, Geoemydidae, Testudinidae, Chelidae, and Pelomedusidae. Among the name-bearing types, there are holotypes of eight taxa (Cyclemys bellii Gray, 1863; Emys speciosa var. levigata Gray, 1831; Phrynops bellii Gray, 1844; Rhinoclemys bellii Gray, 1863; Sternothaerus leachianus Bell, 1825; Sternothaerus trifasciatus Bell, 1825; Testudo hercules var. truncata Gray, 1831; Testudo tentoria Bell, 1828) and one lectotype is of Pyxis arachnoides Bell, 1827. Two additional holotypes or syntypes are of Terrapene maculata Bell, 1825 and Terrapene nebulosa Bell, 1825, and 35 syntypes represent 14 taxa (Cyclemys orbiculata Bell, 1834; Emys concentrica var. polita Gray, 1831; Emys crassicollis Gray, 1831; Emys decussata Gray, 1831; Emys hamiltonii Gray, 1831; Emys irrigata Duméril & Bibron, 1835; Emys speciosa Gray, 1831; Emys spinosa Gray, 1831; Emys tectum Gray, 1830; Emys thurjii Gray, 1831; Kinixys castanea Bell, 1827; Kinixys homeana Bell, 1827; Testudo actinodes Bell, 1828; Testudo guntheri Baur, 1889). Three paralectotypes are of Emys dentata Gray, 1831, eight paralectotypes are of Emys vulgaris Gray, 1831, and one paralectotype is of Pyxis arachnoides Bell, 1827. Except the syntype of Testudo guntheri Baur, 1889, originating from the college of Christ Church, Oxford, all type specimens belong to the former collection of Thomas Bell that was transferred to Oxford in 1862. Testudo guntheri Baur, 1889 is regarded as nomen dubium because it was based on specimens without locality data.
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Livres sur le sujet "Christ Church (University of Oxford). Library"

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Christ Church (University of Oxford). Library. The building accounts of Christ Church Library 1716-1779 : A transcription with an introduction and indices of donors and craftsmen. Oxford : (Christ Church Library) for presentation to members of the Roxburghe Club, 1988.

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Fronda, Rahel. Jewish books and their Christian readers : Christ Church connectons : Christ Church Upper Library 22 May-20 October 2017. Oxford : Christ Church Library, 2017.

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author, Rundle David, et Griffiths Jeremy, dir. A descriptive catalogue of the Western manuscripts, to c. 1600, in Christ Church, Oxford. Oxford : The Oxford Bibliographical Society, 2017.

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Christ Church (University of Oxford). Picture Gallery. Christ Church Picture Gallery, Oxford. Oxford : Christ Church Picture Gallery, 2002.

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Education at Christ Church, Oxford 1660-1800. Oxford : Clarendon, 1988.

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Bill, Edward Geoffrey Watson. Education at Christ Church, Oxford, 1660-1800. Oxford : Clarendon Press, 1988.

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The Cardinal's college : Christ Church, chapter and verse. London : Profile Books, 2012.

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Thalmann, Jacqueline. 40 years of Christ Church Picture Gallery : Still one of Oxford's best kept secrets. Oxford : Christ Church Picture Gallery, 2008.

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The emergence of estate maps : Christ Church, Oxford, 1600 to 1840. Oxford : Clarendon Press, 1995.

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Gyararī, Tōkyō Sutēshon, dir. Firentse Runesansu sobyōten : Okkusufōdo Daigaku Kuraisuto Chāchi Bijutsukan shozō. [Tokyo?] : Firentse Runesansu Sobyōten Jikko Iinkai, 1994.

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Chapitres de livres sur le sujet "Christ Church (University of Oxford). Library"

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Catto, †. Jeremy. « Towards the Courtier : The University Formation of Public Servants in the Age of Richard Fox ». Dans History of Universities, 9–21. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198848523.003.0002.

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This introductory chapter provides an overview of Corpus Christi College in Oxford, founded in 1517 by Bishop Richard Fox, which occupies a particular place in the history of English universities. Corpus Christi College was a new kind of foundation, with a humanist curriculum and a distinctive emphasis on pedagogy. Endowed with lecturers in ‘Humanity‘ (Latin literature), Greek, and Theology—the last appointed to teach Scripture and the church fathers rather than the medieval authorities—it seemed to harness the learning of the Renaissance to the contemporaneous project of spiritual reform and reformation. Moreover, Corpus Christi College’s trilingual library—containing texts in Latin, Greek, and Hebrew—was famously judged by Erasmus as a wonder of the world. So it is that Corpus has been identified as one of a ‘group of Renaissance colleges‘, introducing ‘a new era in the university‘.
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Watts, John. « Introduction ». Dans History of Universities, 1–8. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198848523.003.0001.

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Corpus Christi College, Oxford, founded just over five hundred years ago in 1517 by Bishop Richard Fox, occupies a particular place in the history of English universities. Together with Christ’s College, Cambridge (1506) and St John’s College, Cambridge (1511–16), it was a new kind of foundation, with a humanist curriculum and a distinctive emphasis on paedagogy. Endowed with lecturers in ‘Humanity’ (Latin literature), Greek and Theology, the last appointed to teach Scripture and the church fathers rather than the medieval authorities, it seemed to harness the learning of the Renaissance to the contemporaneous project of spiritual reform and reformation; and its trilingual library—containing texts in Latin, Greek and Hebrew—was famously judged by Erasmus a wonder of the world. So it is that Corpus has been identified as one of a ‘group of Renaissance colleges’, introducing ‘a new era in the university’....
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Mason, J. F. A. « Christ Church ». Dans The History of the University of Oxford, 221–32. Oxford University Press, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199510177.003.0009.

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Sandis, Elizabeth. « Introduction ». Dans Early Modern Drama at the Universities, 1–64. Oxford University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192857132.003.0001.

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Sixteenth- and seventeenth-century playwrights shared our fascination with student life. This study offers the perspective of the students themselves. The plays which they wrote come down to us mostly in manuscript form and in Latin, two factors which have allowed the study of university drama to remain at the fringes of scholarship, despite the contribution which it makes to the history of the universities and the development of English Renaissance drama. Many of the big names of the professional London stages, such as Marlowe, Lyly, Peele, Beaumont, and Fletcher, honed their skills at Oxford or Cambridge, and the plays written by poets in their teens and twenties at university demonstrate the values by which young men were judged, as writers, as scholars, and as men. In this study, I explore the work not only of those who identified themselves as ‘university men’, but those who carved out a scholarly reputation for themselves without having attended university, such as Ben Jonson, who was awarded an honorary MA later in life by Christ Church, Oxford....
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Mandelbrote, Scott. « The Significance of Historical Judaism and the Career of Humphrey Prideaux ». Dans The Mishnaic Moment, 255–77. Oxford University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192898906.003.0012.

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This chapter considers what can be learned from the career, writings, and library of Humphrey Prideaux (1648–1724), dean of Norwich, and disappointed candidate for the Oxford chair of Hebrew. Prideaux was the author of one of the most successful accounts of biblical history published in the eighteenth century, but his intellectual formation and activity remain understudied. Examination of Prideaux’s library of Hebraica and associated books, which were given to Clare College, Cambridge after his death, allows one to explore patterns of study dating back to Christ Church in the heyday of Edward Pococke’s teaching, and unearths relationships that play into later Oxford attempts to edit the Mishnah. At the same time, it reveals the importance of the study of Maimonides and of the Talmud for the forging of Prideaux’s own career as a Hebraist and addresses the significance of changes of style in the presentation of Hebraic learning.
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Handley, Eric. « Thomas Bertram Lonsdale Webster 1905–1974 ». Dans Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 120, Biographical Memoirs of Fellows, II. British Academy, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.5871/bacad/9780197263020.003.0021.

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Tom Webster grew up in London and lived there for twenty years in middle and later life, when he was Professor of Greek in the University at University College, the scene of much of his most fruitful work. For seventeen years before that, he was Hulme Professor of Greek at Manchester, taking up his appointment at the age of twenty-six, as the University recalled with pride and affection when it made him, in 1965, an honorary Doctor of Letters. He began his academic career with eight years (mainly) at Oxford, as an undergraduate and then a young don at Christ Church, with a fruitful interlude at Leipzig; he ended it with six years at Stanford, as Professor of Classics and then Emeritus. At and after the end of the First World War he was a schoolboy at Charterhouse; during the Second World War he served as an officer in Military Intelligence.
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VanderKam, James C. « Scholarly Work 1914–1915 ». Dans R. H. Charles, 483–99. Oxford University PressOxford, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192869289.003.0016.

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Abstract The chapter is largely devoted to another of Charles’s synthetic books, this one entitled Religious Development between the Old and the New Testaments (1914), part of the series The Home University Library of Modern Knowledge and closely resembling his A Critical History of the Doctrine of a Future Life. It summarizes his presentations such as rejecting the notion that the time between the Testaments was one of silence (it was a period of important religious developments), similarities and distinctions between prophecy and apocalyptic and their eschatologies and ethical teachings, messianism, Christ as Son of Man and Servant of the Lord, the blessed future life, and forgiveness of neighbors, the need for ongoing reinterpretation of Scriptures, and the advisability of having a national church. It also surveys the final chapters in the book that center around the apocryphal and pseudepigraphic books. The chapter also deals with a University of London dissertation that Charles evaluated and that he advocated publishing.
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Ward, Keith. « John Macquarrie 1919–2007 ». Dans Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 161, Biographical Memoirs of Fellows, VIII. British Academy, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.5871/bacad/9780197264577.003.0012.

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John Macquarrie (1919–2007), a Fellow of the British Academy, was the foremost Anglican systematic theologian of the twentieth century. His many books cover a wide range of topics, from studies of existentialist philosophy to expositions of systematic Christian theology, writings on mysticism and world religion, and analyses of ethical thought. Macquarrie was always a theologian of the church, using a philosophical vocabulary that united philosophical idealism, existentialism, and Anglo-Saxon analytical philosophy in an original and fruitful way. His masterpiece was the 1966 Principles of Christian Theology, which works through almost every aspect of Christian doctrine in the light of the concepts of human nature and of God that he had forged from idealism, from Martin Heidegger, and from an increasingly sacramental and mystical approach to Christian faith. In 1970, Macquarrie was offered, without his prior knowledge, the Lady Margaret Chair of Divinity at Christ Church, University of Oxford. He received various honours that testify to the high regard in which he was held both in America and in Britain.
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Ricks, Christopher. « Charles Henry Gifford 1913–2003 ». Dans Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 153 Biographical Memoirs of Fellows, VII. British Academy, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.5871/bacad/9780197264348.003.0010.

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Charles Henry Gifford (1913–2003), a Fellow of the British Academy, was a scholar-critic whose death at the age of ninety brought home what true piety is, in contemplation of his supple stamina and of his own discriminating piety towards the literary geniuses whose presences he owned: Leo Tolstoy and George Seferis, Boris Pasternak and Samuel Johnson, Dante and T. S. Eliot. He was a teacher for thirty years at the University of Bristol, a reviewer for the Times Literary Supplement, as essayist for Grand Street, and general editor (for Cambridge University Press) of the Cambridge Studies in Russian Literature. Educated at Harrow and then at Christ Church, Oxford, Gifford gained his BA in 1936, securing those foundations in Classics that were once held to be indispensable to all humane literary studies. Though he changed his mind as to whether he was cut out to be a poet, he never dispensed with what underpinned his love of poetry, the trained analytical and synthesising powers that his study of classical literature had helped to establish within him.
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« 'To the Memory of the most Ingenious and Vertuous Gentleman Mr WIL:CARTVVRIGHT, my much valued Friend'. From COMEDIES TRAGI-COMEDIES, With other POEMS, BY Mr WILLIAM CARTWRIGHT late Student of Christ-Church in Oxford, and Proctor of the UNIVERSITY. TheAyres and Songs set by Mr HENRY LAWES Servant to His late MAJESTY in His Publick and Private Musick (1651) ». Dans Katherine Philips (1631/2–1664) : Printed Publications 1651–1664, 1–6. Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315251141-1.

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Rapports d'organisations sur le sujet "Christ Church (University of Oxford). Library"

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Richmond, C. R. (Workshop on transfer of radionuclides to livestock, Christ Church College-University of Oxford, United Kingdom, September 5--8, 1988) : Foreign trip report. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), septembre 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/6097392.

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