Footnote in table
Genevieve.There was, however, a persistent doubt as to the identity of the Dionysius whose writings footnote in table had become so famous.His order received papal approbation in 1126, and thereafter it spread rapidly throughout Europe two hundred years later there were no less than seventeen hundred Norbertine or Premonstratensian monasteries.However the name may have arisen, the famous scholar certainly adopted it very early in his footnote in table career, and it went over into the vernacular as Ablard or Abailard, though with a multiplicity of variations (in Villon's famous poem, for example, it appears as Esbaillart).End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Historia Calamitatum, by Peter Abelard *** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HISTORIA CALAMITATUM *** ***** This file should be named 14268 8.Gildas, footnote in table in Brittany.THE UNIVERSALS It is not within the province of such a note as this to discuss in detail the great controversy between the realists and the nominalists which dominated the philosophical and, to some extent, the religious thought of France during the first half of the twelfth century.MDARD This abbot was probably, though not certainly, Anselm of Soissons, footnote in table who became a bishop in 1145.CHAPTER XV OF THE PERILS OF HIS ABBEY AND OF THE REASONS FOR THE WRITING OF THIS HIS LETTER Reflecting often upon all these things, I determined to make provision for those sisters and to undertake their care in every way I could.And as footnote in table St.Bernard, abbot of Clairvaux, it is needless here to say more than that his own age recognized in him the embodiment of the highest ideal of medieval monasticism.Furthermore, in order that they might have the greater footnote in table reverence for me, I arranged to watch over them in person.Furthermore, his mother Adela, was the daughter of William I of England, and his younger brother, Stephen, was King of England from 1135 to 1154.The unceasing activities of Bernard and others finally brought Ablard before an ecclesiastical council at Sens in 1140, footnote in table where he was formally arraigned on charges of heresy.