Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Etymologiae> ?p ?o }
- Etymologiae abstract "Etymologiae (also called The Etymologies or Origines, standard abbrev. Orig.) is an etymological encyclopedia compiled by Isidore of Seville (c. 560–636) towards the end of his life. Isidore was encouraged to write the book by his friend Braulio, Bishop of Saragossa. The Etymologies summarized and organized a wealth of knowledge from hundreds of classical sources; three of its books are derived largely from Pliny the Elder's Natural History. Isidore acknowledges Pliny, but not his other principal sources, namely Cassiodorus, Servius and Solinus. The work contains whatever Isidore, an influential Christian bishop, thought worth keeping. Its subject matter is extremely diverse, ranging from grammar and rhetoric to the earth and the cosmos, buildings, metals, war, ships, humans, animals, medicine, law, religions and the hierarchies of angels and saints.Etymologiae covers an encyclopedic range of topics. Etymology, the origins of words, is prominent, but the work covers among other things grammar, rhetoric, mathematics, geometry, music, astronomy, medicine, law, the Roman Catholic Church and heretical sects, pagan philosophers, languages, cities, animals and birds, the physical world, geography, public buildings, roads, metals, rocks, agriculture, ships, clothes, food and tools.Etymologiae was the most used textbook throughout the middle ages. It was so popular that it was read in place of many of the original classical texts that it summarized, so these ceased to be copied and were lost. It was cited by Dante Alighieri, who placed Isidore in his Paradiso, quoted by Geoffrey Chaucer, and mentioned by the poets Bocaccio, Petrarch and John Gower. Among the thousand-odd surviving manuscript copies is the 13th-century Codex Gigas; the earliest surviving manuscript, the Codex Sangallensis, preserves books XI to XX from the 9th century. Etymologiae was printed in at least ten editions between 1472 and 1530, after which its importance faded in the Renaissance. The first scholarly edition was printed in Madrid in 1599; the first modern critical edition was edited by Wallace Lindsay in 1911.Etymologiae is less well known in modern times, though the Vatican considered naming its author Isidore the patron saint of the Internet. Scholars recognize its importance both for its preservation of classical texts and for the insight it offers into medieval thought.".
- Etymologiae author Isidore_of_Seville.
- Etymologiae literaryGenre Encyclopedia.
- Etymologiae nonFictionSubject Etymology.
- Etymologiae numberOfPages "20".
- Etymologiae thumbnail Isidoro_di_siviglia,_etimologie,_fine_VIII_secolo_MSII_4856_Bruxelles,_Bibliotheque_Royale_Albert_I,_20x31,50,_pagina_in_scrittura_onciale_carolina.jpg?width=300.
- Etymologiae wikiPageExternalLink brehaut%20-%20encyclopedist%20of%20the%20dark%20ages.pdf.
- Etymologiae wikiPageExternalLink 64-weiss.
- Etymologiae wikiPageExternalLink 07+TEXTE.pdf.
- Etymologiae wikiPageExternalLink home.html.
- Etymologiae wikiPageExternalLink LAT0706.HTM.
- Etymologiae wikiPageExternalLink isidore.html.
- Etymologiae wikiPageExternalLink books?id=3ep502syZv8C&hl=en.
- Etymologiae wikiPageExternalLink Etymologiarum_libri_XX.
- Etymologiae wikiPageID "141338".
- Etymologiae wikiPageLength "35740".
- Etymologiae wikiPageOutDegree "265".
- Etymologiae wikiPageRevisionID "683773094".
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Abbey_of_Saint_Gall.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Agriculture.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Ambrose.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Egypt.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Angel.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Animal.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Architecture.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Arian_controversy.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Arian_heresy.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Astrology.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Astronomy.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Atom.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Augsburg.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Augustine.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Augustine_of_Hippo.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Aulus_Gellius.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Bacchus.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Bartholomaeus_Anglicus.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Bartholomeus_Anglicus.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Bird.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Boethius.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Braulio_of_Zaragoza.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Breviary_of_Alaric.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Brussels.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Caelius_Aurelianus.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Carolingian_Renaissance.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Cassiodorus.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Category:7th-century_books.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Category:Early_medieval_Latin_literature.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Category:Latin_encyclopedias.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Catholic_Church.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Cato_the_Younger.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Christian.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Chronology.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Church_Fathers.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Cicero.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Cities.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink City.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Civil_engineering.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Classical_antiquity.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Classical_element.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Classics.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Clothes.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Clothing.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Code_of_Theodosius.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Codex_Gigas.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Codex_Theodosianus.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Columella.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Critical_edition.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Daily_Telegraph.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Dante_Alighieri.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Decorative_arts.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Dialectic.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Dionysus.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Divine_Comedy.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Earth.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Electric_ray.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Electrum.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Encyclopaedia.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Encyclopedia.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Etymology.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Faustino_Arevalo.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Faustino_Arévalo.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Fish.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Flat_Earth.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Flat_earth.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Food.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Furnishings.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Gaius_Julius_Solinus.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Game.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Geoffrey_Chaucer.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Geography.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Geometry.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Giovanni_Boccaccio.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink God.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Grammar.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Gregory_the_Great.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Heaven.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Heresy.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Heretical.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Hexameron.
- Etymologiae wikiPageWikiLink Holy_See.