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- Q1629280 subject Q8583944.
- Q1629280 abstract "Penitenziagite ("Do Penance") is a shortened version in vulgar Latin of the phrase "Poenitentiam agite, appropinquavit enim regnum caelorum", meaning "Repent: the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand." (Matthew 4:17).The phrase was used by the Dulcinian movement founded by Gerard Segarelli (1240–1300) in the 13th century, a movement named after the disciple Fra Dolcino.The phrase is used in the novel The Name of the Rose by Umberto Eco and in the Jean-Jacques Annaud movie of same name.A sample of Ron Perlman saying the word appears in the song Endemoniada, the first track on the album The Nephilim, by Fields of the Nephilim.".
- Q1629280 wikiPageWikiLink Q1010173.
- Q1629280 wikiPageWikiLink Q10909316.
- Q1629280 wikiPageWikiLink Q12807.
- Q1629280 wikiPageWikiLink Q154490.
- Q1629280 wikiPageWikiLink Q155018.
- Q1629280 wikiPageWikiLink Q172850.
- Q1629280 wikiPageWikiLink Q220698.
- Q1629280 wikiPageWikiLink Q2801788.
- Q1629280 wikiPageWikiLink Q37560.
- Q1629280 wikiPageWikiLink Q378948.
- Q1629280 wikiPageWikiLink Q448586.
- Q1629280 wikiPageWikiLink Q7207393.
- Q1629280 wikiPageWikiLink Q8583944.
- Q1629280 comment "Penitenziagite ("Do Penance") is a shortened version in vulgar Latin of the phrase "Poenitentiam agite, appropinquavit enim regnum caelorum", meaning "Repent: the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand." (Matthew 4:17).The phrase was used by the Dulcinian movement founded by Gerard Segarelli (1240–1300) in the 13th century, a movement named after the disciple Fra Dolcino.The phrase is used in the novel The Name of the Rose by Umberto Eco and in the Jean-Jacques Annaud movie of same name.A sample of Ron Perlman saying the word appears in the song Endemoniada, the first track on the album The Nephilim, by Fields of the Nephilim.".
- Q1629280 label "Penitenziagite".