Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q5152393> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 14 of
14
with 100 triples per page.
- Q5152393 subject Q7313610.
- Q5152393 subject Q8211397.
- Q5152393 abstract "The Commentary on the Hexameron of Pseudo-Eustathius of Antioch was written in by an unknown person between 375 and 500 AD. More than 26 medieval Greek manuscripts exist containing it, all of which give Eustathius of Antioch as the author. The work is supposedly about the Hexameron or the Six Days of Creation. In reality it contains rather more material than this, down to the time of Alexander the Great, all excerpted from earlier Christian writers, and has been titled Liber Chronicorum. It contains material by Alexander Polyhistor, possibly direct. It is also a useful witness for the Bestiary or Physiologus.The work was discovered in Sicily by Cardinal Gugliemo Sirleto in 1583, who intended to publish it but did not do so. The first and only edition was printed in 1629 by Leo Allatius, with copious notes and a Latin translation, but also many misprints. The text and translation were reprinted by Migne in the Patrologia Graeca vol. 18. No edition has been printed since. No translation exists in any modern language.A study of the work exists by Friedrich Zoepfl.".
- Q5152393 wikiPageWikiLink Q1230408.
- Q5152393 wikiPageWikiLink Q1238783.
- Q5152393 wikiPageWikiLink Q142999.
- Q5152393 wikiPageWikiLink Q441138.
- Q5152393 wikiPageWikiLink Q4523412.
- Q5152393 wikiPageWikiLink Q511971.
- Q5152393 wikiPageWikiLink Q725712.
- Q5152393 wikiPageWikiLink Q7313610.
- Q5152393 wikiPageWikiLink Q8211397.
- Q5152393 comment "The Commentary on the Hexameron of Pseudo-Eustathius of Antioch was written in by an unknown person between 375 and 500 AD. More than 26 medieval Greek manuscripts exist containing it, all of which give Eustathius of Antioch as the author. The work is supposedly about the Hexameron or the Six Days of Creation. In reality it contains rather more material than this, down to the time of Alexander the Great, all excerpted from earlier Christian writers, and has been titled Liber Chronicorum.".
- Q5152393 label "Commentary on the Hexameron".