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Examples
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It is an innumerable group that the liturgy calls martyrum candidatus exercitus, the ‘candid crowd of martyrs’.
Angelus: Entrusting to Mary all the martyrs and the persecuted for the Gospel Argent 2006
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The Adelhausen nun Gute of Winzela had a vision of her deceased brother, a member of the Teutonic Knights, as the choir nuns sang the verse Te martyrum candidatus from the Te Deum laudamus. 79
Sensual Encounters: Monastic Women and Spirituality in Medieval Germany 2008
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I have said Mass many times at this altar, thinking of the greeting that St Philip Neri gave to the English seminarians: "Salvete flores martyrum!"
Archive 2009-06-01 2009
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This translation, by Henry W. Baker, comes from the Lutheran Hymnal; the Latin version, Salvete, flores martyrum, along with a J.M.
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This translation, by Henry W. Baker, comes from the Lutheran Hymnal; the Latin version, Salvete, flores martyrum, along with a J.M.
Archive 2008-01-01 bls 2008
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Finally, for both Lauds (Morning Prayer) and 2nd Evensong (the Vespers of the feast day itself), we'd sing Rex gloriose martyrum, to two different tunes.
Archive 2008-09-01 bls 2008
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Finally, for both Lauds (Morning Prayer) and 2nd Evensong (the Vespers of the feast day itself), we'd sing Rex gloriose martyrum, to two different tunes.
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Impudenter so masculorum aspectibus exponunt, insolenter comas jactantes, trahunt tunicas pedibus collidentes, oculoque petulanti, risu effuso, ad tripudium insanientes, omnem adolescentum intemperantiam in se provocantes, inque in templis memoriae martyrum consecratis; pomoerium civitatis officinam fecerunt impudentiae.
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Note 39: Gregory of Tours, De gloria martyrum 1.10, in MGH SS rer. merov.
A Tender Age: Cultural Anxieties over the Child in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries 2005
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The tale of the Juitel (the "little Jew," judeulus, or Judenknabe, also known as the Jew of Bourges) 25 centers on the issue of conversion to Christianity but also provides a considerable amount of material on childhood and childrearing. 26 It seems to have first appeared in Western Europe through the version of Gregory of Tours, in the first book of his De gloria martyrum, written soon after 590.
A Tender Age: Cultural Anxieties over the Child in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries 2005
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