legend – Latin Translation – Keybot Dictionary
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penelope.uchicago.edu
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6 As were the Giants in the
legend
.
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penelope.uchicago.edu
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13 vix Rossbachius: vim B.
www.hoonved.com
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As well as leaving the so-called ancient Britons to their fate, they must also have left others from around the Empire. There is a
legend
, based on the flimsiest of written historical evidence, about a fellow called Arthur, who had a Roman name and won a mighty battle against the invaders.
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medievalwriting.50megs.com
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Periodic assaults on the use of vernacular languages in a religious context coincided with the suppression of heresy or the imposition of orthodoxy. The Gothic Bibles of Theoderic the Ostrogoth were destroyed and scraped down because they were associated with the Arian heresy. The reform of Benedictine monasticism in England in the 10th century was followed by a return to Latin rather than Old English texts, a process enhanced by the effects of the Norman conquest of England. Irish vernacular texts disappeared from the church with monastic reforms. The vernacular Bibles of the Lollards were banned. Latin was sacred, but also exclusive and an instrument of power.
dainvest.gr
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As well as leaving the so-called ancient Britons to their fate, they must also have left others from around the Empire. There is a
legend
, based on the flimsiest of written historical evidence, about a fellow called Arthur, who had a Roman name and won a mighty battle against the invaders.
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medievalwriting.50megs.com
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Periodic assaults on the use of vernacular languages in a religious context coincided with the suppression of heresy or the imposition of orthodoxy. The Gothic Bibles of Theoderic the Ostrogoth were destroyed and scraped down because they were associated with the Arian heresy. The reform of Benedictine monasticism in England in the 10th century was followed by a return to Latin rather than Old English texts, a process enhanced by the effects of the Norman conquest of England. Irish vernacular texts disappeared from the church with monastic reforms. The vernacular Bibles of the Lollards were banned. Latin was sacred, but also exclusive and an instrument of power.