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         Augustine Saint:     more books (100)
  1. Aurelius Augustinus: De musica liber VI (Acta Universitatis Stockholmiensis Studia Latina Stockholmiensia, 47) by Saint, Bishop of Hippo Augustine, Martin Jacobsson, 2002-12
  2. The city of God. Translated by Marcus Dods by Marcus Dods, 2010-08-30
  3. Sermons on selected lessons of the New Testament
  4. Homilies on the Gospel according to St. John: and his first Epistle
  5. Commentary on the Lord's Sermon on the Mount (The Fathers of the Church, 11) by Saint, Bishop of Hippo Augustine, 2001-02
  6. Sancti Augustini Confessionum libri tredecim by Karl von Raumer, 2010-08-20
  7. Fathers of the Church: Niceta of Remesiana Writings Sulpicius Severus Writings Vincent of Lerins Commonitories Prosper of a Quitaine Grace and Free W by Saint, Bishop of Hippo Augustine, 1971-06
  8. Against the Academicians by Saint, Bishop of Hippo Augustine, 1957-06
  9. Walking into Light by David Brian Winter, Saint, Bishop of Hippo Augustine, 1986-06
  10. Collectio selecta SS. Ecclesiae Patrum (Latin Edition) by Armand Benjamin Caillau, Marie Nicolas Silvestre Guillon, 2009-12-17
  11. The Confessions of St. Augustine by Bishop of Hippo Saint Augustine, 2006-11-03
  12. The Confessions of S. Augustine (1840 ) by Saint Augustine Bishop of Hippo, 2010-02-17
  13. The Confessions of St. Augustine: A Modern English Version (Paraclete Living Library) by Saint, Bishop of Hippo Augustine, Hal McElwaine Helms, 1995-04-19
  14. The Enchiridion on Faith, Hope and Love by Bishop of Hippo Saint Augustine, 1996-09-01

41. Augustine Of Hippo --  Britannica Student Encyclopedia
The Bishop of Hippo in Roman Africa for 35 years, St. Augustine lived during Brief biographical essay on Saint Augustine, Bishop of Hippo from 396 to
http://www.britannica.com/ebi/article-9273012
Home Browse Newsletters Store ... Subscribe Already a member? Log in This Article's Table of Contents Augustine of Hippo Print this Table of Contents Shopping Price: USD $1495 Revised, updated, and still unrivaled. The Official Scrabble Players Dictionary (Hardcover) Price: USD $15.95 The Scrabble player's bible on sale! Save 30%. Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary Price: USD $19.95 Save big on America's best-selling dictionary. Discounted 38%! More Britannica products Augustine of Hippo
 Student Encyclopedia Article Page 1 of 1 Fathers of the Church
Augustine of Hippo... (75 of 384 words) var mm = [["Jan.","January"],["Feb.","February"],["Mar.","March"],["Apr.","April"],["May","May"],["June","June"],["July","July"],["Aug.","August"],["Sept.","September"],["Oct.","October"],["Nov.","November"],["Dec.","December"]]; To cite this page: MLA style: "Augustine of Hippo." Britannica Student Encyclopedia http://www.britannica.com/ebi/article-9273012

42. Zaadz Quotes By Author - Saint Augustine Of Hippo Quotes
Saint Augustine of Hippo (354430) Algerian Bishop of Hippo. More quotes aboutPeace, Purpose, War. 2. Anger is a weed; hate is the tree.
http://zaadz.com/quotes/authors/saint_augustine_of_hippo/
what's a zaad? bookmark us send feedback Quote Size: All Short Tall Grande Venti
Famous Quotes by Saint Augustine of Hippo
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1. "The purpose of all war is peace."

43. St. Augustine Of Hippo - Augustinian Saints
Saint Augustine. Augustine of Hippo (354430) envisioned a form of religious A Bishop in Hippo (near modern-day Annaba, Algeria), Augustine was an
http://www.midwestaugustinians.org/saints_augustine.html
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Augustinian ... Augustinian Saints > St. Augustine of Hippo
Saint Augustine of Hippo
August 28
Augustine of Hippo (354-430) envisioned a form of religious community life in which the members would "live in harmony, being united in mind and heart on the way God." He wrote a Rule outlining the basic principles of this sort of life. Today Augustinians and many other religious orders and congregations still use this Rule as their guide. A Bishop in Hippo (near modern-day Annaba, Algeria), Augustine was an influential leader in the African Church. As Christians were growing in their knowledge of God and Christ, Augustine helped to shape Christian theological teachings, particularly those about the role of Divine Grace and the nature of the Holy Trinity. In the process, he combatted many theological errors. The son of Monica, a holy Christian, and Patricius, a pagan, Augustine was born in 354 in Tagaste (now known as Souk Ahras, Algeria). He was educated in the best secular schools of his day. As a young man, he led a distinctly non-Christian and immoral life. He lived with a young woman without the benefit of marriage. Together they had a son, Adeodatus. The young Augustine was continually searching with a restless heart for meaning in life. Each time that he would be attracted to a particular philosophy or group, he would become disillusioned the more familiar he became with its thought.

44. St Augustine Bio: The Online Library Of Liberty
Saint Augustine of Hippo was born November 13, 354, in Tagaste, Numidia, He was Bishop of Hippo in Roman Africa from 396 to 430 and may have been the
http://oll.libertyfund.org/Intros/StAugustine.php
var ol_fgcolor = "#FEFFC6"; THE ONLINE LIBRARY OF LIBERTY
Saint Augustine (354-430) Updated: December 21, 2004 ELECTRONIC TEXTS ABOUT THE AUTHOR BIBLIOGRAPHY SOURCE ... RELATED MATERIAL
Electronic Texts
Title (ToC) Date HTML Econlib HTML Facs. PDF E-Book (PDF) Online Catalog The Soliloquies 312 KB 6.8 MB
About the Author
Saint Augustine of Hippo was born November 13, 354, in Tagaste, Numidia, and died August 28, 430, in Hippo Regius. He was bishop of Hippo in Roman Africa from 396 to 430 and may have been the most important theologian of the early Christian church during the last days of the western Roman Empire. His best known works are the Confessions and the City of God He returned to Africa in 391 and was ordained a priest. Five years later he was made bishop of Hippo, and he served in various capacities as teacher, judge, and pastor. He wrote extensively, applying his critical pen against such heretical groups as the Manichaeans, the Donatists, and the Pelagians. In his master work, The City of God , Augustine took up the questions pursued by earlier scholars such as Origen. Unlike Origen, however, Augustine eschewed the temptation to ascribe much importance to human powers of free will. Instead, he favored a mystical view of the relationship between an omniscient God, for whom all things are known and without whom nothing is possible, and the salvation of the sinner, who bears full responsibility for his actions. This relationship could be encompassed only by an expression of divine grace. Augustine thus marked out a distinct position apart from the Pelagians (among whom Origen is sometimes classed as a sympathetic, intellectual forebear) and set in motion forces that would continue shaping church doctrine until the Reformation.

45. Saint Augustine Of Hippo
Saint Augustine OF Hippo Bishop, DOCTOR OF THE CHURCH—354430A. Throughout histhirty-five years as Bishop of Hippo Augustine was continually defending
http://www.ewtn.com/library/MARY/AUGUSTN2.HTM
SAINT AUGUSTINE OF HIPPO BISHOP, DOCTOR OF THE CHURCH—354-430A.D. Feast: August 28 Pope Leo I, during whose pontificate Augustine was canonized, ordered that the feast of this saint should be observed with the same honors as that of an Apostle. In every succeeding age his memory has been held in the highest veneration and his writings have been an inspiration to Catholics and non-Catholics alike. Augustine was born on November 13, 354, at Tagaste, a small town of Numidia, North Africa, not far from the episcopal city of Hippo. His parents were citizens of good standing, though not wealthy. The father was one Patricius, a hot-tempered man and a pagan, who, under the influence of his Christian wife, the saintly Monica, learned patience and humility and was baptized shortly before his death. Of this union there were three children: Augustine, another son, Navigius, and a daughter, Perpetua, who became an abbess. He wrote the book, he says, for "a people curious to know the lives of others, but careless to amend their own," to demonstrate God's mercy as shown in the life of one sinner, and to make sure that no one should think him any better than he really was. With the utmost candor Augustine divulges the sins and follies of his youth, and at the end enumerates the weaknesses which still beset him. With a copy of the book which he sent to a friend, he wrote: "See now what I am from this book; believe me who bear testimony against myself, and regard not what others say of me."

46. St. Augustine Of Hippo 354-430
Saint Augustine of Hippo is the most important of the Latin Church Fathers . Four years later Augustine became the Bishop of Hippo, from which point
http://campus.northpark.edu/history/WebChron/Christianity/Augustine.CP.html

47. Duc De Berry - Folio 37v
After public confession and baptism Saint Ambrose cried Te Deum Laudamus, wears a miter that symbolizes his future office of Bishop of Hippo in Africa.
http://www.christusrex.org/www2/berry/f37v.html
The Baptism of Saint Augustine Folio 37v This painting, of medium size, occupies an unusual place in the middle of the Te Deum, which it illustrates. Men of the Middle Ages saw a close relationship hetween the baptism of Saint Augustine and the origins of this magnificent rich song whose verses in praise of God alternate like a noble dialogue.
According to Jacopo da Voragine's The Golden Legend, on Easter day Augustine received baptism with his son, Adeodatus, born to him while he was still a pagan philosopher, and his friend Alypius, converted like Augustine by the words of Saint Ambrose.
After public confession and baptism Saint Ambrose cried "Te Deum Laudamus, " to which Augustine replied "Te Dominum confitemur"; their alternate words of praise continued on to make up the whole hymn.
The Limbourgs represented the scene in a hexagonal baptistery with red vaults. Immersed to his waist in the baptismal font, Augustine wears a miter that symbolizes his future office of bishop of Hippo in Africa.
Dressed in priestly vestments and wearing the miter of the archhishop of Milan, Saint Ambrose pours the haptismal water over Augustine's head. Various figures complete the scene, including one wearing a pointed turban, one contemplating the baptism, and others commenting on it.

48. St. Augustine Of Hippo | Biography Of Saint Augustine And Selected Online Writin
St. Augustine of Hippo, biography and selected writings by this great Early While there, Augustine happened to hear the preaching of the Bishop of Milan
http://www.crossroadsinitiative.com/library_author/6/St_._Augustine_of_Hippo.htm
St . Augustine of Hippo
St. Augustine of Hippo: Biography and Selected Online Writings Early Church Father Doctor of the Church St. Augustine, born in Roman N. Africa to a devout Catholic mother and a pagan father, was a notoriously rebellious Catholic teenager who cohabitated with a girlfriend, joined an exotic Eastern cult, and ran away from his mother. Augustine became a brilliant and renowned teacher of public speaking and was appointed by the emperor to teach in Milan, Italy, at that time the administrative capital of the Western Roman empire. While there, he happened to hear the preaching of the bishop of Milan, Ambrose , who baptized him in 386. St. Augustine ultimately renounced his secular career, put away his mistriss, and became first a monk, then a priest, then the bishop of Hippo, a small town on the N. African Coast. The voluminous writings of this Early Church Father span every conceivable topic in theology, morality, philosophy, and spirituality. St. Augustine of Hippo is commonly recognized as the great teacher in the Western Church between the New Testament and St. Thomas Aquinas

49. The Confessions Of St. Augustine:Augustine, Saint, Bishop Of Hippo; Outler, Albe
Buy The Confessions of St. Augustine by Augustine, Saint, Bishop of Hippo; Outler,Albert Cook for $2.45 at eCampus.comISBN0486424669.
http://www.ecampus.com/bk_detail.asp?isbn=0486424669

50. Saint Augustine, Bishop Of Hippo. De Civitate Dei
Saint Augustine, Bishop of Hippo. De civitate Dei. In Italian. Venice? Antoniodi Bartolommeo, not after 1483. Gift of Howard Lehman Goodhart.
http://www.brynmawr.edu/library/exhibits/BooksPrinters/august.html
Saint Augustine, Bishop of Hippo.
De civitate Dei. In Italian.
Venice?: Antonio di Bartolommeo, not after 1483.

Gift of Howard Lehman Goodhart. Back to the Exhibition

51. Saint Augustine - Biography And Works
Saint Augustine of Hippo (354430), Bishop and Doctor of the Church is best knownfor his Confessions (401), his autobiographical account of his conversion.
http://www.online-literature.com/saint-augustine/
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The Confessions of Saint Augustine
Saint Augustine
Search all of Saint Augustine Saint Augustine of Hippo (354-430), bishop and Doctor of the Church is best known for his Confessions (401), his autobiographical account of his conversion. The term augustinianism evolved from his writings that had a profound influence on the church. Augustine was born at Tagaste (now Nigeria) in North Africa on 13 November, 354. His father, Patricius, while holding an official position in the city remained a pagan until converting on his deathbed. His mother, Saint Monica, was a devout Christian. She had had Augustine signed with the cross and enrolled among the catechumens but unable to secure his baptism. Her grief was great when young Augustine fell gravely ill and agreed to be baptised only to withdraw his consent upon recovery, denouncing the Christian faith. At the encouragement of Monica, his extensive religious education started in the schools of Tagaste (an important part of the Roman Empire) and Madaura until he was sixteen. He was off to Carthage next in 370, but soon fell to the pleasures and excesses of the half pagan city’s theatres, licentiousness and decadent socialising with fellow students. After a time he confessed to Monica that he had been living in sin with a woman with whom he had a son in 372, Adeodatus, (which means Gift of God). Still a student, and with a newfound desire to focus yet again on exploration of his faith, in 373 Augustine became a confirmed Manichaean, much against his mother’s wishes. He was enticed by its promise of free philosophy which attracted his intellectual interest in the natural sciences. It did not however erase his moral turmoil of finding his faith. His intellect having attained full maturity, he returned to Tagaste then Carthage to teach rhetoric, being very popular among his students. Now in his thirties, his spiritual journey led him away from Manichaeism after nine years because of disagreement with its cosmology and a disenchanting meeting with the celebrated Manichaean bishop, Faustus of Mileve.

52. Saint Augustine
one of the four Latin Fathers, Bishop of Hippo (near presentday Annaba, Saint Augustine Bibliography - Bibliography See biographies by PRL Brown
http://www.factmonster.com/ce6/people/A0805328.html

53. Scout Report Archives
Augustine, Saint, Bishop of Hippo. (1 resource). Resources. Augustine of Hippo.Augustine of Hippo is arguably one of the most scholarly Saints.
http://scout.wisc.edu/Archives/SPT--BrowseResources.php?ParentId=31413

54. St. Augustine Of Hippo (354-430) - ReligionFacts.com
Ten years later, Augustine reluctantly became Bishop of Hippo. Saint Augustine,Confessions (online at Christian Classics Ethereal Library).
http://www.religionfacts.com/christianity/people/augustine.htm
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    St. Augustine (354-430)
    Born: 354, Thagaste (modern Algeria)
    Died: August 28, 430, Hippo Regius Aurelius Augustine was born in North Africa in 354 AD to a pagan father and devout Christian mother. Gifted with a brilliant mind, he enjoyed academic success and worldly pleasures at Carthage until he became restless for truth and virtue. Successively disappointed by Platonic philosophy and Manichaen theology, he found his rest in the God of Catholic Christianity at the age of 32. Ten years later, Augustine reluctantly became Bishop of Hippo. A prolific writer and original thinker, Augustine's treatises, sermons and letters number into the hundreds. He put his gifted mind to work on subjects such as grace, the Trinity, the soul, predestination, the sacraments, sexuality and free will. Augustine's thought has had a profound impact on both Catholicism (primarily in his doctrine of the church) and Protestantism (especially in his concept of salvation).
    The Life of Augustine of Hippo
    Augustine is one of the precious few ancient figures who recorded a great deal of information about their life and times. In fact, he is one of very few historical figures to have written an autobiography, a genre that until recent centuries was rarely seen. In his

    55. CIN - Augustine Of Hippo John Paul II
    summit of the theological thinking of the Bishop of Hippo is Christ and theChurch; Cf. L. VERHEIJEN, La regle de Saint Augustine, Paris 1967, III.
    http://www.cin.org/jp2ency/augustin.html
    AUGUSTINUM HIPPONENSEM AUGUSTINE OF HIPPO Apostolic Letter of the Sovereign Pontiff John Paul II August 28, 1986 To the Bishops, priests, religious families and faithful of the whole Catholic Church on the occasion of the sixteenth centenary of the conversion of Saint Augustine, Bishop and Doctor of the Church INTRODUCTION Venerable Brothers and beloved sons and daughters: Greetings and the apostolic blessing! I, too, have added my voice to those of my predecessors, when I expressed my strong desire "that his philosophical, theological and spiritual doctrine be studied and spread, so that he may continue ... his teaching in the Church, a humble but at the same time enlightened teaching which speaks above all of Christ and love."[5] On another occasion, I urged in particular the spiritual sons of this great saint "to keep the fascination of St. Augustine alive and attractive even in modern society." This is an excellent ideal that must fire us with enthusiasm, because "the exact and heartfelt knowledge of his life awakens the thirst for God, the attraction of Christ, the love for wisdom and truth, the need for grace, prayer, virtue, fraternal charity, and the yearning for eternal happiness.."[6] I am very happy, accordingly, that the propitious circumstance of the sixteenth centenary of his conversion and baptism offers me the opportunity to evoke his brilliant figure once again. This commemoration will be at the same time a thanksgiving to God for the gift that he has made to the Church, and through her to the whole human race, with this wonderful conversion. It will also be a very fitting occasion to recall to all that this convert, when he had become a bishop, was a marvelous example to pastors in his intrepid defense of the true faith, or, as he would say, of the "virginity" of the faith.[7] He was likewise the genius who constructed a philosophy that can truly be called Christian, because of its harmony with the faith, and a tireless promoter of spiritual and religious perfection.

    56. St Augustine Of Hippo
    A brief biography of Saint Augustine of Hippo, and major parts of his thought and Once a Christian, Augustine became Bishop of Hippo, and a powerful
    http://www.philosophyofreligion.info/augustine.html
    Philosophy of Religion .Info Contents About the Site Support the Site E-Mail ... Historic Figures / Augustine Philosophy of Religion
    Arguments for Theism

    Arguments for Atheism

    Arguments for Agnosticism
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    Bertrand Russell
    St Augustine of Hippo
    Saint Augustine was a major figure in bringing Christianity to dominance in the previously pagan Roman Empire. Born in Tagaste, in Numidia, Augustine’s journey to faith was far from straightforward. Converting to Christianity in 386, Augustine had immersed himself first in Manichaeism, then in scepticism, and then in Neo-Platonism. Once a Christian, Augustine became Bishop of Hippo, and a powerful theologian and defender of the faith. Augustine’s theological career was marked by two campaigns against heresies in particular; first, against the Manichaeism to which he had previously adhered, and second, against Pelagianism. Manichaeism was a dualist philosophy, according to which there are two transcendent forces responsible for the world, one good and one evil. Its main attraction is that it can more readily explain the mixture of good and evil in the world around us than can the view that we are governed by a single omnipotent and benevolent God. To combat this Persian religion, Augustine affirmed the inherent goodness of God’s Creation. Evil, Augustine argued, does not exist in its own right, but is merely the privation of good, and therefore is not something that was created. All that was created, then is good, so the view that there is a single, good Creator is consistent with the way that the world is.

    57. SAINT AUGUSTINE
    Saint Augustine was the greatest of the Christian writers. Augustine wasordained a priest by the Bishop of Hippo in 391 AD. 4. Bishop. a. Consecration.
    http://www.cals.ncsu.edu/agexed/aee501/augustine.html
    SAINT AUGUSTINE INTRODUCTION. Saint Augustine was the greatest of the Christian writers. He exerted immense influence on the Church and his educational views were adopted and followed for many centuries. LIFE OF AUGUSTINE. 1. BOYHOOD. a. Birth . He was born at Tagaste, in North Africa, on November 13, 354 A.D.
    b. Family . His parents were comfortable middle-class people. His father, Patricius, was a pagan and his mother, Monica, was a devout Christian.
    c. Schooling., He was educated in the Latin grammar school of Madaura and the school of rhetoric in Carthage.
    d. Religion . He adopted the Manichaean faith.
    2. TEACHER. Positions in Augustine's teaching career were: a. Grammar. He taught in the Latin grammar school at Tagaste.
    b. Rhetoric. He opened a school of rhetoric at Carthage in 374 A.D.
    c. Rome. He sailed for Rome and taught rhetoric there.
    d. Milan. He accepted a professorship in rhetoric at Milan.
    3. CONVERT. Augustine became converted to Christianity.
    a. Baptism . Bishop Ambrose baptized Augustine and his son, Adeodatus, in 387 A.D.
    b.

    58. Saint Augustine, Bishop And Doctor
    Saint Augustine, Bishop Doctor of the Church Memorial August 28th When hewas fortytwo, he becme co-adjutor Bishop Hippo, where he was Bishop for
    http://www.wf-f.org/StAugustine.html

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    Saint Ambrose baptizing Saint Augustine
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    Apsidal chapel, Sant'Agostino, San Gimignano, Italy
    "Our hearts are restless until they rest in Thee, O Lord" Prayers, readings Excerpt from "Confessions" Recipe Augustine , one of the most influential thinkers in the entire history of the Church, was born at Tagaste, North Africa, on November 13, 354. His father, Patricius, a city official was not a Christian, though his mother, Monica , was a woman of strong Christian faith. (She eventually led her husband to be baptized, and he died a holy death circa
    Though Augustine received a Christian upbringing, he led a very dissolute life as a youth and young man, according to his " Confessions ". Augustine gives an account of his spiritual development in the first nine Books of the "Confessions" a work that has engrossed readers for 1600 years, and are as fresh and immediate today as when they were written.
    As a nineteen-year old student at Carthage, he espoused the Manichaean heresy, a form of Gnosticism founded in Persia in the late third century, which claimed to be a religion of reason as contrasted with Christianity, a religion of faith. Manichaeism aimed to synthesize all known religions. Its basic dualistic tenet is that there are two equal and opposed Principles ("gods") in the universe: Good (Light/Spirit) and Evil (Darkness/Matter).

    59. Malaspina Great Books - Saint Augustine (354 CE)
    This change of views is solemnly attested by the Bishop of Hippo himself, especiallyin his Books, Music, Art, Books from Alibris Saint Augustine
    http://www.mala.bc.ca/~mcneil/cit/citlcaugust.htm
    Library Citations: Saint Augustine (354-430)
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    60. St. Augustine (354-430) Library Of Congress Citations
    Saint Austins Care for the dead Augustine, Saint, Bishop of Hippo. Care for thedead Notes His Saint Austins Care for the dead, 1651. Heading Augustine
    http://www.mala.bc.ca/~mcneil/cit/citlcaugust1.htm

    St. Augustine (354-430)
    : Library of Congress Citations
    The Little Search Engine that Could
    Down to Name Citations LC Online Catalog Amazon Search Book Citations [First 40 Records] Author: Osmun, George Wilbur, 1876- Title: Augustine: the thinker, by George W. Osmun. Published: Cincinnati, Jennings and Graham; c1906 Description: 205 p. 20 cm. Series: Men of the kingdom Subjects: Augustine, Saint, Bishop of Hippo. Religious thought To 600. Philosophy, Ancient. Control No.: 06036620 //r962 Author: Augustine, Saint, Bishop of Hippo. Title: St. Augustine: On the spirit and the letter, by W. J. Sparrow Simpson, D.D. Published: London, Society for promoting Christian knowledge; New York and Toronto, The Macmillan co., 1925. Description: 2 p. l., 127 p. 19 cm. Series: [Translations of Christian literature. ser. II: Latin texts] LC Call No.: BR45.T62 A8 Other authors: Sparrow-Simpson, W. J. (William John), 1859-1952, ed. and tr. Control No.: 26001959 //r89 Author: Fuchs, Harald, 1900- Title: Augustin und der antike friedensgedanke; untersuchungen zum neunzehnten buch der Civitas Dei, von Harald Fuchs. Published: Berlin, Weidmann, 1926. Description: 4 p.l., 258 p. 25 cm. Series: Neue philologische untersuchungen ... 3. hft. LC Call No.: PA25 .P6 3 heft BR65.A65 Notes: The author's inaugural dissertation, Berlin, 1925, augmented by four "Beilagen" (p. [155]-248) Subjects: Augustine, Saint, Bishop of Hippo. De civitate Dei. Peace History. Control No.: 26017225 //r832

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