Durandus (typeface)
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Durandus (typeface)
Durandus is the latinized form of the French name ''Durand''. It may refer to: *Durandus of Liège (died 1024/5), bishop of Liège *Durandus of Troarn Durandus of Troarn (b. about 1012, at Le Neubourg near Evreux; d. 1089, at Troarn near Caen) was a French Benedictine and ecclesiastical writer. Affiliated from early childhood to the Benedictine community of Mont-Sainte-Cathérine and of Saint-Van ... (c. 1012 – 1089), French Benedictine monk and writer * Durand of Huesca (c. 1160 – 1224), Spanish theologian also known as Durandus of Huesca * Guillaume Durand (c. 1230 – November 1, 1296), French liturgist, theologian and Bishop of Mende, also known as Durandus of Mende * Durandus of Saint-Pourçain (c. 1275 – 13 September 1332 / 10 September 1334), French Dominican theologian {{hndis ...
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Durandus Of Liège
Durandus (died 1024/5) was an 11th-century bishop of Liège.Stanislas Bormans, "Durand", ''Biographie Nationale de Belgique''vol. 6(Brussels, 1878), 361-363. Life Durandus was born to an obscure family in Morialmé, in the principality of Liège, and was a vassal of the local lord. Recommended to Notker of Liège by his lord, he was educated in the bishop's school. On the recommendation of Wolbodo, Emperor Henry II appointed him vice-chancellor of the Empire and scholaster of Bamberg Cathedral Bamberg Cathedral (german: Bamberger Dom, official name Bamberger Dom St. Peter und St. Georg) is a church in Bamberg, Germany, completed in the 13th century. The cathedral is under the administration of the Roman Catholic Church and is the se .... After Wolbodo's death, in 1021, Durandus succeeded him as bishop of Liège. He consecrated the church of Gembloux on 25 July 1022. In 1023 he took part in the Synod of Cologne. He died in Liège on 23 January 1024 or 1025. References ...
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Durandus Of Troarn
Durandus of Troarn (b. about 1012, at Le Neubourg near Evreux; d. 1089, at Troarn near Caen) was a French Benedictine and ecclesiastical writer. Affiliated from early childhood to the Benedictine community of Mont-Sainte-Cathérine and of Saint-Vandrille, he was made abbot of the newly founded Saint-Martin of Troarn by William, Duke of Normandy, in whose esteem he stood on a par with Lanfranc, Anselm of Canterbury, Anselm, and Gerbert of Abbey of Saint Wandrille, Saint-Wandrille. Ordericus Vitalis calls him ''ecclesiastici cantus et dogmatis doctor peritissimus''. Of his achievements in sacred music we know nothing beyond that mention, but we have his ''Liber de Corpore et Sanguine Domini'' against Berengarius. The ninth and last part of it contains precious historical information about the heresiarch. In Durandus's mind Berengarius is a figurist pure and simple, after the manner of Scotus Eriugena, whose now lost book he is said to have possessed and used. In the rest of his book ...
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Durand Of Huesca
Durand of Huesca ( 1160 – 1224) was a Spanish Waldensian, who converted in 1207 to Catholicism. Durand had been a disciple of Peter Waldo, who had been excommunicated in 1184. Around the early 1190s Durand wrote ''Liber Antihaeresis'' against the Cathars, which is considered perhaps the best primary source on early Waldensian thought. In 1207, a religious conference was held between Catholics and Waldenses at Pamiers. Participating in the conference were Bishop Fulk of Toulouse, Bishop Navarrus of Couserans, and mentor of Dominic of Caleruega, Diego de Acebo Bishop of Osma.
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Guillaume Durand
Guillaume Durand, or William Durand (c. 1230 – 1 November 1296), also known as Durandus, Duranti or Durantis, from the Italian form of Durandi filius, as he sometimes signed himself, was a French canonist and liturgical writer, and Bishop of Mende. Life Durand was born at Puimisson, near Béziers, of a noble family of Languedoc. He studied law at Bologna, with Bernard of Botone, and by about 1264 was teaching canon law with success at Modena. Pope Clement IV, another Frenchman, called him to the pontifical court as a chaplain and auditor of the palace, and in 1274 he accompanied Clement's successor, Pope Gregory X, to the Second Council of Lyons, the constitutions of which he helped draw up. As spiritual and temporal legate of the patrimony of St. Peter, he received in 1278, in the pope's name, the homage of Bologna and the other cities of Romagna. Pope Martin IV made him vicar spiritual in 1281, then governor of Romagna and of the March of Ancona (1283). In the midst of ...
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