Hilarius
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Hilarius
Hilarius is the given name of: * Hilarius of Aquileia (died c. 284), saint, bishop of Aquileia, Italy * Hilarius or Hilary of Poitiers (c. 310 – c. 367), Bishop of Poitiers and Doctor of the Church * Hilary the Deacon (Latin: Hilarius Diaconus) (), Sardinian deacon of the Roman church * Hilarius, Archbishop of Tarragona (Spain) c. 402 * Hilarius or Hilary of Arles (c. 403–449), Bishop of Arles and saint * Hilarius (praefectus urbi), ''praefectus urbi'' (prefect of Rome) in 408 * Pope Hilarius or Hilary (died 468), Catholic pope and saint * Hilarius (poet) () * Hilarius Breitinger (1907–1994), German Franciscan prelate * Hilarius Gilges (1909–1933), Afro-German actor and communist * Hilarius Moa Nurak (1943–2016), Roman Catholic bishop * Hilarius of Sexten Hilarius of Sexten (secular name: Christian Gatterer) (1839, in the valley of Sexten in the county of Tyrol – 20 October 1900) was an Austrian Capuchin moral theologian. Life After a course of studie ...
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Pope Hilarius
Pope Hilarius (or Hilary) was the bishop of Rome from 19 November 461 to his death on 29 February 468. In 449, Hilarius served as a legate for Pope Leo I at the Second Council of Ephesus. His opposition to the condemnation of Flavian of Constantinople incurred the enmity of Pope Dioscorus I of Alexandria, Dioscurus of Alexandria, who attempted to prevent him from leaving the city. Hilarius was able to make his escape and returned to Rome by an indirect route. He later erected an oratory at the Lateran in honor of John the Evangelist, to whom he attributed his safe passage. Much of his pontificate was spent in maintaining ecclesiastical discipline in conformity with canon law, and in settling jurisdictional disputes among the bishops of both Gaul and Spain. Early career Hilarius was born in Sardinia. As archdeacon under Pope Leo I, he fought vigorously for the rights of the Holy See, Roman See. In 449, Hilarius and Bishop Julius of Puteoli served as papal legates to the Second Co ...
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Hilarius Gilges
Hilarius Gilges (28 April 1909 – 20 June 1933) was a German actor, dancer and communist political activist. He was murdered at the age of 24 by the Nazis. Life Hilarius Gilges was one of the few black Germans born in the country before the First World War. His mother Maria Stüttgen was a textile worker in Düsseldorf; the origin of his biological father is not known for certain. Maria married Franz Peter Gilges in 1915, giving the boy the family name Gilges. Gilges grew up in the working class milieu of Düsseldorf and joined German Communist Youth in about 1925 or 1926. He became an amateur actor with the communist agitprop theatre group "Nordwest ran" directed by Wolfgang Langhoff. His radical politics led in 1931 to his arrest and sentencing to one year in prison. After his release in 1932 he continued as an active communist agitator. Gilges married Katharina Hubertine Laatsch (born Vogels) and fathered two children. Death In early 1933, after the Nazis seized power, he a ...
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Hilarius (poet)
Hilarius, also known as Hilary the Englishman (fl. 1125), was a Latin poet who is supposed to have been an Englishman. Life He was one of the pupils of Pierre Abélard at his oratory of the Paraclete, and addressed to him a copy of verses with its refrain in the vulgar tongue, "Tort avers vos li mestre", Abelard having threatened to discontinue his teaching because of certain reports made by his servant about the conduct of the scholars. Later Hilarius may have made his way to Angers. His poems are contained in manuscript supp. lat. l008 of the Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris, purchased in 1837 at the sale of M. de Rosny. Quotations from this manuscript had appeared before, but in 1838 it was edited by Champollion Figeac as ''Hilarii versus et ludi''. After 1125 there is no certain trace of him; he may be the same person as the Hilary who taught classical literature at Orléans, mentioned by William of Tyre and Arnulf of Orléans c. 1150, but it is unknown whether Hilarius ...
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Hilarius Of Aquileia
Saint Hilarius of Aquileia, also Hilary of Aquileia ( it, Ilario d'Aquileia, also ''Ellaro'' or ''Elaro'') (d. 16 March, c. 284) was an early Bishop of Aquileia, a martyr and saint. He is supposed to have been the second bishop of Aquileia, succeeding Hermagoras. During the persecution of Numerian he was tortured to death under the prefect Beronius. Before his death Hilarius's prayers brought about the collapse of the pagan temples in Aquileia and the images of the gods they contained, to which he had refused to sacrifice. His martyrdom was shared by his deacon Tatianus, otherwise Tatian, with whom Hilarius's name is often linked, as in the dedication of Gorizia Gorizia (; sl, Gorica , colloquially 'old Gorizia' to distinguish it from Nova Gorica; fur, label= Standard Friulian, Gurize, fur, label= Southeastern Friulian, Guriza; vec, label= Bisiacco, Gorisia; german: Görz ; obsolete English ''Gorit ... Cathedral, and also by their companions Felix, Largus and Dionysius. ...
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Hilary Of Poitiers
Hilary of Poitiers ( la, Hilarius Pictaviensis; ) was Bishop of Poitiers and a Doctor of the Church. He was sometimes referred to as the "Hammer of the Arians" () and the "Athanasius of the West". His name comes from the Latin word for happy or cheerful. In addition to his important work as bishop, Hilary was married and the father of Abra of Poitiers, a nun and saint who became known for her charity. Early life Hilary was born at Poitiers either at the end of the 3rd or beginning of the 4th century A.D. His parents were pagans of distinction. He received a good pagan education, which included a high level of Greek. He studied, later on, the Old and New Testament writings, with the result that he abandoned his Neo-Platonism for Christianity, and with his wife and his daughter (traditionally named Saint Abra), was baptized and received into the Church. The Christians of Poitiers so respected Hilary that about 350 or 353, they unanimously elected him their bishop. At that time Ar ...
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Hilary Of Arles
Hilary of Arles, also known by his Latin name Hilarius (c. 403–449), was a bishop of Arles in Southern France. He is recognized as a saint by the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox Churches, with his feast day celebrated on 5 May. Life In his early youth, or the 420s, Hilary joined the abbey of Lérins which was, at the time, presided over by his kinsman Honoratus. Hilary seems to have been living in Dijon before this, although other authorities believe he came from Belgica, or Provence. Hilary may have been a relative or "even the son" of the Hilarius who had been prefect of Gaul in 396 and of Rome in 408. Hilary succeeded his kinsman Honoratus as bishop of Arles in 429. Following the example of Augustine of Hippo, he is said to have organized his cathedral clergy into a "congregation," devoting a great part of their time to social exercises of asceticism. He held the rank of metropolitan bishop of Vienne and Narbonne, and attempted to exercise the sort of primacy over the ...
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Hilary The Deacon
__NOTOC__ Hilary the Deacon ( la, Hilarius Diaconus; century) was a Sardinian deacon of the Roman church. In 355, along with Lucifer of Cagliari, Eusebius of Vercelli, and Pancratius, he was directed by Pope Liberius to plead for Athanasian orthodoxy before Constantius II at the Council of Milan. He pleaded his case so boldly and offensively that the emperor had him beaten and, along with his companions, condemned to exile. Little is known of him afterwards, except (from Jerome) that he adopted Lucifer's position that Arians, other heretics, and those who dealt with them required a second baptism before they could return to communion. He is sometimes credited (on doubtful authority) with two works. The first, his ''Commentary on Paul's Epistles'' ('), is often published along with the writings of St Ambrosius; the other, ''Questions of the Old and New Testament'' ('), among the works of St Augustine Augustine of Hippo ( , ; la, Aurelius Augustinus Hipponensis; 13 ...
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Hilarius (praefectus Urbi)
Hilarius (''floruit'' 408) was a politician of the Western Roman Empire. Hilarius is known to be the '' praefectus urbi'' of Rome in 408. He is attested in office on January 15 of that year by a law preserved in the ''Codex Theodosianus The ''Codex Theodosianus'' (Eng. Theodosian Code) was a compilation of the laws of the Roman Empire under the Christian emperors since 312. A commission was established by Emperor Theodosius II and his co-emperor Valentinian III on 26 March 429 a ...''. He has been sometimes identified with a Hilarius Praetorian prefect of Gaul in 396, but this identification is rejected by historians on the fact that the urban prefecture was a lesser office than the praetorian one. Bibliography * Arnold Hugh Martin Jones, John Robert Martindale, J. Morris, "Hilarius 2", '' The Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire'', Cambridge University Press, 1971, , p. 563. {{end 5th-century Romans Urban prefects of Rome ...
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Hilarius Breitinger
Hilarius Breitinger, OFM Conv (7 June 1907 – 23 August 1994) was a German Franciscan prelate made apostolic administrator of the Reichsgau Wartheland during World War II by Pope Pius XII, one of the most controversial examples of the reorganization of occupied dioceses during World War II. Breitinger's appointment and those like it were the justification of the Polish Provisional Government for declaring the Concordat of 1925 "null and void" in 1945. Early life Breitinger was born as Lorenz Breitinger on 7 June 1907 in Glattbach near Aschaffenburg. Martin Sprungala.Breitinger, Hilarius". Ostdeutsche Biographie. His parents were Martin, a carpenter, and Barbara Breitinger. He decided to study theology and enter the Order of Friars Minor ("Franciscans") after high school. He was ordained in 1932. According to Phayer, Breitinger is the "key to unraveling" the contradictory accounts of Catholicism in Poland between Poles of German ethnicity (Nazi term Volksdeutsche) and thos ...
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Hilary (name)
Hilary, Hilarie or Hillary is a given name, given and family name, derived from the Latin ''hilarius'' meaning "cheerful", from ''hilaris'', "cheerful, merry", which comes from the Greek language, Greek ἱλαρός (''hilaros''), "cheerful, merry", which in turn comes from ἵλαος (''hilaos''), "propitious, gracious".ἵλαος
Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, ''A Greek-English Lexicon'', on Perseus Ilaria (given name), Ilaria is the popular Italian feminine form, while Ilario is the Italian masculine one. Other male forms are Hilarion (name), Hilarion, Ilarion, and Illarion.


Notable men with the given name

* Hilary the Deacon ( century), churchman and theologian * Pope Hilarius or Hilary (died 468), Catholic pope and saint * Hilary of Arles, 5th-century bishop and sain ...
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Roman Catholic Archdiocese Of Tarragona
The Archdiocese of Tarragona (Latin, ''Tarraconensis'') is a Roman Catholic ecclesiastical territory located in north-eastern Spain, in the province of Tarragona, part of the autonomous community of Catalonia. The archdiocese heads the ecclesiastical province of Tarragona, having Metropolitan authority over the suffragan dioceses of Girona, Lleida, Solsona, Tortosa, Urgell and Vic."Metropolitan Archdiocese of Tarragona"
''GCatholic.org''. Gabriel Chow. Retrieved February 29, 2016

''''. David M. Cheney ...
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Hilarius Of Sexten
Hilarius of Sexten (secular name: Christian Gatterer) (1839, in the valley of Sexten in the county of Tyrol – 20 October 1900) was an Austrian Capuchin moral theologian. Life After a course of studies at Brixen, he entered the Capuchin Franciscan Order in 1858 and was ordained priest in 1862. Having labored in parochial duties for some years, he was appointed to teach moral theology at Meran in 1872. Both secular and regular clergy consulted him in difficult cases. In 1882 he was appointed examiner of confessors for the Diocese of Trent. He fulfilled many offices in his order, being at different times lector, guardian, definitor {{Catholic Church hierarchy sidebar, Administrative and pastoral titles In the Catholic Church, a definitor (Latin for 'one who defines') is a title with different specific uses. There are secular definitors, who have a limited amount of oversight ..., and minister-provincial. In this last office, which he filled 1889–1892, he accepted for his ...
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