Missio (Hungarian Band)
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Missio (Hungarian Band)
Missio may refer to: *Missio, public facing name of Pontifical Mission Societies, the Catholic Church's official charity for overseas mission People *Egone Missio Fondo Egone Missio Archives * Stefano Missio (1972) Italian filmmaker Music *Missio (duo), US electronic duo formed in 2014 *Missió, late 1980s Hungarian heavy metal band, see Impulse (band) See also *Missio Dei, Latin theological term for the "sending of God" *Honesta missio, honorable discharge from the military service in the Roman Empire *Redemptoris missio ''Redemptoris missio'' (Latin for ''The Mission of the Redeemer''), subtitled ''On the permanent validity of the Church's missionary mandate'', is an encyclical by Pope John Paul II published on 7 December 1990. The release coincided with the tw ...
(Latin: The Mission of the Redeemer), subtitled On the permanent validity of the Church's missionary mandate, encyclical {{dab ...
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Pontifical Mission Societies
The Pontifical Mission Societies, known in some countries as Missio, is the name of a group of Catholic missionary societies that are under the jurisdiction of the Pope. These organizations include the Society for the Propagation of the Faith, the Society of St. Peter the Apostle, the Holy Childhood Association and the Missionary Union of Priests and Religious. These four societies each received the title “pontifical” in 1922 to indicate their status as official instruments of the pope and of the universal Catholic Church. In most countries, the national director of the Pontifical Mission Societies heads the four societies, as is the case in the United States, and oversees the World Missions Sunday Collection, which is taken up on the third Sunday of October each year in every Catholic parish around the globe. The Pope specifically asks the Pontifical Mission Societies to help bring the messages of Christ to the world, especially in countries where Christianity is new, you ...
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Fondo Egone Missio Archives
The Fondo Egone Missio (Egone Missio Archives) contains thousands of documents and photographs from 1909 to 1967 relevant to the design and construction of passenger ships, from the original drawings of Monfalcone yard no. 1 (the steamship ''Trieste'' of 1909) to all the reference papers of the design and construction of Home Lines SS Oceanic (1965). The archive is headquartered in Via Rosselli 20, 34074 Monfalcone, Italy. It was created in 2004 by Mrs. Edda Missio, daughter to the ship designer Mr. Egone Missio of Monfalcone, who entered the local shipyard a few months after its foundation, on 11 January 1909 as apprentice carpenter. He became the chief of the passenger design office in 1943, and he worked there until 1967. Missio kept a day-by-day business diary from 1952 to 1967, in which details of his career and of the ships he designed can be found, including details of all the meetings between the parties involved in the conception and design of the SS Oceanic. He designed ...
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Stefano Missio
Stefano Missio (born April 1, 1972, in Udine) is an Italian Cinema of Italy, filmmaker He has made various documentaries among which ''When Italy was not a poor country'', about Italy in the 1960s narrated by Joris Ivens, and ''Scusi, dov'è il Nord Est?'' produced by Fandango and On Line Productions for Arte (broadcast as ''Succes à l'italienne'') and broadcast in Italy by Tele+. In 2005 he directed ''Il Ponte'', a fiction short-movie, screenplayed by Francesco Tullio Altan, starring Carlo Mazzacurati and Valentina Fago. His last work, Che Guevara - The body and the legend (2007), was broadcast in 12 countries. He lives and works in Paris. Filmography *''When Italy wasn't a poor country'' (''Quando l'Italia non era un paese povero''; 1997) *''Siamo troppo sazi'' (1998) *''Scusi, dov’è il Nord Est?'' (2000) *''Il Ponte'' (2005) *''Trumpets' Republic'', (''Трубачка Република''; 2006) *''Che Guevara - The body and the legend'' (2007) References and sources ...
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Missio (duo)
Missio (often stylized MISSIO) is an American electronic alternative duo formed in 2014 in Austin, Texas. It currently consists of founding member Matthew Brue (front-man/songwriter/producer), and David Butler (songwriter/producer). History Formation Missio was formed in 2014 by songwriter/vocalist Matthew Brue. After the completion of his demos, Brue hired friend and local producer/engineer David Butler to collaborate on their self-titled EP, which would later be released in November 2016. After unexpected online success, Brue made his debut appearance under the name MISSIO at the South by Southwest, SXSW festival in 2016 with help from Butler. Brue invited Butler to officially join the act in July 2016. Brue was active as a solo artist under the name Missio before Butler joined. He was featured on Said the Sky's songs "Nostalgia" and "Darling" in mid-late 2015. During an interview, Brue explained that the name MISSIO comes from the Latin word for "mission". This phrase is ...
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Impulse (band)
Impulse is a Bulgarian rock/metal group, formed by Iliya Kunchev in March 1979. They have released six albums, the most famous being "Gladiator". History The band was formed in March 1979 by Iliya Kunchev. In the first line-up also were Vasil Stoev, Peyo Peev, Chavdar Panev and Vili Kavaljiev. The start of group came on Bulgarian National Radio. In the beginning they played melodic pop rock songs. Famous Bulgarian singer Veselin Marinov was the band's vocalist in 1981-1983. The most famous Impulse's song with Marinov on vocals is "Srednoshtna muzika" (en. "Midnight music"). In 1984 Impulse recorded their first album, called ''Impulse 1''. The ballad "Ako ti si otidesh za mig" (en. "If you go away for moment") became a hit. This song is in the BG Radio's chart "500 greatest Bulgarian songs". In period 1985–1987 Impulse had a concerts in USSR and countries from Africa. The band recorded the album ''380 Volts'', but it was forbidden by the communist regime. During that per ...
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Missio Dei
''Missio Dei'' is a Latin Christianity, Christian Theology, theological term that can be translated as the "w:Mission (Christian), mission of God," or the "sending of God." It is a concept which has become increasingly important in missiology and in understanding the mission of the church since the second half of the 20th century. Some of its key proponents include David Bosch, Lesslie Newbigin, and Darrell Guder. History In 1934, the German missiologist Karl Hartenstein first coined the term ''missio Dei'' to distinguish it from the ''missio ecclesiae'', that is, the mission of the church. Some scholars hold that this coinage, which can be traced as far back as Augustine, had a strong trinitarian basis. This language, it is argued, was picked up at the 1952 Willingen conference of the International Missionary Council (IMC) and developed theologically by Lutheran theologian, Georg Vicedom. However, John Flett maintains that while Hartenstein did introduce the actual term ''missio ...
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Honesta Missio
The ''honesta missio'' was the honorable discharge from the military service in the Roman Empire. The status conveyed particular privileges (''praemia militiae''). Among other things, an honorably discharged legionary was paid discharge money from a treasury established by Augustus, the ''aerarium militare'', which amounted to 12,000 sesterces for the common soldier and around 600,000 sesterces for the ''primus pilus'' until the Principate of Caracalla. Specific privileges The honorably discharged legionary also presumably received a certificate after a service of approximately 20 to 26 years. Only a few, called ''tabulae honestae missionis'', have been preserved, presumably because most were made of ephemeral materials. Auxiliary soldiers, called '' peregrini'' (non-Roman citizens of the Empire), usually received along with an ''honesta missio'' Roman citizenship and ''conubium'' ( permission to marry) for themselves and their descendants. The imperial order about these ...
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