- romanized: Ioánnēs ho Damaskēnós, IPA: [ioˈanis o ðamasciˈnos]; Latin:
Ioannes Damascenus; born Yūḥana ibn Manṣūr ibn Sarjūn, يوحنا إبن منصور إبن سرجون "Although...
-
Damascus (Gr****: Νικόλαος Δαμασκηνός, Nikolāos Damaskēnos; Latin:
Nicolaus Damascenus; c. 64 BC –
after 4 AD) was a Gr**** historian,
diplomat and philosopher...
-
Anton Dev (January 15, 1732 –
November 7, 1786;
monastic name
Joannes Damascenus a
nomine Mariae,
Slovenized as
Janez Damascen) was a
Slovene poet, translator...
- 2020. Gottheil, Richard; Krauss, Samuel.
Nicholas of
Damascus (Nicolaus
Damascenus). The
Jewish Encyclopedia.
Retrieved December 3, 2021.
Clare K. Rothschild...
-
Macrobius Marcellus Empiricus Marcus Aurelius Manilius Martial Nicolaus Damascenus Nonius Marcellus Obsequens Orosius Ovid
Petronius Phaedrus Plautus Pliny...
- the
constellations Arctophylax and Ursa Major, the
Great Bear.
Nicolaus Damascenus tells that Lycaon's sons were nefarious. To test Zeus, they
mixed the...
- بن ماسويه), also
written Ibn Masawaih, Masawaiyh, and in
Latin J****
Damascenus, or Mesue, Masuya,
Mesue Major, Msuya, and Mesuë the
Elder was a Persian...
- 22. Aquinas, Thomas.
Summa Theologiae Ia. pp. q.
LXXIX art. XII. resp.
Damascenus,
Joannes (1864).
Patrologiae cursus completus | sive
bibliotheca universalis...
-
Macrobius Marcellus Empiricus Marcus Aurelius Manilius Martial Nicolaus Damascenus Nonius Marcellus Obsequens Orosius Ovid
Petronius Phaedrus Plautus Pliny...
- Constantinople.
Photius commends Conon's
Attic style, and
remarks that
Nicolaus Damascenus borrowed much from him.
There are
separate editions of this
abstract by...