- An
epistle (/ɪˈpɪsəl/; from
Ancient Gr**** ἐπιστολή (epistolḗ) 'letter') is a
writing directed or sent to a
person or
group of people,
usually an elegant...
- The
Epistula Mithridatis (Latin: "Letter of Mithridates"), also
known as the
Letter of
Mithridates to King Arsaces, is a
letter allegedly written by Mithridates...
- The
Epistle of the
Apostles (Latin:
Epistula Apostolorum) is a work of New
Testament apocrypha.
Despite its name, it is more a
gospel or an apocalypse...
- The
Epistle of
Jerome to Pope
Damasus I (Latin:
Epistula Hieronymi ad
Damasum papam),
written in 376 or 377 AD, is a
response from
Jerome to Pope Damasus...
- on the
island of
Menorca in the
early 5th century.: 1
According to the
Epistula Severi (Letter on the
Conversion of the Jews
written by
Severus of Menorca)...
- here: see the
article Double Heroides for the
double epistles (16–21).
Epistula I.
Penelope writes to her
famed husband, Odysseus, a hero of the Trojan...
-
disciples raise questions concerning it.
There is also a text,
known as the
Epistula Apostolorum,
which is a
polemic against Gnostic esoterica, but written...
- The
Epistula ad
Carpianum ("Letter to Carpian") or
Letter of
Eusebius is the
title traditionally given to a
letter from
Eusebius of
Caesarea to a Christian...
-
Preaching of Peter, a 2nd-century writing, only
fragments survived; The
Epistula Petri, the
introductory letter ascribed to the
Apostle Peter that appears...
- Libanius.
Epistula 223
Andronicus 3 (PLRE I),
Governor of
Phoenice 360-1.
Linda Jones Hall (2004), pg. 97
Libanius Epistula 150
Libanius Epistula 195 Wiemer...