18,379 research outputs found
Allen W. Clemen to James C. Furman
A two page letter from Allen W. Clement to James C. Furma
Recollections of Clement C. Moore, author of "A Visit from St. Nicholas"
Includes 2 poems by Clement C Moore, including "A Visit from St. Nicholas." Part of the Nancy H. Marshall Night before Christmas collection. Swem Library copy includes and undated letter about the book by Margaret N.C. Bradley, niece of the author
Spiritual contemplation in Clement of Alexandria’s Stromateis : adaptation of the philosophical category θεωρία
Although scholars have often acknowledged the spirituality in the writings of Clement of Alexandria (cir. 150-215 AD), a thorough study of the Platonic category θεωρία as it
appears in this second century Father has never been undertaken. Most studies on
Christian spirituality either ignore Clement's role altogether, or rush past him with little comment in favor of the great Origen (cir. 185-255 AD).
Stromateis, Clement's most enigmatic work, contains over 75 occurrences of θεωρία. A
close examination of these texts reveals that his use of the term is somewhat different from two of his greatest philosophical and spiritual mentors, Plato and Philo. Clement uses this term (usually translated "contemplation") to refer to a spiritual experience which occurs in
space and time, as well as an ethereal one and one which occurs in the mind. A possible
explanation for this difference lies with Clement's claim in the opening chapter of the
work: he is the recipient of an oral tradition which has never been recorded, but which he plans to include in the Stromateis.
This thesis demonstrates: 1) that Clement is the first Christian writer to adapt this
philosophical category into Christian spirituality; 2) the primary purpose of Stromateis is to present the third stage in a spiritual pathway - to reveal θεωρία as the spiritual "meat" for the advanced believer; and 3) to present God and His contact with the Christian as immediate. In a radical move, going against the philosophical setting of the day, Clement
presents this Platonic category as a means for the Christian to experience an immanent
God
Letter from Clement to Ralph, MSS.1725
Abstract: A letter from Clement to his brother Ralph, written from "Puehuehu," Hawaii, concerning business matters, February 13, 1885.Scope and Content Note: This collection consists of a single letter from Clement, no last name stated, to his brother Ralph, from "Puehuehu," which appears to be in Hawaii, dated February 13, 1885. The letter chiefly discusses business matters. The folder in which it was donated to the Special Collections library states that the author was a plantation owner, that Puehuehu is also known as Kohala, and that the letter's recipient was in England.Biographical/Historical Note: Hawaii businessman/plantation owner, 1885
James C. Furman to James C. Foster
A two page letter from James C. Furman to James C. Foster
Correspondence Between Lieutenant General Alvan C. Gillem, Jr. and Dr. Rufus E. Clement, November 4, 1947
A letter from Dr. Clement regarding the apointment of an enlistment representative for Atlanta Universiy
Correspondence Between Dr. Rufus E. Clement and Alvan C. Gillem, Jr., October 30, 1947
A letter to Dr. Clement regarding enlistment in the United States Army and Air Force
Clement, C, 410193
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/377548Surname: CLEMENT
Given Name(s) or Initials: C
Military Service Number or Last Known Location: 410193
Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 54485191365
Item: [2016.0049.09849] "Clement, C, 410193
Clement Claiborne Clay, Jr., letter and biographical sketch, MSS.0309
Abstract: Letter written from Tuscaloosa in 1834, to his aunt, Mrs. Robert W. Withers of Erie, Greene County, Alabama, and a biographical sketch, author and date unknown, which includes information on Clay's political career, wedding, and friends.Scope and Content Note: The collection contains an 1834 letter written from Tuscaloosa to his aunt, Mrs. Robert W. Withers of Erie, Greene County, Alabama and a biographical sketch, author and date unknown, which includes information on Clay's political career, wedding, and friends.Biographical/Historical Note: Clement Claiborne Clay, Jr., the oldest son of former Alabama senator and governor, Clement Comer Clay, was born on 13 December 1816, in Huntsville, Alabama. He graduated from the University of Alabama in 1834 and from the law department of the University of Virginia at Charlottesville, in 1839. He was admitted to the bar in Alabama in 1840. He married Virginia Tunstall in 1843; the couple had several children.Clay was elected to the Alabama State House of Representatives in 1842, 1844, and 1845, and then served as a county judge in Madison County, Alabama from 1848 to 1850. He ran for a seat in the United States Congress in 1850 but was not elected. Later, in 1853, the Alabama legislature elected him to serve in the United States Senate in the term beginning on 4 March 1853. However, because of the legislature's delay in filling the position, he actually only took office on 29 November 1853, and served until 21 January 1861, when Alabama seceded from the Union at the beginning of the Civil War. He was subsequently elected by the Alabama Confederate legislature as Senator in the First Confederate Congress, where he served from 1862 until 1864.Although he declined the position of Confederate Secretary of War in Jefferson Davis' Cabinet, he and Jacob Thompson headed the Confederate secret agents. They had employed John Wilkes Booth for some services before Booth assassinated Abraham Lincoln, and due to suspicions that Clay was involved in an assassination plot, Clay and his wife were arrested and imprisoned in Fortress Monroe in Washington, DC, in 1865, where they were held for approximately one year.When the Clays were released, they returned to his plantation in Jackson County, Alabama, where he devoted himself to agricultural pursuits and to his law practice. Clement Claiborne Clay, Jr. died on 3 January 1882
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