1,371 research outputs found
Commentary upon the Gospel according to Saint Luke by Saint Cyril of Alexandria. Part 2
As the title of this work broadly indicates, it is the translation into English of St. Cyril of Alexandria’s commentary on the Gospel of Luke. This manuscript document had recently been acquired by Oxford University in Syriac. Payne Smith published an edition, but quickly realized that the work would largely go ignored if it were not translated into English. Few scholars of his day were as able to undertake this task as Payne Smith. Cyril represented the extremely influential Alexandrian school of early Christianity that gave the church much of the material that would lead eventually to the doctrine of the Trinity. Needless to comment, Cyril’s own interpretation of one of the Gospels focuses a crucial eye on a major source for understanding early Christianity. Scholars of the Christian Scriptures will find a useful cross-section of early interpretation here, and students of the major figures of the Alexandrian school will garner some of Cyril’s considerable insights into Scripture. This book retains its value to students of many specializations in Late Antiquity.
Robert Payne Smith (1819-1895) was a priest who had studied Classics at Pembroke College, Oxford University. He later became Regius Professor of Divinity at Oxford University. He was eventually appointed the Dean of Canterbury Cathedral. He was most noted for his Syriac lexicon entitled Thesaurus Syriacus.Translated into English from an ancient Syriac version
Commentary upon the Gospel according to Saint Luke by Saint Cyril, Patriarch of Alexandria. Part 1
As the title of this work broadly indicates, it is the translation into English of St. Cyril of Alexandria’s commentary on the Gospel of Luke. This manuscript document had recently been acquired by Oxford University in Syriac. Payne Smith published an edition, but quickly realized that the work would largely go ignored if it were not translated into English. Few scholars of his day were as able to undertake this task as Payne Smith. Cyril represented the extremely influential Alexandrian school of early Christianity that gave the church much of the material that would lead eventually to the doctrine of the Trinity. Needless to comment, Cyril’s own interpretation of one of the Gospels focuses a crucial eye on a major source for understanding early Christianity. Scholars of the Christian Scriptures will find a useful cross-section of early interpretation here, and students of the major figures of the Alexandrian school will garner some of Cyril’s considerable insights into Scripture. This book retains its value to students of many specializations in Late Antiquity.
Robert Payne Smith (1819-1895) was a priest who had studied Classics at Pembroke College, Oxford University. He later became Regius Professor of Divinity at Oxford University. He was eventually appointed the Dean of Canterbury Cathedral. He was most noted for his Syriac lexicon entitled Thesaurus Syriacus.Translated into English from an ancient Syriac version
Byrne, Cyril (Oral History Interview)
Professor, Department of English, Atlantic Canadian StudiesDr. Cyril Byrne speaks about or mentions: his early life and family in Newfoundland; Corner Brook; Gushue family; Wade family; Kitchuses, Conception Bay; Buckle family; his education in the United Kingdom and Ireland; St. Dunstan's University; Ken MacKinnon; University College Dublin; Dr. Jim O'Brien; Anglo-Saxon; Father Dunning; teaching at Mount Saint Vincent University; teaching in Newfoundland; attending Oxford University; doing a Phd at the University of Toronto; working as an announcer at CBC during summers; starting the Atlantic Canada Studies program; Nova Scotia Premier Gerry Reagan and his help to fund the Atlantic Canada Studies program; Don Keleher; President of the Bank of Montreal; A man named O'Hara, who was Secretary to the Prime Minister; Dick Walsh; Prime Minister Garret FitzGerald; Irish teacher Padraig at in the Atlantic Canada Studies program; University of Galway; Irish Gaelic; Scottish Gaelic; changes in the faculty and administration; his time spent on the Board of Governors and memories of the times; Terry Whalen; Unionization; speaks about class and student changes over the year
Revision2_Supplemental_Material_for_Fluid_walls_for_single-cell_monoclonality_by_Soitu_et_al – Supplemental material for Using Fluid Walls for Single-Cell Cloning Provides Assurance in Monoclonality
Supplemental material, Revision2_Supplemental_Material_for_Fluid_walls_for_single-cell_monoclonality_by_Soitu_et_al for Using Fluid Walls for Single-Cell Cloning Provides Assurance in Monoclonality by Cristian Soitu, Cyril Deroy, Alfonso A. Castrejón-Pita, Peter R. Cook and Edmond J. Walsh in SLAS Technology</p
Rehypothecation
How would you feel if even though you were making regular monthly payments, your mortgage bank sold your house? This may seem like an odd question, but this type of situation happens every day in financial markets in a practice known as rehypothecation. Although such practices may be hard for nontraders to understand, rehypothecation is widespread in financial markets. Following the crisis of 2007-2009, the Dodd-Frank Act put restrictions on rehypothecation for derivatives. To understand the scope of these restrictions, we need to understand the role of rehypothecation in financial trades. In this article, Cyril Monnet discusses questions such as: Which party to a financial trade does rehypothecation benefit? Are there limits to its advantages? And how should it be regulated? There are no hard and fast answers to the last question, but the author notes that we can make a more informed decision about the pros and cons of various forms of regulation if we understand the underlying economics.Financial markets ; Financial Regulatory Reform (Dodd-Frank Act)
"An Inauthentic Georgian Epistle Attributed to Cyril of Alexandria"
This article considers the authenticity of a letter attributed to Cyril of Alexandria that survives only in two Georgian manuscripts. This letter stands at the head of a catena of exegetical fragments dealing with the Pauline epistles, and its author claims responsibility for compiling the subsequent collection of extracts from patristic authors. Although its existence has been known since the early twentieth century, and it was included in Cyril's corpus in the Clavis Patrum Graecorum, a critical edition of the letter was only recently published in 2003. We provide the first modern translation of the letter, and argue on the basis of its contents that Cyril was almost certainly not its author
Cyril Brian Courville, MD
Cyril Brian Courville graduated from Cedar Lake Academy and took premedical training at Emmanuel Missionary College. He completed medical training at the College of Medical Evangelists, took a three-year course in neuropathology, neurology, and neurosurgery, and returned to teach at his alma mater. He was the author of a scope of books, one of which became a standard textbook on neuropathology. In 1934, he founded the Cajal Laboratory of Neuropathology. He served his Alumni Association as its president, and at the time of his death he was an associate editor of the Alumni Journal. This picture appeared in University Magazine, Spring 196510 x 12.5 c
Cyril B. Courville, MD, neuropathologist, teacher, author
C. 2, 3. Professor of neurology at CME, renowned for his research and writing on neuropathology. He founded the Cajal laboratory at the Los Angeles County Hospital where is has devoted years of intensive study and investigation. Dr. Courville's published research studies totaled at one time 11 books and monographs, and 165 journal articles. Founder of medical institutions54.135 K
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UNT Special Collections Artifact Photography
Photographs of "Songs of the Shrapnel Shell" by Cyril Morton Horne, held by UNT Special Collections. The green cover contains the title at the top in an indented part of the cover with the author all in gold lettering. Image 2, the frontispiece/title page. On the left of the title page is a black and white photograph of a soldier in uniform. Image 3, pages 42 and 43 from the book, titled "Chrysallis" on the left page
Self-Appropriation: What I Learned from McShane
Cyril Orji is professor of theology and Core Integrated Study. He is the author of numerous books, including Unmasking the African Ghost (2022), A Semiotic Christology (2021), and A Science–Theology Rapprochement (2018). His research applies the thought of Bernard Lonergan, C. S. Peirce, and Wolfhart Pannenberg to questions of enculturation, systematic theology, natural science, and World Christianity
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