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Vincent of Beauvais

Index Vincent of Beauvais

Vincent of Beauvais (Vincentius Bellovacensis or Vincentius Burgundus; 1184/1194 – c. 1264) was a Dominican friar at the Cistercian monastery of Royaumont Abbey, France. [1]

101 relations: Agolant, Alexander of Roes, Amis et Amiles, Ancient Rome and wine, Andronikos I of Trebizond, Antidotarium Nicolai, Auguste Molinier, Avicenna, Barlaams saga ok Jósafats, Barnacle goose, Bernardus Silvestris, Canons regular, Catherine d'Amboise, Children's Crusade, Chivalric sagas, Cosmographia (Bernardus Silvestris), Cynocephaly, De architectura, Dominican Order, Draconcopedes, Eilmer of Malmesbury, Elijah ben Joseph Chabillo, Encyclopedia, Encyclopedism, Etymologiae, Euhemerism, Female education, Ferragut, Fierabras, Fons memorabilium universi, Friedrich Christoph Schlosser, Giles Milton, Gog and Magog, Golden Legend, Great Mirror, Hélinand of Froidmont, Heterotopia (space), Historia Caroli Magni, History of encyclopedias, History of the Encyclopædia Britannica, Isaac Israeli ben Solomon, Jacob van Maerlant, Jean Bagnyon, Jean d'Outremeuse, Joan the Lame, John Mandeville, Karlamagnús saga, King John and the Bishop, Lapidary (text), Legendary material in Christian hagiography, ..., List of Catholic clergy scientists, List of cultural depictions of Cleopatra, List of encyclopedias by date, List of encyclopedias by language, List of hybrid creatures in folklore, List of philosophers born in the 11th through 14th centuries, List of Thomist writers (13th–18th centuries), Lizard, Llibre de les dones, Louis of France (1244–1260), Lucilia (wife of Lucretius), Magnes the shepherd, Mirrors for princes, Natural History (Pliny), Otia Imperialia, Oxymoron, Physiologus, Reptile, Riccobaldo of Ferrara, Robert of Auxerre, Royaumont Abbey, Rutilius Taurus Aemilianus Palladius, Saint Barbara, Saint George and the Dragon, Secundus the Silent, Siege of Trebizond (1222–23), Simon of St Quentin, Speculum Humanae Salvationis, Speculum literature, Spherical Earth, Stephen of Bourbon, Suda, Sulfuric acid, The Canon's Yeoman's Tale, The Discarded Image, The Legend of Good Women, The Mirror for Magistrates, Thomas Tuscus, Timeline of entomology – prior to 1800, Timeline of zoology, Universal history, University of Santo Tomas Main Building, Vincentio, Vinland map, Visio Karoli Grossi, Worm, Ystoria Mongalorum, 1190, 1250, 1264, 15th century in literature. Expand index (51 more) »

Agolant

Agolant or Agolante is a fictional character in Medieval and Renaissance romantic epics dealing with the Matter of France, including Orlando innamorato by Matteo Maria Boiardo and Orlando furioso by Ludovico Ariosto.

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Alexander of Roes

Alexander of Roes (died after 1288) was a German canon of St. Maria im Kapitol, Cologne, canon law jurist, and author on history and prophecy.

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Amis et Amiles

Amis et Amiles is an old French romance based on a widespread legend of friendship and sacrifice.

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Ancient Rome and wine

Ancient Rome played a pivotal role in the history of wine.

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Andronikos I of Trebizond

Andronikos I Gidos or Andronicus I Gidus (Ανδρόνικος Α΄ Γίδος), was an Emperor of Trebizond (1222–1235).

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Antidotarium Nicolai

The Antidotarium Nicolai, also known as the Antidotarium parvum or small antidotarium, was a late 11th or early 12th-century Latin book with about 150 recipes for the creation of medicines from plants and minerals.

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Auguste Molinier

Auguste Molinier (30 September 185119 May 1904) was a 19th-century French historian.

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Avicenna

Avicenna (also Ibn Sīnā or Abu Ali Sina; ابن سینا; – June 1037) was a Persian polymath who is regarded as one of the most significant physicians, astronomers, thinkers and writers of the Islamic Golden Age.

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Barlaams saga ok Jósafats

Barlaams saga ok Jósafats is an Old Norse rendering of the story of Barlaam and Joesphat, which is based upon the life of the Buddha.

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Barnacle goose

The barnacle goose (Branta leucopsis) belongs to the genus Branta of black geese, which contains species with largely black plumage, distinguishing them from the grey Anser species.

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Bernardus Silvestris

Bernardus Silvestris, also known as Bernard Silvestris and Bernard Silvester, was a medieval Platonist philosopher and poet of the 12th century.

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Canons regular

Canons regular are priests in the Western Church living in community under a rule ("regula" in Latin), and sharing their property in common.

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Catherine d'Amboise

Catherine d'Amboise (1475–1550) was a prose writer and poet of the French Renaissance.

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Children's Crusade

The Children's Crusade was a disastrous popular crusade by European Christians to regain the Holy Land from the Muslims, said to have taken place in 1212.

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Chivalric sagas

The riddarasögur (literally 'sagas of knights', also known in English as 'chivalric sagas', 'romance-sagas', 'knights' sagas', 'sagas of chivalry') are Norse prose sagas of the romance genre.

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Cosmographia (Bernardus Silvestris)

Cosmographia ("Cosmography"), also known as De mundi universitate ("On the totality of the world"), is a Latin philosophical allegory, dealing with the creation of the universe, by the twelfth-century author Bernardus Silvestris.

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Cynocephaly

The characteristic of cynocephaly, or cynocephalus, having the head of a dog—or of a jackal—is a widely attested mythical phenomenon existing in many different forms and contexts.

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De architectura

De architectura (On architecture, published as Ten Books on Architecture) is a treatise on architecture written by the Roman architect and military engineer Marcus Vitruvius Pollio and dedicated to his patron, the emperor Caesar Augustus, as a guide for building projects.

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Dominican Order

The Order of Preachers (Ordo Praedicatorum, postnominal abbreviation OP), also known as the Dominican Order, is a mendicant Catholic religious order founded by the Spanish priest Dominic of Caleruega in France, approved by Pope Honorius III via the Papal bull Religiosam vitam on 22 December 1216.

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Draconcopedes

The medieval Latin term draconcopedes is a beast mentioned in some medieval zoologies.

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Eilmer of Malmesbury

Eilmer of Malmesbury (also known as Oliver due to a scribe's miscopying, or Elmer, or Æthelmær) was an 11th-century English Benedictine monk best known for his early attempt at a gliding flight using wings.

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Elijah ben Joseph Chabillo

Eli (or Elijah) ben Joseph Chabillo (or Habillo) was a Spanish philosopher who lived in Monzón, Aragon, in the second half of the fifteenth century.

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Encyclopedia

An encyclopedia or encyclopaedia is a reference work or compendium providing summaries of information from either all branches of knowledge or from a particular field or discipline.

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Encyclopedism

Encyclopedism is an outlook that aims to include a wide range of knowledge in a single work.

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Etymologiae

Etymologiae (Latin for "The Etymologies"), also known as the Origines ("Origins") and usually abbreviated Orig., is an etymological encyclopedia compiled by Isidore of Seville (c. 560–636) towards the end of his life.

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Euhemerism

Euhemerism is an approach to the interpretation of mythology in which mythological accounts are presumed to have originated from real historical events or personages.

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Female education

Female education is a catch-all term of a complex set of issues and debates surrounding education (primary education, secondary education, tertiary education, and health education in particular) for girls and women.

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Ferragut

Ferragut (also known as Ferragus, Ferracutus, Ferracute, Ferrakut, Ferraguto, Ferraù, Fernagu) was a character—a Saracen paladin, sometimes depicted as a giant—in texts dealing with the Matter of France, including the Historia Caroli Magni, and Italian romantic epics, such as Orlando innamorato by Matteo Maria Boiardo and Orlando furioso by Ludovico Ariosto.

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Fierabras

Fierabras (from French: fier à bras, "brave/formidable arm") or Ferumbras is a fictional Saracen knight (sometimes of gigantic stature) appearing in several chansons de geste and other material relating to the Matter of France.

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Fons memorabilium universi

Fons memorabilium universi ("Source of notable information about the universe") is an early encyclopedia, written in Latin by the Italian humanist Domenico Bandini of Arezzo (also given as Domenico di Bandino or Dominicus Bandinus, c. 1335 – 1418).

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Friedrich Christoph Schlosser

Friedrich Christoph Schlosser (17 November 1776 – 23 September 1861) was a German historian.

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Giles Milton

Giles Milton (born 15 January 1966) is a writer who specialises in narrative history.

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Gog and Magog

Gog and Magog (גּוֹג וּמָגוֹג Gog u-Magog) in the Hebrew Bible may be individuals, peoples, or lands; a prophesied enemy nation of God's people according to the Book of Ezekiel, and according to Genesis, one of the nations descended from Japheth, son of Noah.

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Golden Legend

The Golden Legend (Latin: Legenda aurea or Legenda sanctorum) is a collection of hagiographies by Blessed Jacobus de Varagine that was widely read in late medieval Europe.

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Great Mirror

Great Mirror may refer to.

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Hélinand of Froidmont

Hélinand of Froidmont (c. 1150—after 1229 (probably 1237)) was a medieval poet, chronicler, and ecclesiastical writer.

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Heterotopia (space)

Heterotopia is a concept in human geography elaborated by philosopher Michel Foucault to describe places and spaces that function in non-hegemonic conditions.

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Historia Caroli Magni

Historia Caroli Magni or Historia Karoli Magni et Rotholandi (History of the life of Charlemagne and Roland), sometimes known as the Turpin Chronicle or the Pseudo-Turpin Chronicle, is a 12th-centuryHasenohr, 292.

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History of encyclopedias

Encyclopedias have progressed from the beginning of history in written form, through medieval and modern times in print, and most recently, displayed on computer and distributed via computer networks.

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History of the Encyclopædia Britannica

The Encyclopædia Britannica has been published continuously since 1768, appearing in fifteen official editions.

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Isaac Israeli ben Solomon

Isaac Israeli ben Solomon (Hebrew: Yitzhak ben Shlomo ha-Yisraeli; Arabic: Abu Ya'qub Ishaq ibn Suleiman al-Isra'ili) (c. 832 – c. 932), also known as Isaac Israeli the Elder and Isaac Judaeus, was one of the foremost Arab Jewish physicians and philosophers of his time.

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Jacob van Maerlant

Jacob van Maerlant (c. 1230–40 – c. 1288–1300) was the greatest Flemish poet of the 13th century and one of the most important Middle Dutch authors during the Middle Ages.

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Jean Bagnyon

Jean Bagnyon Geneviève Hasenohr and Michel Zink, eds.

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Jean d'Outremeuse

Jean d'Outremeuse or Jean des Preis (1338 in Liège – 1400) was a writer and historian who wrote two romanticised historical works and a lapidary.

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Joan the Lame

Joan of Burgundy (Jeanne; 24 June 1293 – 12 December 1349), also known as Joan the Lame (Jeanne la Boiteuse), was Queen of France as the first wife of King Philip VI.

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John Mandeville

Sir John Mandeville is the supposed author of The Travels of Sir John Mandeville, a travel memoir which first circulated between 1357 and 1371.

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Karlamagnús saga

The Karlamagnús saga, Karlamagnussaga or Karlamagnus-saga ("saga of Charlemagne") was a late-thirteenth-century Norse prose compilation and adaptation, made for Haakon V of Norway, of the Old French chansons de geste of the Matter of France dealing with Charlemagne and his paladins.

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King John and the Bishop

King John and the Bishop is an English folk-song dating back at least to the 16th century.

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Lapidary (text)

A lapidary is a text, often a whole book, giving "information about the properties and virtues of precious and semi-precious stones", that is to say a work on gemology.

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Legendary material in Christian hagiography

A legendary, in Christian literature, is a collection of biographies of saints or other holy figures.

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List of Catholic clergy scientists

This is a list of Catholic churchmen throughout history who have made contributions to science.

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List of cultural depictions of Cleopatra

Cleopatra has been the subject of literature, films, plays, television programs, and art.

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List of encyclopedias by date

This is a list of encyclopedias, arranged by time period.

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List of encyclopedias by language

This is a list of encyclopedias by language.

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List of hybrid creatures in folklore

The following is a list of hybrid entities from the folklore record grouped morphologically based on their constituent species.

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List of philosophers born in the 11th through 14th centuries

Philosophers born in the 11th through 14th centuries (and others important in the history of philosophy), listed alphabetically: See also.

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List of Thomist writers (13th–18th centuries)

This list of Thomist writers runs from the 13th to the 18th century, stopping short of neo-Thomism.

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Lizard

Lizards are a widespread group of squamate reptiles, with over 6,000 species, ranging across all continents except Antarctica, as well as most oceanic island chains.

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Llibre de les dones

The Llibre de les Dones (Book of Women) is a book that was possibly written between 1387 and 1392 by Francesc Eiximenis in Catalan in Valencia and dedicated to Sanxa Ximenes d'Arenós, countess of Prades.

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Louis of France (1244–1260)

Louis of France (21 or 24 February 1244 – 11 January 1260) was the eldest son of King Louis IX of France and his wife Margaret of Provence.

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Lucilia (wife of Lucretius)

Lucilia is believed to have been the wife of the Roman philosopher Lucretius, though there is little evidence of their relationship, let alone marriage.

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Magnes the shepherd

Magnes the shepherd, sometimes described as Magnes the shepherd boy, is a mythological figure, possibly based on a real person, who was cited by Pliny the Elder (23 CE – 79 CE) as discovering natural magnetism.

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Mirrors for princes

Mirrors for princes (specula principum or rather, principum specula), or mirrors of princes, form a literary genre – in the loose sense of the word – of political writing during the Early Middle Ages, Middle Ages and the Renaissance, and are part of the broader speculum or mirror literature genre.

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Natural History (Pliny)

The Natural History (Naturalis Historia) is a book about the whole of the natural world in Latin by Pliny the Elder, a Roman author and naval commander who died in 79 AD.

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Otia Imperialia

Otia Imperialia ("Recreation for an Emperor") is an early 13th-century encyclopedic work, the best known work of Gervase of Tilbury.

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Oxymoron

An oxymoron (usual plural oxymorons, more rarely oxymora) is a rhetorical device that uses an ostensible self-contradiction to illustrate a rhetorical point or to reveal a paradox.

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Physiologus

The Physiologus is a didactic Christian text written or compiled in Greek by an unknown author, in Alexandria; its composition has been traditionally dated to the 2nd century AD by readers who saw parallels with writings of Clement of Alexandria, who is asserted to have known the text, though Alan Scott has made a case for a date at the end of the 3rd or in the 4th century.

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Reptile

Reptiles are tetrapod animals in the class Reptilia, comprising today's turtles, crocodilians, snakes, amphisbaenians, lizards, tuatara, and their extinct relatives.

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Riccobaldo of Ferrara

Riccobaldo of Ferrara (1246- after 1320) was a medieval Italian notary and Latin writer of the Middle Ages, a chronicler, geographer and encyclopedist.

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Robert of Auxerre

Robert of Auxerre (c. 1156-1212), French chronicler, was an inmate of the monastery of St Marien at Auxerre.

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Royaumont Abbey

Royaumont Abbey is a former Cistercian abbey, located near Asnières-sur-Oise in Val-d'Oise, approximately 30 km north of Paris, France.

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Rutilius Taurus Aemilianus Palladius

Rutilius Taurus Aemilianus Palladius, also known as Palladius Rutilius Taurus Aemilianus or most often just as Palladius, was an ancient writer who wrote in Latin, and is dated variously to the latter 4th century or first half of the 5th century AD.

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Saint Barbara

Saint Barbara (Αγία Βαρβάρα, Ϯⲁⲅⲓⲁ Ⲃⲁⲣⲃⲁⲣⲁ), Feast Day December 4, known in the Eastern Orthodox Church as the Great Martyr Barbara, was an early Christian Greek saint and martyr.

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Saint George and the Dragon

The legend of Saint George and the Dragon describes the saint taming and slaying a dragon that demanded human sacrifices; the saint thereby rescues the princess chosen as the next offering.

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Secundus the Silent

Secundus the Silent (fl. 2nd century AD) was a Cynic or Neopythagorean philosopher who lived in Athens in the early 2nd century, who had taken a vow of silence.

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Siege of Trebizond (1222–23)

The Siege of Trebizond in 1222–1223 was an unsuccessful siege of Trebizond, the capital of the namesake empire, by the Seljuq Turks under a certain Melik.

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Simon of St Quentin

Simon of St Quentin (fl. 1245-48) was a Dominican friar and diplomat who accompanied Ascelin of Lombardia on an embassy which Pope Innocent IV sent to the Mongols in 1245.

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Speculum Humanae Salvationis

The Speculum Humanae Salvationis or Mirror of Human Salvation was a bestselling anonymous illustrated work of popular theology in the late Middle Ages, part of the genre of encyclopedic speculum literature, in this case concentrating on the medieval theory of typology, whereby the events of the Old Testament prefigured, or foretold, the events of the New Testament.

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Speculum literature

The medieval genre of speculum literature, popular from the twelfth through the sixteenth centuries, was inspired by the urge to encompass encyclopedic knowledge within a single work.

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Spherical Earth

The earliest reliably documented mention of the spherical Earth concept dates from around the 6th century BC when it appeared in ancient Greek philosophy but remained a matter of speculation until the 3rd century BC, when Hellenistic astronomy established the spherical shape of the Earth as a physical given.

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Stephen of Bourbon

Stephen of Bourbon was a writer and preacher, especially noted as a historian of medieval heresies, b. in Belleville (Archdiocese of Lyons) towards the end of the twelfth century; d. around 1261.

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Suda

The Suda or Souda (Soûda; Suidae Lexicon) is a large 10th-century Byzantine encyclopedia of the ancient Mediterranean world, formerly attributed to an author called Soudas (Σούδας) or Souidas (Σουίδας).

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Sulfuric acid

Sulfuric acid (alternative spelling sulphuric acid) is a mineral acid with molecular formula H2SO4.

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The Canon's Yeoman's Tale

The Canon's Yeoman's Tale is one of The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer.

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The Discarded Image

The Discarded Image: An Introduction to Medieval and Renaissance Literature is non-fiction and the last book written by C. S. Lewis.

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The Legend of Good Women

The Legend of Good Women is a poem in the form of a dream vision by Geoffrey Chaucer.

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The Mirror for Magistrates

The Mirror for Magistrates is a collection of English poems from the Tudor period by various authors which retell the lives and the tragic ends of various historical figures.

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Thomas Tuscus

Thomas Tuscus or Thomas of Pavia (c. 1212 – c. 1282)Pierre Péano, "Thomas de Pavie", Dictionnaire de spiritualité ascetique e mystique XV (Paris: Beauchenes, 1991), col.

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Timeline of entomology – prior to 1800

13,000 BC The earliest evidence of man's interest in insects is from rock paintings.

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Timeline of zoology

A timeline of the history of zoology.

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Universal history

A universal history is a work aiming at the presentation of the history of humankind as a whole, coherent unit.

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University of Santo Tomas Main Building

The Main Building of the University of Santo Tomas (UST) in Manila, Philippines functions as the university's administrative center, and home of the Faculty of Civil Law, Faculty of Pharmacy, and the College of Science.

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Vincentio

Vincentio is an Italian masculine given name, and may refer to.

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Vinland map

The Vinland map is claimed to be a 15th-century mappa mundi with unique information about Norse exploration of North America.

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Visio Karoli Grossi

The Visio Karoli Crassi or Visio Karoli Grossi (meaning "Vision of Charles the Fat"), also called the Visio Karoli (Tertii) Imperatoris ("Vision of Charles III"), is an anonymous work of Latin prose from around 900.

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Worm

Worms are many different distantly related animals that typically have a long cylindrical tube-like body and no limbs.

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Ystoria Mongalorum

Ystoria Mongalorum is a report, compiled by Giovanni da Pian del Carpine, of his trip to the Mongol Empire.

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1190

Year 1190 (MCXC) was a common year starting on Monday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar.

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1250

Year 1250 (MCCL) was a common year starting on Saturday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar.

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1264

Year 1264 (MCCLXIV) was a leap year starting on Tuesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar.

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15th century in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in the 15th century.

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Redirects here:

Speculum Maius, Speculum Majus, Speculum Naturale, Speculum historiale, Speculum naturale, Vincent de Beauvais, Vincent of Bauvais, Vincentio Bellovacensi, Vincentius Bellovacensis, Vincentius Belvacensis, Vincentius Burgundus.

References

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vincent_of_Beauvais

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