Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
He led us out of the Catholicon and over to a steep staircase.
The term catholicon also specifically referred to remedies for women.
It is a semi-detached building in the west wing, across from the catholicon.
The refectory and the kitchen are located in an independent building on the western side of the wall, across from the catholicon.
He built a surrounding wall, many cells, as well as the monastery's catholicon.
It was probably first built as a basilica and as the catholicon of a monastery.
Different authors have given different recipes for catholicon.
The current catholicon (church) dates back to the 16th century and is marked by the influence of the Renaissance.
In 1845 he expanded the catholicon of the monastery, adding two chapels, a vestibule and a porch to it.
Between the nave and the narthex there are wide, heavy pillars and the catholicon is on a level higher.
The buildings located on the left of the eastern entrance, across from the south side of the catholicon encircle a natural source.
It is built at the site of an earlier catholicon and in the manner of Athonite churches.
Leandro Alberti wrote a defense of the Catholicon in response to these attacks.
The oldest fresco is located on the external southern wall of the catholicon that now includes St. Anthony's chapel.
Catholicon may refer to:
In the middle of the courtyard lies the catholicon surrounded by the wings that house the monks' cells, the guest-house and the refectory.
"This is the Catholicon."
An example recipe for catholicon duplicatum follows:
A high wall surrounds the buildings, the catholicon (main church), the refectory, the bathhouse and the cells, so that, even today, they seem quite well protected.
The correct attribution of the Catholicon to its printers is one of the knotty problems of incunabula research.
The relics were transferred to the main catholicon (cathedral) of the monastery, and a second annual feast day was established in commemoration of this event.
The Catholicon was one of the first books to be printed, using the new printing technology of Johannes Gutenberg in 1460.
A metal semantron, smaller than those of wood, is usually hung near the entrance of the catholicon (the monastery's main church).
For example, aurum vitae, or the gold of life, was a panacean catholicon used in the middle 18th century and later.
- Catholicon, the first French dictionary (trilingual with Breton and Latin; compiled in 1464)