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Although it had a distinctive name in each country, it was everywhere regarded as a kind of psalterium.
The beginning of the splitting is called the psalterium or Lyra Davidis.
How to build a psalterium.
Some authors have called into question the inclusion of the Pyrenean stringed drum under the name of psalterium.
The oldest item is a fragment of the Book of Psalms, or psalterium, from the 11th century.
The development of the story is supported by a brass-band and/or the xirula and the psalterium (ttun-ttun).
It was published by L. Geitler (Psalterium.
(5) The Psalterium, containing merely the Psalter.
The omasum, also known as the bible, the fardel, the manyplies and the psalterium, is the third compartment of the stomach in ruminants.
It contained also Psalterium Gallicanum, as did the majority of the early editions of Vulgate.
Quadruplex Psalterium Davidis.
The lateral portions of the body of the fornix are joined by a thin triangular lamina, named the psalterium (lyra).
His few impressions, chiefly issues of the classics, were all in Latin except Psalterium and a Horae Virginis in Greek.
Johannes Potken publishes the first Ge'ez text, Psalterium David et Cantica aliqua, at Rome.
"Recessit Pastor Noster" by Pomponio Nenna, performance by Corale Polifonica Psalterium.
Another example was the Psaltiri devotíssim (Translation into Catalan of 100 out of the 344 prayers of the Psalterium alias Laudatorium).
The Versio Gallicana or Psalterium Gallicanum has traditionally been considered Jerome's second revision, which he made from the Greek of the Hexapla ca. 386-391.
Spelman, J., Psalterium Davidis Latino-Saxonicum vetus, a Johanne Spelmanno D. Hen.
De Keyser published the second edition of Lefèvre's fivefold Psalter, the Quincuplex Psalterium, which contained the Psalms in five different Latin versions.
The monks left a famous psalter, the psalterium novum beatae Mariae, printed in the 1490s, today on display at the Brandenburg State Library in Potsdam.
Among his publications were the editions of Aristotle, and the Psalterium quincuplex, of Lefèvre d'Estaples, 1509 & 1515, and his commentary on the Pauline Epistles.
Similarly, the Psalterium Cusanum, a 9th or 10th century bilingual Greek-Latin manuscript, has episimôn, enacôse and cophê respectively (with the latter two names mistakenly interchanged for each other.)
It comprised in one volume what in some editions had been distributed in several, such as the "Antiphonarium" (in a very restricted sense), the "Psalterium", the "Hymnarium", the "Responsoriale".
Proclus was cited by Cotton Mather in his work entitled Psalterium Americanum (a commentary on the Book of Psalms) for his view on the book of Psalms.
In the 12th century Fragmenta Taurinensia were used in Nicetas' catenae to the Psalterium, in 1218 another part, now named as Fragmenta Coisliniana, were used with the same purpose.