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Definition of Eusebius hieronymus
1. Noun. (Roman Catholic Church) one of the great Fathers of the early Christian Church whose major work was his translation of the Scriptures from Hebrew and Greek into Latin (which became the Vulgate); a saint and Doctor of the Church (347-420).
Category relationships: Church Of Rome, Roman Catholic, Roman Catholic Church, Roman Church, Western Church
Generic synonyms: Church Father, Father, Father Of The Church, Doctor, Doctor Of The Church, Saint, Theologian, Theologiser, Theologist, Theologizer
Lexicographical Neighbors of Eusebius Hieronymus
Literary usage of Eusebius hieronymus
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Roman Historical Sources and Institutions by Henry Arthur Sanders (1904)
"EUSEBIUS-HIERONYMUS. I have above on pp. 186, 188, 197, 210 and 212 called
attention to five passages of Hieronymus, which were closely related to the ..."
2. Classical Philology by University of Chicago press, JSTOR (Organization) (1906)
"Yet in our versions of Eusebius, Hieronymus has under the year of Abraham 1696 = Ol.
1144= 321-20 the words, Menander primam fabulam cognomento Orgen docens ..."
3. A History of Philosophy: From Thales to the Present Time by Friedrich Ueberweg, George Sylvester Morris, Henry Boynton Smith, Noah Porter, Vincenzo Botta (1891)
"3, with whom Origen, Eusebius, Hieronymus, and others identify him) accounts are
contradictory. According to the Pseudo-Clementine Recognitions, ..."
4. The Cuneiform Inscriptions and the Old Testament by Eberhard Schrader, Owen Charles Whitehouse (1888)
"359 According to Eusebius - Hieronymus, Cyaxares took the capital of Ninus in
the year Olympiad XLII. 4 = 609/608; according to the Armenian Chronicon of ..."
5. An Epitome of the Civil and Literary Chronology of Rome and Constantinople by Henry Fynes Clinton (1853)
"The name of his bishoprick was unknown to Eusebius, Hieronymus, and Theodoret.
Later writers assign him a diocese. The genuine titles of the works of ..."
6. The Living Age by Making of America Project, Eliakim Littell, Robert S. Littell (1867)
"And yet the letters of the vehement, rude Dalmatian priest, eusebius hieronymus,
who retained through life many traces of his semi-barbarous origin, ..."