Lexicographical Neighbors of Hagiologic
Literary usage of Hagiologic
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Century Dictionary: An Encyclopedic Lexicon of the English Language by William Dwight Whitney (1889)
"Reginald, one of the most credulous of hagiologic writers. Kack, Church of our
Fathers, III. ... Same as hagiologic. If we read the accounts of the ..."
2. Encyclopaedia Britannica, a Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, Literature and edited by Hugh Chisholm (1910)
"This literature is more interesting from the linguistic than from the hagiologic
point of view, and comes rather within the domain oí (be philologist. ..."
3. Journal of the American Oriental Society by American Oriental Society (1889)
"The manuscript thus appears to be one of those hagiologic compilations which are
not infrequent, but of which scarcely any two have the same contents. ..."
4. The Cult of the Heavenly Twins by James Rendel Harris (1906)
"from the fact that Vitalis of Ravenna is the father of Prota.se and Gervase of
Milan. We are clearly in the same hagiologic laboratory, and Ambrose is the ..."
5. The New Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge: Embracing by Johann Jakob Herzog, Philip Schaff, Albert Hauck (1908)
"There are also hagiologic.J collections devoted to the members of particular
orders, of which the Ada Sanctorum ordinis S. Bnt- dicti of J. Mabillon and ..."