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dc.contributor.authorSt Basil
dc.date.accessioned2016-02-20T02:35:15Z
dc.date.available2016-02-20T02:35:15Z
dc.date.issued1924
dc.identifier.isbn0674992091,9780674992092
dc.identifier.issn
dc.identifier.urihttp://ir.nmu.org.ua/handle/GenofondUA/19038
dc.description.abstractBasil the Great was born ca. 330 CE at Caesarea in Cappadocia into a family noted for piety. He was at Constantinople and Athens for several years as a student with Gregory of Nazianzus and was much influenced by Origen. For a short time he held a chair of rhetoric at Caesarea, and was then baptized. He visited monasteries in Egypt and Palestine and sought out the most famous hermits in Syria and elsewhere to learn how to lead a pious and ascetic life; but he decided that communal monastic life and work were best. About 360 he founded in Pontus a convent to which his sister and widowed mother belonged. Ordained a presbyter in 365, in 370 he succeeded Eusebius in the archbishopric of Caesarea, which included authority over all Pontus. He died in 379. Even today his reform of monastic life in the east is the basis of modern Greek and Slavonic monasteries. The Loeb Classical Library edition of Basil's Letters is in four volumes.
dc.language.isoEnglish
dc.publisherLoeb Classical Library
dc.subject
dc.subject
dc.subject.ddc
dc.subject.lcc
dc.titleLetters: Volume I, Letters I-LVIII (Loeb Classical Library)
dc.typeother
dc.identifier.aichYUPN3X5JC3BK4AVHPVRKMPZWH3C46ZQO
dc.identifier.crc32E86E595F
dc.identifier.doi
dc.identifier.edonkey6928FC86A6C29104C4893194473DBF5D
dc.identifier.googlebookid
dc.identifier.openlibraryidOL17552487M
dc.identifier.udk
dc.identifier.bbk
dc.identifier.libgenid622757
dc.identifier.md5E88E34635DA21A042F3498DFED4DAA08
dc.identifier.sha1JE4LB3HZYDHMTJNUFXHJTTWRPBHFAO4P
dc.identifier.tthHSXYP6TWGEDAH6BCV4L3ZM76GDATNB3J4SUJZHI


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