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Cleric - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A cleric (Ancient Greek κληρικός - klērikos), clergyman (pl. clergymen ), or churchman (pl. churchmen ) is a member of the clergy of a religion, especially one who is a priest, preache...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cleric |
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Clergy - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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In the Medieval Times the Clerics where the scholars. They would join the clergy that was in the church. The Clerics were very smart and held high in society due to the fact that they were educated since many couldn't afford education back in those times.
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501: Lat hym fare wel, God yeve his soul reste! 502: He is now in his grave and in his cheste. 503: Now of my fifthe housbonde wol I telle. 504: God lete his soule nevere come in helle! 505: And yet was he to me the mooste shrewe; ... 506: That feele I on my ribbes al by rewe, 507: ... 513: I trowe I loved hym best,
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This academic year I have been teaching on Tuesdays, when the Cambridge Late Antique, Byzantine and Early Medieval Seminar runs, looking after a child Tuesday evenings when the London Society for Medieval Studies meets, ... Except that that still looks like Ervey’s hand to me so I wonder how learned this cleric was,
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An introduction to medieval manuscripts, paleography and the history of literacy in our cultural heritage. ... ~carta ejecutoria : a form of letters patent produced by the royal chancery in late medieval Spain...
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Today his four-voice Mass of Notre Dame is a textbook example for medieval counterpoint, and has served sufficiently to maintain his reputation across shifts in fashion. However Machaut's work is extensive, with his French songs & poetry dominating the fourteenth century by both their quality and volume.
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