See also:PETAU, DENYS (1583-1652) , Jesuit See also:scholar, better known as DIOxYSIUS PETAVIUS, was See also:born at See also:- ORLEANS
- ORLEANS, CHARLES, DUKE OF (1391-1465)
- ORLEANS, DUKES OF
- ORLEANS, FERDINAND PHILIP LOUIS CHARLES HENRY, DUKE OF (1810-1842)
- ORLEANS, HENRI, PRINCE
- ORLEANS, HENRIETTA, DUCHESS
- ORLEANS, JEAN BAPTISTE GASTON, DUKE
- ORLEANS, LOUIS
- ORLEANS, LOUIS PHILIPPE JOSEPH
- ORLEANS, LOUIS PHILIPPE ROBERT, DUKE
- ORLEANS, LOUIS PHILIPPE, DUKE OF (1725–1785)
- ORLEANS, LOUIS, DUKE OF (1372–1407)
- ORLEANS, PHILIP I
- ORLEANS, PHILIP II
Orleans on the 21st of See also:August 1583. Educated at See also:Paris University, he came under the See also:influence of See also:Isaac See also:Scaliger, who directed his See also:attention towards the obscurer fathers of the See also:- CHURCH
- CHURCH (according to most authorities derived from the Gr. Kvpcaxov [&wµa], " the Lord's [house]," and common to many Teutonic, Slavonic and other languages under various forms—Scottish kirk, Ger. Kirche, Swed. kirka, Dan. kirke, Russ. tserkov, Buig. cerk
- CHURCH, FREDERICK EDWIN (1826-1900)
- CHURCH, GEORGE EARL (1835–1910)
- CHURCH, RICHARD WILLIAM (1815–189o)
- CHURCH, SIR RICHARD (1784–1873)
Church. In 1603 he was appointed to a lectureship at the university of See also:Bourges, but resigned his See also:place two years later, in See also:- ORDER
- ORDER (through Fr. ordre, for earlier ordene, from Lat. ordo, ordinis, rank, service, arrangement; the ultimate source is generally taken to be the root seen in Lat. oriri, rise, arise, begin; cf. " origin ")
- ORDER, HOLY
order to enter the Society of Jesus. For many years he was See also:professor of divinity at the See also:College de Clermont, the See also:chief Jesuit See also:establishment in Paris; there he died on the 11th of See also:December 1652. He was one of the most brilliant scholars in a learned See also:age. Carrying on and improving the See also:chronological labours of Scaliger, he published in 1627 an See also:Opus de doctrina lemporum, which has been often reprinted. An abridgment of this See also:work, Rationarium See also:tern porum, was translated into See also:French and See also:English, and has been brought down in a See also:modern reprint to the See also:year 1849. But Petau's See also:eminence chiefly rests on . his vast, but unfinished, De theologicis dogmalibus, the first systematic See also:attempt ever made to treat the development of See also:Christian See also:doctrine from the See also:historical point of view.
End of Article: PETAU, DENYS (1583-1652)
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