Bobbio (Bobbiese: Bòbi; Ligurian: Bêubbi; Latin: Bobium) is a small town and comune in the province of Piacenza in Emilia-Romagna, northern Italy. It is...
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Norberto Bobbio (Italian: [norˈbɛrto ˈbɔbbjo]; 18 October 1909 – 9 January 2004) was an Italian philosopher of law and political sciences and a historian...
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Columbanus (redirect from Columbanus of Bobbio)
Lombard kingdoms, most notably Luxeuil Abbey in present-day France and Bobbio Abbey in present-day Italy. Columbanus taught an Irish monastic rule and...
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The Bobbio Missal (Paris, BNF lat. 13246) is a seventh-century Christian liturgical codex that probably originated in France. The Missal contains a lectionary...
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Bobbio Abbey (Italian: Abbazia di San Colombano) is a monastery founded by Irish Saint Columbanus in 614, around which later grew up the town of Bobbio...
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Bobbio may refer to Bobbio, a town and commune in the Province of Piacenza, Emilia Romagna, Italy Bobbio Pellice, a village and commune in the Province...
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The Bobbio Scholiast (commonly abbreviated schol. Bob.) was an anonymous scholiast working in the 7th century at the monastery of Bobbio and known for...
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Bobbio Cathedral (Italian: Duomo di Bobbio; Concattedrale di Santa Maria Assunta) is a Roman Catholic cathedral in Bobbio, Emilia-Romagna, Italy, dedicated...
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The Bobbio Jerome (Milan, Biblioteca Ambrosiana MS S. 45. sup.) is an early seventh-century manuscript copy of the Commentary on Isaiah attributed to St...
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The Republic of Bobbio was a short lived partisan state centered around the Italian city of Bobbio in Piacenza province. The republic extended for ~90...
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Dungal of Bobbio (fl. 811–828) was an Irish monk, teacher, astronomer, and poet. He was to live at Saint-Denis, Pavia, and Bobbio. He may be the same...
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Monza ampullae (redirect from Monza/Bobbio flasks)
largest group was discovered in a burial at Bobbio Abbey, not far from Monza, and names such as Monza/Bobbio flasks ampullae or flagons are among the many...
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Bertulf (died 640) was the third abbot of the monastery of Bobbio. Bertulf was the son of an Austrasian nobleman and a near relative of Arnulf of Metz...
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Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Genoa (redirect from Archdiocese of Genova-Bobbio)
Genoa was, in 1986, united with the Diocese of Bobbio-San Colombano, forming the Archdiocese of Genoa-Bobbio; however a split in 1989 renamed it the "Archdiocese...
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Bobbio Pellice (French: Bobbi) is a comune (municipality) in the Metropolitan City of Turin in the Italian region Piedmont, located about 50 kilometres...
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Jonas of Bobbio (also known as Jonas of Susa) (Sigusia, now Susa, Italy, c. 600 – after 659 AD) was a Columbanian monk and a major Latin monastic author...
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The Bobbio Orosius (Milan, Biblioteca Ambrosiana MS D. 23. Sup.) is an early 7th century Insular manuscript of the Chronicon of Paulus Orosius. The manuscript...
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John Stuart Mill, Eduard Bernstein, John Dewey, Carlo Rosselli, Norberto Bobbio, and Chantal Mouffe. Other important liberal socialist figures include Guido...
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conservatives more open to social welfare programs. According to Norberto Bobbio, one of the major exponents of this distinction, the left believes in attempting...
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Celtic Rite (section The Bobbio Missal)
The Bobbio and Stowe Missals contain the Irish ordinary of a daily Mass in its late Romanized form. Many of the variables are found in the Bobbio book...
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C.R. (1600–1660) was a Roman Catholic prelate who served as Bishop of Bobbio (1650–1660). Alessandro Porro was born in 1600 in Milan, Italy and ordained...
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da Vinci's Mona Lisa is taken from Bobbio. The landscape that forms the background to the picture is that of Bobbio seen from the Malaspina Dal Verme Castle...
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"civilized society requires orders and classes". Italian scholar Norberto Bobbio argued that the right-wing is inegalitarian compared to the left-wing, as...
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Left and Right: The Significance of a Political Distinction (category Books by Norberto Bobbio)
political scientist Norberto Bobbio. It is about the left–right political spectrum, which it argues is consistently useful. Bobbio equated political left and...
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Geraldina Bobbio (born 20 August 1967) is an Argentine alpine skier. She competed in the women's giant slalom at the 1984 Winter Olympics. Evans, Hilary;...
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the Langobards ('long-beards'). Writing in the mid-7th century, Jonas of Bobbio wrote that earlier that century the Irish missionary Columbanus disrupted...
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Irish, Anglo-Saxon, Visigothic and Italian scholars, including Dungal of Bobbio, Alcuin of York, Theodulf of Orléans, and Peter of Pisa; Franks such as...
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Legal Positivism (book) (redirect from Legal Positivism (Book of Bobbio))
Positivism (Il Positivismo Giuridico) is a book by the Italian jurist Norberto Bobbio about one of the ontological elements of foundations of law — the jusphilosophical...
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Tiwari 2012. Guha 2007, pp. 710–720. Sen 2005, p. 70. Sheela Bhatt 2014. Bobbio 2012, pp. 652–668. Jaffrelot 2013, pp. 79–95. Ruparelia, Sanjay (12 January...
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Aurelia Accame Bobbio (31 January 1911, in Rome – 7 September 1999, in Frascati) was an Italian literary historian. Considered a scholar on the works of...
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