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He was a cardinal from 1057. He was (perhaps) a native of Trier, and became a Benedictine. He successfully opposed the teachings of Berengarius, which were considered heretical by the Pope, defending the measures of Gregory VII during the Investiture Controversy.
He is the author of the earliest medieval treatise on letter-writing (De dictamine). Many of his letters are to be seen in the works of St. Peter Damian ...
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Alberic of Monte Cassino was a Cardinal in the Roman Catholic Church who died in 1088. He was a cardinal from 1057. He was (perhaps) a native of Trier, and ...
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Alberic of Montecassino's Breviarium de didamine reveal several significant facts about the transmission and reception of this work in the twelfth century.
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This book, which includes the full Latin text and translation of a vital manuscript long thought lost, demonstrates that Alberic's famous treatise during the ...
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Alberic of Monte Cassino: Father of the Medieval Ars Dictaminis. Author, James Jerome Murphy. Publisher, American Benedictine Review, 1971. Length, 18 pages.
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Died 1088; cardinal since 1057. He was (perhaps) a native of Trier, and became a Benedictine. He opposed successfully the heresy of Berengarius, defended the ...
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The 'De rithmis' of Alberic of Monte Cassino: A Critical Edition. Author: Hugh H. Davis. Pages: pp. 198-227. https://doi.org/10.1484/J.MS.2.306015.
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Historians generally think of Desiderius of Montecassino as the abbot (1058-1087) under whose leadership Montecassino entered its golden age, reaching the ...
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In the 11th-century Eucharistic Controversy, Alberic of Monte composed a small but important treatise. His treatise was said to have destroyed the argument ...