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Štajerska kapucinska provinca do Jožefa II
Škafar, Vinko
Arhivi : glasilo Arhivskega društva in arhivov Slovenije, 2017-07, Vol.40 (2), p.289-306
Ljubljana: Arhivsko Drustvo Slovenije
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Título:
Štajerska kapucinska provinca do Jožefa II
Autor:
Škafar, Vinko
Assuntos:
Monasteries
É parte de:
Arhivi : glasilo Arhivskega društva in arhivov Slovenije, 2017-07, Vol.40 (2), p.289-306
Descrição:
Štajerska kapucinska provinca, samostani, dejavnost, povezovanje geografskih prostorov Abstract The discussion introduces Capuchin monasteries in Styria situated in the territory of the present-day Republic of Slovenia, Republic of Croatia, Republic of Austria (Styria and Carinthia), and the Italian Republic (the western part of the Friuli-Venezia Giulia, Germ. SUMMARY CAPUCHIN STYRIAN PROVINCE UNTIL JOSEPH II In the 18th century, Capuchin Styrian province included 33 monasteries which were an exceptional factor in fostering integration of geographical spaces as their members belonged to five linguistic areas: In 1745, he was a philosophy lecturer in the Krško Capuchin monastery and four years later, in 1749, he lectured theology in Graz, whilst three years later he served as monastery guardian in Maribor where he stayed three years until 1755 when he was elected Provincial of the great Capuchin Styrian province that included 774 priests. Even though St. Lawrence of Brindisi who deserves credit for ensuring Capuchins' arrival in Slovenia and was declared a church teacher, and despite the oldest Slovene dramatic text was written by Romuald of Sant' Andrea, and that literary historians value the baroque sermons of John Baptist of Sveti Križ in Vipava (Tobia Lionelli, 1647-1714) and f. Roger of Ljubljana (Mihael Krammer, 1667-1728), the Capuchin friars were primarily preachers of the people or, as the Italian like to say, frati del popolo - or to qoute Matej Slekovec, they became ?darlings of simple people? (Slekovec 1889, 90).
Editor:
Ljubljana: Arhivsko Drustvo Slovenije
Idioma:
Esloveno
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