LC control no. | n 90666892 |
---|---|
Descriptive conventions | rda |
Personal name heading | Augustinus, de Ancona, -1328 |
Variant(s) | Augustinus, de Ancona, 1243-1328 Anchona, Augustinus de, -1328 Ancona, Augustinus de, -1328 Augustinus, Anconitanus, -1328 Trionfo, Agostino, 1243-1328 Augustine, of Ancona, -1328 Augustinus Triumpus, de Ancona, -1328 Triumpus, Augustinus, de Ancona, -1328 Augustinus Anchonitanus, -1328 Augustinus Triumphus, -1328 Triumphus, Augustinus, -1328 Agostino, d'Ancona, -1328 Trionfo, Agostino, -1328 Trionfo, Augustin, -1328 Augustinus, von Ancona, , -1328 |
Associated country | Italy |
Located | Paris (France) Padua (Italy) Venice (Italy) Naples (Kingdom) |
Death date | 1328-04-02 |
Place of birth | Ancona (Italy) |
Place of death | Naples (Italy) |
Field of activity | Philosophy Theology |
Affiliation | Augustinians |
Found in | nuc90-44164: His Summa de potestate ecclesiastica [MI] 1487 (hdg. on GmC rept.: Augustinus de Ancona) NUC pre-1956 (LC hdg.: Trionfo, Agostino, 1243-1328; usage: Augustini Anconitani; Augustini de Anchona) Goff (Augustinus de Ancona) Augustinus, de Ancona. Summa de ecclesiastica potestate, 6 March 1473: title page (edita a fratre Augustino de Ancona Ordinis fratru[m] He[re]mita[rum] sancti Augustini) Encyclopedia of Medieval Philosophy, 2020, viewed online May 5, 2022: (Augustine of Ancona; Augustinus (Triumphus) de Ancona; 1270/1273-1328; Augustinian friar, wrote at least 32 theological and philosophical works but is chiefly known for his Summa de ecclesiastica potestate, a systematic argument for the supreme power of the pope in both temporal and spiritual affairs) <https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-024-1665-7_61> Encyclopedia of the Middle Ages, 2005, viewed online May 5, 2022: (Augustine of Ancona, 1270-1328; Augustinus Triumphus, a native of Ancona, Hermit of St Augustine, studied at Paris from 1297 to 1300; he later commented on Lombard's Book of Sentences before becoming reader at the school of the Augustinians at Padua. He was master of theology from 1313 to 1315 and in 1322 chaplain to Charles, son of Robert of Anjou, king of Naples and Sicily. We have his Summa de potestate ecclesiastica (ed. Rome, 1479, 1582), written in 1326, two years after the publication of Marsilius of Padua's Defensor pacis) <https://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780227679319.001.0001/acref-9780227679319-e-268> Bibliothè€que nationale de France, online authority file, viewed May 5, 2022: (Augustin d'Ancône (127.-1328); born in Ancona; died in Naples in 1328; heremit of St. Augustine; professor of philosophy and theology; identified in the 16th century as a member of the Trionfo family of Ancona; name variants: Augustinus Anchonitanus; Augustinus Triumphus; Augustinus de Anchona; Agostino d'Ancona; Trionfo, Agostino; Trionfo, Augustin; Augustinus von Ancona; Augustine of Ancona) <https://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb125300018> Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani, 1960, viewed online May 5, 2022: (Agostino d'Ancona, or Agostino Trionfo; died in 1328 at age 85 according to epigraph recorded in 1528, but date is inaccurate as is identification with Trionfo family; date of birth likely 1275; reader at Padua in 1298; pursuing degree at University of Paris, 1302-1305; returned to Italy in 1305, probably to Padua; also lived in Venice; in 1322 made councilor and chaplain of Roberto, king of Naples, and of his son Carlo; remained in Naples until his death 2 April 1328) <https://www.treccani.it/enciclopedia/agostino-d-ancona_%28Dizionario-Biografico%29/> Wikipedia, viewed May 5, 2022: (Augustinus Triumphus; Agostino Trionfo; 1243-2 April 1328, also known as Augustinus of Ancona, was a Hermit of St. Augustine and writer. He is celebrated for his work Summa de potestate ecclesiastica, printed in 1473) <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Augustinus_Triumphus> |
Not found in | New Cath. encyc.; Encyc. Brit. |
Associated language | lat |