piety$60815$ - meaning and definition. What is piety$60815$
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What (who) is piety$60815$ - definition

CIRCLE OF ECCLESIASTICAL AND SECULAR INDIVIDUALS BEGINNING IN THE LATE 1630S IN RUSSIA AT THE TIME OF CHURCH SCHISM, WHICH GATHERED AROUND STEFAN VONIFATIYEV
Zealots of piety

Knightly Piety         
Knightly piety; Knightly Piety devotion
Knightly Piety refers to a specific strand of Christian belief espoused by knights during the Middle Ages. The term comes from Ritterfrömmigkeit, coined by Adolf Waas in his book Geschichte der Kreuzzüge.
Affective piety         
  • Double-sided icon with the Crucifixion and the Virgin Hodegitria (9th Century with additions and overpainting of the 10th and 13th centuries) [http://www.byzantinemuseum.gr/en/collections/icons/?bxm=995 The Byzantine and Christian Museum, Athens].
  • Heliand-Fragment P [German Historical Museum, Berlin
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  • Christ as the Man of Sorrows, with Arma Christi.  Netherlands, ca. 1486
  • [[Isenheim Altarpiece]], Niclaus of Haguenau (for the sculpted portion) and Grünewald (for the painted panels), 1512–1516 Musée Unterlinden, Colmar.
  • ''Arma Christi'' on Pew Back, Church of St. Valentine (completed in 1493), Kiedrich, Germany
  • Rohan Hours, "Lamentation of the Virgin," (f. 135) Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris, M.S. Latin 9471.
  • Saint Catherine of Siena receiving the stigmata. Book of Hours (ca. 1440 ca.), Paris Bibliothèque Nationale, MS lat. 10533
  • St. Francis Receiving the Stigmata, Book of Hours ( Belgium, ca. 1525–30). The Morgan Library & Museum.
  • [[Hours of Mary of Burgundy]], Flanders, ca. 1477 (Vienna, Austrian National Library, cod. 1857, f. 14v)
  • Vittorio Crivelli (1450–1502), Saint Bonaventure Holding the Tree of Life ([http://www.musee-jacquemart-andre.com/en/%20 Musée Jacquemart-André], Paris). ''The Tree of Life'' (or ''Lignum vitae'') was Bonaventure's most popular meditation on Christ.
Wikipedia talk:Articles for creation/Affective Piety; Draft:Affective Piety
Affective piety is most commonly described as a style of highly emotional devotion to the humanity of Jesus, particularly in his infancy and his death, and to the joys and sorrows of the Virgin Mary. It was a major influence on many varieties of devotional literature in late-medieval Europe, both in Latin and in the vernaculars.
Piety Street Recording         
RECORDING STUDIO IN NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA
User:Tphollingsworth/Piety Street Studios; Piety Street Studios; Peity Street Studios; Peity Street Recording; Piety Recording; Piety Studios; Piety Studio; Piety Street Studio; Piety street records; Peity records
Piety Street Recording is a recording studio at 728 Piety Street in the 9th Ward/Bywater, New Orleans.masterdigital.

Wikipedia

Zealots of Piety

The Zealots of Piety (Russian: Кружок ревнителей благочестия) was a circle of ecclesiastical and secular individuals beginning in the late 1630s in Russia at the time of church schism, which gathered around Stefan Vonifatiyev, the confessor of tsar Alexei Mikhailovich. The impetus to the group's formation was the Time of Troubles. The members believed the massacres and conflagrations of the time to be the manifestation of a wrathful God, angry with the Russian people's lack of religiosity. In response, the group called for the rebirth of the Russian Orthodox faith, and a renewal of the religious piety of the masses.

The Zealots of Piety included Fyodor Rtishchev, Archmandrite Nikon (Minin) of the Novospassky Monastery (future Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia), Abbot Ivan Neronov of the Kazan Cathedral, archpriests Avvakum Petrov, Loggin, Lazar, and Daniil. The members of the Zealots of Piety wanted to enhance the authority of the Russian Orthodox Church and increase its influence upon the people. Among other goals of the circle were the struggle against the shortcomings and vices of the clergy, revival of church sermons and other means for influencing the masses. They also aimed to assist the needy and weak in Russian society, protecting them from social injustice, and to spread the Gospel to the Russian people, making faith more integral in daily life. The Zealots of Piety soon became the actual rulers of the Russian Orthodox Church, thanks to the support from the tsar, who had paid much attention to the advice of his confessor.

After Nikon had been elected patriarch in 1652, the groups turned against their former member, protesting several of his reforms. Over time, the group began to dissolve, as many of its members became active figures in the Old Believers movement.