ecclesiastical$23694$ - translation to greek
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ecclesiastical$23694$ - translation to greek

Ecclesiastical Prisons; Prisons, Ecclesiastical

ecclesiastical      
adj. εκκλησιαστικός
religious painting         
  • Mandaean]] manuscript art featuring [[Abatur]] at the scales, from the ''[[Scroll of Abatur]]''
  • The Book of Odes]], a collection of poetry complied by Confucius. This image is a section of the scroll of an unidentified artist from the 13th century, and it narrates the poem about rural living.
  • Alhambra Palace]] depicting images of intricate circle divisions and geometry
  • The [[Ardabil Carpet]], a [[Persian carpet]], [[Tabriz]], mid-16th century, depicts floral gardens shaped in a manner that reflects the Islamic symbolism of paradise.
  • Madonna]] with an Angel, painted by [[Sandro Botticelli]] (1470) and commissioned by the [[Catholic Church]] during the [[Renaissance]] in [[Florence]] (Boston, Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum)
  • Four designs depicting the symbols of oneness and unity throughout the circles partition into each woven and detailed section.
  • A specimen of Islamic sacred art: in the [[Great Mosque of Kairouan]] in [[Tunisia]], the upper part of the ''mihrab'' (prayer niche) is decorated with 9th-century lusterware tiles and painted intertwined vegetal motifs.
  • Shrine of Shah Nematollah Vali, Iran]] showing the repetitive patterns in an identical Mosque from another country.
  • Buddha statue in Sri Lanka.
  • An example of Tibetan Buddhist art: Thangka Depicting [[Vajrabhairava]], c. 1740
  • Virgin and Child. Wall painting from the early [[catacombs]], Rome, 4th century.
ART THAT IS RELIGIOUS IN THEME
Ecclesiastical Art; Art, Ecclesiastical; Ecclesiastical art; Spiritual Art; Sacred art; Devotional art; Religious painting
ραφή
Canon law         
  • Image of pages from the ''Decretum'' of [[Burchard of Worms]], an 11th-century book of canon law.
ORDINANCES AND REGULATIONS MADE BY CHURCH LEADERSHIP FOR THE GOVERNMENT OF A CHRISTIAN ORGANIZATION OR CHURCH AND ITS MEMBERS
Canon Law; Ecclesiastical law; Canon lawyer; Lex (canon law); Law of the Church; Canonical law; Church law; Ecclesiastical lawyer; Canonist; Canon lawyers; Canonists; Law, Canon; Jus canonicum; Law (Christianity); Church canons; Canonical Law; Ecclesiastical lawyers; Ius canonicum; Ecclesiastical Law; Canonical lawyer; Ecclesiastic law; Bachelor of Canon Law; Bachelor of Canon Laws; Christian law; Canon (law); Clerical lawyer
εκκλησιαστικό δίκαιο, κανονικό δίκαιο

Definition

Churchdom
·noun The institution, government, or authority of a church.

Wikipedia

Ecclesiastical prison

It is plain from many decrees in the Corpus Juris Canonici that the Roman Catholic Church has claimed and exercised the right, belonging to a perfect and visible society, of protecting its members by condemning the guilty to imprisonment. The object of prisons originally, both among the Hebrews and the Romans, was merely the safe-keeping of a criminal, real or pretended, until his trial. The ecclesiastical idea of imprisonment, however, is that confinement be made use of both as a punishment and as affording an opportunity for reformation and reflection.