We are using cookies This website uses cookies in order to offer you the most relevant information. By browsing this website, you accept these cookies.
Did you know? You can double click on a word to look it up on TermGallery.
Meanings of mendicant order in English
We have no meanings for "mendicant order" in our records yet.
Usage of mendicant order in English
1
O lady of the mendicantorder, I cherish an affection for thee.
2
Thou art he that is adorned with the marks of the mendicantorder.
3
Thou art one who bears a bald head (as the sign of the mendicantorder).
4
If, notwithstanding instructions of Panchasikha of the mendicantorder, thy knowledge has become abstracted from the sensual objects to which it relates?
5
Nothing perhaps served the pope better now than the agency of the mendicantorders.
6
Those of 1479 appealed against the MendicantOrders and against the appointment of foreigners.
7
The mendicantorders derive their whole subsistence from such oblations.
8
The mendicantorders are like those teachers whose subsistence depends altogether upon their industry.
9
He hated the monks, and even the MendicantOrders.
10
The Success of the MendicantOrders.
11
Thus in 1523 he recommended the conversion of the cloisters of the MendicantOrders into schools 'for boys and girls.'
12
While, from the mystics of that date, valuable works have been preserved, what has been left us from these mendicantorders?
13
Such was the effect of the Crusades in the twelfth century, and of the foundation of the MendicantOrders in the thirteenth.
14
One observing the duties of the mendicantorders should restrain one's senses and the mind even like a tortoise withdrawing its out-stretched limbs.
15
Having elevated monasticism to the zenith of its power, the Mendicantorders, like all the other monastic brotherhoods, entered upon their shameful decline.
16
In that country the preachers are not like our mendicantorders of friars-theyhave two or three suits of clothing, and they wash sometimes.