itinerarium









itinerarium


itinerarium [ahy-tin-uh-rair-ee-uh m, ih-tin-] ExamplesWord Origin noun, plural i·tin·er·ar·i·a [ahy-tin-uh-uh-rair-ee-uh, ih-tin-] /aɪˌtɪn ə əˈrɛər i ə, ɪˌtɪn-/, i·tin·er·ar·i·ums. Roman Catholic Church.

  1. a prayer in the breviary, used by a priest about to begin a journey.

Origin of itinerarium 1700–10; Medieval Latin itinerārium; see itinerary Examples from the Web for itinerarium Historical Examples of itinerarium

  • Giraldus Cambrensis describes them in his Itinerarium Cambriae, 2, 6, p. 865.

    The Irish Ecclesiastical Record, Volume 1, June 1865

    Various

  • His account of how he came to write his famous little Itinerarium mentis in Deum is full of temperament.

    The Mediaeval Mind (Volume II of II)

    Henry Osborn Taylor

  • Therefore may we not follow sympathetically the Itinerarium of Bonaventuras mind as it traces the footprints of its God?

    The Mediaeval Mind (Volume II of II)

    Henry Osborn Taylor

  • And now the Itinerarium—well, it is best to let Bonaventura tell how he came to compose it, and of its purpose and character.

    The Mediaeval Mind (Volume II of II)

    Henry Osborn Taylor

  • In 1726 appeared the Itinerarium Septentrionale, his greatest and best-known work.

    Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 12, Slice 2

    Various

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