Denis Amelote
Denis Amelot Cong. Orat. (or Amelote, or Amelotte; 1609 – 7 October 1678) was a French biblical writer and scholar who is notable for his French translation of the New Testament (4 vols. 1666-170).[1] In his translation he quoted Greek minuscule manuscripts: 42, 43, 44, and 149 (in Gregory-Aland numbering).
Biography
Amelote was born in Saintes,[1] in the ancient Province of Saintonge. He was ordained a priest in 1631, was a Doctor of the Sorbonne, and became a member of the French Oratory.[1] He was a prominent opponent of Jansenism. He died in Paris.[1]
gollark: For most things, even.
gollark: Interrupt handlers are basically an assembly-level implementation detail for this sort of thing.
gollark: My stuff like SPUDNET isn't written using object oriented programming and is *way* easier to implement in JS with express and stuff than it would be with assembly and... something?
gollark: You can end up with messy control/data flow between everything if it's all in one giant mess.
gollark: Yes, but that would probably lead to more problems than the OO thing would if done well.
See also
References
- Maas, Anthony John (1907). Catholic Encyclopedia. 1. New York: Robert Appleton Company. p. 407.
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