Pázmáneum

The Pázmáneum (in Latin Collegium Pazmanianum) is a university in Vienna, founded in 1623 by Péter Pázmány as a seminary for Hungarian theological candidates. It was created at a cost of 200,000 florins.

For other universities with similar names, see Pázmáneum (disambiguation)

Further reading

  • Vilmos Fraknói, Péter Pázmány and his Times (Hung. Pest, 1868–1872); Correspondence of Pázmány (Hung. and Latin), published by the Hungarian Academy of Sciences (Pest, 1873). (R. N. B.)
gollark: Perhaps it was, but one which happened to get written into religious books somehow.
gollark: 17% of known gods/theomorphic entities are currently in containment at Site 922-G.
gollark: Yeees, it sounds kind of outside the context they had at the time.
gollark: Fascinating. Where does Christianity say this?
gollark: Clearly not everyone wanting a unified world government can be the Antichrist. Unless the Antichrist can be multiple people simultaneously.

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