Libellus
Libellus is the Latin word for " little book, booklet, loose folded sheets location" ( Pl: libelli ). It is also referred to treatises which found a place in a few pages.
It often forms in post-classical Latin writings speaking part of modern-day title.
Examples
- " Libellus de Antichristo " (954 ), see Adso of Montier -en-Der
- " Libellus de institutione Herveldensis ecclesiae " (around 1073 ), see Lampert of Hersfeld
- " Libellus de conservatione ecclesiae Sancti Dionysii ", see Suger of Saint- Denis
- Libellus de dictis quator ancillarum sanctae Elisabeth confectus, the report of the four so-called servants ( Guda Isentrud of Hörselgau and two other hospital nurses ) about the life and work of Elizabeth of Thuringia
- " Libellus de Monasteriensis miraculis sancti Liudgeri " ( 1170 ), see Liudger
- " Libellus septem sigillorum ", see Tilo von Kulm
- " Libellus Inquisitionis veri et boni " ( 1436 ), see Nicholas of Cusa
- " Libellus de quinque corporibus regularibus ", see Piero della Francesca
- " De origine, situ, moribus et institutis Norimbergae libellus " (1502 ), see Conrad Celtis
- " Libellus de praeclaris picturae professoribus " ( 1505), see John Butzbach
- " Libellus de natura animalium " ( 1508), see Bestiary
- " Libellvertrag " (1604 ), see train (city)
- " Libellus de vita beata " (1609 ), see Valentin Weigel
- " De ecclesiastica et politica potestate libellus " ( 1611), see Jansenism
- " Libellus disputatorus " (1618 ), see Valentin Weigel
- " Libellus Apology " ( 1624), see philosophy in Jacob Boehme
- " Libellus dialogorum, immersive colloquia, nonnullorum Hermeticae medicinae, ac tincturae universalis " ( 1663 ), see Johann Rudolph Glauber
- " Libellus Toldos Yeshu " ( 1681), see Johann Christoph Wagenseil
- " Libellus ignium " (1703 ), see Johann Rudolph Glauber
- " Libellus de incredibilibus Grace " (1772 ), see Palaephatus