of+unknown+authorship

  • 101Wikipedia:Citing Wikipedia — Help:Contents Citing Wikipedia …

    Wikipedia

  • 102Somerset Carol — Come all you worthy gentlemen, sometimes referred to as the Somerset Carol, is an English folk carol of unknown authorship.[1] It was collected from a Mr. Rapsey, of Bridgwater during the English Folk song revival at the turn of the 20th century… …

    Wikipedia

  • 103Adam lay ybounden — Single surviving manuscript source of Adam lay ybounden in the Sloane Manuscript 2593 held by the British Library. Adam lay ybounden , originally titled Adam lay i bowndyn[1] is a 15th century macaronic English text of unknown authorship. The… …

    Wikipedia

  • 104Ogdoadic Tradition — The Ogdoadic Tradition is an important esoteric current forming an influential part of the mainstream Western Mystery Tradition. The term “Ogdoadic” implies “pertaining to the number eight”, which connotation denotes the essentially Hermetic… …

    Wikipedia

  • 105Osman's Dream — is an Old Turkish epic poem, narrative history, attributed to Osman I of Ottoman Empire, but most probably unknown authorship, dating at the 13th century. The work alludes to a dream experienced by the first sultan, Osman I, consisting of a… …

    Wikipedia

  • 106CATO DIONYSIUS —    name of a book of maxims in verse, held in high favour during the Middle Ages; of unknown authorship …

    The Nuttall Encyclopaedia

  • 107Didache — ‘The Teaching of the Twelve [[➝ Twelve, the]] Apostles’: a brief manual in Greek, of unknown authorship, comprising instruction about conduct and Church order. It contains quotations from the Sermon on the Mount. It is probably to be dated early… …

    Dictionary of the Bible

  • 108Job, book of — A major book of the wisdom literature of the OT, of unknown authorship, probably written during or soon after the Exile (6th cent. BCE). The book questions the justice of a God who was expected to offer protection and prosperity in return for… …

    Dictionary of the Bible

  • 109crypt — [18] The Greek adjective kruptós meant ‘hidden’. From it was derived kruptikós, which passed into English via late Latin crypticus as cryptic [17]. The feminine form of the original Greek adjective, krúptē, was used as a noun meaning literally… …

    The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • 110CREED —    from the Latin credo     I believe. Creeds are a distinctive feature of CHRISTIANITY. Athough well developed creeds do not occur in the BIBLE, rather rudimentary creedal forms found there provide models for later statements; e.g. Deuteronomy… …

    Concise dictionary of Religion