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  1. Nov 11, 2006 · Addeddate 2006-11-11 13:26:55 Barcode 128940 Call number 27573 Digitalpublicationdate 2004-11-05 00:00:00

  2. St. Prosper of Aquitaine, the author of the De vocatione omnium gentium,1 was the chief opponent of the anti-Augus- tinian reaction known in history as Semi-Pelagianism.2 Aris¬ ing in the south of Gaul during Augustine’s last years, the Semi-Pelagian opposition continued unabated till the death

  3. Feb 12, 2020 · v, 248 pages ; 23 cm. Access-restricted-item true Addeddate 2020-02-12 04:02:05 Associated-names

  4. Prosper of Aquitaine : defense of St. Augustine / translated and annotated by P. de Letter

  5. and that tradition is unanimous in naming St. Prosper, we have to discard definitely the hypothesis of an intentional anonymity. 39 2) The teaching of the De vocatione is identical with that of St. Prosper on practically all points of doctrine. 40 3) The literary procedure is the same: similar expressions, similar ways of developing ideas. 41

  6. Prosper was a native of Aquitaine, and may have been educated at Bordeaux. By 417 he arrived in Marseilles as a refugee from Aquitaine in the aftermath of the Gothic invasions of Gaul. In 429 he was corresponding with Augustine. [4] In 431 he appeared in Rome to appeal to Pope Celestine I regarding the teachings of Augustine; there is no ...

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  8. Prosper of Aquitaine (ca. 388–ca. 455). Little is known about his early life, but by the 420s Prosper had emerged as Augustine’s staunchest defender against those he saw as dangerously conceding too much ground to 3Pelagianism. Later in his career, Prosper softened his views concerning the extent

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