Biblia

Bang, Johann Otto

Bang, Johann Otto a Danish theologian, was born Sept. 9, 1712, at Hillerod. He was professor at the University of Copenhagen, and died about 1780. He wrote, Disputatio Logican esse Linzam Judicii (Copenhagen, 1734): De Tutissimna Explicatione Matth. (ibid. 1738): Introduction Ep. Judoe (ibid. 1752). See Hoefer, Nouv. Biog. Generale, s.v. Fuente: Cyclopedia of Biblical, … Continue reading “Bang, Johann Otto”

Banfield, James

Banfield, James an English Wesleyan missionary, was born at Devonport in 1812. He entered the ministry in 1839, labored two years in England and thirtysix in the West Indies, much esteemed and beloved, and died in St. Martin’s, July 31, 1876. See .Min. of the British Conference, 1875, p. 35. Fuente: Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological … Continue reading “Banfield, James”

Banes, Domingo

Banes, Domingo a Spanish theologian, was born at Valladolid in 1527. He studied at Salamanca, entered the Order of the Preaching Friars, and taught theology at Avila, at Alcala de Henares, at Valladolid, and at Salamanca. He died at Medina del Campo, Nov. 1, 1604. He wrote, De Generatione et Corruptione, sive in Aristotelis eosdem … Continue reading “Banes, Domingo”

Bane, John

Bane, John an English Baptist minister, was born at Acle, near Great Yarmouth, Norfolk. In his youth he followed the sea, and was taken a prisoner of war by the French and confined at Arras for upwards of five years. While in prison he became a Christian. After his liberation in 1814, he returned to … Continue reading “Bane, John”

Bane, Claudius de

Bane, Claudius de a French theologian, was first brought before the public in the religious reformation. He embraced Catholicism, and then became counsellor of the presidial of Nimes, whose functions he perfortmed for more than forty years. He died in 1658. He wrote L’Ecriture-Abandonnee par les Ministres de la Religion Pretendue Reforme, a posthumous work … Continue reading “Bane, Claudius de”

Banduri, Anselmo

Banduri, Anselmo Archaeologist and numismatologist, b. 1671 at Ragusa, off the coast of Dalmatia; d. at Paris, 4 January, 1743. He joined the Benedictines at an early age, studied at Naples, and was eventually sent to Florence, then a flourishing centre of higher studies. Here he made the acquaintance of the famous Benedictine scholar Montfaucon, … Continue reading “Banduri, Anselmo”