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         Augustine Saint:     more books (100)
  1. Soliloquies by Saint, Bishop of Hippo Augustine, 2005-12-30
  2. The Trinity (Fathers of the Church, 45) by Saint, Bishop of Hippo Augustine, 2003-05
  3. Fathers of the Church: City of God Books 1-7 by Saint, Bishop of Hippo Augustine, 1950-06
  4. Christian Book: The Confessions of Saint Augustine by Saint, Bishop of Hippo (345-430) Augustine, 2008-11-10
  5. Confessions of St. Augustine by Saint, Bishop of Hippo Augustine, 1977-06
  6. Confessions of st Augustine by Saint, Bishop of Hippo Augustine, 1978-06
  7. Augustine on the Sunday Gospel by Saint, Bishop of Hippo Augustine, John E. Rotelle, 1998-11
  8. An Augustine Treasury: Selections from the Writings of St. Augustine by Saint, Bishop of Hippo Augustine, Jules M. Brady, 1981-06
  9. S. Augustines manuell, or litle booke of the contemplation of Christ ..
  10. Leaves from St. Augustine by Mary Helen Agnes Allies, T W. 1813-1903 Allies, 2010-08-22
  11. King Alfred's Old English version of St. Augustine's Soliloquies by Henry Lee Hargrove, 2010-08-21
  12. St. Augustine's treatise on the city of God, abridged by F.R. Montgomery Hitchcock by F R. Montgomery 1867-1951 Hitchcock, 2010-08-20
  13. The enchiridion of Augustine: addressed to Laurentius : being a treatise on faith, hope, and love
  14. City of God (Everyman's Library) by Saint, Bishop of Hippo Augustine, 1973-06

21. St. Augustine, Church Father And Bishop Of Hippo
Saint Augustine, the Bishop of Hippo, was one of four great fathers of theChristian Church. Augustine was born in Tagaste (modern Algeria).
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St. Augustine (November 13, 354 - August 28, 430) Related Resources Augustine Texts
Augustine resources and biographies
Early Church St. Ambrose ... Algeria - The Roman Era Saint Augustine, the Bishop of Hippo, was one of four great fathers of the Christian Church. Augustine was born in Tagaste (modern Algeria). He turned from Manicheeism to Christianity under the influence of his Christian mother and Bishop Ambrose. The other fathers were Ambrose (who baptized Augustine), Jerome and Gregory.

22. Australian Catholic University - Signadou New Titles List
Part 1 Boo Augustine, Saint, Bishop of Hippo Hyde Park, NY New CityPress, Library catalogue holdings details. 270.2 AUG Part 1, vol.
http://www.acu.edu.au/library/signadou/NewTitles200212Dec.html
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23. Australian Catholic University - Signadou New Titles List
Part 3 Serm Augustine, Saint, Bishop of Hippo Sermons. English. Part3 - Serm Augustine, Saint, Bishop of Hippo Sermons. English.
http://www.acu.edu.au/library/signadou/NewTitles200210Oct.html
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24. Project Gutenberg Author Record
Project Gutenberg Author record. Augustine, Saint, Bishop of Hippo. Titles.
http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/authors/augustine__saint__bishop_.html
Project Gutenberg Author record
Augustine, Saint, Bishop of Hippo
Titles
Confessions Of St. Augustine, The Confessions of Saint Augustine, The
To the main listings page
Main Project Gutenberg Web page (online)

25. Project Gutenberg Bibliographic Record
Project Gutenberg Bibliographic Record. Title Confessions of Saint Augustine,The. Author Augustine, Saint, Bishop of Hippo. Notes. Language English.
http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/titles/confessions_of_saint.html
Project Gutenberg Bibliographic Record
Title: Confessions of Saint Augustine, The
Author: Augustine, Saint, Bishop of Hippo
Notes
Language: English Release Date: Jun 2002
File(s): Title Format Directory Filename Size Etext number Confessions of Saint Augustine, The (ASCII) tcosa10.txt 615 KB Select (click on) a Title to view. Click the Author name above for more eBooks by that author
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26. CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA Rule Of St. Augustine
Augustine enters into no minute details, it is to be is by no means observance andthe Bishop of Hippo strength of the individual, and when the Saint speaks of
http://www.knight.org/advent/cathen/02079b.htm

27. Saint Augustine Bishop Of Hippo
Saint Augustine Bishop of Hippo. 354 430 CE.
http://imiloa.wcc.hawaii.edu/krupp/BIOL101/present/lcture07/tsld008.htm
Saint Augustine Bishop of Hippo
    354 - 430 C.E.
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28. Saint Augustine Bishop Of Hippo
First Previous Next Last Index Home Text. Slide 8 of 27.
http://imiloa.wcc.hawaii.edu/krupp/BIOL101/present/lcture07/sld008.htm

29. Rivendell Is Moving
Gives a short biography, links to online texts, and suggested reading.Category Society Religion and Spirituality...... Saint, Doctor of the Western Church and Bishop of Hippo Regius (Annaba, Algeria),Augustine rose from the son of a poor farmer to number among the great
http://www.watson.org/rivendell/philoaugustine.html
Rivendell Educational Archive has moved its resources ...
Some of the sections have been taken offline because they no longer provide useful information, while others have been updated, expanded, and moved to separate sites.
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30. This Is The Saint Augustine Page.
Augustine, Saint (354430), greatest of the Latin Fathers Augustine presently wasattracted again to Christianity He became Bishop of Hippo (now Annaba, Algeria
http://www.connect.net/ron/august.html
Saint Augustine (354-430)
Augustine, Saint (354-430), greatest of the Latin Fathers and one of the most eminent Western Doctors of the Church. Augustine was born on November 13, 354, in Tagaste, Numidia (now Souk-Ahras, Algeria). His father, Patricius (died about 371), was a pagan (later converted to Christianity), but his mother, Monica, was a devout Christian who labored untiringly for her son's conversion and who was canonized by the Roman Catholic church. Augustine was educated as a rhetorician in the former North African cities of Tagaste, Madaura, and Carthage. Between the ages of 15 and 30, he lived with a Carthaginian woman whose name is unknown; in 372 she bore him a son, whom he named Adeodatus, which is Latin for “the gift of God.” Intellectual Struggle Inspired by the philosophical treatise Hortensius, by the Roman orator and statesman Marcus Tullius Cicero, Augustine became an earnest seeker after truth. He considered becoming a Christian, but experimented with several philosophical systems before finally entering the church. For nine years, from 373 until 382, he adhered to Manichaeism, a Persian dualistic philosophy then widely current in the Western Roman Empire. With its fundamental principle of conflict between good and evil, Manichaeism at first seemed to Augustine to correspond to experience and to furnish the most plausible hypothesis upon which to construct a philosophical and ethical system. Moreover, its moral code was not unpleasantly strict; Augustine later recorded in his Confessions: “Give me chastity and continence, but not just now.” Disillusioned by the impossibility of reconciling certain contradictory Manichaeist doctrines, Augustine abandoned this philosophy and turned to skepticism.

31. 5. Judaism, Christianity, And Islam
Augustine, Saint, Bishop of Hippo. The City of God. Translated by Marcus Dods. Augustine,Saint, Bishop of Hippo. The City of God An Abridged Version.
http://www2.austincc.edu/rgriffin/2311pubsrcs5.html
Back to Title Page and Table of Contents
5. Judaism, Christianity, and Islam (Beginnings, early development to about 1000 A.D.)
Augustine, Saint, Bishop of Hippo. The City of God. Translated by Marcus Dods. New York: Modern Library 1993. RVS: BR 65 .A64 E5 1994.
Augustine, Saint, Bishop of Hippo. The City of God: An Abridged Version. Translated by Gerald G. Walsh, Demetrius B. Sema, Grace Monahan, and Daniel J. Honan. Edited by Vernon J. Bourke. Garden City, N.Y.: Image, 1958. RGC: BR 65 .A64 E5 1958
Augustine, Saint. Confessions.
Augustine, Saint. Letters of Saint Augustine. Liguori, Missouri: Triumph Books, 1992. NRG: BR 65 .A78 E5 1992
Augustine, Saint. Augustine of Hippo, Selected Writings. (The Classics of Western Spirituality.) New York: Paulist Press, 1984. NRG: BR 65 .A52 E6 1984b
Bible, Hebrew, Hebrew (English translation). Tanakh: A New Translation of the Holy Scriptures According to the Traditional Hebrew Text. (Old Testament.) Philadelphia, Pa.: Jewish Publication Society, 1985. CYP, EVC, NRG, PIN, RGC, RVS: BS 895 .J4 1985
Bible (King James Version).

32. New Acquisitions In Classics
Paris Harmattan, 2002. (Series Collection Histoire ancienne et anthropologie.)Main Stack BL820.B2A34 2002 Augustine, Saint, Bishop of Hippo.
http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/ARTH/clasjan.html
New Acquisitions in Classics
UC Berkeley Library
January 2003 Newly acquired materials, primarily of interest to classicists, listed in Library of Congress call number order. Please note : Many of the titles listed below are not shelved in the Art History/Classics Library; please check individual records for the shelving location.
Document maintained on server: http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/
Last update 02/10/03. Maintained by: J. Ceballos

33. SAINT AUGUSTINE
INTRODUCTION. Saint Augustine was the greatest of the Christian writers. Augustinewas ordained a priest by the Bishop of Hippo in 391 AD 4. Bishop.
http://www.cals.ncsu.edu/agexed/aee501/augustine.html
SAINT AUGUSTINE INTRODUCTION. Saint Augustine was the greatest of the Christian writers. He exerted immense influence on the Church and his educational views were adopted and followed for many centuries. LIFE OF AUGUSTINE. 1. BOYHOOD. a. Birth . He was born at Tagaste, in North Africa, on November 13, 354 A.D.
b. Family . His parents were comfortable middle-class people. His father, Patricius, was a pagan and his mother, Monica, was a devout Christian.
c. Schooling., He was educated in the Latin grammar school of Madaura and the school of rhetoric in Carthage.
d. Religion . He adopted the Manichaean faith.
2. TEACHER. Positions in Augustine's teaching career were: a. Grammar. He taught in the Latin grammar school at Tagaste.
b. Rhetoric. He opened a school of rhetoric at Carthage in 374 A.D.
c. Rome. He sailed for Rome and taught rhetoric there.
d. Milan. He accepted a professorship in rhetoric at Milan.
3. CONVERT. Augustine became converted to Christianity.
a. Baptism . Bishop Ambrose baptized Augustine and his son, Adeodatus, in 387 A.D.
b.

34. New Catholic Dictionary: Augustine Of Hippo, Saint
Augustine of Hippo, Saint. (354430) Confessor, Doctor of the Church,Bishop of Hippo, born Tagaste, Africa; died Hippo. He was the
http://www.catholic-forum.com/saints/ncd00883.htm
Augustine of Hippo, Saint
) Confessor, Doctor of the Church, Bishop of Hippo, born Tagaste, Africa; died Hippo. He was the son of Patricius, a pagan, and of Saint Monica, and received a Christian education but, on proceeding to Carthage to study law, he became a slave to immorality and eventually embraced Manichreism. He went to Italy, , and taught rhetoric at Milan, where he was baptized by Ambrose, . Returning to Tagaste, , he distributed his goods to the poor, and was ordained, . Consecrated assistant Bishop of Hippo, , he introduced religious poverty and community life into his residence, which became a nursery of African monasteries and bishops. For 34 years he wrote and preached against the heresies of the times; becoming renowned as a philosopher, a theologian, and especially as the Doctor of Grace. His writings cover the whole field of theology; his Confessions and the City of God are the best known. His conversion is the classic instance of the efficacy of a mother's prayer. His description of his last days with Saint Monica, at Ostia, is the most sublime passage in his Confessions . Patron of theologians, brewers, and printers, invoked against sore eyes. Emblems: dove, child, shell, and pen. Relics at Pavia and Hippo. Feast, Roman Calendar, 28 August.

35. Patron Saints Index: Saint Augustine Of Hippo
Illustrated profile, with links, and excerpts from the Saint's writings.Category Society Religion and Spirituality...... God, give me chastity and continence but not just now. Augustine finally broke bythe prayers of his mother and the help of Saint Ambrose of Bishop of Hippo
http://www.catholic-forum.com/saints/sainta02.htm
AUGUSTINE of Hippo
Also Known As
Aurelius Augustinus; Doctor of Grace
Memorial
28 August
Profile
His father was a pagan who converted on his death bed; his mother was Saint Monica , a devout Christian. Trained in Christianity, he lost his faith in youth and led a wild life. Lived with a Carthaginian woman from the age of 15 through 30. Fathered a son whom he named Adeotadus, which means the gift of God Taught rhetoric at Carthage and Milan . After investigating and experimenting with several philosophies, he became a Manichaean for several years; it taught of a great struggle between good and evil, and featured a lax moral code. A summation of his thinking at the time comes from his Confessions : "God, give me chastity and continence - but not just now."
Augustine finally broke with the Manichaeans and was converted by the prayers of his mother and the help of Saint Ambrose of Milan , who baptized him. On the death of his mother he returned to Africa, sold his property, gave the proceeds to the poor , and founded a monastery Monk Priest Preacher ... Bishop of Hippo. Founded religious communities. Fought

36. Island Of Freedom - St. Augustine
Biography, quotes, and links to English translations of works by Augustine of Hippo.Category Society Religion and Spirituality...... Saint Augustine was one Augustine presently was attracted again to Christianity, andfound Neoplatonism to ordained a priest in 391, and became Bishop of Hippo
http://www.island-of-freedom.com/AUGUST.HTM
St. Augustine
Augustine - texts, commentaries, research material, essays...
St. Augustine of Hippo
- translations, papers, quotes...
St. Augustine Quote of the Month

Confessions

City of God

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Letters of St. Augustine

Saint Augustine was one of the foremost philosopher-theologians of early Christianity and the leading figure in the church of North Africa. He had a profound influence on the subsequent development of Western thought and culture, and shaped the themes and defined the problems that have characterized the Western tradition of Christian theology. His two most celebrated writings are his semiautobiographical Confessions and City of God , a Christian vision of history.
Augustine was born at Thagaste in Numidia, which is part of present day Algeria. His father, Patricius (died about 371), was a pagan (later converted to Christianity), but his mother, Monica, was a devout Christian who labored untiringly for her son's conversion and who was canonized by the Roman Catholic church. As a child he was schooled in Latin literature and later went to Carthage to study rhetoric, where he became a teacher. By the age of twenty he turned away from his Christian upbringing. He was repelled by its codes of behavior, but he never completely renounced it.
At Cathage he became enthusiastic about philosophy after reading Cicero's Hortensius . He considered becoming a Christian, but experimented with several philosophical systems before finally entering the church. For nine years, from 373 until 382, he adhered to Manichaeism, a Persian dualistic philosophy then widely current in the Western Roman Empire. With its fundamental principle of conflict between good and evil and its claim of a rational interpretation of Scripture, Manichaeism at first seemed to Augustine to correspond to experience and to furnish the most plausible hypothesis upon which to construct a philosophical and ethical system. Moreover, its moral code was not unpleasantly strict; Augustine later recorded in his

37. ThinkQuest Library Of Entries
Saint Augustine of Hippo (354 430) Key Figure in Transition from Paganism to ChristianityPhilosophy. One year later, Augustine became Bishop of Hippo.
http://library.thinkquest.org/3075/augustin.htm
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38. Saint Augustine Of Hippo, Christian Travelers, Guides
In 396 he was consecrated Bishop of Hippo and remained a pastor until his death.For more than thirty years Augustine was the leading the theologian in African
http://www.christian-travelers-guides.com/hist/augustine.html
Home page Christianity
and history
Augustine of Hippo (354-430).
The greatest of the Latin Christian Fathers and African theologians and one of the outstanding thinkers of all time. Augustine was of Berber descent and almost certainly Black. His mother, Monica, was a Christian whose virtues he praised. But at Carthage he was drawn into sexual excesses: later, while studying rhetoric and philosophy, he came under the influence of Manichaism followed by Neoplatonism. In the spring of 387, after many sessions with Ambrose, Bishop of Milan, and the study of the Bible, Augustine was baptized. The events of Augustine's life are recorded in his Confessions which is a spiritual classic and the first real work of Christian autobiography. Augustine's Christinaity remained strongly ascetic and his writings display a remarkably African ethos. In 396 he was consecrated Bishop of Hippo and remained a pastor until his death. For more than thirty years Augustine was the leading the theologian in African Christianity. In 410 the Goths sacked Rome and the pagans blamed the Christians whose God they said caused the disaster. Augustine put the capstone on his theological activity by defending the Christians against this charge in his great work The City of God Augustine's theology helped bring about the Protestant Reformation and deeply influenced early Protestant theologians such as Martin Luther and John Calvin who were strongly Augustinian in their outlook.

39. PastMasters
Thomas Aquinas, Saint Aquinas, Works; Aristotle Works; Augustine, Saint,Bishop of Hippo. Augustine, Opera Omnia; Augustine, Saint, Bishop of Hippo.
http://lib.harvard.edu/e-resources/details/p/pastmast.html

PastMasters
http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:hul.eresource:pastmast Abstract: See warnings below regarding printing and emailing. The Past Masters series from InteLex Corporation comprises full-text electronic editions of works by major philosophical figures, in both original language and in English translation. Areas covered include the history of political thought and theory, education, religious studies, economics, classics, history and German studies. Texts include published and unpublished works, articles and essays, and correspondence. The following works are available:
  • Anselm, Saint, Archbishop of Canterbury: Anselm, Opera Omnia Thomas Aquinas, Saint: Aquinas, Works Aristotle: Works Augustine, Saint, Bishop of Hippo. Augustine, Opera Omnia Augustine, Saint, Bishop of Hippo. Augustine, Works Austin, J.L.: Works Ayer, A.J.: Writings Bentham, Jeremy: Correspondence Bentham, Jeremy: Works Berkeley, George: Works British Philosophy: 1600-1900 Including works by Francis Bacon, Thomas Hobbes, British Moralists (Selections), Anne Conway, John Locke, Bishop George Berkeley, David Hume, Adam Smith, Edmund Burke, David Ricardo, Jeremy Bentham, John Stuart Mill, Henry Sidgwick. Calvin, Jean: Works of John Calvin

40. Fictionwise EBooks: Saint Augustine
Begun in AD 413 by Saint Augustine, the great theologian who was Bishop of Hippo,the book's initial purpose was to refute the charge that Christianity was to
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Family/Relationships General ... True Crime Browse Authors Award-Winners Bestsellers Big Bargains ... Under a Dollar Miscellany About Us Affiliate Program Author Info Buywise Club ... Tell a Friend Saint Augustine Alert me when new Saint Augustine titles are added Bio: Saint Augustine, a seminal thinker and prolific writer widely regarded as one of the greatest Fathers of the Catholic Church, was born Aurelius Augustinus, a citizen of Rome, on November 13, A.D. 354, in the North African town of Tagaste (today the Algerian village of Souk Ahras). His pagan father, Patricius, was a property owner and minor official; his revered mother, Monnica, was of native Berber descent and a devout Christian. Augustine received a classical Latin education at the local school and later studied rhetoric in the nearby town of Madaura. While a university student in the cosmopolitan seaport of Carthage he fathered a son, Adeodatus, by an unnamed mistress who remained his lover for many years. At the age of nineteen Augustine read Cicero's Hortensius, a now lost treatise that inspired him to seek true wisdom through the study of philosophy. During this period he also joined the pseudo-Christian sect known as the Manichaeans. Augustine embarked on a teaching career in 374. Over the next years he conducted a school for rhetoric in Carthage and published his first book

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