Значение слова "ASSISI" найдено в 5 источниках
найдено в "Catholic encyclopedia"
Assisi: translation

Assisi
Diocese in Umbria

Catholic Encyclopedia..2006.

Assisi
    Assisi
     Catholic_Encyclopedia Assisi
    Diocese located in the civil province of Umbria, Italy. The town of Assisi (Assisium), which takes its name from Mount Asi, on which it is situated, lies amost in the centre of the province of Umbria, about halfway between the cities of Perugia and Foligno, and forty-one miles north of Rome. The beginnings of Assisian history are involved in much obscurity; but in early imperial times it had become a flourishing municipality of no mean importance, and lays claim, with some show of truth, to being the birthplace of the Latin poet Sextus Aurelius Propertius. The Gospel was first preached to the Assisians about the middle of the third century by St. Cyspolitus, Bishop of Bettona (ancient Vettona), who suffered martyrdom under the Emperor Maximilian. About 235 St. Rufinus was appointed Bishop of Assisi by Pope St. Fabian; suffered martyrdom about 236; and was succeeded by St. Victorinus. Both St. Victorinus and his immediate successor, St. Sabinus, died martyrs, the latter being most cruelly beaten to death.Of the bishops who occupied the See of Assisi during the fifth and sixth centuries, one, Aventius, is worthy of mention. It was this heroic prelate who interceded (545) with Totila in behalf of the Assisians, and saved the city from the ravages of the Ostrogothic army on its way to Rome. In succeeding centuries mention is made of several Bishops of Assisi who were present at general councils of the Church. Thus, in 659, Aquilinus was summoned by Pope Martin I to be present at the Lateran Council, convened for the purpose of formulating decrees against the Monothelites. In the seventh and eighth centuries Assisi fell under the power of the Lombard dukes, and in 773 was razed to the ground by Charlemagne for its determined resistance to him. He restored it, however, and at the same time all traces of Arian ( see Arianism ) belief and Lombard sympathies disappeared. About the same time the great castle, or Rocca d'Assisi, was built, which stronghold made the town thenceforth a great power in the political life of central Italy. Bishop Hugo, whose episcopate lasted from 1036 to 1050, transferred the episcopal chair to the cathedral of San Rufino, which he himself raised over the little oratory beheath which the Saint's bones had rested for eight centuries. From St. Rufinus to the present incumbent of the See of Assisi, the Right Reverend Monsignor Ambrose Luddi, O. P., the bishops of that see have numbered some ninety-two; but of these some are little known, and the existence of others is more or less problematical. Assisi is chiefly famous as the birthplace of St. Francis. All the places sanctified by his presence have been preserved in their original state or transformed into sanctuaries. Foremost among these is the basilica of Our Lady of Angels, erected on the model of St. Peter's at Rome through the beneficence of Pope St. Pius V, which shelters the famous little chapel of the Porziuncula (Portiuncula), the cradle of the Franciscan Order, where St. Francis received the great Perdono d'Assisi, more commonly known as the Portiuncula Indulgence. Within this basilica also stands the tiny cell in which St. Francis died, and which contains among other things the well-known statue by Luca della Robbia made after the Saint's death mask. St. Francis's remains now repose in the patriarchal basilica of San Francesco, erected through the exertions of Brother Elias, the first stone of which was laid by Gregory IX, 25 July, 1228. Consecrated by Innocent IV, this church is composed of three sanctuaries, one over the other, and is one of the earliest specimens of Gothic architecture in Italy. "There is nothing like it", says Taine. "Before seeing it one has no idea of the art and genius of the Middle Ages." It is difficult to overestimate the stimulus given to Italian art by the building of this great double basilica, in the decoration of which the foremost painters of the day were engaged, including Cimabue and Giotto, whose famous mystical frescoes, illustrative of the vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience, adorn the lower church. The recent revival of widespread interest in all that concerns St. Francis has made Assisi the goal of a new race of literary and artistic pilgrims. The splendours and associations of the basilicas of San Francesco and Santa Maria degli Angeli tend to overshadow the other churches of Assisi. The cathedral of San Rufino, mentioned above, which dates from 1140, is noted for its beautiful façade and possesses a font (the only one in Assisi) in which not only St. Francis and St. Clare, but the Emperor Frederick II was baptized. The Chiesa Nuova, a Greek cross, surmounted by five cupolas and standing on the site of St. Francis's parental house, was built at the expense of Phillip III of Spain, in 1615. Santa Chiara, a splendid Gothic church of the thirteenth century, due to the genius of Filippo di Campello, contains the remains of St. Clare, the co-foundress with St. Francis of Assisi of the Poor Ladies, or Poor Clares, as they are now called, and daughter of Count Favorino Scifi, an Assisian noble. The convent of St. Damian's in which the holy abbess lived, stands without the city and is little changed since her day. Aside from the churches and convents, perhaps the most interesting monuments in Assisi are the remains of the temple of Minerva, a striking reminder of the Roman period, and the renowned castle known as the Rocca Magiore, dating, as it seems from Charlemagne's time, and affording a magnificent panorama of Assisi and its vicinity. The population of the town now numbers 3,750.
    Present status
    The Diocese of Assisi now comprises four municipalities in the civil province of Perugia (Umbria), besides twenty-six small hamlets and villages, each, with the exception of Porziano, having its church and resident priest. There are 3 educational institutions for boys, with 206 pupils; and one episcopal seminary, with 28 seminarists. There are 64 secular priests, and 125 priests of religious orders; while the faithful of the diocese number 28,500. There are 8 monasteries of men and 18 convents of nuns. The churches chapels, and oratories in the diocese number 190, with 35 parishes in all. The Diocese of Assisi is immediately subject to the Holy See, a privilege which it has enjoyed from remote antiquity.
    Cristofani, Delle storie d'Assisi (Assisi, 1866); Gordon, The story of Assisi (London, 1903); De Costanza, Disamina degli scrittori e dei monumenti riguardanti S. Rufino, vescovo e martire di Assisi (Assisi, 1797); Ughelli, Italia Sacra (Venice, 1722), I; Cappelletti, Le chiese d'Italia (Venice, 1866), V; Cruickshank, The Umbrian Towns (London, 1901); Hutton, The cities of Umbria (London, 1905); Schnürer, Franz von Assisi (Munich, 1905); Thode, Franz von Assisi und die Anfänge der Kunst der Renaissance in Italien (Berlin, 1904).
    STEPHEN DONOVAN
    Transcribed by Olivia Olivares Dedicated to the people of San Francisco de Asís Parish, Diocese of Phoenix, Flagstaff, Arizona.

The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume VIII. — New York: Robert Appleton Company..1910.



найдено в "Crosswordopener"

• Apennines religious center

• Basilica di San Francesco setting

• Basilica of San Francesco locale

• Basilica of San Francesco site

• Birthplace of a saint

• Birthplace of Saint Francis

• Birthplace of St. Clare

• Birthplace of St. Francis

• Birthplace of the Roman poet Sextus Propertius

• Church of St. Francis city

• City of central Italy

• City of Francis and Clare

• Clare of ___

• Commune near Perugia

• Famed Perugian town

• Francis of ___

• Francis' birthplace

• Francis' home

• Francis's hometown

• Franciscan home

• Franciscan locale

• Franciscan Order founder's birthplace

• Franciscan order's birthplace

• Franciscan's mecca

• Historic Italian town damaged many times by earthquakes

• Historic Umbrian town

• Home of a saint

• Home of Francis

• Home of Italy's patron saint

• Home of Saint Francis

• Home of St. Francis

• Home of Sts. Agnes and Clare

• Italian home of the Basilica of San Francesco

• Italian religious center

• Italian town known for its embroidery

• Italian town near Perugia

• Italian town on a slope of Monte Subasio

• Italian town on the slope of Mount Subasio

• Italian town popular with pilgrims

• Italian town where the Franciscans were founded

• Italian town with frescoes by Giotto

• Italian town with Giotto frescoes

• Original home of the Poor Clares

• Perugia town

• Pilgrimage site in Umbria

• Place to see Giotto paintings

• Saint Clare of ___

• Saint Clare's home

• Saint Clare's town

• Saint Francis of ___

• Saint Francis' home

• Saint's city

• Saint's home

• Saint's town in Umbria

• Setting of the castle Rocca Maggiore

• St. Clare's birthplace

• St. Clare's home

• St. Clare's town

• St. Francis of ___

• St. Francis slept here

• St. Francis' birthplace

• St. Francis' city

• St. Francis' home

• St. Francis' home town

• St. Francis' place

• St. Francis' town

• St. Francis's bailiwick

• Tourist town in the Umbria region

• Tourist town of the Apennines

• Town above the Umbrian plain

• Town associated with St. Francis

• Town in east Umbria

• Town in Umbria

• Town near Perugia

• Town of an animal-friendly saint

• Town of St. Francis

• Umbria tourist town

• Umbria town

• Umbrian birthplace of two saints

• Umbrian commune

• Umbrian hill town

• Umbrian town famed as a birthplace

• Whence St. Clare

• Whence St. Francis

• Whence St. Francis hailed

• Where St. Francis was from


найдено в "Universal-Lexicon"
Assisi: übersetzung

As|si|si:
Stadt in Italien.

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Assisi,
 
Stadt in der Provinz Perugia, Umbrien, Italien, 24 900 Einwohner; Bischofssitz, Wallfahrtsort mit starkem Fremdenverkehr,
 
Wirtschaft:
 
Textil-, Nahrungsmittel- und Metall verarbeitende Industrie im Umland.
 
Stadtbild:
 
Die einschiffige Doppelkirche San Francesco (1228-53) des Franziskanerklosters, die durch das Erdbeben von 1997 stark beschädigt wurde, erhielt aufwändige Sicherungs- und Restaurierungsmaßnahmen. Die Doppelkirche besteht aus der Oberkirche (ein frühes Beispiel der italienischen Gotik in Anlehnung an französische Kathedralen; der Freskenzyklus mit der Franziskuslegende von Giotto und weitere Fresken von Cimabue sowie Glasfenster, um 1250, wurden 1997 stark zerstört) und der kryptenartigen Unterkirche mit Kreuzgewölben (ausgemalt mit Fresken von Giotto, Simone Martini, P.Lorenzetti u. a.); an der Piazza del Comune die Giebelfront des römischen Minervatempels (heute Vorhalle der Kirche Santa Maria sopra Minerva), Palazzo dei Priori (14. Jahrhundert; mit Pinakothek); Dom (im 9. Jahrhundert gegründet, 1228 geweiht, 1571 umgestaltet; Glockenturm, 11. Jahrhundert; Dommuseum); Kirche Santa Chiara (1257-60); Kloster San Damiano (13. Jahrhundert). 5 km außerhalb von Assisi steht die Kirche Santa Maria degli Angeli (1569 begonnen, Entwurf von G. da Vignola) mit der Portiunculakapelle (wohl 4. Jahrhundert) unter ihrer Kuppel. - Infolge des schweren Erdbebens 1997 wurden einige Kunstschätze von Assisi unwiederbringlich zerstört. Die erhaltenen mittelalterlichen Architektur- und Kunstdenkmäler erklärte die UNESCO zum Weltkulturerbe.
 
Geschichte:
 
Assisi, das römische Municipium Asisium an der Stelle einer altumbrischen Ansiedlung, wurde 545 durch den Ostgotenkönig Totila zerstört und gehörte dann bis zum 12. Jahrhundert zum langobardischen, später fränkisches Herzogtum Spoleto. Unter Papst Innozenz III. (13. Jahrhundert) und, nach mehrmaligem Herrschaftswechsel, endgültig unter Pius II. (15. Jahrhundert) kam Assisi zum Kirchenstaat. - Das mittelalterliche Assisi war Geburtsort und Wirkungsstätte des heiligen Franz von Assisi.
 
Literatur:
 
J. Poeschke: Die Kirche von San Francesco in A. u. ihre Wandmalerei (1985).
 

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As|si|si: Stadt in Italien.


найдено в "Англо-русском словаре общей лексики"
сущ. Ассизи (город в провинции Перуджия, Италия, где родился и умер св. Франциск Ассизский; туристический и религиозный центр) см. тж. Francis of Assisi
T: 202