Eusebius

Etymology
From, from.

Translations

 * Armenian: Եվսեբիոս
 * Basque: Eusebio
 * Catalan: Eusebi
 * French:
 * Galician:
 * Georgian: ევსები
 * German:
 * Greek:
 * Ancient: Εὐσέβιος
 * Hungarian:
 * Irish: Eusbius
 * Italian:
 * Latin: Eusebius
 * Ligurian: Zeuggio
 * Occitan: Eusèbi, Esèbe, Eusebi
 * Portuguese: ,
 * Russian: Евсе́вий
 * Sicilian: Eusebiu
 * Spanish:
 * Vietnamese: Êusêbiô

Noun

 * 1) One who is comparable to ; an ecclesiastic historian.
 * 2) * 1994, Mark Greengrass, “Nicolas Pithou: experience, conscience and history in the French civil wars” in Religion, Culture and Society in Early Modern Britain: Essays in Honour of Patrick Collinson, eds. Anthony Fletcher and Peter Roberts, (digitally printed first paperback version, 2006), chapter 1, pages :
 * "en"
 * "en"

- In provincial synods across France, local Eusebiuses were put to the task; by May 1565 the results were piling up in Geneva, ‘tantae molis’ lamented Beza ‘ut camelum, nedum asinum possint obruere’.
 * 1) * 2002, Nigel Smith, “Non-conformist voices and books” in The Cambridge History of the Book in Britain,, volume IV: 1557–1695, eds. John Barnard and D.F. McKenzie, ISBN 052166182X, chapter 19, page :
 * "en"

- The extreme Puritans had an impact of no less import on the publishing activities of their enemies. In their attempt to halt the progress of forms of religion and religious opinion that had gone far beyond their own goals, several Presbyterian divines produced carefully assembled accounts of the heresies of their own times – they were the Eusebiuses of their day, and their works are now major sources for the history of the period.


 * 1) A thorough ecclesiastic history.
 * 2) * 1957, James Stevenson (editor), A New Eusebius: Documents illustrative of the history of the Church to A.D. 337, SPCK, main title

Etymology
Borrowed from, from , from ; see.

Proper noun

 * 1) a Latin rhetorician