Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
In the Gallican books it is a variable prayer.
However, it shows the greatest liturgical similarity with Gallican chant.
Evidence for the Gallican rites of ordination and some other matters is derived from this book.
It represents a pure Roman use with no Gallican elements.
It was written to support Richard Smith, and adopted some Gallican ideas.
He was less responsive to moves for a rapprochement with Gallican circles in France.
Note also that, even in this revolutionary legislation, there are strong remnants of Gallican royalism.
The groundwork is Roman, with Gallican additions and modifications.
He holds that Milan, not Lyon, was the principal centre of Gallican development.
This lectionary is purely Gallican with no apparent Roman influence.
There are also Gallican additions.
Though Roman in form, not free from Gallican interpolation, especially in the rubrics.
It uses the older Gallican psalter of St. Jerome.
There it was subsequently modified, influenced by local styles and Gallican chant, and categorized into the system of eight modes.
He was a Gallican opponent of Jansenism.
"Letter on Anglican and Gallican Liberty"
The prayer that follows is not mentioned by St. Germanus, but is given in the Gallican books.
The use of two reciting tones in Gregorian psalmody may derive from Gallican chant.
On the other hand he was a strenuous defender of the Gallican theories, on the right of religious authority and of the civil power.
Nearly all the Gallican books of the later Merovingian period, which are all that are left, contain many Roman elements.
But the most respected proponents of Gallican ideas did not contest the Pope's primacy in the Church, merely his supremacy and infallibility.
Washing of feet - this ceremony is peculiarly Gallican and Celtic and is not found in Roman books.
It is a Roman book more or less Gallicanized; the various manuscripts represent different stages of this Gallican influence.
Some types of Gallican chant show direct influence from Byzantine chant, including the use of Greek texts.
The text is a Gallican version of the Vulgate, written in Insular majuscule letters in a single column.