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出典:Wiktionary

Agapetae

出典:『Wiktionary』 (2026/05/24 23:35 UTC )

別の表記

  • agapetae
  • Agapetæ

語源

Eponym from Agape +‎ -tae

発音

名詞

Agapetae pl (plural only)

  1. (historical) Women of the early Christian church who cohabited in a state of "spiritual love" with clergy or laymen who had vowed chastity.
  2. (historical) Monks or clergy who cohabited with virgins and widows of the church.
  3. (historical) A 4th century Spanish sect founded by Agape and her husband Elpidius that rejected the institution of marriage and was deemed heretical for its perceived hedonism. Considered also to be a forerunner of Priscillianism.

同意語

関連する語

  • agapet
  • Agapeti

参照

  1. ^ Rev. John Henry Blunt (1874), “Agapetæ”, in Dictionary of sects, heresies, ecclesiastical parties, and schools of religious thought.‎, page 13
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ウィキペディア英語版

出典:Wikipedia

Agapetae

出典:『Wikipedia』 (2011/04/23 15:13 UTC 版)

英語による解説

ウィキペディア英語版からの引用
引用

In the 1st century AD to the 3rd century the Agapetae were Christian virgins who consecrated themselves to God with a vow of chastity. They were one of a number of Early Christian 'classes' of virgins who associated with men as 'sisters'. The Agapetae lived with laymen, originally in a spiritual community of mutual support. The laymen too took vows of chastity, and looked after the material interests of their 'sisters'.

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