释义 |
plenarium|plɪˈnɛərɪəm| Pl. plenaria. [ad. med.L. plēnārium in same sense, f. plēnārius complete: cf. plenary a. (n.)] A book or manuscript containing a complete set of sacred writings, e.g. all the gospels or all the epistles.
1908W. G. Collingwood Scandinavian Britain 243 Bishop Patrick set forth to Iceland ‘with wood for building a church, and a plenarium, and an iron bell’. 1911F. Mershman in Cath. Encycl. XII. 164 Plenarium or Plenarius (Liber) is any book that contains completely all matters pertaining to one subject otherwise found scattered in several books... The entire mortuary office..is called Plenarium. A complete copy of the four gospels was called an ‘Evangelium plenarium’... Some Plenaria gave all the writings of the New Testament, others, those parts of the Sacred Scriptures that were commonly read in the Divine service and bore the name ‘Lectionarium plenarium’. 1929E. C. Thomas Lay Folks' Hist. Liturgy i. xvii. 87 In the form for Consecrating a Church we find..a form for the consecration of a stole and of the Plenarium or Four Gospels as part of the Rite. |