• Halle (‘Der von Halle’, c. 1400) Halle (‘Der von Halle’, c. 1400) OM. German friar from Halle (Saxony province), possibly also active in the Strasbourg region. Known for several sermon extracts. In some of these, he elaborates on the four last things (death, last judgment, hell, and heavenly beatitude). In another, he speaks about the four winds sent by the Holy Spirit; a theme we can also find in Bonaventure’s Soliloquium . Other excerpts contain more phantastical stories.

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  • Hannibal Calaber (Hannibal Rosselius/Annibale Rosselli/Rosiglio Calabrese, c. 1524-c. 1600/1610) Hannibal Calaber (Hannibal Rosselius/Annibale Rosselli/Rosiglio Calabrese, c. 1524-c. 1600/1610) OFM. Italian friar. Born in Gimigliano (on August 6 1525?) as the son of Giovanni Battista and Caterina Rosselli. Received an education in the arts at Taverna, and then studied philosophy at Naples (starting his studies there in 1546). Somewhat later, he entered the Observant Franciscan order in the Umbria province. Studied in Paris and England (during the Mary interlude?) and in Louvain (between 15...

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  • Hannibal Rossellus (Annibale Rosselli, fl. 16 th cent.) Hannibal Rossellus (Annibale Rosselli, fl. 16 th cent.) OFM. Italian friar.

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  • Hannibal Tavarone (Annibale Tavarone da Genova, 1723-1785) Hannibal Tavarone (Annibale Tavarone da Genova, 1723-1785) OFMCap. Italian friar. Missionary (San Tomé, Principe, Madeira, Canary Islands, Benin, Brazil) and author.

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  • Hans (‘Bruder Hans’, fl. 14th cent.) Hans (‘Bruder Hans’, fl. 14th cent.) OM. German friar. Translated Bonaventure’s Officium in Passione Domini into German.

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  • Hartung (Hartwich/Heinrich) Erfurdensis (first half fourteenth century) Hartung (Hartwich/Heinrich) Erfurdensis (first half fourteenth century) OM. German friar. There is still some discussion as to whether or not he was a Franciscan. Preached ca. 1320-40 in the region of Erfurt. A fair amount of his German Postillen (predominantly (model) sermons for the sundays and feast days (Sermones de T & de S) of the liturgical year, deriving most frequently their theme from the epistles and the gospels read on these occasions), Tractatus (sermons organised more loosely, of...

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  • Haymo de Faversham (Haymo de Feversham/Haymo of Faversham, † 1243/44, Anagni) Haymo de Faversham (Haymo de Feversham/Haymo of Faversham, † 1243/44, Anagni) OM. English friar. Born in Kent. Was already a famous magister in Paris (`Aristotelissimus', `totius speculum honestatis magnusque theologus') and a preacher of renown when he entered the Franciscan order in St.-Denis at the instigation of Jordan of Saxony (general master of the Dominicans!). Received the habit on Good Friday 1225. Thereafter, between 1225-1230 and around 1235-1239 active as a teacher of the Order in ...

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  • Heinrich Jäck (fl. c. 1480) Heinrich Jäck (fl. c. 1480) OM or secular priest? German preacher in the neighbourhood of Ulm and Biberach

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  • Helena Bononiensis (Elena da Bologna, fl. 16th cent.) Helena Bononiensis (Elena da Bologna, fl. 16th cent.) OSC. Italian Poor Clare. Wrote spiritual works for her spiritual daughter Anna Marchesana di Monferrato.

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  • Helena de Pace (Elena de Paz, fl. 17th cent.) Helena de Pace (Elena de Paz, fl. 17th cent.) OSC. Spanish Poor Clare. Active in Salamanca. Would have written various works of prose and poetry in Latin and Castilian.

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