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De bono mortis ("Death as a good") is a sermon by St. Ambrose (340–397), a Doctor of the Church. The text, which argues that death is not a bad thing to be feared, was written between 387 and 391. A companion piece or supplement to his De Iacob, it was composed "as two sermons, perhaps for the catechumens awaiting baptism at Easter". Profoundly informed by neoplatonism, it is one of the texts through which Augustine of Hippo, Ambrose's pupil in Milan, came under the influence of that philosophy.

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  • De bono mortis (en)
  • De bono mortis (it)
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  • De bono mortis ("Death as a good") is a sermon by St. Ambrose (340–397), a Doctor of the Church. The text, which argues that death is not a bad thing to be feared, was written between 387 and 391. A companion piece or supplement to his De Iacob, it was composed "as two sermons, perhaps for the catechumens awaiting baptism at Easter". Profoundly informed by neoplatonism, it is one of the texts through which Augustine of Hippo, Ambrose's pupil in Milan, came under the influence of that philosophy. (en)
  • De bono mortis (Sul bene della morte) è un'opera di Ambrogio di Milano, dottore della Chiesa, scritta tra il 387 e il 389; appartiene al gruppo delle opere oratorie ed esegetiche ambrosiane. L'opera, strettamente connessa con il De Isaac et anima, è un'omelia sulla morte, considerata dall'autore un bene inestimabile. Ambrogio presenta tre tipi diversi di morte: spirituale, mistica e fisica. L'opera si conclude con una sezione dedicata al giorno del giudizio, ispirata al IV libro di Esdra (considerato canonico dal vescovo meneghino). (it)
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  • De bono mortis ("Death as a good") is a sermon by St. Ambrose (340–397), a Doctor of the Church. The text, which argues that death is not a bad thing to be feared, was written between 387 and 391. A companion piece or supplement to his De Iacob, it was composed "as two sermons, perhaps for the catechumens awaiting baptism at Easter". Profoundly informed by neoplatonism, it is one of the texts through which Augustine of Hippo, Ambrose's pupil in Milan, came under the influence of that philosophy. (en)
  • De bono mortis (Sul bene della morte) è un'opera di Ambrogio di Milano, dottore della Chiesa, scritta tra il 387 e il 389; appartiene al gruppo delle opere oratorie ed esegetiche ambrosiane. L'opera, strettamente connessa con il De Isaac et anima, è un'omelia sulla morte, considerata dall'autore un bene inestimabile. Ambrogio presenta tre tipi diversi di morte: spirituale, mistica e fisica. L'opera si conclude con una sezione dedicata al giorno del giudizio, ispirata al IV libro di Esdra (considerato canonico dal vescovo meneghino). (it)
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