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Topic: Basilides



  
 BASILIDES - LoveToKnow Article on BASILIDES
Basilides wrote an exegetical work in twenty-four books on his gospel, but which this was is not known.
A comparison of the surviving fragments of Basilides, moreover, with the outline of his system in Irenaeus-H.ippolytus (SynLagma) shows that the account given by the Fathers of the Church is also in the highest degree untrustworthy.
The doctrine described by them that from the supreme God (the innatus pater) had emanated 365 heavens with their spirits, answers originally to the astronomical conception of, the heavens with their 365 daily aspects (Irenaeus i.
http://39.1911encyclopedia.org/B/BA/BASILIDES.htm   (1810 words)

  
 Great Saints
Saturninus was a predecessor of Basilides and a disciple of the teachings of Menander.
Basilides scheme was decidedly Christian in scope, the entire process of releasing spiritual humanity from the darkness of material existence being dependent upon the descent of the Christ and the light of the gospel through the lower worlds.
Basilides contributed a unique and personal vision of the Gnosis, the two features of which were a sophisticated cosmology of intermediate realms and beings between creation and the Unknown God, and a method of ascensional mysticism for rising through the lower spheres to the spiritual heights.
http://www.geocities.com/ega_church/grsts.html   (3622 words)

  
 Basilides, Gnostic Heretic whose doctrines were condemned in 1 John and 2 John.
According to Irenaeus, Basilides was apparently a dualist and an emanationist, and according to Hippolytus a pantheistic evolutionist.
Basilides invented prophets for himself named Barcabbas and Barcoph, and claimed to have received verbal instructions from St. Matthias the Apostle and to be a disciple of Glaucias, a disciple of St. Peter.
For Muslims like Ali to call the Basilides a "Christian sect" is as intellectually dishonest as Christians calling the "Bahai faith" a Muslim sect.
http://www.bible.ca/trinity/trinity-sects-basilides.htm   (2497 words)

  
 ART. XV. -- Buddhist Gnosticism, the System of Basilides.
Basilides flourished at Alexandria under Hadrian (117- 138 A.D.), and is said to have been the disciple of Glaucias-- the "interpreter of S. Peter."(2) He belonged therefore to the second generation after the Apostles, and to the great age of the Gnostics (Clem.
These are the fundamental tenets of Basilides, and they are also the foundations which the Buddha laid.
This is Basilides' primary classification,(3) and it is also the chief division of the Buddhists.
http://ccbs.ntu.edu.tw/FULLTEXT/JR-ENG/kenn.htm   (11036 words)

  
 The Invisible Basilica: Basilides
To Basilides, the passions were unnatural accretions which encrusted the spiritual essence due to its entanglement in matter.
Basilides was probably the first major Gnostic who viewed himself as a Christian theologian; but unlike his predecessor Simon Magus, he rejected the Old Testament.
Despite his advocacy of ascetism, Basilides had at least one son (perhaps a "spiritual son" rather than a genetic son), named Isidorus, who succeeded him in his office as religious teacher.
http://www.hermetic.com/sabazius/basilides.htm   (1553 words)

  
 Hyppolitus: Refutation of All Heresies
The Gospel then came, says (Basilides), first from the Sonship through the Son, that was seated beside the Archon, to the Archon, and the Archon learned that He was not God of the universe, but was begotten.
Basilides, therefore, and Isidorus, the true son and disciple of Basilides, say that Matthias communicated to them secret discourses, which, I being specially instructed, he heard from the Saviour.
For the Archon has generated, according to Basilides, a son; and the soul as an operation and completion, Aristotle asserts to be an entelecheia of a natural organic hotly.
http://www.webcom.com/~gnosis/library/hyp_refut7.htm   (10359 words)

  
 Christian Gnosticism
This behavior caused the rulers of the other 364 heavens to oppose the god of the Jews, and to send a savior, Jesus Christ, from the highest realm of the Father, to rescue the human beings who are struggling under the yoke of this jealous god (Irenaeus 1.24.4).
Basilides began his system with a "primal octet" consisting of the "unengendered parent" or Father; Intellect (nous); the 'ordering principle' or "Word" (logos); "prudence" (phronêsis); Wisdom (sophia); Power (dunamis) (Irenaeus, Against Heresies 1.24.3, in Layton, The Gnostic Scriptures 1987) and "justice" and "peace" (Basilides, Fragment A, Layton).
Basilides does not call upon his hearers to abandon the material realm only to dissolve into negativity; instead, he offers them a new life, by appealing to the grand hierarchy of rulers persisting above the material realm (cf.
http://www.hermetic-philosophy.com/gnosis1.htm   (5652 words)

  
 Llewellyn Encyclopedia: Basilides
Basilides wrote psalms, odes, and commentaries on the Gospels.
But he also received what was to become a secret tradition named after him, based on knowledge passed to him from an early interpreter of the Apostle Peter.
He also wrote a gospel for his own sect, but very little of his writings have been preserved.
http://www.llewellynencyclopedia.com/term.php?id=3282   (147 words)

  
 Supernatural Religion - Pt 2 Ch 6
Now, there is nothing whatever to show that the twenty-four books which he composed "on the Gospel" were not in elucidation of the Gospel as technically understood by him, illustrated by extracts from his own special Gospel and from the tradition handed down to him by Glaucias and Matthias.
The remark, made at the beginning of the third century, that the followers of Basilides believed that the actual events of the life of Jesus occurred in the way in which they have been written in the Gospels, is no proof that either they or Basilides used or admitted the authority of our Gospels.
Moreover, it must be borne in mind that Basilides used the word "Gospel" in a peculiar sense.
http://homepages.ihug.co.nz/~freethought/cassels/sr/p2c06.htm   (6337 words)

  
 The Great Schools of Christian Gnosis
Basilides therefore rejected the blood sacrifice of Jesus as a vicarious atonement— he would neither impute death to Jesus the man or to the Christ, the Divine Mind who appeared in him.
Mead suggests that Basilides' commentaries aimed at explaining Jesus' public sayings and parables by the light of a secret gospel or tradition.< 1> Basilides is also known to have quoted from the letters of Paul.
Basilides also taught the concept of a Demiurge, called the Great Ruler, who with his angels was responsible for the creation of worlds and all that is material.
http://essenes.net/TheGreatSchoolsOfChristianGnosis.html   (11720 words)

  
 Basilides
For if He is the Former of the world, He too made the angels, or at least was the cause of their creation; and He will be regarded as having made the world who prepared the causes of its formation.
Although they maintain that the angels were made by a long succession downwards, or that the Former of the world [sprang] from the Supreme Father, as Basilides asserts; nevertheless that which is the cause of those things which have been made will still be traced to Him who was the Author of such a succession.
5.3.2-3) refers to Basilides' teaching on election in relation to faith and virtue; the second (frag.
http://www.earlychristianwritings.com/basilides.html   (1490 words)

  
 The Absolute Truth about Prophet Jesus (peace be upon him) - Ummah.com
Basilides wrote a new "Bible," in which the gospels were corrected in the light of the information he had received from Glaucius.
Basilides even wrote that Jesus watched as Simon of Cyrene was being crucified, and that he then moved away and was raised alive into the presence of God.
According to Irenaeus, Basilides, a historian from Alexandria, insisted in his writings between 130 and 150 CE that Jesus had not been crucified.
http://www.ummah.net/forum/showthread.php?t=36727   (8705 words)

  
 A Beggar At The Table » 2005 » August
Basilides’ system did kind of explain some of the language used in the psalms of the councils of the gods and such (if by way of misinterpretation), but the big con is that it is completely constructed.
Basilides, from Egypt, is best known for being, as far as we can tell, the first to venture the heretical hypothesis later adopted, in modified form, by Islam and some other groups, that Jesus Himself was not crucified, but that Simon of Cyrene was crucified in the place of Christ.
But, blessedly, as with all the major heretics, his system didn’t have much in the way of staying power, other than the aforementioned conjecture that Simon of Cyrene was crucified in the place of Jesus–an assertion which has sadly lived on and been preserved in Islamic tradition.
http://qaz1.bannerland.org/wordpress?m=200508   (2941 words)

  
 Basilides, Carpocrates, Valentinus
Basilides apparently claimed to have received teachings handed down from the Apostles Peter and Matthew (interestingly, Matthew or Levi was also an important figure in the Gnostic Gospel of Mary).
Basilides wrote extensively on the mythology of aeons and archons that forms an important part of Gnostic mytho-poetic cosmology.
As neo-classical Gnostics, we seek to live out a spirituality that continues the religious tradition begun by the classical Gnostics who emerged in the early Christian era.
http://www.gnostic-church.org/triumvirate.htm   (1828 words)

  
 Lives of Saints :: Tout 11
When he saw that Basilides remained steadfast in his faith, Masrus ordered to cut off Basilides holy head, thus he received the crown of martyrdom in the kingdom of heaven in return for the earthly kingdom which he had forsaken.
Our Lord Christ sent His Angel and lifted Basilides up by the Holy Spirit to heaven, and showed him the spiritual dwellings, and his soul was comforted.
Emperor Numerianus was the ruler, who was married to Basilides' sister, Patricia, and had a son called Yustus.
http://www.copticchurch.net/classes/synex.php?month=1&day=11&sa=1   (527 words)

  
 Religious Movements Homepage: Gnosticism
Aside from his Gnostic leadership Basilides remained a member of the church in Alexandria until he died (Eliade: 571).
The American Gnostic Church in Texas was started in 1985 and their teachings reflect those of the 2nd Century Gnostic teachings of Basilides (Melton: 761).
What is Gnosticism: As noted, Gnosticism has been defined as a mystical religion (Ellwood and Partin: 96).
http://religiousmovements.lib.virginia.edu/nrms/gnosticism.html   (2169 words)

  
 The New Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge, Vol. II: Basilica - Chambers (b)
The oldest refutation of the teachings of Basilides, by Agrippa Castor, is lost, and we are dependent upon the later accounts of Irenæus, Clement of Alexandria, and Hippolytus.
In the perfected spirit-world the place will be assigned to each which belongs to him according to the degree of his faith.
" Fragments of xiii and xxiii, preserved by Clement and in the Acta Archelai, supplement the knowledge of Basilides furnished by his opponents.
http://www.ccel.org/ccel/schaff/encyc02.b.html   (15738 words)

  
 A Definition of Isopsephia with examples > Jesus8880
Basilides was a Gnostic scholar who taught in Alexandria during the reign of Hadrian 117-138 AD.
Irenaeus, Against Heresies, 1.24.5-7, circa 180 AD Basilides was absolutely famous for combining mathematics with religion.
Here are some examples of isopsephia riddles unknowingly recorded by the early Church father Ireneaus in his tirade against the Gnostic doctrines of Basilides:
http://www.jesus8880.com/chapters/gematria/isopsephia.htm   (1275 words)

  
 Order of Nazorean Essenes
There seems to be some connection between Buddhism and the teachings of the Gnostic Basilides.
Although a connection between 4th century Nazoreanism (Manichaeanism) and Buddhism is irrefutable, the connection between 1st Century Nazoreanism and Buddhism is a bit more difficult to verify.
The Book of the Laws of the countries is said to be a work of a disciple of Bardaisan.
http://essenes.net/asoka.html   (1145 words)

  
 Basilides - definition of Basilides in Encyclopedia
Basilides is also mentioned in Borges's short story "Three Versions of Judas" (1944), which opens with the striking passage "In Asia Minor or in Alexandria, in the second century of our faith, when Basilides published that the Cosmos was a reckless or evil improvisation by deficient angels...
Basilides (circa 117-138) was an early Christian religious teacher who lived in Alexandria, Egypt.
Twentieth-century psychoanalyst Carl Jung wrote his Seven Sermons to the Dead under the pen-name "Basilides of Alexandria." The Argentinean writer Jorge Luis Borges was interested in Irenaeus's account of Basilides's Gnostic doctrine and wrote an essay on the subject: "A Vindication of the False Basilides" (1932).
http://encyclopedia.laborlawtalk.com/Basilides   (192 words)

  
 Origen of Alexandria and Apokatastasis
According to Origen, Basilides held a doctrine of reincarnation that was identical to the Pythagorean belief that human souls may take on the bodies of animals in future lives.
For according to Basilides, beings perish when they attempt to transgress the boundaries of their nature.
This is not to say that the Gnostics were mere eclectics - they most certainly had original ideas of their own, which informed their interpretations of various doctrines.
http://www.romancatholicism.org/origen-apokatastasis.htm   (5693 words)

  
 Great Theosophists--Gnostic Theosophy (7 of 29)
The Gnostic Fathers made no reply to these attacks, knowing that their doctrines were only for those who could understand them, and refusing to make things of the inner life a matter of public debate.
Perhaps it was his knowledge of the real teachings of Jesus that made his position in the orthodox Church so insecure.
Tertullian stormed at him, and the other orthodox Church Fathers could not find enough obloquy to express their contempt for this "heretic." His twenty-four volumes of Interpretations of the Gospels (the first commentaries written by a Christian philosopher) were burned and Basilides himself was excommunicated and driven out of his native land.
http://www.wisdomworld.org/setting/gnostictheosophy.html   (3718 words)

  
 Basilides
For Basilides, belief in God meant belief in a paradoxical Absolute Negation: "God is Not-Being, even He, who made the world out of what was not; Not-Being made Not-Being." Given the utter non-existence of God, God is not even "unspeakable." He simply is Not.
Basilides considered suffering not as something to be escaped, but rather as a blessing, the purpose of which was to turn the spiritual essence away from its entanglement in matter.
Salvation, which involves the disentanglement of spirit from matter, must be accomplished through asceticism and faith.
http://www.alcott.net/alcott/home/champions/Basilides.html   (202 words)

  
 DAILY PROPER (jun12sun.htm)
Ever celebrating the feast of Thy holy martyrs Basilides, Cyrinus, Nabor, and Nazarius, grant, we beseech Thee, O Lord, that we may continually experience the blessing of their patronage.
May the natal festival of Thy martyrs, Basilides, Cyrinus, Nabor, and Nazarius, be glorious for us, we beseech Thee, O Lord, and may that which eternal goodness has conferred them increase in the fruits of our devotion.
Through the Lord Jesus Christ, Thy Son, Who liveth and reigneth with Thee in the unity of the Holy Ghost, one God
http://www.dailycatholic.org/issue/05Jun/jun12sun.htm   (2427 words)

  
 AllRefer.com - Basilides (Ancient Religion, Biography) - Encyclopedia
AllRefer.com - Basilides (Ancient Religion, Biography) - Encyclopedia
He wrote Exegitica (his personal gospel with 24 books of commentary) and poems.
You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > Ancient Religion, Biographies > Basilides
http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/B/Basilide.html   (138 words)

  
 Excite - Search: Basilides
Basilides was conversant with both Hebrew scriptures and Christian Gospels.
BASILIDES, one of the most conspicuous exponents of Gnosticism, was living at Alexandria probably as early as the first decades of the 2nd century.
{Basilides, in Book 23 of his "Commentaries," speaks of those who suffer...
http://srch.excite.com/info.xcite/search/web/Basilides   (358 words)

  
 The Roots of Consciousness: History, Ancient Rome
Leaving the temple he went out into the streets and enquired if Basilides had not been seen in the city; finally he sent horsemen to the place where this priest lived, and learned that at the time he saw him Basilides was eighty miles away.
Then he was forced to admit that he had really been favored with a vision: the word Basilides (from a Greek word for king) meant that he would attain to empire.
Suddenly, while his attention was turned to the god, he noticed behind him one of the principle Egyptian priests named Basilides, whom he knew to be several days' journey from Alexandria, and ill in bed at the time.
http://www.williamjames.com/History/ROME.htm   (1193 words)

  
 Carl Jung, Alchemy and Neo-Gnosticism
Basilides differed from other Gnostic schools in his concept of God as being essentially unknowable, an idea that can be traced to Indian sources, whose notions of MAYA and NIRVANA he also included in his philosophy."
The Supreme Being first generated Mind, from which came LOGOS, Understanding, Wisdom, Power and a whole succession of powers, principalities and angels in a complex spiritual hierarchy....
Basilides believed that there were 365 Aeons, personifications of the emanations from the Godhead which effected the creation of matter.
http://www.crossroad.to/Quotes/spirituality/jung.htm   (1452 words)

  
 Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, Series II, Vol. XIV
The Letter of the Blessed Dionysius, the Archbishop of Alexandria to Basilides the Bishop
Dionysius to my beloved son, and brother, and fellow minister in holy things, Basilides faithful to God, salutation in the Lord.
But they who have fasted the whole six days, are not to be blamed if theybreak their fast after midnight.Some do notfast any of these days.
http://www.ccel.org/fathers2/NPNF2-14/Npnf2-14-179.htm   (291 words)

  
 Ante-Nicene Fathers, Vol. V
and by the sentence of the bishops who had assembled in their presence, and who had written letters to you concerning him, the episcopate was conferred upon him, and hands were imposed on him in the place of Basilides.
But neither can deceit advantage Martialis, in such a way as that he who also is involved in great crimes should hold his bishopric, since the apostle also warns, and says, "A bishop must be blameless, as the steward of God."
But if Basilides could deceive men, he cannot deceive God, since it is written, "God is not mocked."
http://www.bible.ca/history/fathers/ANF-05/anf05-92.htm   (1456 words)

  
 Excerpts from the Writings of Basilides
The following texts are attributed to Basilides by the patristic writers noted below:
{Basilides, in Book 23 of his "Commentaries," speaks of those who suffer punishment as martyrs, with the following words:} I believe that all who experience the so-called tribulations must have committed sins other than what they realize, and so have been brought to this good end.
{Actually, Basilides' presupposition is that the soul previously sinned in another life and undergoes its punishment in the present one.
http://www.webcom.com/~gnosis/library/basilide.htm   (693 words)

  
 Kevin Robinson - Barasax
The word was used as a name for the supreme being and its significance lay in the numerical values of the Greek letters forming it, which sum to 365.
Although little is known for certain of Basilides and the system of gnostic belief which he developed, it seems likely that the original form for the name was Abrasax, which was later corrupted to the now more familiar Abraxas.
The intent is to suggest the idea that words derive real and manifest power from the meanings which people ascribe to them.
http://www.eeng.dcu.ie/~robinsok/Barasax.html   (172 words)

  
 Lives of Saints :: Amshir 23
When Diocletian abandoned the faith, Basilides, informed his son, Eusebius, of what Diocletian had done.
The Martyrdom of St. Eusebius, Son of Basilides, the Minister.
On this day, St. Eusebius, the son of Basilides, the minister, was martyred.
http://www.copticchurch.net/synaxarium/g_3_2_2005.html   (360 words)

  
 Military Christians Worldwide
Basilides subsequently converted to Christ and was also martyred.
I'm an ACCTS staff member who blogs anonymously because this blog isn't about me. I chose the blog name "Basilides" in recognition of the Roman soldier who, while still a non-Christian, defended a Christian as she was being led to her martyrdom.
Battle of the Sexes: Of course, the war of the sexes is an ongoing battle, highlighted here by an asinine op-ed piece that declares too much "manliness" is the problem with the Bush administration's war on terror.
http://militarychristiansworldwide.blogspot.com   (3082 words)

  
 Isidore, Alexandria/Egypt, Ancient Christian Church
But that kind of apophatic tendency within their theology also comes back into the fore within Christianity with the fully developed thought of the fourth century Cappadocian Fathers though then purged of its more "gnostic" way of putting this "language of negation" (Pelikan 1993: especially 40-56).
Haereses (I.24.6), records that 'the followers of Basilides had declared that they had ceased to be Jews but not yet become Christians'" (Frend 1954: 27; cf.
Frend 1984: 205), which might just provide some clue to their status and the situation early in the second century.
http://www.dacb.org/stories/egypt/isidore.html   (516 words)

  
 Basilides (2nd century)
H.A. Wolfson, "Negative Attributes in the Church Fathers and in the Gnostic Basilides," Harvard Theological Review 50 (1957): 145-156.
Layton, "The Significance of Basilides in Ancient Christian Thought," Representations 28 (1989): 135-151.
Fragments from the Writings of Basilides (Gnostic Society Library)
http://www.earlychurch.org.uk/basilides.php   (107 words)

  
 Evagrius Ponticus and the Condemnation of Origen - Edward Moore, S.T.L., Ph.D. - Theandros - An Online journal of ...
Most notable among these movements were the Gnostics, especially Basilides of Alexandria.
The Gnostic theologian Basilides of Alexandria had earlier formulated a doctrine of reincarnation based upon a passage in Romans:
That is (Paul means), before I came into this body, I lived in the kind of body that is not subject to the law: the body of a domestic animal or bird.
http://www.theandros.com/evagrius.html   (3378 words)

  
 Egypt: Who's Who of Ancient Egypt - Egyptian people, queens and family: Basilides
He was active and it is clear that although the strains of Christian doctrine which eventually became a more or less coherent orthodoxy viewed them as heretics, they saw themselves, and would appear to pagans, as Christians.
Basilides was a philosopher who was one of the main proponents of gnosticism in second-century Alexandria.
Egypt: Who's Who of Ancient Egypt - Egyptian people, queens and family: Basilides
http://interoz.com/Egypt/who/basilide.htm   (115 words)

  
 Catholic Online - Saints & Angels - St. Basilides
Catholic Online - Saints & Angels - St. Basilides
Basilides was a soldier of the guard of the prefect of Egypt.
Would you like to see more on this subject?
http://saints.catholic.org/saints/saint.php?saint_id=1699   (70 words)

  
 ninemsn Encarta - Search Results - Basilides
Basilides (died 145), teacher at Alexandria, who founded a sect adhering to the philosophical doctrines of Gnosticism.
Help with Spanish, French, German, and Italian homework.
http://au.encarta.msn.com/Basilides.html   (34 words)

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: St. Nazarius and Companions
Their names were taken from the "Martyrologium Hieronyanum", in the Berne MS.
In an ancient itinerary to the graves of the Roman martyrs (De Rossi, "Roma Sotterranea", I, 183) mention is made of a mortuary chapel of a martyr Basilides on the Via Aurelia; he is another Roman saint whose feast is on 10 June.
In the Roman Martyrology and that of Bede for 12 June mention is made of four Roman martyrs, Basilides, Cyrinus, Nabor, and Nazarius, who suffered death under Diocletian.
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/10728b.htm   (271 words)

  
 Gnosticism
Our knowledge of Gnostics comes mainly from the early church father Irenaeus, who wrote the five volume set "Against Heresies" and the Gnostic literature itself found at Nag Hammadi, Egypt in 1945.
Two major schools had developed by 150 AD, the followers of Valentinus and the followers of Basilides.
http://www.biblefacts.org/history/gnost.html   (1165 words)

  
 Saints of June 10
Asterius was a heretic Arian who converted and became bishop of Petra in Arabia.
A group of 23 Christians martyred at Rome on the Aurelian Way under Aurelian.
The particulars about the martyrdom of these 17 Africans have been lost.
http://www.saintpatrickdc.org/ss/0610.htm   (2093 words)

  
 Saints of June 12
Basilides is probably the Roman martyr of June 10, who died in the late 3rd century; Cyrinus (Quirinus), the martyr of June 4; and Nabor and Nazarius, two Milanese martyrs of whom nothing reliable is known.
It seems, however, more likely that this group is the result of a confusion of names in the martyrologies.
http://www.saintpatrickdc.org/ss/0612.htm   (2653 words)

  
 The Hochey in Gheorgheni
At the and of year 1948 was founded the first icehochey team by prof.
The team ended the sezon 1998/99 in the 3rd place.
In 1949 was founded the team of "Vasutasok" under the lead of Karda László.
http://www.nextra.ro/clients/progym/eng/historry.htm   (439 words)

  
 County Obituaries: A-E The San Diego Union-Tribune
He was born in Samar, Philippines, and was a laundry technician with the Omni Hotel in San Diego.
Juan A. Basilides, 84, of National City died Sunday.
Survivors include his wife, Adoracion Basilides; daughters, Angelita Bautista, Bella Basilides, Rowena Brizuela and Rebecca Basilides; sons, Roberto Basilides, Juan Basilides Jr., Romeo Basilides, Mario Basilides and Renato Basilides; 18 grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren.
http://www.signonsandiego.com/uniontrib/20040422/news_1m22obitae.html   (861 words)

  
 ABS-CBN Interactive
Down by seven, 60-67, going into the last two minutes, the Jets rallied behind three free throws by Jovy Sese and Nino Marquez before Basilides uncorked five straight points to provide a fitting gift to Vice Mayor and actor-TV host Anjo Yllana, who celebrated his birthday Saturday.
The Spring of NBC president Nathaniel "Tac" Padilla and Gov. Teresita "Ningning" Lazaro led throughout and appeared set to win until Basilides knocked in the game-winning triple—his fourth for the day.
PSC Commissioner Joey Mundo graced the opening ceremony, highlighted by the performances of actor-TV host Janno Gibbs, Roselle Nava and Sexbomb singers Rochelle, Jopay, Izzy and Weng.
http://www.abs-cbnnews.com/storypage.aspx?StoryId=3576   (876 words)

  
 [No title]
What's your favorite filter for viewing the world...
I've got plenty of ideas, the only problem is choosing the one that has the widest scope for alternative interpretations.
I like the way they complement each other, make you think of the effects of different lightning of a given scene.
http://www.nikonians.org/cgi-bin/dcforum/dcboard.cgi?az=printer_format&om=2&forum=DCForumID29   (2851 words)

  
 Ábrisné Basilides
Find where Ábrisné Basilides is credited alongside another name
Discuss this person with other users on IMDb message board for Ábrisné Basilides
You may report errors and omissions on this page to the IMDb database managers.
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1282448   (83 words)

  
 Art Bell Back Tonite
He's back after being gone for three 1/2 months...Noory is Ok, but Bell just intrigues me more.
1 posted on 04/18/2003 9:06:44 PM PDT by Basilides
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/896162/posts   (340 words)

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