A book containing the prayer service for each day.
Breviary of Alaric was created in 506.
He started reading the daily prayers in his breviary early in the morning.
The most famous prayer that is linked to St. Benedict is the Breviary, the monastic Breviary. The Rule of St. Benedict is not very long, but a HUGE portion of it is taking up with instructions on celebrating the Divine Office. Up until the revisions of Vatican Council II, this was in a four volume work known as the ''Monastic Breviary''.
The word "breviary" comes from brevis. This means concise or short. It's a liturgical book of the Latin liturgical rites of the Catholic Church. This book contains prayers, readings, Psalms, notations and hymns.
Giuseppe Maria Tommasi has written: 'The reformed breviary of Cardinal Tommasi'
The earliest known pie chart is generally credited to William Playfair's Statistical Breviary of 1801.
The earliest known pie chart is generally credited to William Playfair's Statistical Breviary of 1801.
Pierre Batiffol has written: 'History of the Roman Breviary' 'Notre visite en Irlande'
They pray using the Gutka, a small sized missal or breviary containing chosen hymns or http://wiki.answers.com/index.php/Banifrom Sikh Scriptures.
The Psalms are used all through the Liturgy. There is a psalm sung or said after the First Reading at Mass every day, and the Breviary used to go through the entire Psalter every week, which meant that religious and priests prayed the entire Psalter in the course of a week. The new Breviary issued after Vatican II, has reduced this to reciting the entire Psalter in four weeks.
Go to a religious book store and look for or ask about the Breviary (in the Roman Catholic tradition) or the Book of Common Prayer (Anglican/Episcopalian). There are various forms of the Breviary containing different levels of detail-- they will not all contain every canonical hour, nor would you probably want to use them all unless you are living a monastic life. The proprietors of the store should be able to help you find what you are looking for.
The earliest known pie chart is generally credited to William Playfair's Statistical Breviary of 1801, where two such graphs are used. This is according to WikiPedia.