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  1. ofrecidos por la Facultad de Derecho Canónicode la Pontificia Universidad Gregoriana. Para presentar sugerencias escríbenos. CIC1983. CIC1983 multilingüe. El CIC1983 en otros sitios. Elaboración. Cambiamentos. Documentos relacionados. Busquar en los Códigos.

  2. Accesso alla piattaforma didattica Moodle della Pontificia Università Gregoriana. Accedi. BigBlueButton. Accesso al software BigBlueButton per effettuare video-conferenze con persone esterne all’Università. (riservato ai soli docenti). Accedi. Segreteria studenti.

  3. Biblioteca della Pontificia Università Gregoriana. Seguici su Facebook. Da mercoledì 22 luglio 2020 la Biblioteca è su Facebook. Seguiteci! Newsletter & Contatti. Iscriviti alla Newsletter oppure sfoglia tutti i contatti della Biblioteca. I numeri della Biblioteca. 0 Accessi giornalieri. 0

  4. Pontificia Universidad Gregoriana | 4423 seguidores en LinkedIn. Religionis et bonis artibus | In 1551, St. Ignatius Loyola, the founder of the Society of Jesus, opened a "Schola grammaticae et humanitatis pro iuvenibus" in Rome. Within a short span of time, it became the Roman College and in 1556 started conferring academic degrees according to pontifical norms.

  5. Psychology. Anthropology. Centres. Saint Peter Favre Centre for Formators to the Priesthood and Religious Life. Cardinal Bea Centre for Judaic Studies. Alberto Hurtado Centre for Faith and Culture. Gregorian Centre for Interreligious Studies. Ignatian Spirituality Centre. Academic Offerings.

  6. Pontificia Universidad Gregoriana | 4101 seguidores en LinkedIn. Religionis et bonis artibus | In 1551, St. Ignatius Loyola, the founder of the Society of Jesus, opened a "Schola grammaticae et humanitatis pro iuvenibus" in Rome. Within a short span of time, it became the Roman College and in 1556 started conferring academic degrees according to pontifical norms.

  7. Since 1551 at the service of the Church and the World. The origin of the Pontifical Gregorian University dates back to 1551 when Saint Ignatius of Loyola, together with a small group of Jesuits, established in Rome a “free school of grammar, humanities and Christian doctrine”. This institution was called the Roman College and, in 1873, by ...