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Urbs beata Jerusalem dicta pacis visio : ウィキペディア英語版 | Urbs beata Jerusalem dicta pacis visio Urbs beata Jerusalem dicta pacis visio is the first line of a 7th or 8th-century hymn sung in the Office of the Dedication of a Roman Catholic church. ==Text== The hymn comprises eight stanzas, together with a doxology. The text is scripturally inspired by Ephesians ii. 20, 1 Peter ii. 5, and Revelation xxi.〔Henry, H. T. "Urbs beata Jerusalem dicta pacis visio." In ''Catholic Encyclopedia''. Vol. XII. New York: Robert Appleton Co., 1911, http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Catholic Encyclopedia (1913)/Urbs beata Jerusalem dicta pacis visio (accessed November 30, 2007).〕 The translation below is by John Mason Neale.〔Schaff, Philip. History of the Christian Church, Volume IV: Mediaeval Christianity. A.D. 590-1073. (http://www.ccel.org/ccel/schaff/hcc4.titlepage.html )〕 Under Pope Urban VIII, a group of correctors revised the hymn, replacing the unquantitative, accentual, trochaic rhythm with quantitative, iambic metre (with an addition syllable), and the stanza appeared in the Breviary with divided lines:
Coelestis Urbs Jerusalem, Beata pacis visio, Quæ celsa de viventibus Saxis ad astra tolleris, Sponsæque ritu cingeris Mille Angelorum millibus. Originally, the first four stanzas of "Urbs beata Jerusalem" were usually assigned, in the Office of the Dedication of a church, to Vespers and Matins, while the last four were given to Lauds. After the revision, the hymn for Lauds was changed to "Alto ex Olympi vertice".
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