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* Saint Richard Gwyn, Welsh school teacher who was martyred by being hanged, drawn and quartered for high treason in 1584
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Saint and Richard
The latter title is especially suggestive of his role in forming several Franciscans who later became influential thinkers in the faculty, among them Saint Bonaventure, John of La Rochelle, Odo Rigaldus, William of Middleton and Richard Rufus of Cornwall.
* The Saint Joseph's Pumas, led by current coach Richard Davis, returned to the NCAA Elite Eight for the fourth time in 2010.
Richard of Saint Victor, C. R. S. A., ( died 1173 ) is known today as one of the most influential religious thinkers of his time.
Like many before him, Richard travelled to Paris in search of a good education and became a canon of the Augustinian Abbey of Saint Victor on account of its reputation for piety and learning.
Benjamin Minor ( originally titled Book of the Twelve Patriarchs ) and Benjamin Major are Richard of Saint Victor's great works on contemplation.
Richard of Saint Victor ’ s Commentary on Ezekiel is of special interest in the field of art history because they explanations laid out by the author are accompanied by illustrations.
* H. Feiss, ' Heaven in the Theology of Hugh, Achard and Richard of Saint Victor ', in Imagining Heaven in the Middle Ages, 2000, pp. 145 – 163.
The Saint had a band of compatriots, including Roger Conway, Norman Kent, Archie Sheridan, Richard " Dicky " Tremayne ( a name that appeared in the 1990s TV series, Twin Peaks ), Peter Quentin, Monty Hayward, and his ex-military valet, Orace.
* Bailey, Richard N., " St Oswald's Heads ", in C. Stancliffe and E. Cambridge ( eds ), Oswald: Northumbrian King to European Saint ( 1995, 1996 ).
The work was closely studied by Gustav Mahler and Richard Strauss and served as the foundation for a subsequent textbook by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov, who, as a music student, attended the concerts Berlioz conducted in Moscow and Saint Petersburg.
Richard Crashaw's poem " Saint Mary Magdalene, or the Weeper " refers to the " Golden " Tagus as wanting Mary Magdalene's silver tears.
Sir Richard le Breton ( or Richard de Brito ) was one of the four knights who murdered Saint Thomas Becket.
* Chandos: Heather Harper, Philip Langridge, John Shirley-Quirk ; London Symphony Orchestra and Chorus ; Choristers of Saint Paul's Cathedral ; Richard Hickox, conductor
* The original nine League or founder members who formed the party on August 2, 1792: Sir Andrew Ffoulkes ( second in command ), Lord Anthony Dewhurst, Lord Timothy Hastings, Lord John Bathurst, Lord Stowmarries, Sir Edward Mackenzie, Sir Philip Glynde, Lord Saint Denys, Sir Richard Galveston
Saint and Gwyn
The Lives of Dewi Sant ( David, the patron saint of Wales ), Saint Cadoc and Saint Gildas report that Gildas visited the abbey of Ty Gwyn in 527 or 528 and objected to Dewi / David being placed in charge of it at such a young age.
The Christian Vita Collen tells of Saint Collen vanquishing Gwyn and his otherworldly court from Glastonbury Tor with the use of holy water.
A similar lineage can be found in Bonedd y Saint, in which a saint named Mechyll fab Echwys is the grandson of Gwyn Glohoyw and great-grandson of Gloyw Walltlydan.
Montgomeryshire is the birthplace of Saint Richard Gwyn ; it is where the Treaty of Montgomery was signed 29 September 1267.
The town's primary schools are Princess Road School, Ysgol Pendorlan, Ysgol Pen-y-Bryn, Ysgol Ty Gwyn Jones and Saint Joseph's R. C.
Saint and Welsh
Padstow was originally named Petroc-stow, Petroc-stowe, or ' Petrock's Place ', after the Welsh missionary Saint Petroc, who landed at Trebetherick around AD 500.
Saint David ( c. 500 – 589 ) () was a Welsh Bishop during the 6th century ; he was later regarded as a saint and as the patron saint of Wales.
Edwards in Matins, Lauds and Vespers for St David ’ s Day: the Medieval Office of the Welsh Patron Saint in National Library of Wales MS 20541 E ( Cambridge, 1990 )
The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle states that it was a military campaign, but Welsh sources record it as a pilgrimage to St Davids in honour of Saint David.
Unlike the rest of France and Brittany, Lower Brittany ( roughly, west of a boundary from Saint Brieuc to Vannes ) has maintained a distinctly Celtic language, Breton, which is related to Cornish and Welsh.
* Saint Tewdrig ( alternatively Tewdric or Theodoric ) ( c. 580 – c. 630 ), Welsh king of Gwent and Glywysing, who was martyred fighting the Saxons
* Fraid ( Wales ) Because of Welsh pronunciation mutations, her name changes to ' Ffraid ' in some place names such as ' Llansanffraid ' = ' Saint Bride's Village ' and Llansantffraid-ym-Mechain
Elen ( known in Welsh tradition as Elen Luyddog ( Helen of the Hosts ); also known as Saint Helen of Caernarfon ) was a late 4th-century founder of churches in Wales who is remembered as a saint.
It is dedicated to Saint Peter and Saint Paul, and also to three Welsh saints: Dubricius (), Teilo and Oudoceus ().
In modern times, the Welsh roots of the college come to the fore most prominently on Saint David's Day.
Llangollen takes its name from Saint Collen ( from the Welsh llan meaning ' church ' or ' saint ' or perhaps ' holy ') and Collen, a 6th century monk who founded a church beside the river.
* Annual Saint David ’ s Day Dinner, March 1: hosted by the Historical Society to commemorate the Welsh roots of the City of Carbondale and to celebrate the Welsh heritage of a great many residents of the Lackawanna and Wyoming Valleys in Pennsylvania.
West Saxon occupation of the area did not last long, however, and may have ended as early as 584, the date of the battle of Fethanleag, according to the A. S. C., in which Cutha was killed and Ceawlin returned home in anger, and certainly by 603 when, according to Bede, Saint Augustine attended a conference of Welsh bishops " at St. Augustine's Oak on the borders of the Hwicce and the West Saxons ".
There are also chapters relating events about Saint Germanus of Auxerre that claim to be excerpts from a ( now lost ) biography about this saint, a unique collection of traditions about Saint Patrick, as well as a section describing events in the North of England in the sixth and seventh centuries which begins with a paragraph about the beginnings of Welsh literature ( ch.
On 22 May 1538, at the insistence of Cromwell, he preached the final sermon before Franciscan Friar John Forest was burnt at the stake, in a fire said to have been fueled partly by a Welsh image of Saint Derfel.
Additionally, various Welsh Regiments of the British Army utilize aspects of Saint David's cross, Saint David himself, or songs of Saint David in their formalities during the celebrations.
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