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church and window
Far away, standing before a curtained window in the study room, was his father, hands tucked under his coattails, and staring into the dark church.
Stained glass church window in Béthanie ( Hong Kong ) | Béthanie, Hong Kong of St Francis Xavier baptizing a Chinese man.
* Hans Holbein the Elder ( – 1524 ), German painter, woodcut artist, illustrator of books and church window designer.
And this agrees with his arms carved various times on the noble Tower of Wisbeche Church, and as they were formerly in a window of Linton Church in Cambridgeshire, as I have it in a manuscript of church notes taken above a century ago.
In the narthex of the sanctuary of the church is a stained glass window honor which features, among other highlights of Patton's career, a picture of him riding in a tank.
An important example of Apulian Romanesque architecture, the church has a simple Romanesque façade with three portals ; in the upper part is a rose window decorated with monstruous and fantasy figures.
* The medieval church of San Marco dei Veneziani, with a notable rose window in the façade.
He was also a woodcut artist and an illustrator of books, and was a church window designer.
Stained glass window patchwork is a type of patchwork which simulates the effect of stained glass in church windows.
There is a memorial window, representing Byrhtnoth's dying prayer, in St Mary's church at Maldon.
Image of the stained glass window of the church in Offham, Kent where Henry Rivers was chaplain from 1880 to 1889
Oscar crashes through the window of the church Homer is hiding in, and demands the money while Elmo, who was hiding in the trash can with him, tells Homer he knows where he lives.
All of the church's medieval glass was destroyed by William Dowsing in 1644 ; the only stained glass windows in the church are the east windows over the altar ( 1954, by Sir Ninian Comper ) and the west window below the grand tower.
The east wall of the church probably had five such windows grouped and graded together, but they were replaced in the fifteenth century by one single large traceried window which probably shed more light inside during the morning.
Amongst the changes they oversaw was the removal of the tower ceiling and the addition of stone vaulting as originally featured in the medieval plans. Place was responsible for the design of the east window, based on Hawton church, and the original design for the choirstall canopies.
* Daily Mail article about a White-crowned Sparrow as an exotic visitor to the UK, now commemorated in the church window
The church there has a 20th-century stained glass window representing them.
In the east end of the church, the early lancet windows were replaced by one huge window of stained glass, misericords were installed in the choir, and the tower was extended.
The amazing Jesse window went to the church at Llanrhaeadr-yng-Nghinmeirch.
Wabasha is also home to the Grace Memorial Episcopal Church, the oldest Episcopal church in Minnesota, which features a Tiffany stained glass window.
In 1899, the settlement was named Elverson after James Elverson, owner of The Philadelphia Inquirer, who would later donate a stained glass window to a church there.
Portions of the 1730 church survive, although fragments of this may, in fact, be older than that date, for there is a window, on the south side aisle ornamented with trefoiled heads and stone mullions with shields carved on them.
Rimsky-Korsakov relates some of Balakirev's extremes in behavior at this point — how he had " given up eating meat, and ate fish, but ... only those which had died, never the killed variety "; how he would remove his hat and quickly cross himself whenever he passed by a church ; and how his compassion for animals reached the point that whenever an insect was found in a room, he would carefully catch it and release it from a window, saying, " Go thee, deary, in the Lord, go!
There is also a fine memorial window in the parish church to the Civil War Royalists.
Coat of arms, dated 1793, in the east window of the chancel of Shrivenham # Churches | St. Andrew's parish church, Shrivenham

church and widow
The graveyards in central London had no space, and fearing that he might have to be cremated, against his wishes, his widow appealed to his friends to see whether any of them knew of a church with space in its graveyard.
Although not formally a member of the Universalist Church of America, in a 1905 letter to the widow of Carl Norman Thrasher, she identified herself with her parents ' church as a " Universalist ”.
James I and his queen Joan Beaufort ( died 1445 ) were both buried in the priory church, as was Queen Margaret Tudor ( died 1541 ), widow of James IV of Scotland.
His widow commissioned the French glass artist Rene Lalique to refit the church of St Matthew, Millbrook ( popularly known as the " Glass Church ") as a memorial to him.
Manning contrasts the brutality of the institutional church with Jesus treatment of the adulterous woman of John 8: 1-11 and of his meeting of the widow of Nain ( Luke 7: 11-17 ).
He was buried next to his first wife's tomb in the churchyard of St Kenelm's, the church which adjoined his home at Alderley, with a monument erected that reads: His estate was largely left for his widow, with his legal texts given to his grandson Gabriel if Gabriel chose to study the law, and his more valuable manuscripts and books given to Lincoln's Inn.
In 1867, his widow, Elizabeth, had an Episcopal church designed by Edward Tuckerman Potter built as a memorial to Samuel Colt and the three children they lost.
He was buried in the London church of St Andrew Undershaft, where the monument erected by his widow, a terracotta figure of him, still remains.
Peter Schöffer, who married Fust's widow ( c. 1468 ), also founded a similar memorial service for Fust in 1473 in the church of the Dominican Order at Mainz ( Bockenheimer, Gesch.
In 1956, on the death of the 4th Marquess ( d. 1951 ), his widow gave the house and grounds, excluding the church, to the National Trust in lieu of death duties.
The Anglo-Saxon cross is not to be confused with the market cross near the church, the current version of which was erected in 1902 and is known as " St Armstrong's Cross " as it was paid for by Lady Armstrong, widow of Lord Armstrong of Cragside.
Smith's widow, Emma, wanted Marks to become church president, but Marks believed that Rigdon had the superior claim.
After Duke Henry died in 1238 and was buried in the church, his widow moved to the Cistercian convent which by now was led by her daughter.
Besides Mawarden Court at Stratford Sub Castle and the Down at Blandford, he acquired Boconnoc in Cornwall from Lord Mohun's widow in 1717, and subsequently Kynaston in Dorset, Bradock, Treskillard and Brannell in Cornwall, Woodyates on the border of Dorset and Wiltshire, Abbot's Ann in Hampshire ( where he rebuilt the church ) and, subsequently his favourite residence, Swallowfield Park in Berkshire, where he died in 1726.
A monument raised to Ludlow's memory by his widow is in the church of St Martin in Vevey.
Thinking that he might have to be cremated against his wishes, his widow asked her friends whether they knew of a church that had space for him.
While living in England, Callis met Mormon missionaries in Liverpool and subsequently joined the church along with his three siblings and their widow mother.
* Grace Plunkett ( née Gifford ) ( 1888 – 1955 ), widow of Joseph Plunkett, died in her apartment in South Richmond Street and was taken to Harrington Street church for a state funeral.
The church is late Norman ; has a rich south doorway, and an apsidal vaulted chancel ; contains a monument to Bishop Barlow's widow, recording that her five daughters were all married to bishops ; and was restored in 1850.
She was buried at the church, as was Isabella, widow of Edward II.
In a documented dated in 1551, Joana Fernandes ou Rodrigues, a widow, donated lands in order to raise a church to Santa Luzia, reformulate or expand the existing hermitage ( ostensibly for the founders and not for a future church ) at the end of the 16th century.
On July 3, 2011, it was reported that his widow, Isabel Ayala Nava, was assassinated, along with her sister, as the two women exited a church in Xaltianguis, Guerrero.
In about 1870, Henry's widow, Theophania, erected another footbridge some way north of the house, to enable the faithful to access their church without using a ford near the house.
He was married on 4 December 1611 to Jane ( Cullymore ) Farmer of St Mary-le-Bow, Cheapside – the widow of George Farmer and daughter of George Cullymore and Ellen Buckfoulde – at the church of St Savior's, Southwark.

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