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Abbey and Our
Labyrinth in the Trappist Abbey of Our Lady of Saint-Remy, Wallonia, Belgium.
The Scottish host assembled near Edinburgh and James IV and Warbeck offered prayers at Holyrood Abbey on the 14 September, and on the next day at St Triduana's Chapel and Our Lady Kirk of Restalrig.
The Catholic Church of Our Lady St Mary of Glastonbury was built, on land near to the Abbey, in 1939.
Shortly after his work on the nave at Downside Abbey he was commissioned to design the small Roman Catholic Church of Our Lady & St Alphege, Bath, the first part of which was completed in 1929.
* The Abbey of Our Lady of Gethsemani-Famous as the Home of the monk Thomas Merton.
A Trappist monastery, the Abbey of Our Lady of the Holy Trinity, was established there in 1947.
In April 1941, Merton went to a retreat he had booked for Holy Week at the Abbey of Our Lady of Gethsemani near Bardstown, Kentucky.
* Abbey church of Santa Maria Assunta (" Our Lady of the Assumption ", 13th century ).
* The Abbey of Our Lady of Gethsemani
* Our Lady of Joy Abbey ( Trappist Haven Monastery ), on Lantau Island
* Our Lady of the Mississippi Abbey ( Trappistine nuns ), Dubuque, Iowa
* Our Lady of Guadalupe Trappist Abbey, Lafayette, Oregon
* Abbey of Our Lady of the Holy Trinity, Huntsville, Utah
* Abbey of Our Lady of Mount Zion, a medieval monastic order founded by Godfrey de Bouillon in Jerusalem in 1090
The Cistercians established Our Lady of Dallas Abbey in 1958 and Cistercian Preparatory School in 1962, which are both adjacent to campus.
Our U-16s lost to St. Pauls ’ s, Oughterard 9-2 and Gortnor Abbey, Crossmollina 6-1 away before an disappointing defeat to a poor St. Josephs ( The Bish ).
The Priory Documents of the 1960s gave a revised history of the Priory of Sion, claiming it had been founded by Godfrey of Bouillon during the Crusades and named after Mount Sion in Jerusalem, conflating it with a genuine historical monastic order, the Abbey of Our Lady of Mount Zion.
However, in 2008 on the Feast of the Presentation of Our Lady in the Temple ( 21 November ), Mariawald Abbey gained from Pope Benedict XVI permission to return to the Old Rite and their original religious discipline.
Hurrying back to Ireland, she reunited with Eadulf at the Abbey of Fearna, proved his innocence and uncovered the true killer as well as the reasons behind the crime ( see Our Lady of Darkness ).
It has been suggested that the eleven angels each represent a year of his age at the start of his actual reign, which began in 1377, when he gave eleven of the coins called angels to " Our Lady of the Pew " at Westminster Abbey.
Our Lady of Joy Abbey
It adopted its new, official name Our Lady of Joy Abbey on January 15, 2000.
In 1585, in league with the Englishman Richard Topcliffe, he attacked and ransacked he Abbey of Our Lady of Aiguebelle, Provence, and attempted to destroy it.
* Order of Cistercians of the Strict Observance ( Trappists ), Our Lady of the Philippines Trappist Abbey, San Miguel, Guimaras

Abbey and Lady
* 1923 – The Duke of York weds Lady Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon at Westminster Abbey.
Following the Reformation, the Abbey was dissolved in 1539 and the Abbey Church sold to the town in 1553 for £ 400: it became a Protestant parish church for the borough and the Lady Chapel was used as a school.
In 2005 the Abbey Theatre produced the play with an all male cast ; it also featured Wilde as a character – the play opens with him drinking in a Parisian café, dreaming of his play .. More recently the Melbourne Theatre Company staged a production in December 2011 with Geoffrey Rush playing Lady Bracknell.
Yeats was a driving force behind the Irish Literary Revival and, along with Lady Gregory, Edward Martyn, and others, founded the Abbey Theatre, where he served as its chief during its early years.
* April 26 – The Prince Albert, Duke of York ( later George VI, King of the United Kingdom ) marries Lady Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon ( later Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother ) in Westminster Abbey.
Despite his reputation for thrift, he gave her a splendid funeral: she lay in state in the Tower and was buried in Westminster Abbey, in the Lady Chapel Henry had built.
In 1191, monks at the abbey claimed to have found the graves of Arthur and Guinevere to the south of the Lady Chapel of the Abbey Church, which was visited by a number of contemporary historians including Giraldus Cambrensis.
She is buried in the Henry VII Lady Chapel of the Abbey, in a black marble tomb topped with a bronze gilded effigy and canopy, between the graves of William and Mary and the tomb of Mary, Queen of Scots.
Eventually the bones were gathered up and placed in an urn, which Charles II of England ordered interred in Westminster Abbey in the wall of the Henry VII Lady Chapel.
In 1553 the Lady Chapel became a school, the Great Gatehouse a town jail, some other buildings passed to the Crown, and the Abbey Church was sold to the town for £ 400 in 1553 by King Edward VI to be the church of the parish.
When that chapel was demolished in about 1502 to make way for the Henry VII Lady Chapel, Anne's coffin was moved to a vault under the Abbey of the Minoresses, run by nuns of the Order of Poor Ladies.
In the following century Lady Margaret Beaufort obtained the property of Creake Abbey ( whose religious had all died of Black Death in 1506 ) to fund her works at Oxford and Cambridge, an action she took on the advice of such a staunch traditionalist as John Fisher, Bishop of Rochester.
Talbot was the only child of William Davenport Talbot, of Lacock Abbey, near Chippenham, Wiltshire, and of Lady Elisabeth Fox Strangways, daughter of the 2nd Earl of Ilchester.
* Bisham Abbey and the Ghost of Lady Hobby
He died on 21 or 26 December 1495, and was buried at Keynsham Abbey in Somerset which Lady Agnes Cheyne, the incumbent of Chenies Manor House, bequeathed to him in 1494.
The castle ( along with other Boyle properties-Chiswick House, Burlington House, Bolton Abbey and Londesborough Hall ) was acquired by the Cavendish family in 1753 when the daughter and heiress of the 4th Earl of Cork, Lady Charlotte Boyle ( 1731-1754 ) married William Cavendish, 4th Duke of Devonshire, a future Prime Minister of Great Britain & Ireland.
Charlotte died in December 1754 and Lady Burlington died in September 1758, so the villa and gardens passed to the Cavendish family, as did numerous other Boyle residences including Bolton Abbey, Londesborough Hall in the East Riding of Yorkshire, and Lismore Castle in Ireland.
He was buried beneath the floor of the nave of the Henry VII Lady Chapel in Westminster Abbey.

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