Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Berkeley, Gloucestershire" ¶ 10
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Chantry and Jenner's
Edward Jenner Museum | Dr Jenner's House, The Chantry, Church Lane, Berkeley, Gloucestershire, England

Chantry and home
Originally home to Chantry Monks the building was taken during the dissolution and given, by Henry VIII to Anne of Cleves as part of the divorce settlement.
Among historical landmarks in the town are a free-standing 17th-century clock tower, a grand town hall originally designed by Sir John Vanbrugh, Collingwood House the Georgian home of Admiral Lord Collingwood, and a 13th-century chapel called The Chantry which is now the tourist information centre and houses such cultural institutions as the Morpeth Chantry Bagpipe Museum.

Chantry and for
John Dee, noted Elizabethan philosopher, magician and scientist and also responsible for the introduction to the first English translation of Euclid was educated at the Chantry School ( later re-founded as the Grammar School ) in the sixteenth century.
Cooper was a great philanthropist in Canterbury, and used some of his wealth to build a number of Alms Houses for the poor in Chantry Lane in the centre of the city.
* Toby Flood, born 1985, professional Rugby union player for Leicester Tigers and England, attended Morpeth Chantry School.
He married 5 August 1954, Katherine Sonia ( b. 1926 ), second daughter of Digby Coddington Cayley ( 1895 – 1965 ) of Rougham Chantry, Bury St. Edmunds, JP for Lancashire and Major KOSB, by his spouse Beatrice née Campbell-Renton of Mordington House, Berwickshire.
During the troublous times of Cromwell the map was laid beneath the floor of Bishop Audley's Chantry, beside the Lady Chapel, where it remained secreted for some time.
Chantry colleges still maintained the daily divine office with the additional prime function of offering masses in intercession for departed members of the founder's family ; but also typically served charitable or educational purposes, such as providing hospitals or schools.
Windle Chantry dates back to the 15th Century, with Sir Thomas Gerard responsible for its construction on his return from Agincourt around 1415
Chantry is the English term for a fund established to pay for a priest to celebrate sung Masses for a specified purpose, generally for the soul of the deceased donor.
*" London and Middlesex Chantry Certificate ", certificate of the royal commissioners, in preparation for the dissolution ; London Record Society ; here hosted by British History Online.
Roger Lupton is thought to have been born at Cautley in the parish of Sedbergh in 1456 and he provided for a Chantry School in Sedbergh in 1525 while he was Provost of Eton.
When the " impious prince ", as Bede has called him, sent Roman soldiers to Alban's house to look for the priest, Alban exchanged cloaks with the priest and was arrested in his stead at Chantry Island.

Chantry and years
Yeats, the Irish poet, stayed at The Chantry House in his later years with his mistress Edith Shackleton Heald

Chantry and is
The cathedral has a memorial, Prince Arthur's Chantry, to the young prince Arthur Tudor, who is buried here.
The last important addition is Prince Arthur ’ s Chantry Chapel to the right of the south choir aisle, 1502 – 04.
* Castle Street heads north from The Plain to Thornbury Castle and St Mary's Church ; it passes several older buildings including ' the Chantry ' which is now used by the community association ( TDCA ).
Wavell is buried in the old mediaeval cloister at Winchester College, next to the Chantry Chapel.
Its premises at the Chantry in Church Street, Aylesbury, are still there, though today the site is occupied mainly by almshouses.
In the Fort Gardens is Milton Chantry, Gravesend's earliest extant building, dating from the late 13th century.
Again everyone believes that the responsible party is the beautiful Valentine Chantry, who is the murder victim.
In Triangle at Rhodes the murder is by poison and it is thought that Chantry and her lover attempted to murder her husband and that the plot went wrong.
It is used, with one major modification, by members of the Chantry Guild in Gordon Dickson's 1962 science fiction novel Necromancer.
Southampton, a popular summer getaway, is close to Chantry Island, Port Elgin, Saugeen First Nation and Sauble Beach.
Chantry later did a bust of Smith in appreciation and there is a painting of Chantry by Smith.
Portman Road Football Ground to the West of the centre, and the new University to the East are both in the seat, as is the vast Chantry council estate to the South.
Electric Frankenstein is also the first and only band so far to have a whole art book published of their record covers and concert posters, which was designed by most of the best known illustrative artists around, such as Coop, Kozik, Johnny Ace, Art Chantry, Dirty Donny, Peter Bagge, and many more.

Chantry and now
That Abbot Clement Lichfield lies buried beneath the Chantry Chapel, now known as the Lichfield Chapel in consequence, provides the link to the closing days of the life of the abbey.
These include ; the Canal Wharf, land behind the Church, St, Martin's Hall, the Churchyard and now the Leon Recreation Ground that was once part of the lands belonging to the Chantry.
These include ; the Canal Wharf, land behind the Church, St, Martin's Hall, the Churchyard and now the Leon Recreation Ground that was once part of the lands belonging to the Chantry.
' Scheduled ' listed buildings include the St. John's Guildhall of 1681, and the carefully restored Foresters Cottages, Chantry House with its 15th-century window, the 16th-century town house ( now a local museum ), the Maltings ( now converted into flats ), and a small brick house which was first built in 1681 as a school by the Merchant Taylors.
In 1977 the Chapel was closed and converted housing now called Chantry House.

Chantry and .
The older site has been redeveloped as a new community centre, called " Turnberrie's ", ; the older community centre, at ' the Chantry ', on Castle Street, remains in active use however.
Arthur was buried in Worcester Cathedral where " Prince Arthur's Chantry " stands today.
In 1950, using funds from a small legacy, Powell purchased a house called The Chantry at Frome, Somerset, about sixteen miles from Bath.
Anthony Powell died at The Chantry on 28 March 2000.
* Aisling Sturbridge, High Regent of the Chantry of Five Bouroughs.
" Through this form of exchange, it became clear that this " Dallas " group held different understandings, especially in the area of Covenant Theology, from those espoused by northeastern Reformed Baptists led by Walter Chantry and Albert N. Martin.
A bypass, industrial estates and a new shopping centre in the town centre, called the Chantry Centre, were all built and the town ’ s character changed completely.
In 1458 the chapel was replaced by St Leonard's Chantry.
There are also six primary schools in the town: Mary Elton Primary School, John the Evangelist Church of England Primary School, All Saints C Of E Primary School and St. Nicholas ' Chantry CEVC Primary School.
In 1989 over 100 homeless families were removed from hostels in marginal wards and placed in the Hermes and Chantry Point tower blocks in the safe Labour ward of Harrow Road.
Many of the flats had had their heating and sanitation systems destroyed by the council to prevent their use as drug dens, others had indeed been taken over by heroin users and still others had pigeons making nests out of asbestos, with the level in flats in Hermes and Chantry Points well above safe norms.
There are also two middle schools within Morpeth built next to each other called Newminster and Chantry.

0.188 seconds.