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foundations and abbey
* Pope Stephen II crowns Pepin the short King of the Franks at Saint-Denis outside Paris ; also dedicates the foundations of the new abbey church.
A small, 9th century chapel remains standing within walking distance of the church, as do the foundations of a later women's abbey.
In the mid-11th Century king Edward the Confessor began the construction of an abbey at Westminster, only the foundations of which survive today.
The original parish church alongside the abbey was demolished, though the foundations are still visible.
The monks lived among the ruins and gradually rebuilt the abbey church upon the foundations of the abbey constructed in 1147.
The wealth and influence of the abbey extended to many daughter foundations, including St Michael's Mount in Cornwall.
The abbey is largely reduced to its foundations.
Of the once wealthy abbey, mostly only knee-high ruins and exposed foundations remain.
In Roman sites, though an inscription built into the wall of the abbey church of San Venanzio at Ceperana suggested to a Renaissance humanist it had been built upon the foundations of a temple to Jupiter Sabazius, according to modern scholars not a single temple consecrated to Sabazius, the rider god of the open air, has been located, small votive hands, typically made of copper or bronze, are often associated with the cult of Sabazios.
In about 1840 parts of the foundations of the abbey church were excavated: it was long and wide, with a Lady Chapel extending a further at the east end.
Throughout its existence, the abbey was comparatively poor compared to other foundations, due to a lack of royal patronage and a consequent lack of tithe estates.
The foundations of the main abbey building are located at
The Yorkshire Museum, built for the Yorkshire Philosophical Society, stands in part of the abbey cloister ; parts of the east, south and west cloister walls were temporarily excavated in 1827-29 preparatory to digging the museum's foundations.
When this happened local people took stone from the abbey for their homes ; evidence can be seen in walls and foundations of older houses in Titchfield village.
Of the abbey of Hailes near Winchcomb, founded by Richard, Earl of Cornwall, in 1246, little more than the foundations are left, but these have been excavated with great care, and interesting fragments have been brought to light.
The next solid evidence of inhabitation is a written record from 1186 implying the existence of a Benedictine abbey built on its foundations.

foundations and church
Æthelberht built Justus a cathedral church in Rochester ; the foundations of a nave and chancel partly underneath the present-day Rochester Cathedral may date from that time.
The result of the same doctrines in Bohemia – that land but which was richest in ecclesiastical foundations – was that in a short time the entire church estate was taken over and a revolution brought about in the relations of temporal holdings.
* 1009 – The Church of the Holy Sepulchre, a Christian church in Jerusalem, is completely destroyed by the Fatimid caliph Al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah, who hacks the Church's foundations down to bedrock.
Others have argued that the church is indeed built upon Jesus and faith, but also on the disciples as the roots and foundations of the church on the basis of Paul's teaching in Romans and Ephesians, though not primarily Peter.
Stephen gave out grants of land and favours to those present, and endowed numerous church foundations with land and privileges.
Since the breakdown of the philosophical foundations of scholasticism, the new nominalism did not bode well for an institutional church legitimized as an intermediary between man and God.
Ironically in view of Byrd's own religious beliefs, it was his Anglican church music which came closest to establishing a continuous tradition, at least in the sense that some of it continued to be performed in choral foundations after the Restoration and into the eighteenth century.
The foundations of the earliest church ( the Church of the Holy Trinity ) are under the present superb Romanesque nave built in the 12th century.
The foundations of the travertine church can still be seen in the crypt of the present building.
Stephen gave out grants of land and favours to those present, and endowed numerous church foundations with land and privileges.
A great fire in 1624 inflicted serious damage on the church, of which only the foundations and a few walls remained.
Traces of the flint rubble foundations of a 7th century wooden church have been found under the choir of the present building ; an associated burial has been radiocarbon dated to between 590 and 690 AD.
Evidence suggests that stone and some of the foundations of the previus church were re-used for the new building, which had a nave the same length as the present one, with aisles, a large transept and a small apse at the eastern end.
The foundations of a 6th-century circular baptistery beside the natural springs has been uncovered beneath the ruins of the pre-Romanesque church of Saint-Léger, itself destroyed in the 17th century.
Upper town: ( oldest part, remains from the 13th and 16th centuries, town walls still standing ), old town hall ( 1662 ); the Martinsturm is considered the landmark of Bregenz ( late Roman core, chapel with frescos from 1362, from 1599 to 1601 a storey was added, biggest Baroque bulb-shaped steeple in Central Europe, houses the Museum of Military History ); Gothic parish church of St. Gall ( the Roman-Romanesque foundations date from before 1380, rebuilt around 1480, from 1737 to 1938 altered by F. A.
Excavations at Saint Martin's Square in the centre exposed the foundations of the old Saint Martin's church, which was partly built with Roman waste materials.
It was rebuilt in Gothic style on its old foundations after falling rocks from the adjacent cliff partially destroyed the former Romanesque style church in 1227.
" With this treatise, John Locke laid one of the most important intellectual foundations of the separation of church and state, which ultimately led to the secular state.
Stone blocks taken from the old stone church were used as foundations for the present day church as well as for the walling enclosing the Churchyard.

foundations and are
Then there are the trustees and officers of the great educational foundations, who inevitably exert an influence on educational decisions by their support or refusal to support various educational programs, experiments, and demonstrations.
These are the centuries in which the inhabitants of the Aegean world settled firmly into their minds and into their institutions the foundations of the Hellenic outlook, independent of outside forces.
These are collegiate foundations, which provide a home and an income for unmarried ladies, generally of noble birth, called canonesses ( Kanonissinen ) or more usually Stiftsdamen.
Among his advances in physics are the foundations of hydrostatics, statics and an explanation of the principle of the lever.
Alternative medicine methods are diverse in their foundations and methodologies.
In the second year the foundations of the Temple are laid and the dedication takes place with great rejoicing.
In particular, the Unicode standard provides foundations for complete BiDi support, with detailed rules as to how mixtures of left-to-right and right-to-left scripts are to be encoded and displayed.
The wall also has twelve foundations which are adorned with precious stones, and upon the foundations are written the names of the twelve apostles.
The gates and foundations are often interpreted as symbolizing the people of God before and after Christ.
Reinforced concrete and masonry columns are generally built directly on top of concrete foundations.
The sociological foundations of critical psychology are decidedly Marxist.
It is a metábasis because psychology cannot possibly provide any foundations for a priori laws which themselves are the basis for all the ways we should think correctly.
Courses typically taught only in college are being reformatted so that they can be taught to any level of student, whereby elementary school students may learn the foundations of any topic they desire.
Ernst Haeckel, along with Karl von Baer and Wilhelm His, are primarily influential in forming the preliminary foundations of ‘ phylogenetic embryology ’ based on principles of evolution.
In logic and the foundations of mathematics, formal languages are used to represent the syntax of axiomatic systems, and mathematical formalism is the philosophy that all of mathematics can be reduced to the syntactic manipulation of formal languages in this way.
Often referred to as fonds, meaning " foundations ", these base sauces, espagnole, velouté, and béchamel, are still known today.
The most remarkable are the monastic foundations at Humor ( hoo mor ), Moldoviţa ( mol do vee ' tsa ), Arbore ( are ' bo ray ) and Voroneţ ( vo ro nets ).
There are two known Iron Age sites-a promontory fort at Landberg and the foundations of a house underlying an early Christian settlement at Kirkigeo.
* " For the foundations of the earth are the LORD's ; upon them he has set the world.
Martineau also wrote: “ Bopp's Sanskrit studies and Sanskrit publications are the solid foundations upon which his system of comparative grammar was erected, and without which that could not have been perfect.
Donations from foundations which are funded by political parties or receive most of their funding from governments or intergovernmental organizations are rejected.

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