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mitred and abbots
Most of them have mitred abbots.
Two mitred abbots next entered from a side chapel, carrying a mixture of holy oils, with which the ruler was then anointed.
Former distinctions between " mitred abbots " and " non-mitred abbots " have been abolished.

mitred and England
This had mitred gates at each end, and was probably the second lock to be built in England, although it was the first to be built on a river.

mitred and were
All the refounded houses were in properties that had remained in Crown possession ; but, in spite of much prompting, none of Mary's lay supporters would co-operate in returning their holdings of monastic lands to religious use ; while the lay lords in Parliament proved unremittingly hostile, as a revival of the " mitred " abbeys would have returned the House of Lords to having an ecclesiastical majority.
Since at least early July, 2004, the park has become a home to wild rabbits and a growing colony of feral Peruvian conures ( parrots, either the Chapman's mitred or the scarlet-fronted ), who were released into the wild by their owners ( or some escaped ).

mitred and St
The hopes of both did not deceive them, for Wojciech, rising in rank, became a priest, and soon from being a Kraków scholastic, as Dlugosz says, or from being a Kraków dean and Poznan pastor, he became the mitred prelate of Poznan in 1399 ; tearing down the wooden church in Bensowa, he had a brick one built in 1407, and later settled the friars of St. Paul the Hermit there, and gave it the villages of Bensowa, Bensowka, Bydlowa, and Bystronowice.

mitred and .
Within the college a simpler form is sometimes used where the central tierce simply contains the arms of the See of Lincoln, rather than displaying them on a mitred escutcheon.
The black mummified corpse of the saint is stretched out in a glass coffin, clad in his mouldering canonicals, mitred, crosiered and gloved, glittering with votive jewels.
Feckenham sat in Elizabeth's first parliament, and was the last mitred abbot to do so.
The mitred half lap is the weakest version of the joint because of the reduced gluing surface.
The secret mitred dovetail joint ( also called a mitered blind dovetail ) is used in the highest class of cabinet and box work.
Two versions of this joint are the secret double-lapped dovetail and the full-blind mitred dovetail.
The abbot was the Primus Abbas, or first mitred abbot of Ireland.
Palmer notes that Cottingham's 1825-30 restoration added the head of a " mitred, bearded bishop ", but examination today reveals nothing of this.
As well as his spiritual duties, he also took up the civil duties expected at that time of a mitred abbot, being appointed as Justice of the Peace and to various governmental Commissions for Berkshire from 1526 to 1538.
A mitred backing timber which extends the after line of the rabbet in the stem to give extra support to the ends of the planks and the bowsprit.
This gave way in the 12th century to a house dedicated to the Blessed Virgin Mary by Dermot O ' Dempsey, Prince of Offaly, whose mitred abbot sat as a baron in the Irish Parliament.
Frame construction style falls into three categories: cope and stick, mitred sticking and applied moulding.
In mitred sticking, the profile ( known as the sticking ) is applied to the edges of both the rail and stile and then a section of the sticking at the ends of each stile is removed leaving a mitred edge which aligns to a similar mitre cut on the ends of the sticking on each rail.
However, a far more common technique, and one which consumes a smaller area of substrate, is to use a mitred bend.
Microstrip 90 ° mitred bend.
For both the curved and mitred bends, the electrical length is somewhat shorter than the physical path-length of the strip.

abbots and England
Bowing to political reality, Henry I of England ceded his right to invest his bishops and abbots and reserved the custom of requiring them to come and do homage.
Urban's support had dwindled to the northern Italian states, Portugal, England, and Holy Roman Emperor Charles IV, who brought with him the support of most of the princes and abbots of Germany.
This resulted in the abbots forming their own chapter to rule the order in England and consequently they became increasingly involved in internecine politics.
Pupils from the school at Canterbury were sent out as Benedictine abbots in southern England, disseminating the curriculum of Theodore.
In 1088 Robert Curthose, Duke of Normandy, enfeoffed the Cotentin to his brother Henry, later King Henry I of England, who as count of the Cotentin established his first power base there and in the adjoining Avranchin, which lay to the south, beyond the River Thar, among the region's lords, abbots and bishops.
On his return to England, Coutances was given custody of the abbeys of Wilton and Ramsey, which were being held by King Henry pending the election of new abbots.

abbots and were
In the East abbots, if in priests ' orders and with the consent of the bishop, were, as we have seen, permitted by the second Nicene council, AD 787, to confer the tonsure and admit to the order of reader ; but gradually abbots, in the West also, advanced higher claims, until we find them in AD 1489 permitted by Innocent IV to confer both the subdiaconate and diaconate.
When abbots dined in their own private hall, the Rule of St Benedict charged them to invite their monks to their table, provided there was room, on which occasions the guests were to abstain from quarrels, slanderous talk and idle gossiping.
The abbots of Cluny and Vendôme were, by virtue of their office, cardinals of the Roman church.
Clan MacKinnon may also have some claim to being spiritual descendants of St Columcille as after he founded his monastery on Isle Iona, the MacKinnons were the abbots of the Church for centuries.
The result was that, more often than not, bishops, abbots of monasteries, and even the pope were not independent, but resembled lackeys or sycophants of the crown of the Holy Roman Empire.
According to the terms of the compromise, the election of bishops and abbots was to follow proper procedure, that is, the canons of the cathedral were to elect the bishop.
Though present and allowed to speak before the council, members of the Imperial Roman / Byzantine court, abbots, priests, monks and laymen were not allowed to vote.
The Council sought to: ( a ) bring an end to the practice of the conferring of ecclesiastical benefices by people who were laymen ; ( b ) free the election of bishops and abbots from secular influence ; ( c ) clarify the separation of spiritual and temporal affairs ; ( d ) re-establish the principle that spiritual authority resides solely in the Church ; ( e ) abolish the claim of the emperors to influence papal elections.
Partly as a result of these factors, some scholars have identified a distinctive form of Celtic Christianity, in which abbots were more significant than bishops, attitudes to clerical celibacy were more relaxed and there was some significant differences in practice with Roman Christianity, particularly the form of tonsure and the method of calculating Easter, although most of these issues had been resolved by the mid-seventh century.
Numerous Merovingians who served as bishops and abbots, or who generously funded abbeys and monasteries, were rewarded with sainthood.
Not all territorial seigneurs were secular ; bishops and abbots also held lands that entailed similar obligations.
Some were ruled by princes or other hereditary rulers, some were governed by bishops or abbots.
Scholars generally agree that these copies were written at Monte Cassino and the end of the document refers to Abbas Raynaldus cu ... who was most probably one of the two abbots of that name at the abbey during that period.
Some of the native abbots were also deposed, both at the council held near Easter and at a further one near Whitsun.
Norman clergy were appointed to replace the deposed bishops and abbots, and at the end of the process, only two native English bishops remained in office, along with several continental prelates appointed by Edward the Confessor.
As in Normandy, his bishops and abbots were bound to him by feudal obligations ; and his right of investiture in the Norman tradition prevailed within his kingdom, during the age of the Investiture Controversy that brought excommunication upon the Salian Emperor Henry IV.
Present on the ecclesiastical side were archbishops, bishops, and abbots, and occasionally also abbesses and priests ; on the secular side ealdormen ( or eorls in the latter centuries ) and thegns.
In 817, Theodore wrote two letters to Pope Paschal I, which were co-signed by several fellow iconophile abbots, in the first requesting that he summon an anti-iconoclastic Synod ; letters to the Patriarchs of Alexandria and Jerusalem, among other " foreign " clerics, followed.
" The abbots were to be allowed to venerate images if they so wished, as long as they remained outside of Constantinople.
The proximity of the Palace of Westminster did not extend to providing monks or abbots with high royal connections ; in social origin the Benedictines of Westminster were as modest as most of the order.
The best known of them were Robert of Molesme, Alberic of Citeaux and the English monk Stephen Harding, who were the first three abbots.

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