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patronage and church
It appears that these are associated with Pictish kings, which argues for a considerable degree of royal patronage and control of the church.
In return for protection and patronage Ockham wrote treatises that argued for King Louis to have supreme control over church and state in the Holy Roman Empire.
By these successes he gained the patronage of the Fuggers, and found himself fairly launched as the recognized apologist of the established order in church and state.
This preference persisted throughout the nineteenth century, as academically oriented artists waited and hoped for the patronage of state or church to satisfy their more elevated ambitions.
Their patronage underpinned the careers of a number of young Lancashire men, including William Smyth, Hugh Oldham, and Christopher Urswick, who went on to become pillars of the Tudor church and state.
Under Edward's patronage, de Brome diverted the revenue of the University Church to his college, which thereafter was responsible for appointing the vicar and providing four chaplains to celebrate the daily services in the church.
Some minorities resent the privileges granted the Catholic church as other religious groups were actively or passively discouraged His critics hold that Duplessis's inherently-corrupt patronage politics, his reactionary conservatism, his emphasis on traditional family and religious values, his anachronistic anti-union stance, rural focus and his preservation and promotion of Catholic Church institutions over the development of a secular social infrastructure akin to that underway in most of the postwar West, stunted Quebec's social and economic development by at least a decade.
In his hands, he holds the banner of Erzherzogtums Austria below the Enns, and also a church model that symbolizes the patronage of the parish church.
Young, living in a time when patronage was slowly fading out, was notable for urgently seeking patronage for his poetry, his theatrical works, and his career in the church: he failed in each area.
The Friends of Little Gidding was founded in 1946 by Alan Maycock with the patronage of T. S. Eliot, to maintain and adorn the church at Little Gidding, and to honour the life of Nicholas Ferrar and his family and their life at Little Gidding.
This trend, along with the lack of Counter-Reformation church patronage that dominated the arts in Catholic Europe, resulted in the great number of " scenes of everyday life " or genre paintings, and other non-religious pictures.
The church, today called San Sebastiano fuori le mura, was rebuilt in the 1610s under the patronage of Scipione Borghese.
The Simeon Trust was established by him for the purpose of acquiring church patronage to perpetuate evangelical clergy in Church of England parishes.
Many humanists were churchmen, most notably Pope Pius II ( Aeneas Silvius Piccolomini ), Sixtus IV and Leo X, and there was often patronage of humanists by senior church figures.
In the hierarchy of the church, bishops and abbots looked to the patronage of the king's palace, where the sources of patronage and security lay.
The parish church was rebuilt in the sixteenth century under " Spanish patronage " and dedicated to the saint.
* Cosimo de ' Medici set a new standard for patronage of the arts, not associated with the church or monarchy.
The Franciscan Order erected a church under the patronage of Saints Nicodemus and Joseph of Arimathea in Ramla.
During the 15th century patronage of the church changed from St Mary to St Peter.
The decades before the Conquest were prosperous for the elite, and there was great patronage of church building by figures such as Lady Godiva.
The fruits of royal patronage were demonstrated by the construction of a large church ( long ), built in the fashionable French-influenced Gothic style pioneered by Henry's masons at Westminster Abbey.
The church was under the patronage of the Worswick family, who had their countryseat at Normanton Hall ( now demolished ), which lay outside Earl Shilton on the road to Thurleston.

patronage and belonged
The University of Douai was founded under the patronage of Phillip II, when Douai belonged to the Spanish Netherlands.
It was consecrated in 1260, at which time the manor and patronage of the church belonged to Rouen Cathedral, as it had from before the Norman invasion.
The promiscuous image came from reversing the dominant image of femininity in the traditional Latino-American culture of the time — the Pachuca's high public visibility and patronage of nightlife with pachucos during a time when the " good " minority woman belonged in the home was seen in a scandalous light.
Although he tried to give the impression of being independent of Hastings ' patronage, he could neither shake off his reputation as an ally of Hastings nor deny that he belonged to his party.
Under the patronage of royal courts, performers belonged to professional companies that were directed by a stage manager ( sutradhara ), who may also have acted.
Beatrice belonged to the best class of Renaissance women, and was one of the cultural influences of the age ; to a great extent, her patronage and good taste are responsible for the splendour of the Castello of Milan, the Certosa of Pavia, and many other famous buildings in Lombardy.

patronage and canons
Farmer was under the patronage of the Earl of Oxford and dedicated his collection of canons and his late madrigal volume to his patron.

patronage and St
The cathedral of the Catholic Diocese of Argyll and the Isles is placed under the patronage of St. Columba as are numerous Catholic schools and parishes throughout the nation.
It was founded in 1858, by Father Caspar Rehrl, an Austrian missionary, who established the sisterhood of pioneer women under the patronage of St. Agnes of Rome, to whom he had a particular devotion.
St. Anthony's ( Deir Mar Antonios ) is the oldest monastery in the world and under the patronage of the Patriarch of the Coptic Orthodox Church.
They were preparing to face 27, 000 Danish troops under the French general Count St. Germain in case the Russian-Denmark freedom conference, scheduled for 1 July 1762 in Berlin under the patronage of Frederick II, failed to resolve the issue.
The churches of St Maurice ( partly rebuilt in 1867 ), St André, and St Thomas ( erected from 1847 to 1853, under the patronage of Cardinal Gousset, now buried within its walls ) also draw tourists.
By the standards of his time a gentleman like Wren would not generally join an artisan body ; however the workmen of St Paul's cathedral would naturally have sought the patronage or " interest " of their employer, and within Wren's lifetime there was a predominantly gentlemen's Lodge at the Rummer and Grapes, a mile upriver at Westminster ( where Wren had been to School ).
In the 13th century, the abbey was under the patronage of Llywelyn the Great, Prince of Gwynedd, and his son Dafydd ap Llywelyn gave St Winefride's Well to the abbey.
The patronage of the parish of St Giles was included in the endowment of the college by Thomas White.
The new parish was placed under the patronage of St. John the Baptist.
After the region around St. David's was firmly occupied by the Norman Marcher lordship of Pembroke by the early 12th century, with St. David's firmly under Norman influence thereafter, the princely Dinefwr family of Deheubarth transferred their patronage to Strata Florida, interring many of their family members there.
The painting that first brought him into public notice, and gained him the acquaintance and patronage of Edmund Burke, was founded on an old tradition of the landing of St Patrick on the sea-coast of Cashel, ( this is a mistake reproduced from another source, Cashel is an inland town far from the sea ) and of the conversion and Baptism of the King of Cashel It was exhibited in London in 1762 or 1763 and rediscovered in the 1980s, in unexhibitable condition.
In 1602, Schaw wrote a Charter granting to Sir William St. Clair of Rosslyn the right to purchase patronage over the masons of Scotland.
This patronage was surrendered by their descendant, another William St. Clair, on the formation of the Grand Lodge of Scotland in 1736, in spite of the fact that it never won the royal approval that would have made it valid.
He then settled in Upper Canada, and in 1824 he established the first medical school in Upper Canada, in St. Thomas, under the patronage of Colonel Thomas Talbot.
Others believe the patronage of Dr. King, Bishop of London, which provided him with the Rectory of St. Martin's, Ludgate, and made him Chaplain to the Archbishop of Canterbury, relieved him from his financial troubles.
These railway lines brought many visitors to St Kilda and increased patronage to the privately run sea baths, the jetty promenade and the St. Kilda Cup, cricket and bowling clubs were formed in 1855 and 1865.
Under his patronage is the St. Joseph Freinademetz German National Parish in Beijing is a parish for German-speaking residents and visitors.
Father Peter Anderson built one of the first of two churches in the diocese to be consecrated under the patronage of St Rose.
Thereupon the Abbey and all its possessions, including St Mary's Church at Kirkby Lonsdale, were granted to Trinity College, Cambridge, which retains patronage to this day.

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