Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Cartmel Priory" ¶ 4
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

priory and was
The " visitation " was a section of the province through which visitors to each priory could describe the state of its religious life and its studies to the next chapter.
Lammana Priory was a priory on the island consisting of two Benedictine monks until 1289.
The priory was replaced by a chapel served by a secular priest until the Dissolution of the Monasteries in 1536 when it became property of the Crown.
Eadberht of Lindisfarne, the next bishop ( and Saint ) was buried in the place from which Cuthbert's body was exhumed earlier the same year when the priory was abandoned in the late ninth century.
The priory was re-established in Norman times in 1093 as a Benedictine house and continued until its suppression in 1536 under Henry VIII.
As prior of more than one Dominican priory during a time of great moral laxity, he insisted on discipline, and, in accordance with his own wishes, he was appointed inquisitor at Como.
Æthelflæd, daughter of Alfred the Great, and her husband Æthelred, ealdorman of Mercia, were buried in the priory, and their nephew, King Æthelstan, was a major patron of Oswald's cult.
He was taken to the priory of St Gervase at Rouen, where he died on 9 September 1087.
A town grew up around it, and a Benedictine priory was established around 1075 by Withenoc, a Breton who became lord of Monmouth after Roger, the son of William fitzOsbern, was disgraced.
The priory may have once been the residence of the monk Geoffrey of Monmouth, who was born around 1100 and is best known for writing the chronicle Historia Regum Britanniae (" History of the Kings of Britain ").
The town gained representation in the English Parliament at the same time, and its priory was dissolved.
The church was founded as a Benedictine priory around 1075.
She died at Tamworth, Staffordshire in 918, and was buried at St Peter's Church ( now St Oswald's priory ) in Gloucester, a city she had reconstructed from Roman ruins, and laid out the core street plan, which is still in existence today.
James I and his queen Joan Beaufort ( died 1445 ) were both buried in the priory church, as was Queen Margaret Tudor ( died 1541 ), widow of James IV of Scotland.
In 1478 his studies were interrupted when he was sent to the Dominican priory of Santa Maria degli Angeli in Ferrara as assistant master of novices.
Much of Southwark was originally owned by the church — the greatest reminder of monastic London is Southwark Cathedral, originally the priory of St Mary Overy.
Orff was buried in the Baroque church of the beer-brewing Benedictine priory of Andechs, south of Munich.
Part of James's solution was to create an assembly of abbots and followed this up by establishing a Carthusian priory at Perth to provide an example of internal disicipline to other religious houses.
Following its royal foundation, the abbey was established by a party of monks from the French abbey of Cluny, together with monks from the Cluniac priory of St Pancras at Lewes in Sussex.
After Henry VIII ordered the Dissolution of the Monasteries in 1539, the manuscript was separated from the priory ( Backhouse 2004 ).
The abbey was originally served by a community of Augustinian Canons Regular from Merton Priory and the layout of the original church at Holyrood, now known only from excavations, probably came from the 1125 church at the priory.
Upon her death in 1290 at Harby, near the city of Lincoln, the body of Queen Eleanor was carried to the Gilbertine priory of St. Catherine, Lincoln in the south of Lincoln, where she was embalmed.

priory and dissolved
Although the priory was dissolved in 1539 the town remained an important staging post on the Bath Road.
In 1177 the abbey was dissolved by Henry II and replaced with a double priory of the Fontevrault order.
Soon after his appointment, the office and its stores were transferred to a dissolved Dominican monastery at Blackfriars, having previously been housed at Warwick Inn in the city, the London Charterhouse, and then at the priory of St. John of Jerusalem in Clerkenwell, to which a return was made after Cawarden's death.
The priory was dissolved by royal authority in 1539.
The priory was dissolved in 1806, but returned to the Catholic Church in 1986.
Avebury priory was dissolved in 1411 and its property granted to Fotheringhay College.
The priory was formally dissolved on 8 April 1540 and surrendered to the king's men on 22 December 1540, making it one of the last monastic houses in England to be suppressed.
The priory was dissolved in 1803, when the library and archives were given to the city of Düsseldorf ; the monastery and the church were sold and torn down in 1809.
The priory was dissolved in 1536 and subsequently demolished and in 1563, the Parliament of England met at the castle because of an outbreak of plague in London.
For a time, although it predates it, Bradwell was the supporting village for Bradwell Abbey, a Benedictine priory, founded in 1155 and dissolved in about 1540.
In 1460, owing to its poverty, the priory was dissolved and annexed to the nearby Nutley Abbey in Long Crendon.
The Charterhouse began as ( and takes its name from ) a Carthusian priory, founded in 1371 and dissolved in 1537.
The priory was finally dissolved in 1542.
It was always an alien priory run directly from France and, as such, was dissolved in 1414.
The priory was dissolved in 1539.
The priory was dissolved in 1536 during the Dissolution of the Monasteries and only ruins remain.
The Carthusian Order having been dissolved in 1538 in the Reformation, the priory and its property was given by the King to Thomas Mannyng, Bishop of Ipswich.
The nave of the church is one of the oldest parts of the ruin, however subsequent additions continued to be added up until the priory was dissolved in 1537 under Henry VIII, and when the King gave the dissolved priory to the Duke of Norfolk complete with its estates, the remaining monks were turned out.
Like most alien priories, it was dissolved in 1415 under an Act of Henry V. In 1440 Henry VI granted the property of the priory to the newly-founded Eton College, which established a manor house on the site.
The priory was dissolved by Henry VIII in 1539.

0.279 seconds.