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1

GRANSDEN, ANTONIA. « The Cult of St Mary at Beodericisworth and then in Bury St Edmunds Abbey to c. 1150 ». Journal of Ecclesiastical History 55, no 4 (octobre 2004) : 627–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022046904001472.

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This paper argues that the earliest church at Beodericisworth, the later Bury St Edmunds, was dedicated to the Virgin Mary. Probably in the reign of Athelstan, the (supposed) body of St Edmund, king and martyr, was translated into this church. The cult of St Edmund burgeoned and before the end of the eleventh century St Edmund's shrine had become one of England's foremost pilgrim centres and attracted the wealth which helped pay for the great Romanesque church built to house it. Nevertheless, a wide variety of sources, both written and visual, demonstrate that the cult of St Mary retained much vitality, becoming the pre-eminent secondary cult in Bury St Edmunds, one especially fostered by Abbot Anselm (1121–48). Finally, similar examples are cited of other churches where dedications to saints like St Mary, who enjoyed widespread veneration, were replaced by those of saints of more local fame but whose (supposed) bodies those churches possessed.
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Kucharska, Gabriela. « Wolność polityczna niepodległej Ukrainy w kontekście starań Polaków mieszkających we Lwowie o odzyskanie kościoła św. Marii Magdaleny ». Civitas Hominibus. Rocznik Filozoficzno-Społeczny 16, no 1 (14 mars 2022) : 49–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.25312/2391-5145.16/2021_04gk.

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The political freedom of independent Ukraine in the context of the efforts of Poles living in Lviv to regain the church of St. Mary Magdalene This article is a case study of St. Mary Magdalene’s Church in Lviv and the efforts of parishioners to regain the church for the parish and the faithful in the context of the reality of the multinational border city. Based on data obtained during interviews with various figures (Consul General of the Republic of Poland in Lviv, the Metropolitan Curia in Lviv, the parish priest of St. Maria Magdalena, the Head of the Department of Culture of the City of Lviv, the Head of the Historical Environment Protection Department of the City of Lviv, the directors of the Lviv Organ and Chamber Music Hall in Lviv, director of the Polish School of St. Mary Magdalene in Lviv and a parishioner from the parish of St. Mary Magdalene), as well as information on Ukrainian legal acts and articles in the Ukrainian and Polish press, consecutive stages of the dispute over the recovery of the church are described. The article also considers the politicization of the dispute and discusses the activities of politicians and other actors who have been involved. Furthermore, an attempt was made to answer the question whether thirty years of Ukraine's independence resulted in either the expansion or restriction of the actual political freedom of this country, with a particular emphasis on the question of whether the country has become free from post-Soviet influence and whether it is free to such an extent that it can enforce its own law. Keywords: historical policy, Polish-Ukrainian relations, Lviv, Ukraine, St. Mary Magdalene’s Catholic Church in Lviv
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Tadic, Milutin, et Aleksandar Petrovic. « Mathematical-geographical intention in orienting mediaeval churches of the Serbian monastery Gradac ». Glasnik Srpskog geografskog drustva 91, no 4 (2011) : 141–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/gsgd1104141t.

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The subject of the paper is an exact analysis of the orientation of the Serbian monastery churches: the Church of the Virgin Mary (13th century), St. Nicholas' Church (13th century), and an early Christian church (6th century). The paper determines the azimuth of parallel axes in churches, and then the aberrations of those axes from the equinoctial east are interpreted. Under assumption that the axes were directed towards the rising sun, it was surmised that the early Christian church's patron saint could be St. John the Baptist, that the Church of the Virgin Mary was founded on Annunciation day to which it is dedicated, and that St. Nicholas' Church is oriented in accordance with the rule (?toward the sunrise?) even though its axis deviates from the equinoctial east by 41? degrees.
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Magen, Y. « The Crusader Church of St. Mary in el-Bira ». Liber Annuus 51 (janvier 2001) : 257–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1484/j.la.2.303536.

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Aslet, William. « Situating St Mary-le-Strand : The Church, the City and the Career of James Gibbs ». Architectural History 63 (2020) : 77–110. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/arh.2020.3.

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ABSTRACTJames Gibbs's church of St Mary-le-Strand has often been interpreted as an expression of his training in Rome, his Tory politics and his Roman Catholic faith. These factors, as well as the growing clout of the Palladian movement, all supposedly contributed to the architect's dismissal from the Commission for Fifty New Churches. In fact, the design was discovered slowly and by compromise, and Gibbs's dismissal was brought about by a change of monarchy, the demise of his original patrons and by the cost-cutting agenda of the new Whig regime. Rather than recent Italian sources, St Mary-le-Strand derives many of its features from the architecture of London, particularly St Paul's Cathedral. The siting of the church on the royal processional way from Westminster to St Paul's Cathedral explains many of Gibbs's design choices. Queen Anne, under whose reign the church was conceived, used the route frequently.
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Jewell, R. H. I. « IV. The Anglo-Saxon Friezes at Breedon-on-the-Hill, Leicestershire ». Archaeologia 108 (1986) : 95–115. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0261340900011723.

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Let into various walls inside the church of St. Mary and St. Hardulph at Breedon-on-the-Hill, Leicestershire, is a group of frieze sculpture and relief-carved panels. It is now generally accepted that these are of Anglo-Saxon origin, and have been reused in the present church, of which no part is earlier than the twelfth century.
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AZIZZADEH, Fariba. « Pathology of Tourist Attraction Problems in St. Mary Church of Urmia ». Journal of Environmental Management and Tourism 10, no 8 (26 février 2020) : 1956. http://dx.doi.org/10.14505//jemt.v10.8(40).25.

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St. Mary Church of Urmia is ranked second in the world in terms of age. It has not been successful in attracting international tourists. This study is attempted to investigate the problems of tourist attraction for this church. The present study uses an interpretive paradigm and a qualitative research method in which the participants were 5 individuals from the target community of Christians working there. The tool used in this study was semi-structured interview (open-ended questions). Interaction between the researcher and the respondent as well as feedback from the participants has been used to ensure reliability. The information was analyzed using the thematic analysis method as well as during the three-step grounded coding (open, axial, and selective). According to the views of the participant, the 8 issues of the Ministry of Guidance on the issue of Christianity propagation, physical change of the church and the construction of a gable roof on it, the failure of Christians to propagate this church, a long-term bureaucracy of the Ministry of Guidance, the distance from Urmia to other tourist cities, issues related to restrictions on freedom and coverage in Iran, political issues and the effects of sanctions and inappropriate weather have been addressed.
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Karydis, Nikolaos. « The development of the Church of St Mary at Ephesos from late antiquity to the Dark Ages ». Anatolian Studies 69 (2019) : 175–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0066154619000103.

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AbstractThe Church of St Mary is one of the most significant monuments of Ephesos, but also one of the most enigmatic. Its repeated modifications prior to its destruction created an amalgam of different phases that have proven difficult to decipher within the present remains. Written records and inscriptions suggest that this church was the venue of the riotous Ecumenical Council of AD 431, but the identification of the phase of the building that corresponds to this event is controversial. And, although the remains make it clear that at some point the church was transformed into a domed basilica, the latter’s form and date have not been established with certainty. The present article tries to fill these lacunae through a new survey of the remains of the church and a re-examination of the evidence from the archaeological excavations of the 20th century. This new investigation of wall structures and design patterns within the remains leads to new interpretations of the evidence, and sheds further light on the history of the Church of St Mary from its late antique origins to the Dark Ages.
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Willink, David. « Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church of Canada St Mary Cathedral v Aga ». Ecclesiastical Law Journal 24, no 1 (janvier 2022) : 114–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0956618x21000788.

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Lloyd, Richard. « Music at the parish church of St Mary at Hill, London ». Early Music XXV, no 2 (mai 1997) : 221–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/earlyj/xxv.2.221.

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Lloyd, R. « Music at the parish church of St Mary at Hill, London ». Early Music 25, no 2 (1 mai 1997) : 221–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/em/25.2.221.

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Morley, Beric M. « The Nave Roof of the Church of St Mary, Kempley, Gloucestershire ». Antiquaries Journal 65, no 1 (mars 1985) : 101–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003581500024719.

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The nave roof of the Norman church of St. Mary, Kempley, Gloucestershire, is hidden above a seventeenth-century ceiling. Recent study has shown the roof structure to be substantially original. The roof is described and its date considered against various dating schemes for the building. A preferred date of c. 1120 is proposed.
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13

Tracy, Charles, Hugh Harrison et Daniel Miles. « The Choir-stalls at the Priory Church of St Mary, Abergavenny ». Journal of the British Archaeological Association 155, no 1 (janvier 2002) : 203–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1179/jba.2002.155.1.203.

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Villius, Hans. « The Casket Letters : A Famous Case Reopened ». Historical Journal 28, no 3 (septembre 1985) : 517–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0018246x00003289.

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The place where the University of Edinburgh now stands was once the site of the church of St Mary in the Fields or, as it is usually called, Kirk o'Field. On a February night in 1567, in the small house close to the church, there occurred what is certainly the most frequently discussed event in the history of Scotland, the murder of Henry Stuart, Lord Darnley, consort to Mary Queen of Scots. Much discussed it has been, but since it is still not properly resolved it merits another look.
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15

Gem, Richard, Emily Howe et Richard Bryant. « The Ninth-Century Polychrome Decoration at St Mary's Church, Deerhurst ». Antiquaries Journal 88 (septembre 2008) : 109–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003581500001360.

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This paper presents the results of a detailed analysis of surviving paintwork on the chancel arch, the carved animal heads and the figurative panel in the west porch at the Anglo-Saxon church of St Mary, Deerhurst, Gloucestershire, UK. The context of the polychromy in relation to the ninth-century fabric of the church is assessed. The detailed results of the technical analysis are presented. The original scheme of painted decoration is described, including the newly discovered plant scroll painted on the arch. The results of the examination are evaluated, setting the polychrome decoration of the ninth-century church into its contemporary context in England and on the Continent, with special regard to both the technical and the artistic aspects.
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Płotkowiak, Maciej. « Concept And Its Implementation During The Reconstruction Of The Church Of Blessed Virgin Mary In Chojna ». Civil And Environmental Engineering Reports 19, no 4 (1 décembre 2015) : 87–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/ceer-2015-0055.

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Abstract St. Mary's parish church in Chojna was erected at the turn of XIV and XVc. in a shape of three aisles, hall church without transept, completed from the west with a single tower and from the east with polygonal presbytery with an ambulatory attached. The convergence of characteristic structural and decorative features with employed ones in medieval churches being attributed to Hinrich Brunsberg's fabric resulted in such a way, that also authorship of St. Mary in Chojna was assigned to this legendary architect and master builder of late Middle Ages period. The church was destroyed by fire during WWII in February 1945 and since then had remained as an open ruin. In 1997 reconstruction procedure of the church was begun under the leadership of the author and it still continues. This text consists of the sum of experiences connected with confronting design ideas and solutions with their executions on the site during construction works.
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Turner, Garth. « ‘Aesthete, impressario, and indomitable persuader’ : Walter Hussey at St Matthew’s, Northampton, and Chichester Cathedral ». Studies in Church History 28 (1992) : 523–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0424208400012675.

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Until 1955, the setting of Walter Hussey’s life was buildings by Victorian masters: St Matthew’s, Northampton, built by Pearson’s pupil Matthew Holding; Marlborough College, with buildings by a series of Goths; Butterfield’s Keble; Street’s Cuddesdon; Scott’s St Mary Abbots, Kensington, and then St Matthew’s, Northampton, again, succeeding his father as vicar. But if this was the tradition in which he grew up, his achievement was to protest against its continuation inside the Church, when art outside employed a new idiom.
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Barber, Melanie. « Records of the Court of Arches in Lambeth Palace Library ». Ecclesiastical Law Journal 3, no 12 (janvier 1993) : 10–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0956618x00001678.

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The Court of Arches is the Archbishop's court of appeal for the Province of Canterbury. It derives its name from the church of St. Mary-le-Bow or St. Maria de Arcubus in the city of London where the court was held from at least the primacy of Archbishop Pecham (1279–92) until the church was destroyed by the Great Fire of London in 1666. The church was one of thirteen in the City of London which, before the abolition of peculiars in the middle of the nineteenth century, came within the Archbishop's jurisdiction of the deanery of the Arches. The judge or Official Principal who presided over the Court of Arches came to be known as the Dean of the Arches from his lesser office as judge of the court of the peculiar.
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Dzik, Janina. « The Reception of the Engravings of Gottfried Bernhard Göz’s Marian Series in the Monumental Painting of the Lviv Circle in the 18th Century ». Roczniki Humanistyczne 67, no 4 SELECTED PAPERS IN ENGLISH (30 octobre 2019) : 7–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.18290/rh.2019.68.4-1en.

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The Polish version of the article was published in Roczniki Humanistyczne vol. 63, issue 4 (2015). The graphic series dedicated to the Mother of God, defined as Sub tuum praesidium confugimus, by Gottfried Bernhard Göz (1708–1774) was an inspiration for the monumental painting of the Rococo period in Poland in the times of the Saxon kings. The series of engravings with a devotional character made with the stipple engraving technique presents 12 signed Marian scenes: the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Mary’s Birth, the Presentation of Mary, Mary and Joseph’s Matrimony, the Annunciation, the Visitation, the Purification, the images of Our Lady of Sorrows, and the Assumption. Other scenes are connected with Mary’s patronage – as the Queen of the Rosary—and her intercession. The prints, as researchers of Göz’s work assume, prove his mature style that was shaped in the years 1737–1740, when he formed a publishing “company” together with the Klauber brothers, Joseph Sebastian and Johann Baptist. He used the motifs occurring in the series many times e.g. on the vault of the nave in the Dominican nuns’ St Stefan Church in Habsthal (1748; Upper Swabia), in the sketch and painting for the Cistercian monastery in Birnau (1748–1750). These motifs were also found in Bavarian Marian shrines, e.g. Frauenchiemsee, Maria Mitleid Kapelle and Mater Dolorosa Kapelle with paintings by Balthasar Furtner (1761) and in a church in Niederaschau and Kleinmariazell (1763–1765). References to the series may also be found in the area of Slovenia, i.e. on the vault of Grajska Kapela in Novo Celje (1758–1763). The prints were known to the circle of Lviv artists active in the 18th century and they were used as models for numerous figural compositions. First of all the Lviv painter Stanisław Stroiński (1719–1802) used them for the decorations, among others, of the interior of the Franciscan Marian sanctuary in Leżajsk, in the Franciscan Holy Spirit Church in Krystynopol (1756–1759 (now Chervonohrad in Ukraine), and in the decoration of St Anne’s Chapel in the Holy Trinity Benedictine Church in Przemyśl. The series of prints was also used by the painter Gabriel Sławiński in the decoration of the chancel in St Lawrence Parish Church in the village of Żółkiewka and on the vault of the post-Pauline St Louis Church in Włodawa. The engravings are a significant model for Polish painting because of their style, technique and original approach to the conventional religious theme.
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Shumka, Laura. « Particularities of wooden carved iconostases in selected post-Byzantine churches of Albania ». Muzeológia a kultúrne dedičstvo 10, no 4 (2022) : 79–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.46284/mkd.2022.10.4.6.

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This paper presents the data and study results of the post-Byzantine wood carved iconostases of different churches in Albania, which notwithstanding the circumstances of the communistic period have preserved to a considerable extent their typical characteristics. The paper aims to examine the stylistic and morphological aspects of the iconostasis in selected churches in relation to the architecture and tries to identify the relationships, sequences and reasons for such phenomena. The presence of iconostases in the Eastern Orthodox Church is based on the carried rituals and services that are expressed through ecclesiastical sculptures and other works. In these contexts, the iconostasis is the most dominating screen, related to the rood screen of English mediaeval churches, but contrary to them it is a closed and solid structure. In the iconostasis, architecture and wood carving workers collaborate on a large scale in order to create a solid and well-integrated frame. The analysis includes St Mary’s Monastery, also known as the Monastery of Dormition of Theotokos Mary, a medieval Byzantine church on Zvërnec island in the Narta Lagoon, southwest of the city of Vlora, southwestern Albania (SMZ); the Church of Apostles in Hoshtevë, Gjirokastra, with its spectacular interior completely covered with frescoes that became a cultural monument of Albania in 1948 (SA); and the Church of the Dormition of the Theotokos, simply known as Koimissi or St Mary, in the village of Labovë e Kryqit, Gjirokastër County, southern Albania (SM).
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Tracy, Charles. « The 14th-Century Canons' Stalls in the Collegiate Church of St Mary, Astley, Warwickshire ». Journal of the British Archaeological Association 162, no 1 (octobre 2009) : 88–124. http://dx.doi.org/10.1179/006812809x12448232842411.

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Zaher, Raed, Samah Mahmoud et Shaban Abdel Razik. « The Church of the Holy Virgin Mary and St. George in El-Ghanayme, Assiut ». Minia Journal of Tourism and Hospitality Research MJTHR 14, no 3 (1 décembre 2022) : 61–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.21608/mjthr.2022.170661.1072.

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Lodge, R. Anthony. « The Cult of the Magdalene in medieval Scotland (Mary Magdalene, Pittenweem and St Fillan’s Cave) ». Innes Review 73, no 2 (novembre 2022) : 137–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/inr.2022.0332.

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The fishing town of Pittenweem (Fife) got its name (Gaelic Pett na h-Uaimhe, ‘estate of the cave’) from an impressive geological feature close to the East Shore known as St Fillan’s Cave. Although the existence of a historical Fillan has been carefully examined, no firm evidence has been found to link him to the famous Cave. In fact, the earliest recorded references to the Cave call it fons Sancte Marie Magdalene (‘spring of St Mary Magdalene’), leaving us with a new question related to Pittenweem’s pre-Reformation association with the Magdalene. This article attempts to understand when and how this came about. It begins by casting the net wide, setting the cult of Mary Magdalene within the broader context of the western Church, before offering a gazetteer of Magdalene sites in medieval Scotland and an exploration of when and how her cult came to Pittenweem. It concludes with brief remarks about the Cave’s later association with St Fillan.
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Banić, Silvija. « Zadarski gotički vezeni antependij u Budimpešti ». Ars Adriatica, no 4 (1 janvier 2014) : 75. http://dx.doi.org/10.15291/ars.490.

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The Museum of Applied Arts (Iparművészeti Múzeum) at Budapest houses an embroidered Gothic antependium which belonged to the church of St Chrysogonus, which was the seat of the Benedictine Abbey at Zadar. At an unspecified time, the antependium became part of the collection of Zsigmund Bubics, an art historian, collector and the bishop of Košice in present-day Slovakia from 1887 to 1906, and was donated to the Museum of Applied Arts in 1909. It measures 94 by 190 cm. The majority of the antependium’s surface is filled with the figures of saints set beneath three pointed, Gothic arches. The central field is occupied by the enthroned Virgin with the Christ Child, in the left field is St Chrysogonus and in the right St Benedict. In the upper section of the antependium one can see the busts of two saints who might be identified as St Gregory the Pope and St Donatus. Along the lateral edges of this triptych-like antependium are vertical borders, at the centres of which are niches with two small standing female saints who wear crowns (St Scholastica and St Anastasia). To the left of the Virgin’s throne is the figure of a donor depicted kneeling with his hands clasped in prayer, which has unfortunately not been provided with an inscription. It is clear, however, that he is wearing the Benedictine habit with a somewhat over-emphasized hood falling down his back. The Benedictine donor might be identified as one of the abbots of the monastery of St Chrysogonus. It is suggested in the article that this may have been John de Ontiaco (Joannes de Onciache) from the bishopric of Lyon, who was the abbot of the monastery of St Chrysogonus from 1345 to 1377. The author argues that the antependium was produced in a weaving workshop in Venice during the late 1360s or early 1370s, on the basis of comparisons with similar contemporary painted and embroidered artworks. Based on the iconographic programme which was depicted on the antependium, but also on the information found in archival records, the author proposes that the antependium was made for the altar of St Chrysogonus which stood in the north apse of the abbey church. Although it has not been established when the antependium left Zadar, based on the similarities between the crimson satin fabric, which replaced the original surface on which the embroidery was applied, on the antependium from the Church of St Mary at Zadar, and the antependium from the Church of St Chrysogonus, it is stated that both interventions were made in the Benedictine Convent of St Mary at Zadar during a short period of time in the last quarter of the eighteenth century. This is also understood as evidence that at that time the antependium from the Church of St Chrysogonus was still being carefully kept at Zadar.
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Zubin Ferri, Tea, Emina Pustijanac, Ines Kovačić et Josipa Bilić. « Micro-analytical Evidence of Copper-Based Pigment and Fungal Contamination of Medieval Mural Paintings in Beram, Croatia ». Microscopy and Microanalysis 25, no 6 (27 septembre 2019) : 1471–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s143192761901496x.

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AbstractThe aim of the present study was to map the painting materials, degradation processes, and biological features present on the mural painting in the church of St. Mary in Beram (Croatia) to study their possible interaction and produce information helping the preservation of this valuable painting. The research was conducted on micro samples of painting materials taken from different sites along the painting and the characterization of the present fungal species was carried out. The painting samples, together with observable patinas and degradation products, were studied by optical microscopy (OM), scanning electron microscopy, energy-dispersive spectroscopy (SEM/EDS), Fourier-Transform Infrared spectroscopy, and powder X-ray diffraction. Fungal diversity was studied using cultivation methods followed by OM and SEM analyses in addition to molecular analysis. The results contribute to the characterization of the original painting materials, successively added materials and occurred interventions, to the understanding of degradation progressions and fungal biotransformation processes. A mineral, cumengite, a copper-based pigment extremely rarely used in art, was found. Its occurrence together with barium sulfate, gypsum, and calcium oxalate possibly produced by microbiological activity was studied and information was added regarding the composition of painting materials in St. Mary church mural cycle.
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Friedrich, Jacek. « Ikonografia witraży Wiktora Ostrzołka w gdańskim kościele Mariackim (1977–1980) ». Porta Aurea, no 20 (21 décembre 2021) : 206–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.26881/porta.2021.20.09.

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In 1966, a commemorative decoration appeared inside St Mary’s Church in Gdansk: its main component was the painting showing Poland’s Baptism placed in the chancel. Meanwhile, a pillar by the Priests’ Chapel was decorated with a standard bearing striped concentration camp uniform cloth with numbers of priests -prisoners in Nazi camps. This referred directly to the décor of the Priests’ Chapel created not long before, and in which Polish priests murdered during WW II had been commemorated in 1965. Thus the millennial decoration of the chancel clearly associated the history of the Polish state with the history of Christianity in Poland, while the decoration of the Priests’ Chapel emphasized the martyrology of Polish priests. Both motifs were clearly continued in two large –size stained glass windows installed in the church in the late 1970s: one of them fills in the window in the Priests’ Chapel, while the other is to be found in the window closing the church’s chancel. Both were designed by Wiktor Ostrzołek, a leading stained glass designer in post -WW II Poland. The iconographic programme of the first refers to the martyrology of priests, yet it does not limit itself to priests -martyrs in recent history, but shows those connected with it from the very beginning: St Adalbert, Five Martyr Brothers, St Stanislaus, St John Sarkander, St Andrew Bobola and Maximilian Kolbe. Respective figures are interconnected with the use of a clear red line serving as a metaphor of the martyrs’ blood. Its continuity connecting St Adalbert with St Maximilian, thus the beginnings of the Polish state with the present, at the same time shows the continuity of the presence of the Catholic Church in Polish history. This continuity is even more unequivocally expressed by the iconographic programme of the chancel stained glass. Here it is the figure of Mary that stands out; she enshrouds the presentations referring to the Church’s mission, and in particular to the Church’s mission in Poland, in her protective mantle. A deep interconnection between the history of Poland and the Roman Catholic Church was presented in the three acts of entrusting Poland to God and Mary: the Baptism of Poland in 966, the Lvov Oath of John Casimir in 1656, and the Jasna Góra Pledge connected directly with the 1966 millennial celebrations.
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Sygulska, Anna. « CONTEMPORARY TWO-STOREY CHURCHES – ACOUSTIC INVESTIGATIONS ». Journal of Architecture and Urbanism 39, no 2 (30 juin 2015) : 140–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.3846/20297955.2015.1056444.

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The paper discusses the idea of two-storey churches, with insight into socio-political conditions which influenced their construction. The analysis of the issue was carried out on the basis of investigations in five two-storey churches in Poznań. The churches under investigation were: Visitation of Blessed Virgin Mary Church, Christ the King Church, Our Lady of Częstochowa Church, St. Lawrence Church, and Christ the Redeemer Church. In total, ten interiors were examined. The churches were erected in the late 70s and early 80s of the 20th century. The acoustic conditions were analyzed in terms of cubature, the shape of the interior and finishes. The upper and lower churches were compared within one building; the investigation also involved comparing the churches against each other. Moreover, functionality of the buildings was analyzed, which included aspects of acoustic as well as architectural functionality.
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Stankiewicz, Aleksander. « Kilka uwag na temat twórczości Krzysztofa Boguszewskiego ». Artifex Novus, no 3 (1 octobre 2019) : 20–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.21697/an.7061.

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SUMMARY The article deals with the artistic activity of Krzysztof Aleksander Boguszewski (d. 1635), nobleman, spiritual and painter, active in Poznań in years 1624–1635. In the past, scholars tried to do all they could to expand his oeuvre by resorting to imprecise comparisons or overinterpretation of his works. Also, they wanted to found style of his paintings in works of Herman Han. In the light of documents, it is sure that Boguszewski was not the imitator or even pupil of Han. He probably learned to paint in confraternity of painters in Lublin or Lwów. In fact, we can only proof his signature in one existing work – The entry of St. Martin into Amiens from 1628, originally from Cistercian church in Paradyż, but today exposed in Poznań cathedral. Other paintings from Paradyż Abbey, like The Heavenly Jerusalem (1628?), The Immaculate Conception (1628?) and St. Paul (1628?) and effigies of St. Mary from church in Otorów and Biechów (1632) we can include in the works of Boguszewski using the compare method. The other painting attributed by scholars to artist are fundamentally different. The iconography of his works from Paradyż were projected by the Cistercian abbot, Marek Łętowski (d. 1629). His conception for Boguszewski works was based on the instructions of Church intellectualist, like Carlo Borromeo or Gabriele Paleotti. It is very probably, that the painter, who became a priest in parish church of St. Adalbert in Poznań in 1630, was personally involved in the idea of artists working for the reform of the Church after the council of Trent.
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Wandzel, Szymon. « Maryja przeciw złu w przekazie św. Ludwika Marii Grignion de Montfort ». Łódzkie Studia Teologiczne 31, no 3 (11 octobre 2022) : 257–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.52097/lst.2022.3.257-268.

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The author tries to answer the question whether, according to St Louis Grignion de Montfort, Mary has power over demons and evil and can protect people from it. Saint Louis presents Mary as the Brave Helmswoman who resists evil and defends the Christian people. Through her living faith, her bond with the Church and the maternal mission of her Alma Mater, she also takes an active part in the work of amusement and supports those who take up arms against evil. The author notes that Mary’s role in fighting evil and helping humanity is active. Mary is constantly ready to help her children. Many Saints over the years confirm this truth, and a particular emphasis on the timeline is the figure of Saint Louis, in whose texts we can read his position confirming this thesis.
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Kwiatkowski, Dariusz. « San Giuseppe il modello della partecipazione nell’Eucaristia ». Poznańskie Studia Teologiczne, no 34 (28 août 2020) : 165–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.14746/pst.2019.34.10.

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Pope John Paul II in the encyclical Ecclesia de Eucharistia called Mary a ‘Woman of the Eucharist’. He pointed out the attitudes that can be described as Eucharistic. This article, using the principle of analogy and maintaining an appropriate balance, shows St. Joseph as a model of the Eucharistic ap- proach of every Christian. The life of Saint Joseph was characterized by deep faith and love for God and man, the ability to hear and receive the word of God and the constant willingness to sacrifice his life in order to be able to fulfill the will of God. All these qualities are needed to participate in the Eucharist in a conscious and active way. These attitudes result from participation in the Eucharist and should shape the life of every Christian. In addition, it should be emphasized that the Church introduced the name of St. Joseph to the Eucharistic prayers and ordered it to be mentioned immediately after Mary. Placing the name of St. Joseph in the most important prayer of the Holy Mass, introduces him to the heart of the Eucharist.
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McHardy, George. « John Hunter and the ‘Healing Window' in the church of St Mary Abbots, Kensington, London ». Journal of Medical Biography 28, no 2 (7 novembre 2019) : 96–101. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0967772019866519.

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During research into the reinterment in 1859 of John Hunter’s remains in Westminster Abbey, it was learnt that there was ‘a window to Hunter’s memory’ in St Mary Abbots church, Kensington, London. Research into that window shows that it in fact commemorates Hunter’s residence within the parish, and that also of two other Kensington worthies. Their place of residence is identified, Hunter’s is illustrated and a nice connexion is found with a window in Gloucester cathedral in memory of Drs Jenner and Baron.
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BUCKLE, ALEXANDRA. « An English composer in royal and aristocratic service : Robert Chirbury, c. 1380–1454 ». Plainsong and Medieval Music 15, no 2 (30 août 2006) : 109–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0961137106000350.

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Four compositions in the first layer of the Old Hall Manuscript (GB-Lbl, Add. MS 57950) are attributed to R. Chirbury (or R. Chyrbury). This article argues that the Robert Chirbury who ended his days as Dean at the Collegiate Church of St Mary, Warwick was this composer. His career included stints at the Chapel Royal and probably also earlier employment in the London diocese, as well as service in the household of Richard Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick. Moreover, this individual can be differentiated from similarly named men in the Register of the London St Nicholas Fraternity of Parish Clerks, and the assertion that the composer was employed at St George's, Windsor can be discounted.
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Jeffery, Paul. « The Church That Never Was : Wren's St Mary, and Other Projects for Lincoln's Inn Fields ». Architectural History 31 (1988) : 136. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1568539.

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Brødholt, E. T., et P. Holck. « Skeletal trauma in the burials from the royal church of St. Mary in medieval Oslo ». International Journal of Osteoarchaeology 22, no 2 (27 août 2010) : 201–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/oa.1198.

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Sobota Matejčić, Gordana. « Institute for History of Art, Zagreb ». Ars Adriatica, no 2 (1 janvier 2012) : 167. http://dx.doi.org/10.15291/ars.447.

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In 2005, during the composing of the Inventory of the Moveable Cultural Heritage of the Church and Monastery of St Francis of Assisi at Krk, three wooden statues were found in the attic. These had once belonged to a lavish Renaissance triptych at the centre of which was a figure of the Virgin (107 x 45 x 27 cm), flanked by the figures of St John the Baptist (c. 105 x 28 x 30 cm), an apostle with a book (c. 93 x 32 x 22 cm), and, in all likelihood, St James the Apostle. A trace of a small left foot in the Virgin’s lap indicates that the original composition was that of the Virgin and Child. It is highly likely that these statues originally belonged to the altar of St James which mentioned by Augustino Valier during his visitation of the Church of St Francis of Assisi in 1579 as having a pala honorifica . Harmonious proportions, fine modelling of the heads, beautifully and confidently carved drapery of the fabrics, together with almost classical gestures, all point to a good master carver who, in this case, sought inspiration in Venetian painting of the 1520s and 1530s. When attempting to find close parallels in the production of Venetian wood-carving workshops from the first half of the sixteenth century, without a doubt the best candidates are two signed statues from the workshop of Paolo Campsa de Boboti: the statue of the Risen Christ from the parish church of St Lawrence at Soave in Italy, dated to 1533, and the statue of the Virgin and Child in a private collection in Italy, dated to 1534. To these one can add a statue from the Gianfranco Luzzetti collection at Florence, which has been attributed to Campsa’s workshop. Judging from all the above, the statues from St Francis’ might be dated to the 1540s. In the parish church of Holy Trinity at Baška is a wooden triptych which, according to a nineteenth-century record, was inscribed with Campsa’s signature and the year 1514. When Bishop Stefanus David visited the Chapel of St Michael at Baška in 1685, he described in detail this wooden and carved palla on the main altar dedicated to St Michael, noting that the altar is under the patronage of the Papić family who had founded it and made considerable donations to it. The high altar in the Church of St Mary Magdalene at Porat, also on the island of Krk, has a polyptych attributed to Girolamo and Francesco da Santa Croce. Until now, it has been dated to 1556 - the year of the dedication of the altar and the church. However, more frequently than not, a number of years could pass between the furnishing of an altar and its dedication. With this in mind and having re-analyzed the paintings, the polyptych can be dated as early as the previous decade. Until now, the Renaissance statue of St Mary Magdalene (105 x 25 x 13 cm), originally part of an altar predella but today housed in the Monastery’s collection, was not discussed in the scholarly literature save for its iconography. Based on the morphological similarities between the statue of St Mary Magdalene and the three statues at Krk, it can be concluded that they were carved by the same master carver. Written sources inform us that after 1541 Paolo Campsa was no longer alive. Great differences between the works signed by Campsa have already been the subject of scholarly debate and it is known that due to high demand, his workshop included a number of highly skilled wood carvers. In the case of Krk, perhaps the master carver was an employee at Campsa’s workshop who outlived him and who, after its closure, went his own way and was considered good enough to be hired by fellow painters from the Santa Croce workshop. Installing a statue in a predella was a rare occurrence in sixteenth-century Croatia and Venice alike. Even in the case of Campsa. Reliefs were used more frequently. However, this arrangement was customary on contemporary flügelaltaren in the trans-Alpine north. It ought to be considered whether this northern altar design might provide a trail which would lead to a more specific location of a possible master carver.
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Josipović, Ivan. « Prilog Trogirskoj klesarskoj radionici ». Ars Adriatica, no 1 (1 janvier 2011) : 97. http://dx.doi.org/10.15291/ars.430.

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The author attributes the chancel screen gable from the Trogir Town Museum, discovered in the pavement of the vestibule of the destroyed pre-Romanesque hexaconchal church of St Mary at Trogir to the Trogir stonecarvers’ workshop. The arguments for such an attribution are found in the visual and stylistic analysis of the gable and in the analogies with other similar fragments of pre-Romanesque reliefs which have already been attributed to the same workshop. This demonstrates a similar concept in the layout on the gables from Trogir and Bijaći, while more obvious stylistic parallels for the Trogir gable are found on the chancel screen arches and architraves from Pađene, Brnaze, Malo polje of Trogir and Otres, but also those from Krković and Ostrovica. In addition, two fragmented reliefs which have been inserted as spolia in east wall of the parish church of St George at Pađene near Knin are also attributed to the same workshop. These fragments have been measured and photographed in more detail for the first time for this paper. The analysis of their decoration has resulted in the conclusion that these fragments belonged to a widely distributed type of chancel screen pilasters, with a somewhat more complex decoration consisting of a dense interlaced mesh of three-strand bands. Finally, the gable from the Trogir Town Museum, and other stylistically similar relief from Trogir, have been brought into a stronger connection with the church of St Mary, and its original liturgical furnishings in particular. Following from such a conclusion, as well as the fact that the same workshop produced liturgical installations in another hexaconchal church at Brnaze near Sinj, the author dates both structures to the period when the workshop was active (the first quarter of the ninth century), and places the construction of almost all Dalmatian hexaconchs in a relatively short time frame from the end of the eighth century to mid-ninth century.
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Raedts, Peter. « St Bernard of Clairvaux and Jerusalem ». Studies in Church History. Subsidia 10 (1994) : 169–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s014304590000020x.

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Although Jesus wept while mourning the inevitable destruction of the city (Luke 19. 41), and St Paul taught the Christians of Galaria to look for it not on earth, but in heaven (cf. Gal. 4.25-6), the Christian imagination has always been haunted by the city of Jerusalem. As early as the second century Melito of Sardis travelled to Jerusalem to see for himself ‘the place where these things were preached and done’. And as soon as Christianity became a licensed religion under the protection of the Emperor, Christians from all parts of the Empire began to flock to Jerusalem to see for themselves the holy sites ubi steterunt pedes eius, where once his feet stood (Ps. 132. 7) Churches were built to mark all the places mentioned in the Gospels, monasteries were founded to receive the pilgrims, and stories began to circulate about the spectacular conversions which happened to pilgrims while visiting the Holy Places, such as that of St Mary of Egypt who turned from a nymphomaniac into a desert mother on the very doorstep of the church of the Holy Sepulchre. Quite soon earnest Church Fathers like St Jerome and St Gregory of Nyssa, both of them pilgrims to Jerusalem, had to issue dire warnings that true Christianity was a matter of the heart and not of geography, and that a trip to Palestine might perhaps be helpful but certainly not necessary in order to find Christ.
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Willoughby, James. « Inhabited Sacristies in Medieval England : the Case of St Mary's, Warwick ». Antiquaries Journal 92 (11 mai 2012) : 331–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003581512000042.

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A transcript survives of the oath sworn in 1465 by the lay sacristan of the collegiate church of St Mary at Warwick on the occasion of his taking office. His duties are spelled out in detail, and include the striking requirement that he spend each night in the sacristy for the better security of the treasures. This paper prints the oath and aims to place it in its institutional context. The medieval sacristy at Warwick survives and details of the oath illuminate details of the architecture. Similar first-floor vestries are known elsewhere, and the suggestion is made that some other churches might also have had inhabited sacristies.
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Duranović, Elvir. « Sultan Sulayman’s Mosque in Jajce from its Foundation (1528) until the Second World War (1941) ». Anali Gazi Husrev-Begove biblioteke 27, no 41 (19 février 2021) : 135–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.51719/25663267.2020.27.41.135.

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After the conquest of Jajce in 1528, by order of the Ottoman rule, the former Church of St. Mary was converted into a mosque which was named after the then sultan, namely Sultan Suleyman’s Mosque or the Emperor’s Mosque. Without referring to the pre-Ottoman period of the construction and activities of St. Mary’s Church for which our literature accumulated considerable material, this paper will focus on the period of the foundation of the mosque in 1528 until the beginning of the Second World War. Based on the archival material and published sources, this paper tries to explain why St. Mary’s Church had been converted into a mosque and how that had been done. More significant events from the history of the mosque are highligted, and also imams, hatibs, muezzins and other mosque officials are portrayed chronologically to the present day. Special attention is focused on the history of Sultan Sulayman’s Mosque in the 19th century when a fire broke out at the mosque, and it has never been restored to the present day. Referring to the sources from the archives of the Islamic Community in Bosnia and Herzegovina, the author has pointed to the causes of the fact that the mosque was not restored after the fire.
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Vijgen, Jörgen. « St. Thomas Aquinas’s Postilla super Psalmos as the work of a Dominican friar and theologian at prayer ». Studium. Filosofía y Teología 24, no 48 (21 décembre 2021) : 195–217. http://dx.doi.org/10.53439/stdfyt48.24.2021.195-217.

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St. Thomas’s commentary on the Book of Psalms, known as the Postilla super Psalmos, gives us a privileged insight into the mind and heart of a Dominican friar and theologian at work and at prayer. In this contribution I will elucidate these claims on the basis of elements found in his commentary and in particular in the areas of (1) prayer and the liturgy, (2) Christ, Mary and the Church, (3) Sin and Mercy and (4) Contemplation and Preaching.
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Wizeman, William. « Re-Imaging The Marian Catholic Church ». Recusant History 28, no 3 (mai 2007) : 353–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0034193200011420.

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The late Professor Geoffrey Dickens in his book, The English Reformation, condemned the Marian church for ‘failing to discover’ the verve and creativity of the Counter-Reformation; on the other hand, Dr Lucy Wooding has praised the Marian church for its adherence to the views of the great religious reformer Erasmus and its insularity from the counter-reforming Catholicism of Europe in her book Rethinking Catholicism in Reformation England. However, by studying the Latin and English catechetical, homiletic, devotional and controversial religious texts printed during the Catholic renewal in England in the reign of Mary Tudor (1553–58) and the decrees of Cardinal Reginald Pole's Legatine Synod in London (1555–56), a very different picture emerges. Rooted in the writings of St John Fisher—which also influenced the pivotal decrees of the Council of Trent (1545–63) on justification and the Eucharist—Marian authors presented a theological synthesis that concurred with Trent's determinations. This article will focus on three pivotal Reformation controversies: the intrepretation of scripture, justification, and the Eucharist.
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Bagshaw, Steve, Richard Bryant et Michael Hare. « The Discovery of an Anglo-Saxon Painted Figure at St Mary's Church, Deerhurst, Gloucestershire ». Antiquaries Journal 86 (septembre 2006) : 66–109. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003581500000068.

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The church of St Mary at Deerhurst in Gloucestershire is well known for its Anglo-Saxon fabric and sculpture. In 1993 a painting of an Anglo-Saxon figure was discovered, and in 2002 it became possible for the authors to study the painting in detail.The painting is on one of a pair of triangular-headed stone panels set high in the internal east wall of the church. The discovery provides a significant addition to the tiny corpus of known Anglo-Saxon wall paintings. The identity of the standing, nimbed figure remains elusive, but the figure can be tentatively dated on art historical grounds to the middle to late tenth century.The authors also explore the structural context of the painting. It is suggested that in the first half of the ninth century the church had an upper floor over the central space (the present east end), and that this floor possibly extended over the whole church. At the east end, there were internal openings from this upper floor into a high-level space in the polygonal apse. At a later date two of these openings were blocked and covered by stone panels, one of which is the subject of this paper. It is possible that the panels flanked a high-level altar or an opening through which a shrine, set on a high-level floor in the apse, could be viewed.
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Andrejic, Zivojin. « Interpretation of the icon of Three-handed Virgin Mary of the St. Trinity church in Karan ». Zbornik radova Filozofskog fakulteta u Pristini, no 46-4 (2016) : 477–502. http://dx.doi.org/10.5937/zrffp46-6285.

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Morley, Beric M., et Daniel W. H. Miles. « The Nave Roof and other Timberwork at the Church of St Mary, Kempley, Gloucestershire : Dendrochronological Dating ». Antiquaries Journal 80, no 1 (septembre 2000) : 294–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003581500050265.

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A description and analysis of the early roof at Kempley was published in the Journal fifteen years ago. At that time the roof was under repair and could be examined closely. Despite alterations in the seventeenth century, it was possible to reconstruct its original form on paper (fig 1). Its construction, in oak, with simple bare-faced lap-dovetail joints, and all members either horizontal or vertical, suggested an early date. The only direct parallels are on the Continent. The trusses could be shown to be integral with the walls, and a review of the evidence for the date of the masonry structure gave four possible models, two in the eleventh century and two at a date loosely referred to as ‘around 1120’. The author expressed a preference for the later date, and the arguments that supported it. Even so, if correct, it suggested that this was the earliest nave roof surviving in Britain.
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Hooper, Carole. « The unsaintly behaviour of Mary Mackillop : her early teaching career at Portland ». History of Education Review 47, no 2 (1 octobre 2018) : 186–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/her-10-2017-0019.

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Purpose Mary Mackillop, the only Australian to have been declared a “saint” by the Roman Catholic Church, co-founded the Institute of the Sisters of St Joseph, a religious congregation established primarily to educate the poor. Prior to this, she taught at a Common School in Portland. While she was there, the headmaster was dismissed. The purpose of this paper is to examine the extent to which the narrative accounts of the dismissal, as provided in the biographies of Mary, are supported by the documentary evidence. Contemporary records of the Board of Education indicate that Mary played a more active role in the dismissal than that suggested by her biographers. Design/methodology/approach Documentary evidence, particularly the records of the Board of Education, has been used to challenge the biographical accounts of Mary Mackillop’s involvement in an incident that occurred while she was a teacher at the Portland Common School. Findings It appears that the biographers, by omitting to consider the evidence available in the records of the Board of Education, have down-played Mary Mackillop’s involvement in the events that led to the dismissal of the head teacher at Portland. Originality/value This paper uses documentary evidence to challenge the account of the Portand incident, as provided in the biographies of Mary Mackillop.
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LINDLEY, KEITH. « WHITECHAPEL INDEPENDENTS AND THE ENGLISH REVOLUTION ». Historical Journal 41, no 1 (mars 1998) : 283–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0018246x97007735.

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The existence of an Independent church at Stepney presided over by William Greenhill is already well known as too is the association of the eastern suburbs generally with religious and political radicalism in the 1640s. What is less familiar, however, is the fact that Stepney's neighbouring parish, St Mary Matfellon, Whitechapel, also came to possess an Independent church gathered under the divine Thomas Walley (or Whalley), and that prominent members of that church and their sectarian allies had for some time assumed key roles in local politics and were eventually to engineer an Independent take-over of the parish after a protracted struggle. This article will focus upon the composition of the Whitechapel Independents, the form taken by the parochial factionalism, the identities and reactions of their local opponents and the way in which events and personalities in Whitechapel related to broader religious and political themes in the capital.
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Veber, Dmitrii. « The Dedication of Churches in the Medieval Towns of Prussia ». ISTORIYA 12, no 9 (107) (2021) : 0. http://dx.doi.org/10.18254/s207987840017121-2.

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This article discusses the practice of dedicating churches to saints in cities on the territory of the state of the Teutonic Order in Prussia. Special attention is paid to three church groups — parish churches, churches owned by monastic orders — Dominicans, Franciscans, Cistercians and Augustinians — Heremites, as well as cathedrals in the capitals of the bishoprics of Kulm, Pomesan, Warmia and Sambia. Among the most popular patron saints was the Virgin Mary, which was due to her patronage of the Teutonic Order as well as the cultural influence of the Hanseatic cities, and her veneration in certain mendicant orders such as the Cistercians. Other popular saints included St Peter and St Paul, and St Nicholas, who also acted as the patron saint of merchants. St Adalbert was also worshipped locally, due to his missionary work in Prussia. Patrons of the churches were also venerated in medieval Europe and were introduced to the region during the process of Christianization.
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Massa, Mark. « On the Uses of Heresy : Leonard Feeney, Mary Douglas, and the Notre Dame Football Team ». Harvard Theological Review 84, no 3 (juillet 1991) : 325–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0017816000024044.

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On the afternoon of 6 September 1952, the readers of the Boston Pilot—the voice of the Roman Catholic archdiocese—found on the front page of their usually staid weekly the text of a trenchant letter from the Holy Office in Rome. The text, dated August 8, addressed a group of Boston Catholics who had kicked up a fuss over the ancient theological dictum, extra ecclesiam nulla salus (“outside the church there is no salvation”)—a phrase going back to St. Cyprian in the third century and one of the pillars of orthodoxy for Christian believers.
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Illampas, Rogiros, Ioannis Ioannou et Paulo B. Lourenço. « Seismic appraisal of heritage ruins : The case study of the St. Mary of Carmel church in Cyprus ». Engineering Structures 224 (décembre 2020) : 111209. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.engstruct.2020.111209.

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Damjanović, Dragan. « Polychrome Roof Tiles and National Style in Nineteenth-century Croatia ». Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 70, no 4 (1 décembre 2011) : 466–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/jsah.2011.70.4.466.

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Gothic architecture, revived and decorated with motifs borrowed from folk art, provided the foundation for the creation of a Croatian national style in the last quarter of the nineteenth century. Dragan Damjanović explains how the Viennese architect Friedrich Schmidt and his student and collaborator Herman Bollé created the signature architecture of this movement, the brilliantly colored and boldly patterned tile roofs of St. Mark's church (restored 1875–82), Zagreb cathedral (restored 1878–1902), and the church of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Marija Bistrica (restored 1878–85). In Polychrome Roof Tiles and National Style in Nineteenth-century Croatia, this architecture is placed in the context of the Gothic Revival in the Austro-Hungarian monarchy and the collecting and analysis of traditional textiles by the amateur ethnographer Felix (Srećko) Lay.
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