infirmarian การใช้
- For the next ten years she filled the post of infirmarian.
- Following the capture of the city by Crusaders, the order became a military as well as infirmarian order.
- She was assigned to the office of infirmarian ( nurse ) for the community, which she carried out diligently.
- He was accepted as a Redemptorist lay brother serving his congregation as sacristan, gardener, ostiarius, infirmarian, and tailor.
- In addition to the teaching staff and students, the seminary had a medical practitioner, one porter, one sacristan and one infirmarian
- The descriptions are nothing without their practical counterpart, and Hildegard was thought to have been an infirmarian in the monastery where she lived.
- Because monasteries were located in rural areas the infirmarian was also responsible for the care of lacerations, fractures, dislocations, and burns.
- In 1985 Brother Francis Garate ( 1857-1929 ) was beatified by the infirmarian at the College in A Guarda from 1877 to 1888.
- An infirmarian treated not only other monks but pilgrims, workers, and the poor men, women, and children in the monastery's hospice.
- Along with typical medical practice the text also hints that the youth ( such as Hildegard ) would have received hands-on training from the previous infirmarian.
- After having served for some time as a gardener and cook in the friary at Viterbo, he was sent to Tolfa, a town not far distant from Civitavecchia, to become the infirmarian.
- At the zenith of its wealth just before the Reformation it had the sixth largest monastic income in England, and had 120 monks, an almoner, an infirmarian, a sacristan and a cellarer.
- After professing solemn vows in 1945, Berry was sent to a school on the Monte Mario in Rome, where she taught English and music and was the infirmarian for the religious community and students.
- The three flee and are rescued by Ursca, the infirmarian, who takes them to an abandoned, lightning-struck barn where in the rafters is a snow-sick Marna, apparently alive.
- The hood of the cowl is folded over the face and the body is then lowered into the ground where it is received into the arms of an infirmarian, who then arranges it in a final loving service.
- Internally in the convents, the nuns would have an infirmary and the nun placed in charge was the " infirmarian " but this was for the nuns only and did not cater for the wider population.
- The heyday of the Abbey was during the fourteenth century when there were but six canons, though the Rule required in addition to the abbot, prior and cellarer, a cantor, sacrist and kitchener, refectorian, infirmarian, almoner, master of novices and guest master, which according to Bedingfield, may have been posts filled in rotation or plurality.
- There are no exterior shots at all in the film; instead, the presence of an extra-monastic world is conveyed obliquely, by the background cooing of a wood pigeon, or by the green, pulsating body of a tiny crouching frog, cupped in the hand of an infirmarian, and brought in to give pleasure to the dying Th閞鑣e ."