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priorate การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • It was during his priorate that the original community slowly began to expand.
  • He died sometime after 8 April 1278 when he was once more unsuccessful in regaining the priorate.
  • In 1363 he held the priorate of the quarter of S . Spirito from May & ndash; June.
  • The church, again mentioned in 1178, was a priorate in 1228, and thus no more a Benedictine possession.
  • After three years he was, upon his own urgent request, relieved from the priorate and returned to Saint-Germain-des-Pr閟.
  • The 235-foot crossing tower was begun in 1433, although preparations had already been made during Chillenden's priorate, when the piers had been reinforced.
  • In order to be free from the control of the new priorate, the people of Meda built another church dedicated to St . Mary and St . Sebastian.
  • In 1089 the diocese of Jaca gave the church to monastery of San Juan de la Pe馻, which, for some time, converted it into a priorate.
  • During his tenure of the priorate a cloister was built, silver chalices and a silver processional cross were purchased, and many books were added to the library.
  • Most of the work was done during the priorate of Thomas Chillenden ( 1391 1411 ) : Chillenden also built a new choir screen at the east end of the nave, into which Eastry's existing screen was incorporated.
  • Benedict also granted Cardinal de Malsec certain benefices, the Archdiaconate of Lantario in the Church of Toulouse, the Priorate of Montalto in the diocese of Auch, and the Provostship of Lesinhanno ( Lesignan ) in the diocese of Narbonne.
  • If the statement of Maurice Chauncy, a contemporary of Batmanson's, that his successor Houghton, who was executed for refusing the oath of supremacy, died on 4 May 1535,  in the fifth year of his priorate,  be correct, Batmanson must have resigned the office some months before his death.
  • During his priorate at Arnheim he had the happiness and honour of " converting " one of his friends and fellow-students at Paris, Gerard Groote ( the future founder of the Brothers of the Common Life ), whom he attracted into his Charterhouse and directed for three years . " Moreover by his spiritual writings . . . he exercised on the whole school of Deventer and Windesheim the influence of a recognized master . " He was to this extent the organizer of the great movement of the Catholic Renaissance, which, initiated at Windesheim and in the convents of the Low Countries, went on developing throughout the fifteenth century, finding its definite expression in the Council of Trent.