Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Hace 4 días · Godstow is about three miles from Eynsham, and there was no other abbey of nuns in Oxfordshire. Of one abbess he tells how she washed the limbs of lepers, anticipating one of the best-known passages in the life of St. Hugh. In the year 1281 the king ordered the sheriff to arrest the abbess and produce her before him at the next ...

  2. Hace 3 días · According to the current abbess, Benedictine Mother Cecilia Snell, as told in a biography published by her community, the future Sister Wilhelmina had a mystical experience at her first Communion at age 9 wherein Jesus invited her to be his. “She saw something of him at her first Communion.

  3. Hace 5 días · Roughly four years later, on the Solemnity of the Ascension in the Latin Rite, the abbess and sisters decided to move her body to a final resting place inside their monastery chapel, a long-standing custom for founders and foundresses.

  4. Hace 5 días · Mills built on the Thames by the abbess of Godstow in the early 13th century and by the abbot of Abingdon c. 1344 were also blamed for damaging Castle mills. In 1738 the tenant of Rewley was accused of diverting water away from Castle mills.

  5. Hace 4 días · Book: English Benedictine Nuns in Exile in the Seventeenth Century. Laurence Lux-Sterritt. Manchester, Manchester University Press, 2017, ISBN: 978-1-5261-1002-2; 320pp.; Price: £75.00. Reviewer: Kristof Smeyers. University of Antwerp. Citation:

  6. Hace 3 días · About 1218 Reynold de Braose granted it to Henry of St. Valery, a relation by marriage, who gave it c. 1230 to Godstow abbey (Oxon.). The abbey's estate was augmented c . 1260 by William Berneval, (fn. 112) and in 1361 Buddington was described as 2 yardlands held of Bramber rape.

  7. Hace 3 días · Bramber church was surrendered by the abbot of St. Florent to the abbey of Fècamp, who in return gave up all claim to the church of Beeding (ibid. 405); apparently W. de Braose recovered the church from Fécamp and restored it to St. Florent (ibid. 38).