「abbey」の共起表現一覧(2語右で並び替え)13ページ目
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He was educated at the Christian Brothers, | Abbey Grammar School in Newry. |
was educated at St Patrick's College, Armagh, | Abbey Grammar School, Newry and at the University of |
It contains Whitehall, Westminster | Abbey, Westminster School, the Tate Gallery, Dolphin |
went to St Thomas a Becket Primary School and | Abbey Wood School, and Olympic runner Jennifer Stout |
y education at Ballyvarley School and then the | Abbey Primary School, Newry. |
layer Eugene Cruft was educated at Westminster | Abbey Choir School, Westminster School, and as a Bou |
Secondary education is provided by the | Abbey Vocational School, Donegal Town, while a small |
student-run newspaper/newsboard of Westminster | Abbey Choir School. |
ve), were taken from the buildings of Downside | Abbey and School. |
overnors of Westminster School and Westminster | Abbey Choir School. |
July 1953 in Coventry, and educated at Whitley | Abbey Comprehensive School. |
Hampton & Richmond Borough F.C. also attended | Abbey Wood School. |
st by several School buildings and Westminster | Abbey Choir School; and the North by the archway to |
He spent some time in the sister | abbey in Scotland but, after two decades of communit |
is career as a Benedictine monk at Dunfermline | Abbey, Fife, Scotland. |
at he was subsequently reburied in Dunfermline | Abbey, in Scotland. |
the head of the monastic community of Culross | Abbey, Fife, Scotland. |
archaeological excavations of the Augustinian | abbey, a second dugout was discovered under Zonnebek |
ut went to Alexander McLeod Primary School and | Abbey Wood Secondary School. |
Cwm yr | Abbey Stream Section is a Site of Special Scientific |
The | abbey was secularised in 1802. |
Control of the | abbey was secularized in the 16th century and after |
The | abbey was secularized the same year; the nuns were p |
ting the church of Kippen to the Cambuskenneth | Abbey to secure themselves a place of burial. |
ft was known to travel frequently to Celbridge | Abbey to see her. |
the death of Begu herself, the monks of Whitby | Abbey were seeking holy relics to replace those of H |
, and became a priest at the Premonstratensian | Abbey in Seelau in 1728, then traveled to Vienna to |
The west front of Woburn | Abbey, as seen approaching the house. |
Seitenstetten | Abbey (Stift Seitenstetten) is a Benedictine monaste |
1547 at the Dissolution of the Monasteries the | abbey was seized and given to the Moore family, and |
When the | abbey was seized on behalf of Henry VIII during the |
Hadrian, abbot of a Neapolitan | abbey, was selected, but he considered himself unwor |
s of expanding many business ideas to make the | abbey more self-sufficient. |
He founded Rebais | Abbey, and sent missionaries to areas that were stil |
f the Abbeydale valley between Archer Road and | Abbey Lane, separated by the River Sheaf and the rai |
s, Archbishop of Paris, he left the Cistercian | abbey of Sept-Fonds, to which he had retired, and se |
Lynn | Abbey (born September 18, 1948; birth name Marilyn L |
A monk from Glastonbury | Abbey, he served as Bishop of Wells beginning in 956 |
Simon was a monk of Melrose | Abbey, and served there until he moved to become Abb |
Westminster | Abbey, which served as St Peter's Cathedral of the D |
Since the Reformation the | Abbey has served as a parish church in the Church of |
Abbey Road Session Pops Orchestra - brass | |
The second CD, | Abbey Road Sessions Part 2, had three more tracks an |
The | Abbey Road Sessions EP is an EP by the band Embrace. |
The | Abbey Road Sessions is a 2011 studio album by Ian Sh |
In 1523, the town and | abbey were set ablaze by the Earl of Surrey. |
heme for glazing the choir windows at Dunblane | Abbey (1913); several windows in the chapel of the O |
ding 83 macaques from Longleat, 32 from Woburn | Abbey, and several different species from Ravensden |
title of Duke of Bedford, together with Woburn | Abbey and several other estates which went with it, |
The | abbey was severely damaged during the second half of |
It also brought the | Abbey National share exchange centre to the area alo |
Abbey stated she has loved Eurovision since childhoo | |
eign, a great fire broke out and destroyed the | abbey, so she had the foundations reconstructed. |
She became a nun at Chelles | Abbey, where she was eventually made abbess. |
In addition she angered the monks of Buckfast | Abbey when she called on them to stop selling Buckfa |
ndor discovers them and transports them to his | abbey where she can recover. |
recorded that centuries ago monks from Watton | Abbey pastured sheep around the village and could re |
In 1914, Whitby | Abbey was shelled by German battlecruisers Von der T |
During World War I the | abbey provided shelter to many refugees from the reg |
was held to celebrate the refoundation of the | abbey of Sherbone, and a collection of essays, St Wu |
The Peace | Abbey, of Sherborn, MA, awarded Alex Pacheco with th |
daughter of David Crosbie (d.1717), of Ardfert | Abbey, High Sheriff of Co. Kerry, by his wife jane, |
Substantial parts of the | abbey remain, showing close links with other abbeys |
th century as a subordinate house to Haughmond | Abbey (near Shrewsbury). |
n has a church called St Peter's Church and an | abbey called Sibton Abbey. |
g, his brother John Scrivener purchased Sibton | Abbey in Sibton, Suffolk, where Scrivener family des |
in 1173 to the granting of independence to the | Abbey of Siegburg. |
s Resignalling scheme) and towards Shrewsbury, | Abbey Foregate signal box. |
The town's dependence on the | Abbey was signalled by its decline after the Abbey w |
The charter of the | abbey was signed on February 22, 1100. |
The | abbey owns significant artworks and artifacts, inclu |
The | abbey had, since 10 December 1836, brewed a witbier |
Initially it was made by the | abbey but since 1959, the cheese is no longer made b |
At the Dissolution Henry VIII gave the | abbey to Sir Thomas Leigh, who pulled off the roof a |
estcott and Captain Burges, and in Westminster | Abbey to Sir Eyre Coote. |
sequent generations: William Rosewell of Forde | Abbey (1563-1593); Sir Henry Rosewell (1593-1656); a |
That | abbey of Sithiu became part of the Order of Saint Be |
urce of water for the monks living in Jedburgh | Abbey which sits behind the river. |
n Public house is less that 300 yards from the | Abbey Arms, situated on the corner of Abbey Road and |
The ruined remains of Barking | Abbey are situated in Barking in the London Borough |
The | abbey is situated on a peninsula in the Danube, on t |
e Anglican church of St. Margaret, Westminster | Abbey is situated in the grounds of Westminster Abbe |
The | abbey necrology situates her tombstone next to the c |
The cathedral became an | abbey again six years later. |
By the time of Edward the Confessor, the | abbey owned slightly more than half the town; the re |
one Park and Rowley Fields, Westcotes, most of | Abbey and small parts of Latimer and Castle. |
The monks at nearby Kirkstead | Abbey were smelting iron from around 1160, the rest |
ss, Busho Bruno and Abbot Altmann of Ebersberg | Abbey were so badly injured that they did not surviv |
St Felix of Burgundy founded an | abbey near Soham around 630 AD but it was destroyed |
olution of the Monasteries belonged to Langley | Abbey, and sold two years later to George Proctor to |
the 1920s, when some of the estates of Coombe | Abbey were sold off and people began to settle in th |
The estate including the site of the | abbey was sold by the Crown to Robert Brandling in 1 |
om; but the former baronial seat of Vale Royal | Abbey was sold in 1947. |
It did: when the | abbey was sold, the part of the roof went to Cilcain |
At the end of the war, the | abbey houses soldiers of the Red Army, and then a Ru |
Joining the Benedictine Order, he entered the | Abbey of Solesmes in 1842, and was collaborator of A |
An Entombment at the | Abbey of Solesmes (1494-98) is attributed to him. |
the local lords, belonging to the lands of the | abbey of Solignac, it was the symbol of the feudal p |
his stewardship his often financially troubled | abbey remained solvent (a difficult task given the s |
eft over from cultivation by the monks at Dore | Abbey), and some villagers still have commoner's rig |
Recently the | abbey had some wind turbines built, as part of their |
The | Abbey's main gatehouse, which gave access to the clo |
Straide | Abbey has some interesting carved reliefs on its rui |
The | Abbey, Ditcheat, Somerset: attributed, refronting an |
The fortunes of the | abbey suffered somewhat through the English invasion |
ment or storage, the other carrying water from | Abbey Mills south to the river at Beckton, and impro |
en green spaces, though the area around Merton | Abbey and South Wimbledon is more downmarket. |
orm part of the Grange pertaining to Muchelney | Abbey; the South wing was probably added by Revd. |
79 Richter served as organist at Heiligenkreuz | Abbey in southern Austria. |
ntury to educate novices from every Cistercian | abbey in southwest France. |
is in the 1128 foundation charter for Waverley | Abbey (sometimes spelt Waverly), where it was called |
1963 he entered the Trappists at St. Joseph's | Abbey in Spencer, Massachusetts, where he served in |
iest, Siward by name, who kept a school in the | abbey of SS Peter and Paul at Shrewsbury. |
He founded the | abbey of St Vincent, Metz. |
Norman Conquest by Richard Fitz Turold to the | Abbey of St Mary de Valle near Bayeux intending that |
850 as a Benedictine priory, affiliated to the | Abbey of St Boniface in Munich. |
Soon after his return to Italy, he founded the | Abbey of St Andrew in Vercelli, his home town. |
The Roman Catholic | Abbey of St Mary and St Petroc, formerly belonging t |
Adam de Hereford had bestowed the lands on the | Abbey of St Thomas, along with Wochtred (Oughter Ard |
In 1108 he retired into the | abbey of St Victor, where he resumed his lectures. |
Paisley | Abbey and St Giles' Cathedral, Edinburgh, are the on |
Linchehou, when it was part of the land of the | Abbey of St Peter of Gloucester. |
ford and received the habit at the Benedictine | abbey of St Gregory, Downside, in 1929. |
was educated for a career in the church at the | abbey of St Riquier and was one of its most brillian |
The Tyttenhanger estate was owned by the | Abbey of St Albans until the Dissolution of the Mona |
After his death, Clovis was put to rest in the | Abbey of St Genevieve in Paris. |
Abbot of the | Abbey of St Werburgh, Chester, he became Bishop of S |
s may represent monks or lay brothers from the | Abbey of St Werburgh. |
rch of St Margaret of Antioch was given to the | Abbey of St Jacut-de-la-Mer in Brittany between 1086 |
stonework salvaged from the Norman Benedictine | Abbey of St Peter at Jumieges and the Grande Maison |
The | abbey of St Mary de Pratis, Leicester held considera |
s name from its proximity to the church of the | Abbey of St Augustine (St Augustine the Great), whic |
t was founded in 1207 or 1208 as a cell of the | Abbey of St Mary de Pratis ("St Mary in the Meadows" |
In 1605 he joined the Benedictine Order at the | Abbey of St Justina, Padua, taking the religious nam |
h a Benedictine prior and seven monks from the | abbey of St Nicholas at Angers, France. |
England and nailed to the doors of Westminster | Abbey and St Paul's Cathedral. |
The | Abbey of St Mary and St Petroc is an abbey in Bodmin |
owerful baron Hugh Kyvelioc who gave it to the | Abbey of St Werburgh in 1170-1173. |
d burial registers of the collegiate church or | abbey of St Peter, Westminster, Harleian Society, re |
o a larger area of land granted by Offa to the | Abbey of St Albans in 793. |
ntly the manor of Granborough was owned by the | abbey at St Albans, though in the Dissolution of the |
his life he spent in literary pursuits at the | Abbey of St-Denis near Paris, where he died. |
stanced in it as spurious some charters in the | Abbey of St-Denis. |
Gallen was often at odds with the neighboring | Abbey of St. Gall). |
King oversaw the demolition of the | abbey of St. Francis, which had being founded in the |
In 1721 he went to the | Abbey of St. Gall to study Oriental languages, but w |
The Benedictine | Abbey of St. Trudpert (de:St. |
oduced about 872-883 in the scriptorium of the | Abbey of St. Gall, Switzerland, under the direction |
He was buried in the | Abbey of St. Victor, Paris. |
The first monks may came from the | Abbey of St. Benignus at Dijon. |
In 1637 he followed a call to the | abbey of St. Jacob in Mainz, where he served as prio |
The manor of Everdon was granted to the | abbey of St. Mary of Bernay, Eure, in Normandy, some |
lt of the rebellion against Charles V, the old | Abbey of St. Bavo was dissolved. |
then started to study catholic theology at the | abbey of St. Ottilien. |
e lady Laverine, or Leofrine, his wife, to the | abbey of St. Edmund's in Bury in about 963. |
e, called Molana, founded a little monastery - | Abbey of St. Molanfide - on an island called Dair In |
he received the archdiaconate of Padua and the | Abbey of St. Crisogonus in Zadar. |
He entered the | Abbey of St. Boniface at Munich, which belonged to t |
the early ferries being run by monks from the | Abbey of St. Werburgh. |
He is buried in the | Abbey of St. Victor in Paris by a fellow exile and v |
the south end whereof was sometime a priory or | abbey of St. Saviour, called Bermond's Eye in Southw |
defended his claims to the territories of the | abbey of St. Vincent de Lucq and the monastery of St |
h century, was a Benedictine monastery, Chimay | Abbey or St. Monegonde's Abbey (Abbaye de Ste. |
oved during Norman incursions and moved to the | Abbey of St. Medard in Soissons, where it remains. |
Herulph was a Benedictine of the | Abbey of St. Gall and Bishop of Langres of the eight |
the | Abbey of St. Sauve de Valenciennes (ninth century), |
the abbot, monks, and nuns at the Benedictine | Abbey of St. Michael's in the town of Schleswig, who |
Eastminster (The | Abbey of St. Mary de Graces) was a Cistercian abbey |
shop of London in 674, founded the Benedictine | Abbey of St. Peter of Chertsey in 666, and Frithuwal |
Westvleteren | Abbey or St. Sixtus' Abbey, Westvleteren, which belo |
Poppo also received in 1023 the | Abbey of St. Maximin at Trier. |
Clark, James Midgley, The | Abbey of St. Gall as a Centre of Literature and Art, |
Westminster | Abbey and St. Margaret's, Westminster |
Chronicles of the | abbey of St. Maixent (pub. |
piety, Hugh was in constant conflict with the | abbey of St. Maixent. |
nals written in the early tenth century at the | Abbey of St. Vaast in Arras. |
by Bishop Leo Haid in 1876, it is the daughter | abbey to St. Vincent's Abbey in Latrobe, Pennsylvani |
hedral in a Norman design based heavily on the | Abbey of St. Etienne in Caen, of which he had previo |
t was also made in 1530 to dissolve the famous | Abbey of St. Gall, which was a state of the Holy Rom |
1070 AD: Arnold of Soissons founded the | abbey of St. Peter in Oudenburg |
St. Lambrecht's | Abbey (Stift St. Lambrecht) is a Benedictine monaste |
another hide at 'Doversele' to the Benedictine | Abbey of St. Peter de Castellion of Conches in Norma |
ll's and Tuotilo's tropes at the Irish-founded | Abbey of St. Gall. |
Many German churches, including the former | Abbey of St. Blasius in the Black Forest and the chu |
House of Thurn and Taxis received the Imperial | Abbey of St. Emmeram and associated territories in R |
He studied at the | Abbey of St. Vincent in Latrobe and there became a B |
ried in a small silk purse by the Abbot of the | Abbey of St. Enda. |
hias the Apostle's remains are interred in the | abbey of St. Matthias, Trier, Germany, brought there |
In 1152 he sent some of his daughters into the | Abbey of St. Maria in Andernach. |
, Hothorpe was then under the ownership of the | Abbey of St. Edmundsbury, but by the time of Henry I |
ian who governed the numerous religious of the | Abbey of St. Victor at Marseilles, dedicated most of |
The end came for the great | Abbey of St. Mary of Jedburgh in 1560 and the coming |
Warin died in 984 and was buried in the | Abbey of St. Martin. |
Morphia was buried at the | abbey of St. Mary Josaphat, just outside of Jerusale |
In 782 he became Abbot of the | Abbey of St. Gall, where he established a library. |
The | abbey of St. Winoc was destroyed in 1789, and only p |
fts from popes, kings, queens, and nobles, the | Abbey of St. Victor was soon richly endowed. |
magne made him Imperial Abbot and Abbot of the | Abbey of St.-Denis in Paris where he died in 814. |
Their ground is the | Abbey Moor Stadium. |
The chemical company initially used the | abbey as staff accommodation and then, from 1954 to |
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