Under his reforms, only monasteries and convents that were involved in teaching or charity work had a right to exist. |
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It was the linen of nuns and convents rather than of brides and marriage beds. |
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Why are Germany's convents and monasteries marketing themselves as New Age spiritual retreats for paying customers? |
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Much could be written about her extraordinary life as Mother Superior of her convents at Bingen and Rupertsberg. |
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Soon the effects of the new teaching were widely felt, with monks and nuns leaving their monasteries and convents. |
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Now, in this flurry of activity, I was e-mailing convents and monasteries like mad. |
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The churches, convents, and all the dwellings of the former patricians were in ruins. |
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The seminaries were full, the convents bursting, parochial schools multiplying. |
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Feudalism was abolished along with the Inquisition and the Church's military orders, and two-thirds of monasteries and convents were dissolved. |
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A number of priests and nuns were killed, and churches and convents were torched. |
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In order to fulfill a wider role, to preach and teach, the Franciscans needed books, churches, and convents. |
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Families whose daughters entered convents often found themselves on the horns of a dilemma. |
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Pioneering work in the diocese at this time was extremely difficult, setting out lands for the building of schools, convents etc. |
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Well today there wouldn't be 50 people entering novitiates or convents or monasteries probably around Australia I think. |
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Extra daughters were sent off to live in respectable refinement at convents, so that the family would not have to dower them as lavishly and divide the family patrimony. |
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In a couple of convents situated close to the biennale headquarters in Giardini, Campagnol uncovered more secrets. |
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The prolonged independence struggle in Peru and the reform tendencies and anticlericalism of the new republican regime further affected the convents. |
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Eventually, he placed a ban on the Augustinians, forbidding them from building any new convents or churches without express permission of the bishop. |
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The martyrology is compiled in the form of a calendar with names to be read out each day by such communities as monasteries, convents and seminaries. |
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In ten short years, several historic monasteries and convents have been restored to the Orthodox church and have welcomed hundreds of young novices. |
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Are there any convents or nunneries for non-religious people? |
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Luxembourg has also traditionally been the home of a great number of convents and religious orders, a number that has dwindled since the last century. |
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As demonstrated at the beginning of this article, their support for convents had allowed female monasticism to flourish in the early-modern period. |
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Hosts of rebellious peasants traversed the country from end to end, furiously attacked castles, churches, and convents, and murdered noblemen and ecclesiastics. |
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This article examines the contentious and frequently litigious relationship between convents and the families of professed nuns in early-modern Spain. |
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By 1939, forty-four parishes and convents in the Pittsburgh diocese offered weekly novenas of their own. |
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The Spanish colonists constructed many churches and convents, as well as a cathedral, university and Archbishopric. |
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Buddhist convents and temples that were exempt from state taxes beforehand were targeted by the state for taxation. |
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Concurrent with the spread of Sufi convents in Iran, a Shiitisation of Sufi beliefs occurred regarding the theory of sainthood in particular. |
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Not a city was without its cathedral, surrounded by its succursal churches, its monasteries, and convents. |
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The All Saints Sisters of the Poor, with convents in Catonsville, Maryland and elsewhere use an elaborated version of the Anglican Daily Office. |
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During a tour of Thuringia, he became enraged at the widespread burning of convents, monasteries, bishops' palaces, and libraries. |
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During this period, monasteries and convents, such as those at Shaftesbury and Shrewsbury, were prominent features of society providing lodging, hospitals and education. |
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Matilda had been educated in a sequence of convents, however, and may well have taken the vows to formally become a nun, which formed an obstacle to the marriage progressing. |
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Some of the royalist ladies installed themselves in convents in Holland and France that offered safe haven for indigent and travelling nobles and allies. |
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The deceased nun's funeral was held at Kizhathadiyoor near Pala on Saturday morning, attending by a large number of mourners, clergy and nuns from different convents. |
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The dreadful punishment of immuring persons, or burying them alive in the walls of convents, was undoubtedly sometimes resorted to by monastic communities. |
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Housed in madrasas, mosques, Sufi convents, mausolea, and hospitals, these libraries contained works on the religious and rational sciences as well as literature and poetry. |
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