Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
A misericord pushed in behind the ear while he slept.
Additionally, there is one 19th century misericord on a priests seat.
He seized the misericord with his free hand.
Each monk would be regularly sent either to the misericord or to the refectory.
The carving of the misericord seats is exceptionally fine.
The misericord of the dragon also has some lovely frog carvings for its supporters.
At Westminster Abbey, the misericord was constructed sometime between 1230 and 1270.
In churches it may have a projection called a misericord, which offers some support to a person standing in front when the seat is folded.
Misericord: Thin dagger intended to penetrate joints in armor.
No fame of them the world permits to be; Misericord and Justice both disdain them.
He recoiled when he saw Sir Roger's glaive and misericord.
Like the verger, my new guide raised the six heavy wood seats against the pulpitum to show off the 14th-century misericord carvings.
A message from the nuns, a message from the Sisters of Misericord."
When he turned it sidewise to the light he could already see the thick, gross profile leaning out like a devil from a misericord.
He rummaged in his saddlebags and, besides some homely equipment like a jar of oil, turned up an extra misericord.
In the mid-fourteenth century a misericord at Gloucester cathedral, England shows two young men playing a ball game.
This is much the case at Wells, where none of the misericord carvings is directly based on a Biblical story.
Misericord (room)
"The misericord," de Beq said flatly.
In another there is in fact no seat as such, rather like a monk's misericord, a chair that is not a chair (Fig. 7).
Often the hinged seat will have a misericord (small wooden seat) on the underside on which he can lean while standing during the long services.
In her right hand was a rapier, and in the left a misericord, one of the thin elongated daggers used by plate-armored combatants.
Also of note is the detail that a steel misericord attached to a wooden effigy of Edward Estur was found shattered after her disappearance.
He wasn't the one who'd whittled this dagger; he wasn't the one who'd given it the highfalutin name of a "misericord."
Voices I heard, and every one appeared To supplicate for peace and misericord The Lamb of God who takes away our sins.
While in 1326, he buries his misericorde in the herb garden.
In 2008, she released her 3rd album "Misericorde".
She is best known as the foundress of the Sisters of Misericorde.
The Misericorde Sisters were not well liked by the Montreal community.
Misericorde - Humanities and central administration (including the famous Senate room)
The misericorde, also called "dagger of mercy" or basilard, was used to give the coup de grace.
A misericorde with an ivy-root handle.
I've even-God forgive me-learned to live after a fashion with using the misericorde, though my personal preference for the act is a pistol.
Chapelle de la Misericorde, built in 1639, one of the oldest buildings in the principality.
French Soldier O, prenez misericorde!
Their hobnailed sandals (caligae) were also an effective weapon against a fallen enemy (cf. the mediaeval misericorde).
O, prenez misericorde; ayez pitie de moi!
The Congregation of the Sisters of Misericorde is described by the Catholic Encyclopedia:
It was only a short Misericorde, that little dagger which a warrior takes into battle to dispatch his victims if they are too far gone for salvation and yet not dead.
The Scarborough Hospital was founded as Scarborough General Hospital by the Sisters of Misericorde in 1956.
The town was also famous for its Chapelle Marie la Misericorde, a luxurious church in which Mobutu buried his first wife Mama Mobutu.
In 1853 the Misericorde Sisters built a convent on the corner of Dorchester Boulevard and Saint-André Street and she lived there the remainder of her life.
After his defeat, she slays him with a misericorde, fulfilling the promise made by his real daughter and dying herself from the wounds she received fighting Cecily and Aria.
The jupon is confined to the hips by a horizontal baldric of square plates of metal richly chased and linked together, to which are attached the sword and misericorde.
Andrew Picard - The writer of "Hue: Death of a City," the book that illustrates the Misericorde Hospital Massacre and assigns blame on Ben Tyson.
Her legacy lives on in the works of the Sisters of Marie-Josephe and of the Misericorde, and in the thousands of Lay Marianists all over the world.
MISERICORDE, n. A dagger which in mediaeval warfare was used by the foot soldier to remind an unhorsed knight that he was mortal.
Beginning January 17, 1848, the eight founders of the Misericorde Sisters, including Cadron-Jetté, commenced practical training in midwifery under Dr Eugène-Hercule Trudele, a young obstetrician.
In 1848, she took religious vows, along with several other women, and founded a Roman Catholic religious institute known as the Sisters of Misericorde, dedicated to the care of unwed mothers and their children.
The Sisters of Misericorde were a religious congregation founded by Marie-Rosalie Cadron-Jetté (1794 - 1864) in Montreal, Quebec, in 1848 and was dedicated to nursing the poor and needy.
Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
Of the 120 canons, 116 are based on the Miserere.
Then again they got them to their knees and sang the Miserere.
There is also an abundance of sacred musical influence at play in the Miserere.
The monks sang the "Miserere" while they went in procession to the new fire.
The performers may not be quite homeless these days, and the Miserere is hardly an opera.
If it ever be a good thing to take such despondency to heart, the Miserere is the right music, and a cathedral a fit scene.
Western Market is also a former name for Plaza Miserere.
Miserere is an album released by Zucchero in 1992.
The Tenebrae service where the Miserere would be sung normally began at around 3am.
In 1997 the Plaza Miserere station was declared a national historic monument.
He exhibited his cycle Miserere in 1948.
Górecki's motto and turn are essential motivic elements in the Miserere.
It was Peacock's idea to stage an elongated version of the Miserere.
Four or five priests and as many choristers were singing Miserere before the high altar when I went in.
Lost works include a Miserere (?
The Miserere itself is presumed lost.
Non in Pratis is the second of two introduzioni to come before the lost Miserere.
In 1855 he made his debut as a composer in a "Miserere" for six voices, with high acclaim.
The plaza lies on the former site of a mansion known as the Quinta de Miserere.
The installation piece,inspired by Allegri's 17th century choral work Miserere.
Indeed it would be difficult not to understand the Miserere, which I take to be the composition of an atheist.
Henry Górecki dedicated his Miserere to the city of Bydgoszcz.
He retired from the combats in Miserere, and waged urban warfare from the buildings of the city.
Allegri's Miserere is one of the most often-recorded examples of late Renaissance music.
In 1992 Fornaciari released the album Miserere.
A misericord pushed in behind the ear while he slept.
Additionally, there is one 19th century misericord on a priests seat.
He seized the misericord with his free hand.
Each monk would be regularly sent either to the misericord or to the refectory.
The carving of the misericord seats is exceptionally fine.
The misericord of the dragon also has some lovely frog carvings for its supporters.
At Westminster Abbey, the misericord was constructed sometime between 1230 and 1270.
In churches it may have a projection called a misericord, which offers some support to a person standing in front when the seat is folded.
Misericord: Thin dagger intended to penetrate joints in armor.
No fame of them the world permits to be; Misericord and Justice both disdain them.
He recoiled when he saw Sir Roger's glaive and misericord.
Like the verger, my new guide raised the six heavy wood seats against the pulpitum to show off the 14th-century misericord carvings.
A message from the nuns, a message from the Sisters of Misericord."
When he turned it sidewise to the light he could already see the thick, gross profile leaning out like a devil from a misericord.
He rummaged in his saddlebags and, besides some homely equipment like a jar of oil, turned up an extra misericord.
In the mid-fourteenth century a misericord at Gloucester cathedral, England shows two young men playing a ball game.
This is much the case at Wells, where none of the misericord carvings is directly based on a Biblical story.
Misericord (room)
"The misericord," de Beq said flatly.
In another there is in fact no seat as such, rather like a monk's misericord, a chair that is not a chair (Fig. 7).
Often the hinged seat will have a misericord (small wooden seat) on the underside on which he can lean while standing during the long services.
In her right hand was a rapier, and in the left a misericord, one of the thin elongated daggers used by plate-armored combatants.
Also of note is the detail that a steel misericord attached to a wooden effigy of Edward Estur was found shattered after her disappearance.
He wasn't the one who'd whittled this dagger; he wasn't the one who'd given it the highfalutin name of a "misericord."
Voices I heard, and every one appeared To supplicate for peace and misericord The Lamb of God who takes away our sins.
While in 1326, he buries his misericorde in the herb garden.
In 2008, she released her 3rd album "Misericorde".
She is best known as the foundress of the Sisters of Misericorde.
The Misericorde Sisters were not well liked by the Montreal community.
Misericorde - Humanities and central administration (including the famous Senate room)
The misericorde, also called "dagger of mercy" or basilard, was used to give the coup de grace.
A misericorde with an ivy-root handle.
I've even-God forgive me-learned to live after a fashion with using the misericorde, though my personal preference for the act is a pistol.
Chapelle de la Misericorde, built in 1639, one of the oldest buildings in the principality.
French Soldier O, prenez misericorde!
Their hobnailed sandals (caligae) were also an effective weapon against a fallen enemy (cf. the mediaeval misericorde).
O, prenez misericorde; ayez pitie de moi!
The Congregation of the Sisters of Misericorde is described by the Catholic Encyclopedia:
It was only a short Misericorde, that little dagger which a warrior takes into battle to dispatch his victims if they are too far gone for salvation and yet not dead.
The Scarborough Hospital was founded as Scarborough General Hospital by the Sisters of Misericorde in 1956.
The town was also famous for its Chapelle Marie la Misericorde, a luxurious church in which Mobutu buried his first wife Mama Mobutu.
In 1853 the Misericorde Sisters built a convent on the corner of Dorchester Boulevard and Saint-André Street and she lived there the remainder of her life.
After his defeat, she slays him with a misericorde, fulfilling the promise made by his real daughter and dying herself from the wounds she received fighting Cecily and Aria.
The jupon is confined to the hips by a horizontal baldric of square plates of metal richly chased and linked together, to which are attached the sword and misericorde.
Andrew Picard - The writer of "Hue: Death of a City," the book that illustrates the Misericorde Hospital Massacre and assigns blame on Ben Tyson.
Her legacy lives on in the works of the Sisters of Marie-Josephe and of the Misericorde, and in the thousands of Lay Marianists all over the world.
MISERICORDE, n. A dagger which in mediaeval warfare was used by the foot soldier to remind an unhorsed knight that he was mortal.
Beginning January 17, 1848, the eight founders of the Misericorde Sisters, including Cadron-Jetté, commenced practical training in midwifery under Dr Eugène-Hercule Trudele, a young obstetrician.
In 1848, she took religious vows, along with several other women, and founded a Roman Catholic religious institute known as the Sisters of Misericorde, dedicated to the care of unwed mothers and their children.
The Sisters of Misericorde were a religious congregation founded by Marie-Rosalie Cadron-Jetté (1794 - 1864) in Montreal, Quebec, in 1848 and was dedicated to nursing the poor and needy.
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