| Charlotte Augusta Sneyd - 1847 - 170 sivua
...is considered by the English to be a person of any consequence. (40) But above all are their riches displayed in the church treasures ; for there is not...those enormously rich Benedictine, Carthusian, and Cistertian monasteries must be. (41) These are, indeed, more like baronial palaces than religious houses,... | |
| 1854 - 564 sivua
...crucifixes, candlesticks, thuribles, basins and cups of silver ; nor is there a convent of mendicant-friars so poor, as not to have all these same articles in silver, besides many other ornaments in the same metal, fit for a cathedral church. You may imagine, therefore, what the decorations of... | |
| Henry Donald Maurice Spence-Jones - 1898 - 502 sivua
...England about forty years before the great confiscation, thus writes : "Above all are the English riches displayed in the church treasures ; for there is not...ornaments worthy of a cathedral church in the same metal. You may therefore imagine what the decorations of those enormously rich Benedictine, Carthusian, and... | |
| Cardinal Francis Aidan Gasquet - 1900 - 428 sivua
...plate possessed by all but the poorest in the land, he continues : " But above all are their riches displayed in the church treasures, for there is not...magnificence may therefore imagine what the decorations of these enormously rich Benedictine, Carthusian, and Cistercian monasteries must be. ... I have been... | |
| 1901 - 556 sivua
...church in the kingdom so mean as not to possess crucifixes, candlesticks, censers, patens, and chalices of silver ; nor is there a convent of mendicant friars...ornaments worthy of a cathedral church in the same metal' He adds that the rich monasteries are more like baronial than religious houses. It is statements such... | |
| Henry Duff Traill - 1903 - 884 sivua
...church in the kingdom so mean as not to possess crucifixes, candlesticks, censers, paten, and chalice of silver, nor is there a convent of mendicant friars...same articles in silver, besides many other ornaments in the same metal, worthy of a cathedral church. You may well imagine what the decoration of those... | |
| Francis Aiden Gasquet - 1905 - 424 sivua
...silver plate possessed by all but the poorest in the land, he continues: "But above all are their riches displayed in the church treasures, for there is not...magnificence may therefore imagine what the decorations of these enormously rich Benedictine, Carthusian, and Cistercian monasteries must be. ... I have been... | |
| Henry Duff Traill, James Saumarez Mann - 1909 - 470 sivua
...church in the kingdom so mean as not to possess crucifixes, candlesticks, censers, paten, and chalice of silver, nor is there a convent of mendicant friars...same articles in silver, besides many other ornaments in the same metal, worthy of a cathedral church. You may well imagine what the decoration of those... | |
| Albert Frederick Pollard - 1914 - 360 sivua
...the borders of Scotland ; besides London to the south. [Ibid. p. 29.] But above all are their riches displayed in the church treasures ; for there is not...many other ornaments worthy of a cathedral church m the same metal. Your Magnificence may therefore imagine what the decorations of those enormously... | |
| Peter Joseph Chandlery - 1924 - 314 sivua
...church in the kingdom so mean as not to possess crucifixes, candlesticks, censers, patens, and chalices of silver ; nor is there a convent of mendicant Friars so poor as not to have these same articles in silver, besides many other ornaments worthy of a Cathedral church in the same... | |
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