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chantry    
n. 弭撒或祈祷礼拜用费

弭撒或祈祷礼拜用费



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  • Chantry - Wikipedia
    A chantry may occupy a single altar, for example in the side aisle of a church, or an enclosed chapel within a larger church, generally dedicated to the donor's favourite saint Many chantry altars became richly endowed, often with gold furnishings and valuable vestments
  • Chantry | Gothic, Medieval Monastic | Britannica
    chantry, chapel, generally within a church, endowed for the singing of masses for the founder after his death The practice of founding chantries, or chantry chapels, in western Europe began during the 13th century A chantry was added to the cathedral of Notre-Dame in Paris in 1258
  • CHANTRY Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
    The meaning of CHANTRY is an endowment for the chanting of masses commonly for the founder
  • Francis Leggatt Chantrey - Wikipedia
    Chantrey developed a procedure of making a portrait sculpture in which he would begin by making two life-sized drawings of his sitter's head, one full-face and one in profile, with the aid of a camera lucida
  • What is a Chantry Chapel? - Hull Minster Heritage
    A chantry was literally a payment for chant, a place where a priest would be employed to chant, recite or sing the Mass (the service now known in the Church of England as Holy Communion) over and over again, day after day specifically to benefit the person paying
  • Illustrated Dictionary of British Churches - Chantry Definition
    A Chantry, also known as a chantry chapel, is a memorial or even a complete building dedicated to the memory of a person or family In the medieval period it was common for wealthy patrons of a church to give a grant of money to pay for a priest to say prayers for themselves and their family
  • History of Lichfield and Cathedral: Chantries
    Often funded by endowments, they disappeared following Reformation A chantry is a chapel or altar with an endowment from a priest or a high-ranking benefactor, and dedicated to provide prayers and litany for the dead, often the benefactor and his family, but sometimes for all Christian souls
  • The Medieval Chantry in England - British Archaeological Association
    Chantries were religious institutions endowed with land, goods and money At their heart was the performance of a daily mass for the spiritual benefit of their founders, and the souls of all faithful dead
  • CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Chantry - NEW ADVENT
    These detached chantry chapels, built in a churchyard, or in an outlying district, or at the entrance to bridges, often consisted of two stories, the lower one being devoted to the strictly religious uses of the foundation, while the incumbent used the upper one as his home or as a schoolroom
  • The origin of chantries - Medievalists. net
    Alternatively he could establish a chantry attached to a cathedral or parish church and served by a secular priest – another privatised form of commemoration which became a characteristic form of late medieval piety





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