- A
canoness is a
member of a
religious community of women,
historically a
stable community dedicated to the
celebration of the
Liturgy of the
Hours in a...
- Ritterschaft. In 1924, they
transformed it into a
charitable foundation for
Cannonesses. Only
parts of the
original medieval buildings remain at the rear of...
-
Denbigh handed over
Newnham Paddox House to
another community of nuns:
Cannonesses of the Holy Sepulchre.
These nuns had
evacuated their convent, New Hall...
- Temple-na-Ferta ?Abbey
Gaelic nuns
founded 5th
century by St Patrick;
Augustinian Cannonesses Regular — Arroasian?
apparently refounded c. 1144?;
dissolved 1562?;...
- 1870
after a fire had destro**** the
previous frontage. The
Augustinian Cannonesses acquired the
house in 1921. The Oratory,
built in 1986, was the subject...
- was
transferred to St William's, on
account of the
opposition of the
cannonesses of St Stephen's to the new teaching. In the
seventeenth century Louis...
- Temple-na-Ferta ?Abbey
Gaelic nuns
founded 5th
century by St Patrick;
Augustinian Cannonesses Regular — Arroasian?
apparently refounded c. 1144?;
dissolved 1562?;...
- canonised) and
thanks to
Catherine of
Fresnel and
Judith of Aspremont, two
cannonesses of the
Poussay Chapter, the
village welcomed its
first girls' school...
- In the area
which would later be the
Duchy of
Westphalia orders of
cannonesses were
frequently founded by the
local nobility.
Examples include Meschede...
- Malta.
Urbanie Marie Deweerdt,
Sister Mary
Borgia of the
Missionary Cannonesses of St. Augustine, Dominica. Mona Olga Eastwick. For
public services in...