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1 Liturgical Year 2020 of the Celtic Orthodox Church Wednesday 1St
Liturgical Year 2020 of the Celtic Orthodox Church Wednesday 1st January 2020 Holy Name of Jesus Circumcision of Our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ Basil the Great, Bishop of Caesarea of Palestine, Father of the Church (379) Beoc of Lough Derg, Donegal (5th or 6th c.) Connat, Abbess of St. Brigid’s convent at Kildare, Ireland (590) Ossene of Clonmore, Ireland (6th c.) ♦ Liturgy: Wis 3:10-19 Eph 3:1-7 Lk 6:5-11 Holy Name of Jesus: ♦ Vespers: Ps 8 and 19 ♦ 1st Nocturn: Ps 64 1Tm 2:1-6 Lk 6:16-22 ♦ 3rd Nocturn: Ps 71 and 134 Phil 2:6-11 ♦ Matins: Jn 10:9-16 ♦ Liturgy: Gn 17:1-14 Ps 112 Col 2:8-12 Lk 2:20-21 ♦ Sext: Ps 53 ♦ None: Ps 148 1 Thursday 2 January 2020 Seraphim, priest-monk of Sarov (1833) Adalard, Abbot of Corbie, Founder of New Corbie (827) John of Kronstadt, priest and confessor (1908) Seiriol, Welsh monk and hermit at Anglesey, off the coast of north Wales (early 6th c.) Munchin, monk, Patron of Limerick, Ireland (7th c.) The thousand Lichfield Christians martyred during the reign of Diocletian (c. 333) ♦ Liturgy: Wis 4:1-6 Eph 3:8-13 Lk 8:24-36 Friday 3 January 2020 Genevieve, virgin, Patroness of Paris (502) Blimont, monk of Luxeuil, 3rd Abbot of Leuconay (673) Malachi, prophet (c. 515 BC) Finlugh, Abbot of Derry (6th c.) Fintan, Abbot and Patron Saint of Doon, Limerick, Ireland (6th c.) ♦ Liturgy: Wis 4:7-14a Eph 3:14-21 Lk 6:46-49 Saturday 4 January 2020 70 Disciples of Our Lord Jesus Christ Gregory, Bishop of Langres (540) ♦ Liturgy: Wis 4:14b-20 Eph 4:1-16 Lk 7:1-10 70 Disciples: Lk 10:1-5 2 Sunday 5 January 2020 (Forefeast of the Epiphany) Syncletica, hermit in Egypt (c. -
1 Liturgical Year 2019 of the Celtic Orthodox Church Monday 1St July 2019 Cosmas and Damian, Holy Unmercenaries, Martyrs at Rome
Liturgical Year 2019 of the Celtic Orthodox Church 4th Week after Pentecost Monday 1st July 2019 Cosmas and Damian, Holy Unmercenaries, martyrs at Rome (ca. 287) Thierry, 1st Abbot of Mont-d’Hor (533) Servanus of Culross, Irish bishop, patron of the Orkney Islands (6th c.) Aaron and Julius, martyred at Caerleon, Wales, during persecution of Diocletian (ca. 304) Cewydd, Welsh saint of Anglesey (6th c.) ♦ Liturgy: Gn 21:3, 8-21 Rm 8:28-39 Mk 6:7-13 Tuesday 2 July 2019 Visitation of the Most Holy Mother of God (1st c.) Géroche, Monk of Faremoutiers (ca. 680) Oudoc, Bishop of Llandaff, Wales (615) John Maximovitch, Archbishop of San Francisco (1966) ♦ Liturgy: Gn 22:1-13, 15-19 Rm 9:1-13 Mk 6:30-45 Visitation: ♦ Liturgy: Cant 2:8-14 Hb 9:1-7 1 Lk 1:39-47 Wednesday 3 July 2019 Anatolius, Bishop of Laodicea, Church Father, Patriarch of Constantinople (282) Germanus of Man, Bishop of the Isle of Man (474) Cillene, Abbot of Iona, Scotland (752) Gunthiern of Wales, prince, became hermit in Brittany (500) Guthagon the Irishman, hermit, took residence in Belgium (8th c.) Rumold, Bishop of Dublin, martyred near Malines (775) Aaron and Julius (Martyrs, Caerleon (304) Byblig, Welsh monk, Caernarvon (5th c.) ♦ Liturgy: Gn 23:1-4, 19; 24:1-8, 62-67 Rm 9:14-24 Mk 6:46-56 Thursday 4 July 2019 Andrew, Archbishop of Crete (712) Bertha of Artois, Abbess of Blangy (725) Finbar of Wexford, Founder and 1st Abbot on the Innis-Doimhle, Ireland (6th c.) Odo the Good, Archbishop of Canterbury (959) ♦ Liturgy: Gn 27:1-5, 15-29 Rm 9:25-33 Mk 7:1-13 Friday 5 July 2019 -
June Insert READY
SAINT EDWARD’S SERVICES IN JUNE, 2021 Mon 1 /14 Jun nf ✣ Holy Martyr Justin the Philosopher, &c; Rght. Witte; Holy King & Martyr Wistan; Acts 21:8-14; 1 Cor. 1:18-24; John 14:27- 15:7; John 4:5-42 Tue 2 / 15 Jun nf µ St Nicephorus the Confessor; St Odo the Good, Abp of Canter- bury; New M. Constantine the Hagarene; Acts 21:26-32; John 16:2-13 Wed 3 / 16 Jun f2 Youg Icon of the ΜΘ; M. Lucillian; Ven. Kevin of Glendalough; Rb. Clothilde, Queen of the Franks; Ven Dorotheus of the Youg; Acts 23:1-11; John 16:15-23 Thu 4 / 17 Jun nf St Metrophanes, Abp of C’ple; Ven. Petroc of Bodmin & his disciples; Acts 25:13-19; John 16:23-33 Fri 5 / 18 Jun f2 ✣ Leavetaking of Ascension; Holy Hm. Boniface of Crediton, Enlightener of Germany; Abba Dorotheus of Palestine; Acts 27: 1-28:1; John 17:18-26 Sat 6 / 19 Jun nf ✣ Soul Sabbath; Ven. Hilarion the New; M. Olivia; Acts 28:1- 31; 1 Thess. 4:13-17; John 21:14-25; John 5:24-30 VIGIL SERVICE FOR PENTECOST 6 p.m. Sun 7 / 20 Jun nf ✣ GREAT FEAST OF PENTECOST: TRINITY SUNDAY; Num. 11:16-17, 24-29; Joel 2:23-32; Ezek.36:24-28; MG John 20:19- 23; Acts 2:1-11; John 7:37-52, 8:12; Divine Liturgy at 10 a.m. followed by Vespers and the Three Kneeling Prayers Mon 8 / 21 Jun nf ✣ Holy Spirit Day; Gt M. -
Somerset County Herald ‘Local Notes and Queries’ by Paul Mansfield
Somerset County Herald ‘Local Notes and Queries’ by Paul Mansfield July 5th 1919 A challenge to our readers. We have much pleasure in recommencing in this issue our column of Local Notes and Queries which proved such a popular feature of this paper for 20 years, but which we were compelled to discontinue for a time owing to difficulties created by the war. We are particularly anxious that this column should consist as far as possible of notes, queries and replies contributed by our readers themselves, and it will very largely depend upon the assistance we receive from them in this direction whether or not the feature shall be continued. It would of course, be an easy matter for us to get a column of such notes written up each week in our own offices, but this is not our purpose in reintroducing this feature in our paper. We want the column to be almost entirely our readers own column, and if they show by their contributions to it that they appreciate such a feature it will be a pleasure to us to help them in every way we can in making the column interesting and useful. If, on the other hand, the contributions we receive from our readers are so few and far between as to suggest that they take little or no interest in such a column, we shall very soon discontinue it, and insert some other feature in it’s place. We therefore invite any and all of our readers who are in any way interested in such matters to send us short interesting notes or queries on any of the following or kindred subjects relating to the district over which the paper -
Orthodox News
home news features sayings jottings review stock order s ORTHODOX NEWS Published by St George Orthodox Information Service The White House, Mettingham, Suffolk NR35 1TP 01986 895176 E-mail: [email protected] Website: www.mettingham.org.uk ISSN 0267 8470 Winter 2013 Vol. 25 No. 1 PATRIARCH JOHN X Former Metropolitan of Western Europe becomes Patriarch of Antioch Following his election by Divine Lot on 17 December of the enthronement of His Beatitude John X, Patriarch 2012, Metropolitan John, whose former diocese of the Great Antioch of All the East. included Great Britain & Ireland, was enthroned as John X, Patriarch of the Great Antioch of All the East Among the worshippers were Lebanon’s President M. on 10 Feb 2013. Suleiman, Lebanon’s Prime Minister N. Mikati, Russia’s ambassador to Lebanon A. Zasypkin, The celebrations began with the Divine Liturgy Ukrainian ambassador V. Koval, and other diplomats celebrated in St. Nicholas’s Cathedral in Beirut by accredited in Beirut. There were also Cardinal K. Koch, Patriarch John X, Archbishop Chrysostomos of New president of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Justiniana and All Cyprus and Metropolitan Christopher Christian Unity, Maronite Patriarch Bechara Boutros of the Czech Lands and Slovakia. Participating in the Cardinal Al-Rahi, Greek-Catholic Melkite Patriarch liturgy were hierarchs and clergy of the Local Orthodox Gregory III, Syro-Malabar Patriarch Ignatius Joseph III, Churches who came to Beirut for the celebrations. Syriac Jacobite Patriarch Mar Ignatius Zakka I Ivas of Antioch, Catholicos Aram I of the Great House of The Russian Orthodox Church’s delegation led by Cilicia, as well as representatives of other non- Metropolitan Hilarion of Volokolamsk, head of the Orthodox confessions and public figures in Lebanon Moscow Patriarchate’s department for external church and Syria. -
Orthodox News, Summer/Autumn 2012, Vol. 24 No
home news features sayings jottings links stock order s ORTHODOX NEWS Published by St George Orthodox Information Service The White House, Mettingham, Suffolk NR35 1TP 01986 895176 E-mail: [email protected] Website: www.mettingham.org.uk ISSN 0267 8470 Summer/Autumn 2012 First Electronic Issue Vol. 24 No. 3 & 4 Archimandrite Nikolai (Karpov) with [moving right] Princess Catherine Galitzine and Grand Duchess Xenia MEMORY ETERNAL! 80th Anniversary of the Repose of Vladika Nikolai (Karpov) Bishop of London n September 1972, St George Orthodox Information Archimandrite Nikolai was 38 years old at the time. In Service published an article to mark the 40th 1915 he had finished his studies at the Moscow I anniversary of the repose of Bishop Nikolai Theological Academy, and afterwards he taught at (Karpov) of London who died on 11 October 1932. This theological schools in Russia, and preached at the year we have arrived at the 80th anniversary and it Oboyan Convent in the Diocese of Kursk. Abroad, in seems appropriate to reprint the article. Extracts from the kingdom of Serbia, he acted as priest in several Volume 5 of the biography of Metropolitan Antony parishes, before becoming lecturer at the Butol (Khrapovitski) of Kiev and Galicia, who later became Theological Seminary, where he was greatly loved by the first Chief Hierarch of the Synod of the Russian the staff and pupils. He was then appointed priest in Orthodox Church Outside Russia, form the basis of the charge of the Russian Orthodox parish in London, article. The book was written by Archbishop Nikon of which was rent by internal dissension at that time. -
Yakym Senkivskyi from Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia
Not logged in Talk Contributions Create account Log in Article Talk Read Edit View history Search Wikipedia Yakym Senkivskyi From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Main page Blessed Yakym Senkivskyi (Ukrainian: Яким Сеньківський; 2 May 1896 – 29 June 1941) was a Ukrainian Contents Greek Catholic priest and martyr. Current events Random article Life [edit] About Wikipedia Contact us Senkivskyi was born in the village of Hayi Velykyi in the Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria (present-day Donate Ternopil Oblast, Ukraine). He studied theology in Lviv, and was ordained a priest on 4 December 1921. He received a doctorate in theology from Innsbruck. In 1923 he went to Krekhiv and became a novice in the Order Contribute of Saint Basil the Great. After he professed his first vows, he was transferred to the village of Krasnopushcha, Help and later to the village of Lavriv. From 1931 to 1938 he held different positions in the Monastery of Saint Community portal Recent changes Onufrius in Lviv. Upload file Death and Beatification [edit] Tools What links here In 1939, he was appointed abbot of the monastery in Drohobych. On June 26, 1941, he was arrested by the Related changes Soviet NKVD, and on June 29, he was boiled in a cauldron in the Drohobych prison. Special pages He was beatified by Pope John Paul II on June 27, 2001. Permanent link Page information Cite this page References [edit] Wikidata item Biographies of twenty five Greek-Catholic Servants of God at the website of the Vatican Print/export Beatification of the Servants of God on June 27, -
A Guide to the Best Historical Novels and Tales by Jonathan Nield
PRE-CHRISTIAN ERA. HELON'S PILGRIMAGE TO JERUSALEM -- F. Strauss (trans.) SARCHEDON -- G. J. Whyte Melville Judaism in the Century preceding Christ Ancient Babylon and the Assyrians J. Mawman, London, 1824 W. Thacker & Co., and Ward, Lock, & Co. PRUSIAS -- Ernst Eckstein (trans.) UARDA -- Georg Ebers (trans.) The Slave Revolt under Spartacus. Egypt--Rameses Sesostris Trubner & Co. Sampson Low & Co. TWO THOUSAND YEARS AGO -- A. J. Church ZOROASTER -- F. Marion Crawford Rome--Spartacus and Mithridates Zoroaster, the Persian Religious Reformer Blackie & Son Macmillan & Co. WOE TO THE CONQUERED -- Alfred Clark AN EGYPTIAN PRINCESS -- Georg Ebers (trans.) Roman Life, B. C. 73-71 Egypt--Amasis and Cambyses, 6th Century B. C. Sampson Low & Co. Sampson Low & Co. A FRIEND OF CAESAR -- W. S. Davis THE FALL OF ATHENS -- A. J. Church Pompey and Caesar Peloponnesian War Macmillan & Co. Seeley & Co. CLEOPATRA -- Georg Ebers (trans.) A YOUNG MACEDONIAN -- A. J. Church Latter Years of Cleopatra. Alexander the Great Sampson Low & Co. Seeley & Co. SALAMMBO -- Gustave Flaubert (trans.) Rome versus Carthage G. P. Putnam's Sons, and Grant Richards THE LION'S BROOD -- Duffield Osborne Rome versus Carthage W. Heinemann LORDS OF THE WORLD -- A. J. Church Rome versus Carthage. Blackie & Son THE SISTERS -- Georg Ehers (trans.) Egypt--Ptolemy Philometer, and Euergetes Sampson Low & Co. THE HAMMER -- A. J. Church and R. Seeley Maccabaean Times Seeley & Co. DEBORAH -- J. M. Ludlow Maccabaean Times J. Nisbet & Co. FIRST CENTURY A.D. DARKNESS AND DAWN -- Dean Farrar Persecutions under Nero Longmans, Green, & Co. NEAERA -- John W. Graham Rome under Tiberius (A. D. 26) THE LAST DAYS OF POMPEII -- Lytton Macmillan & Co. -
Medieval English Roodscreens, with Special Reference to Devon
Medieval English Roodscreens, with special reference to Devon. Submitted by Michael Aufrère Williams to the University of Exeter as a thesis for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in History, June 2008. This thesis is available for Library use on the understanding that it is copyright material and that no quotation from the thesis may be published without proper acknowledgement. I certify that all material in this thesis which is not my own work has been identified and that no material has previously been submitted and approved for the award of a degree by this or any other University. ABSTRACT Roodscreens dividing church chancels and naves, topped with the image of Christ on the cross and often decorated with images of saints, were universal pieces of furnishing in English parish churches between the fourteenth and sixteenth centuries. This thesis centres on such screens in Devon, while seeking to place them in the context of their history in England as a whole. It discusses their origins, the period of their flowering in the later middle ages, and their fate at the Reformation, which swept away their lofts and iconography but kept their basic structures. While the heart of the thesis lies in the period from 1300 to 1570, consideration is also given to their subsequent fate between about 1570 and about 1870, when many disappeared due to changing fashions in church layout and furnishing. It concludes by showing how modern conservation, since 1870, has preserved most of those that remained as well as studying and restoring them. The thesis uses all the available primary and secondary sources for Devon, and major comparative ones for the rest of England. -
SOME SAINTS of EAST ANGLIA D. H. Farmer
SOME SAINTS OF EAST ANGLIA D. H. Farmer The saints afEast Anglia, like those of any particular province in the Middle Ages, enjoyed the approval and the veneration of their compatriots. This can be seen from their presence in the liturgical books, from their images in glass, sculpture and paintings, from the frequent concourse of pilgrims to their shrines. Saints who walked the same streets and enjoyed the same countryside as their clients seemed especially close, but what made them both accessible and powerful as patrons was the presence of their bodies in East Anglian churches. In England as elsewhere the saint's tomb was the starting point for his cult: the tomb became a sacred place. The saint's presence was believed to benefit sufferers from various ailments, but was also frequently terrible to would-be violators of the saint's property or custodians. Were there any special peculiarities of East Anglian Saints? The main conclusion to emerge from this study of them is that they were remarkably characteristic of English hagiology as a whole. Historical information is sparse; accounts of miracles and visions abound. Here as elsewhere a substantial proportion of saints belonged to the Age of Be de: the pioneering days of English Christianity seemed to be especially productive of Christian heroes. Here too we find cults of Anglo-Saxon kings as martyrs when they died in battle against pagan leaders. Here also are recorded some who were killed by Vikings, especially in the years 865-70, when the Great Army came to East Anglia and used it as a base from which to attack other Anglo-Saxon kingdoms. -
Of Lod-Huish and Doniford, in Somerset, and of Sand, in Devon
PROCEEDINGS OF THE SOMERSETSHIRE ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY DURING THE YEAR l8 97 . PA%T II—PAPERS, ETC. OF LOD-HUISH AND DONIFORD, IN SOMERSET, AND OF SAND, IN DEVON. PREFATORY NOTE. A FEW years since the MS. containing the following pedigree of Huyshe was purchased from the catalogue of a London bookseller. It is carefully written and bound, and appears from a letter preserved and inserted, that it was sent by the Rev. Francis Huyshe, of Pennsylvania, Exeter, to John Burke, Esq., of Eaynham Place, Chelsea, London, on 19th September, 1839. In this letter Mr. Huyshe says, " with this you will receive a correct copy of Mr. Protheroe's pedi- gree of Huyshe, which I believe you expect from him. I am fully confident, that you will think your most valuable work really honoured by the high ability and zeal that has spared neither trouble nor expense, which he has brought to the work, upon which he has been engaged very many years." It is probable Mr. Burke was then compiling his Genea- logical and Heraldic History of the Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland, and this pedigree was furnished him to give Vol. XLIII (Third Series, Vol. Ill), Part II. a 2 Papers, 8fc. particulars relative to the family of Huyshe. It has been transcribed verbatim, slightly re-arranged in a few places for greater clearness. The Notes added have been collected from various sources, and special thanks are offered to Mr. Roscoe Gibbs for the gift of his excellent drawings for the illustrations. W. H. HAMILTON ROGERS, F.S.A. -
Religion and Conscience in Ancient Eqypt; Lectures Delivered At
THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA PRESENTED BY PROF. CHARLES A. KOFOID AND MRS. PRUDENCE W. KOFOID RELIGION AND CONSCIENCE IN ANCIENT EGYPT RELIGION AND CONSCIENCE IN ANCIENT EGYPT LECTURES DELIVERED AT UNIVERSITY COLLEGE, LONDON BY W. M. FLINDERS PETRIE M D.C.L., LL.D., PH.D. METHUEN & CO. 36, ESSEX STREET, STRAND LONDON 1898 PREFACE THESE lectures, though based on the litera- ture of the Egyptians, cover also some general considerations which are equally applicable to the Religion and Conscience of other nations. They are intended as an attempt to indicate lines of study, and to observe what actually is the construction of human thought, as shown in some of the oldest and most continuous records. It may be said that the relation of these to certain standard views in ethics and religion should have been treated and that some more ; logical and systematic ideas are needed to start from. But my object was to see what really is, and not to try to fit that in with any theories, however highly supported, or any views, however orthodox. Treating the divagations of human thought as if they must have been systematic and logical has been the bane of all theories and a ; many M30S5Q8 6 PREFACE house of cards has been built to match one single fact or principle which has been grasped. I do not touch the larger ques- tions here, but only deal with what we can see and and in this I readily prove ; place no more attempt to enquire what lies behind the growth of ideas here traced, than the biologist enquires what lies behind the com- parison and nature of the structures which he unravels.