Academic literature on the topic 'St. Peter's Church (Bournemouth, England)'

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Journal articles on the topic "St. Peter's Church (Bournemouth, England)"

1

SAYERS, JANE. "Peter's Throne and Augustine's Chair: Rome and Canterbury from Baldwin (1184–90) to Robert Winchelsey (1297–1313)." Journal of Ecclesiastical History 51, no. 2 (April 2000): 249–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022046900004243.

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The arrival of St Augustine in England from Rome in 597 was an event of profound significance, for it marked the beginnings of relations between Rome and Canterbury. To later generations this came to mean relations between the papacy in its universal role, hence the throne of St Peter, and the metropolitical see of Canterbury and the cathedral priory of Christ Church, for the chair of St Augustine was the seat of both a metropolitan and an abbot. The archiepiscopal see and the cathedral priory were inextricably bound in a unique way.Relations with Rome had always been particularly close, both between the archbishops and the pope and between the convent and the pope. The cathedral church of Canterbury was dedicated to the Saviour (Christ Church) as was the papal cathedral of the Lateran. Gregory had sent the pallium to Augustine in sign of his metropolitan rank. There had been correspondence with Rome from the first. In Eadmer's account of the old Anglo-Saxon church, it was built in the Roman fashion, as Bede testifies, imitating the church of the blessed Peter, prince of the Apostles, in which the most sacred relics in the whole world are venerated. Even more precisely, the confessio of St Peter was copied at Canterbury. As Eadmer says, ‘From the choir of the singers one went up to the two altars (of Christ and of St Wilfrid) by some steps, since there was a crypt underneath, what the Romans call a confessio, built like the confessio of St Peter.’ (Eadmer had both visited Rome in 1099 and witnessed the fire that destroyed the old cathedral some thirty years before in 1067.) And there, in the confessio, Eadmer goes on to say, Alfege had put the head of St Swithun and there were many other relics. The confessio in St Peter's had been constructed by Pope Gregory the Great and contained the body of the prince of the Apostles and it was in a niche here that the pallia were put before the ceremony of the vesting, close to the body of St Peter. There may be, too, another influence from Rome and old St Peter's on the cathedral at Canterbury. The spiral columns in St Anselm's crypt at Canterbury, which survived the later fire of 1174, and are still standing, were possibly modelled on those that supported St Peter's shrine. These twisted columns were believed to have been brought to Rome from the Temple of Solomon. At the end of the sixth century, possibly due to Gregory the Great, they were arranged to form an iconostasis-like screen before the apostle's shrine. Pope Gregory III in the eighth century had added an outer screen of six similar columns, the present of the Byzantine Exarch, of which five still survive. They are practically the only relics of the old basilica to have been preserved in the new Renaissance St Peter's.
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2

Hawkins, Alfred R. J. "The Peculiar Case of a Royal Peculiar: A Problem of Faculty at the Tower of London." Ecclesiastical Law Journal 24, no. 3 (September 2022): 345–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0956618x22000345.

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Her Majesty's Royal Palace and Fortress the Tower of London, less formally known as the Tower of London or simply ‘the Tower’, was the seat of royal power in England for several centuries following its construction by William the Conqueror in 1078. While now a popular tourist attraction, it remains the home of the Crown Jewels, is a working barracks and maintains many ceremonial traditions of state. Two chapels are located within its walls. Foremost of these is the late eleventh-century chapel of St John the Evangelist (St John's), located within the White Tower, noted as a rare surviving example of early Anglo-Norman ecclesiastic architecture. To the north-west, the Chapel of St Peter ad Vincula (St Peter's) has an equally remarkable history and is a building of singular importance even within the Tower complex. Its origins may be traced, like many London parish churches, to a small, private house-church in the ninth century, before being subsumed within the boundaries of the fortress. The chapel, the latest of three documented iterations, was constructed between 1519 and 1520 and is the burial place of many notable figures, including the sixteenth-century queens Anne Boleyn, Catherine Howard and Lady Jane Grey, together with Cardinal John Fisher and the former Lord Chancellor Sir Thomas More, both now venerated as martyrs and saints in the Roman Catholic Church.
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3

McClean, Robert. "Making Wellington: earthquakes, survivors and creating heritage." Architectural History Aotearoa 9 (October 8, 2012): 55–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.26686/aha.v9i.7296.

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Landing at Te Whanganui a Tara in 1840, New Zealand Company settlers lost no time to construct the "England of the South" using familiar building materials of brick, stone, clay and mortar. Within months of settling at Pito-one (Petone), the newly arrived people not only experienced earthquakes, but also flooding of Te Awa kai Rangi (Hutt River). Consequently, the original plan to build the City of Britannia at Pito-one was transferred to Lambton Harbour at Pipitea and Te Aro. The construction of Wellington was severely disrupted by the first visitation occurring on 16 October 1848 when the Awatere fault ruptured releasing an earthquake of Mw 7.8. The earthquake sequence, lasting until October 1849, damaged nearly all masonry buildings in Wellington, including newly constructed Paremata Barracks. This event was soon followed by the 2nd visitation of 23 January 1855. This time it was a rupture of the Wairarapa fault and a huge 8.2 Mw earthquake lasting until 10 October 1855. Perceptions of buildings as "permanent" symbols of progress and English heritage were fundamentally challenged as a result of the earthquakes. Instead, the settlers looked to the survivors – small timber-framed buildings as markers of security and continued occupation. A small number of survivors will be explored in detail – Taylor-Stace Cottage, Porirua, and Homewood, Karori, both buildings of 1847 and both still in existence today. Also the ruins of Paremata Barracks as the only remnant of a masonry structure pre-dating 1848 in the Wellington region. There are also a few survivors of 1855 earthquake including Christ Church, Taita (1854) and St Joseph's Providence Porch, St Mary's College, Thorndon (1852). There are also the post-1855 timber-framed legacies of Old St Paul's Cathedral (1866), Government Buildings (1876) and St Peter's Church (1879). Improved knowledge about the historical evolution of perceptions of heritage in Wellington as a result of past earthquake visitations can help inform public education about heritage values, how to build today and strengthen existing buildings in readiness for future earthquake visitations.
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4

Moreno, Teresa. "Laser Cleaning of Fifteenth and Early Sixteenth Century A.D. Wax Votive Images from St. Peter's Cathedral, Exeter, England." MRS Proceedings 852 (2004). http://dx.doi.org/10.1557/proc-852-oo2.7.

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ABSTRACTA rare collection of cast votive images (ex-votos ) made of beeswax were found in the 1940s behind the cresting of a screen above the tomb of Bishop Edmund Lacey in the Cathedral Church of St. Peter in Exeter, England. Some of these fragmentary, aged and brittle waxes, dating to the late fifteenth to early sixteenth centuries A.D., served as the basis to further test the cleaning of dirt and accretions using a Q-switched Nd:YAG laser. Because of the low melting point of the wax, observations made of the effects on the wax substrate due to heat emitted from the laser were critical to establish the efficacy of the cleaning method. Preliminary optical microscopy was used to establish a typology of the waxes based on their condition, color, and nature of the weathering phenomena. Several techniques were used to characterize the waxes and the surface deposits, including gas chromatography-mass spectroscopy (GC-MS), energy-dispersive x-ray fluorescence (EDXRF) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM-EDS), in addition to simple tests of melting point and hardness that served to help understand the nature, condition and treatment of the waxes [1].
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Books on the topic "St. Peter's Church (Bournemouth, England)"

1

Wheeler, Geoffrey. St. Peter's centenary 1892-1992. Hale: St Peter's Centenary Committee, 1992.

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2

Hall-Matthews, J. C. B. The Collegiate Church of St Peter, Wolverhampton. Much Wenlock: R.J.L.Smith, 1993.

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3

Farrer, William. The registers of St. Peter's, Burnley: 1653-1690. [Lanscashire, England]: Lancashire Parish Register Society, 2001.

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4

Hayes, Richard. New & old: A history of S. Peter's Church, Mount Park, Ealing. (London) (Mount Park, Ealing): (R. Hayes), 1985.

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5

T, Waldron, and Rodwell Warwick, eds. St Peter's Barton-upon-Humber, Lincolnshire: A Parish Church and its community. Oxford: Oxbow, 2007.

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6

Pearson, Edna. Two churches - two communities: St.Peter's, Bromyard and St. James's, Stanford Bishop, Bromyard parish registers (rev. ed.). Bromyard: Bromyard and District Local History Society, 1993.

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7

Blundell, James. A guide to the heraldry of the parish church of St. Peter's, Congleton: With biographical notices of the families and individuals represented. Congleton: Congleton History Society, 2005.

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8

St. Peter's Cathedral (Charlottetown, P.E.I.), ed. The Jubilee of St. Peter's Cathedral, Charlottetown, P.E. Island, 1869-1919: Souvenir album. [Charlottetown, P.E.I.?: s.n., 1997.

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9

Don, Whiteside. Whiteside names listed in the parish registers of St. Peter's Church, Fleetwood, 1842-1900, Christ Church, Thornton, 1836-1900 and St. Anne's Church, Singleton, 1841-1900, all Church of England in Lancashire, England. Nepean, Ontario, Canada: Donald Whiteside and Associates, 1991.

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10

Molle, Pietro. La Chiesa italiana di Londra: La storia dei primi pallottini in Inghilterra. Todi (PG) [i.e. Perugia, Italy]: Tau, 2014.

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