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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
- 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 Flat is reopening after 4 years. Here’s when, and why it took . . .
After more than four years of waiting, Sachiko Iwaki of Monrovia, an avid hiker, can’t wait to visit Chantry Flat once again
- 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
- CHANTRY Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of CHANTRY is an endowment for the chanting of masses commonly for the founder
- 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
- 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
- chantry - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
chantry (plural chantries) An endowment for the maintenance of a priest to sing a daily mass for the souls of specified people A chapel set up for this purpose Coordinate term: oratory
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