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The Church and Monastery of Saint Catherine of Siena (Spanish: Iglesia y Monasterio de Santa Catalina de Siena) is a Catholic church and monastery located between Andahuaylas, Puno and Inambari streets in the neighbourhood of Barrios Altos, part of the historic centre of Lima, Peru.
Saint Catherine's Monastery (Arabic: دير القدّيسة كاترين Dayr al-Qiddīsa Katrīn; Greek: Μονὴ τῆς Ἁγίας Αἰκατερίνης), officially the Sacred Autonomous Royal Monastery of Saint Catherine of the Holy and God-Trodden Mount Sinai, is a Christian monastery located in the Sinai Peninsula of Egypt.
Portal of the monastery; The entrance portal is adorned with a relief of St. Catherine of Siena, under whose patronage the monastery was founded. It is carved into the solid tuff wall that borders the entire block. The sober simplicity of shapes and color of this cover contrasts with the cheerful color that the visitor will find in the interior ...
St. Catherine of Siena Roman Catholic Rectory. The St. Catherine of Siena Parish complex consists of four buildings: the parish school (1913), convent (1926), rectory (1926), and the church itself (1929). [2] All buildings are basically Romanesque in style, with some Byzantine elements. [2] The church is the most visually catching structure.
The Church of Saint Catherine [1] or Chapel of Saint Catherine (Latin: Ecclesia Sanctae Catharinae, Arabic: كنيسة القديسة كترينا, Hebrew: כנסיית קתרינה הקדושה) is a Catholic religious building located adjacent to the northern part [2] of the Basilica of the Nativity in Bethlehem [3] [4] in the West Bank, Palestine. [5]
1822: Congregation of St. Catharine of Siena, St. Catharine, KY (now Dominican Sisters of Peace) 1830: Congregation of St. Mary of the Springs, Columbus, OH (now Dominican Sisters of Peace) 1849: Congregation of the Most Holy Rosary , Sinsinawa, WI
A group of Dominican tertiary nuns, living in a small house in via Santa Chiara where St. Catherine had died, were looking for larger premises. Led by Porzia Massimo whose late husband was a Conti, [1] from 1574 they successively acquired parts of properties belonging to the Conti family at Magnanapoli to establish their convent there, financially assisted by Pope Gregory XIII. [1]
Church of Saint Hyacinth in Słupsk (since 1278) Church of Saint Catherine in Wrocław (1295-1810) Nörenberg Abbey in Ińsko (c.1308-1535) Church of St. Giles in Kraków (since the 15th century?) St. Hyacinth's Church in Warsaw (since 1603) St. Dominic's Church in Warsaw (since 1937) Church of Our Lady of the Snow in Kraków (since 1627)