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Nivelles (Belgium), the Saint Gertrude of Nivelles statue. Gertrude is portrayed as leading a devout life until her death. It is possible that, after taking the veil in circa 640, she never left the monastery cloister, thus escaping politics and local affairs. [9] Gertrude is described as "exhausted by a life of charity, fasting and prayer" at ...
The Collegiate Church of St. Gertrude (French: Collégiale Sainte-Gertrude) is a Roman Catholic collegiate church in Nivelles, Walloon Brabant, Belgium, which was built in the 11th century. It is dedicated to Saint Gertude, the patron saint of cats.
Gertrude of Nivelles (626–659), founded the Abbey of Nivelles located in present-day Belgium Gertrude the Great (1256–1302), German Cistercian, mystic, and theologian Religious institutions and schools
View of the Eads Bridge under construction in 1870, listed as a St. Louis Landmark and National Historic Landmark St. Louis Landmark is a designation of the Board of Aldermen of the City of St. Louis for historic buildings and other sites in St. Louis, Missouri. Listed sites are selected after meeting a combination of criteria, such as whether the site is a cultural resource, near a cultural ...
Le Moyen âge retrouvé - De saint Louis à Viollet Le Duc: Le Maître de saint Eustache de la cathédrale de Chartres / Les problèmes de la peinture gothique et le Maître de saint Chéron de la cathédrale de Chartres. Vol. 2. Preface by Jean Bony and Jean Taralon. Paris: Flammarion. ISBN 2-08-010932-4. Manhes-Deremble, Colette (1993).
Gertrude of Nivelles, Pippin's daughter and abbess of the Nivelles monastery (626–659) Johann Tserclaes, Holy Roman Empire general in the Thirty Years' War (1559–1632) Louis-Joseph Seutin, doctor and surgeon (1793–1862) Jules Louis Guillery, lawyer and politician (1824–1902) Henri Delmotte, novelist (1822–1884)
[8] [9] The restaurant building was used as the museum's gift shop. [10] In 2010, the Orient home and White Castle restaurant were featured in "White Castle on the Farm", an episode of American Pickers. [11] In that same year, the building was again sold and moved, to a private collection in Rolla, Missouri. [12] [better source needed]
It was first built in 1368 by the city's tailors' guild as the "St.-Gertraud-, Urban- und Theobald-Kapelle vor dem Gubener Tor" (Chapel of St Gertrude, Saint Urban and Saint Theobald before the Gubener Gate) to provide a place of worship for merchants heading south and stopping off in the city. That building and its successor stood on what is ...