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Confraternity Nickname Date founded Institution Location Status References Black Brazier (aka Neo Black Queens of Africa) Bra Bra, Axe Queens, AYE Early 1990s Nigeria Active [2] [7] Damsel: Early 1990s Nigeria [2] Daughters of Jezebel: Early 1990s Nigeria [2] Jezebel: Amazons Nigeria [11] Knights of the Aristos: Nigeria [7] Lady of Rose ...
The Outlaws, another well-known street and creek confraternity, began as a splinter group of the Icelanders (German). [6] In the late 1990s, all-female confraternities began to be formed. These include the Black Brazier (Bra Bra), the Viqueens, Daughters of Jezebel, and the Damsel. Female confraternities have supplied spies for allied male ...
Evangelisch-Lutherische Gebetsbruderschaft (Evangelical Lutheran Prayer Brotherhood) is a German Lutheran religious society for men and women, based on the doctrines of the Bible and Book of Concord, with regular prayer for the renewal and unity of the Church. Prayer Brotherhood was founded in Leipzig by Lutheran
Confraternity book of the Abbey of Saint Gall.. A confraternity book (German: Verbrüderungsbuch, Latin: liber confraternitatum or confraternitatis), also called a liber memorialis (memorial book) or liber vitae (book of life), is a medieval register of the names of people who had entered into a state of spiritual brotherhood (confraternity) with a church or monastery in some way, often by ...
The manual of the Bona Mors confraternity. Apostleship of Prayer. 1896. Daughters of Charity of St. Vincent de Paul. (1856). "Devotion of Bona Mors" . St. Vincent's Manual. John Murphy & Co. Moran, Patrick Francis (1883). "Litany for a Happy Death" . The Catholic Prayer Book and Manual of Meditations. Dublin.
Gustave Doré, The Death of Athaliah.. Accounts of Athaliah’s life are found in 2 Kings 8:16–11:16 and 2 Chronicles 22:10–23:15 in the Hebrew Bible.According to the chroniclers, she was the daughter of king Omri of Israel; [1] however, she is usually considered to have been the daughter of King Ahab – the son of Omri – and his wife, Queen Jezebel. [2]
Book of Prayer of the Spanish and Portuguese Jews' Congregation, London (5 vols.): Oxford (Oxford University Press, Vivian Ridler), 5725 - 1965 (Hebrew and English; since reprinted) Book of Prayer: According to the Custom of the Spanish and Portuguese Jews , David de Sola Pool : New York, Union of Sephardic Congregations, 1941, 1954, 1979 ...
Jezebel is introduced into the biblical narrative as a Phoenician princess, the daughter of Ithobaal I, king of Tyre (1 Kings 16:31 says she was "Sidonian", which is a biblical term for Phoenicians in general). [12]