Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Saint Emma Monastery (founded 1931) is a Roman Catholic retreat house and monastery for the Sisters of Saint Benedict of Westmoreland County, located in Greensburg, Pennsylvania. The current Prioress is Mother Mary Anne Noll OSB.
Benedictine Sisters of Elk County, a Benedictine monastery located in St. Marys that closed in 2014. [73] Daylesford Abbey, a Roman Catholic monastery located in Paoli. [74] Saint Emma Monastery, a Benedictine monastery located in Greensburg. [75] Saint Vincent Archabbey, a Benedictine monastery located in Latrobe. [76]
St. Benedict's Abbey; Saint Emma Monastery; St. Gregory's Abbey, Three Rivers; Saint John's Abbey, Collegeville; Saint Joseph Abbey (Louisiana) Saint Leo Abbey; Saint Louis Abbey; St. Martin's Abbey, Washington; Saint Meinrad Archabbey; St. Paul's Abbey (New Jersey) Saint Vincent Archabbey; Savannah Priory; St. Andrew Abbey; St. Gregory's Abbey ...
Small section of the extensive St. Emmeram's buildings Main inner courtyard Map of the site in 2014. Saint Emmeram's Abbey (German: Kloster Sankt Emmeram or Reichsabtei Sankt Emmeram) was a Benedictine monastery founded around 739 at Regensburg in Bavaria (modern-day southeastern Germany) at the grave of the itinerant Frankish bishop Saint Emmeram. [1]
St. Joseph Monastery was the first Benedictine monastery for women to be founded in the United States. The monastery operated until 2014. The monastery was founded by Mother Benedicta Riepp, O.S.B., who was sent, along with two companions, from St. Walburga Abbey in Eichstätt, in the Kingdom of Bavaria.
St Carroc Monastery; St Syriac's Monastery; St Cyricus and St Julitta's Monastery; St Cadix's Monastery; St Syriac's Cell: St German's Priory + Celtic monks possibly founded 7th century; secular canons episcopal diocesan cathedral founded c.936; see transferred to new site at Crediton, Devon 1042; monks or secular founded 1042; Augustinian ...
The St Tammany County jury made their decision Friday evening after a five-day trial. Emma was posthumously awarded $29 million for the pain she suffered after she was hit by the car, and her ...
Hemma of Gurk (German: Hemma von Gurk; c. 995 – 27 June 1045), [2] also called Emma of Gurk (Slovene: Ema Krška), was a noblewoman and founder of several churches and monasteries in the Duchy of Carinthia. Buried at Gurk Cathedral since 1174, she was beatified on 21 November 1287 and canonised on 5 January 1938 by Pope Pius XI. [3]