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St. Teresa of Avila 11600 Atwood Rd, Auburn 1994 [71] St. Thomas Mission Main St., Sierra City [72] Ridge Deanery. Name Image Location Established Source; Herlong
St. Teresa was painted in 1819–20 by François Gérard, a French neoclassical painter. [web 21] St Theresa of Avila is a 1754-1755 painting by Joseph-Marie Vien and is exhibited in the New Orleans Museum of Art in New Orleans, Louisiana.
Teresa de Ahumada (née Teresa de Cepeda y Fuentes; nickname, Teresita; also known as Teresa la Quiteña; Quito, Real Audiencia of Quito, Spanish Empire, 25 October 1566 - Ávila, 9 September 1610) was a Spanish Discalced Carmelite nun born in that part of Quito that is in present-day Ecuador.
The opera features two 16th-century Spanish saints—the former mercenary Ignatius of Loyola and the mystic Teresa of Avila—as well as their colleagues, real and imagined: St. Plan, St. Settlement, St. Plot, St. Chavez, etc. Thomson decided to divide St. Teresa's role between two singers, "St. Teresa I" and "St. Teresa II", and added the ...
Döbling Carmelite Nunnery Döbling Carmelite Church. The Döbling Carmelite Monastery (Karmelitenkloster Döbling) is a monastery belonging to the Teresian Carmelites, a reformed branch of the Carmelites that arose out of the reform of the Carmelite Order by two Spanish saints, St. Teresa of Ávila and St. John of the Cross; the Teresian Carmelites thus belong to the Discalced Carmelites ...
Teresa de Cartagena (writer) Grove of the Infirm; Wonder at the Works of God; St. Teresa of Ávila, OCD; The Interior Castle; The Way of Perfection; St. John of the Cross, OCD (poet) Dark Night of the Soul; Ascent of Mount Carmel; St. Ignatius of Loyola, SJ; The Spiritual Exercises; Autobiography; St. Francis de Borja, SJ; Luis de León, OESA ...
Ana de Jesús, known in English as Anne of Jesus (25 November 1545 – 4 March 1621), was a Spanish Discalced Carmelite nun and writer. She was the founder of the Carmelite reform and a close companion of Teresa of Ávila, and served to establish new monasteries of the Order throughout Europe.
Auclair published biographies of two Roman Catholic saints, Teresa of Avila (1950) [4] and Bernadette of Lourdes (1957). [5] She also published biographies of Spanish poet and playwright Federico García Lorca, whom she knew personally (1968), [6] [7] and of the early 20th century pro-peace French socialist Jean Jaurès (1954).