Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
St. Mary's Church (Irish: Naoimh Eaglais Mhuire) is a Grade B-1 listed [1] Catholic church located in Chapel Lane/Smithfield area of Belfast, Northern Ireland.A church was opened on this site in May 1784 and thus it is the mother church for the city of Belfast.
St Mary's Church, Fleetwood; St Patrick's Chapel, Heysham; St John the Evangelist's Church, Kirkham; St Mary's Church, Morecambe; Church of St John the Evangelist, Poulton-le-Fylde; St Mary's Church, Yealand Conyers; In the Diocese of Salford: St Anne's Church, Blackburn; Church of St Mary of the Assumption, Burnley; St Michael and St John ...
Belfast's first Catholic church was St Mary's, Chapel Lane but with the growth of the Catholic population in the early nineteenth century Bishop William Crolly, then a priest in residence in the small Georgian town, decided to construct a new church on a plot of land in Donegall Street which had been left in trust for the Roman Catholic inhabitants of Belfast. [1]
St Mary's Church (Irish: Leas-Ardeaglais Naomh Muire), known also as St Mary's Pro-Cathedral or simply the Pro-Cathedral, the Chapel in Marlborough Street or the Pro, is a pro-cathedral and is the episcopal seat of the Catholic Archbishop of Dublin and Primate of Ireland. [1] [2]
St Fergus (died 583) is named as first Bishop of Down. The Diocese of Connor was founded in 480 by St Macnissi, and St Malachy was bishop there (1124). The dioceses of Down and Connor were permanently joined in 1439.
St Mary's Church is a Roman Catholic parish church in Chislehurst, the Borough of Bromley, London. It was built from 1853 to 1854, and was designed by William Wardell . Wardell, a friend of the architect Augustus Pugin , built the church in a similar Gothic Revival style .
St Mary's church was probably established as part of the reorganisation of Taunton by Henry of Blois, Bishop of Winchester, by 1180, [2] and has been the town church since 1308. [3] Prior to 1308 the church was dependent on the Augustinian Taunton Priory. [4] A new chapel was consecrated in 1437. [5] It is built of sandstone and has a painted ...
Ottery's notable buildings include the Tumbling Weir and St Mary's church. The town is the site of The King's School, [12] formerly a grammar school but now a comprehensive school, founded in 1545 by Henry VIII, and of Ottery St Mary Primary School. The Old Town Hall now accommodates the local heritage museum. [13]