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  2. Church bell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Church_bell

    Cutaway drawing of a church bell, showing construction. Church bell ringing in Aldeboarn, Friesland (Frisia), the Netherlands, June 2022. A church bell is a bell in a Christian church building designed to be heard outside the building. It can be a single bell, or part of a set of bells.

  3. Bell tower - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bell_tower

    Such a tower commonly serves as part of a Christian church, and will contain church bells, but there are also many secular bell towers, often part of a municipal building, an educational establishment, or a tower built specifically to house a carillon. Church bell towers often incorporate clocks, and secular towers usually do, as a public service.

  4. Bell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bell

    The bell can swing through a full circle in alternate directions. English full-circle bells shown in the "down" position, in which they are normally left between ringing sessions English full-circle bells shown in the "up" position. In the western world, the common form of bell is a church bell or town bell, which is hung within a tower or bell ...

  5. Bellfounding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bellfounding

    The thickness of a church bell at its thickest part (the "sound bow") is usually one thirteenth its diameter. [11] If the bell is mounted as cast, without any tuning, it is called a "maiden bell". Russian bells are treated in this way and cast for a certain tone. [11] Cutaway drawing of a bell, showing the clapper and interior.

  6. Belfry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Belfry

    Belfry. The belfry is a structure enclosing bells for ringing as part of a building, usually as part of a bell tower or steeple.It can also refer to the entire tower or building, particularly in continental Europe for such a tower attached to a city hall or other civic building.

  7. Steeple - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steeple

    The steeple of the Alexander Church in Tampere, Finland. Towers are a common element of religious architecture worldwide and are generally viewed as attempts to reach skyward toward heavens and the divine. [1] Towers were not a part of Christian churches until about AD 600, when bell towers first came into use. [1]

  8. Church bells speak again in Spain thanks to effort to recover ...

    www.aol.com/news/church-bells-speak-again-spain...

    Xavier Pallàs plants his feet on the belfry floor, grips the rope, and with one tug fills the lush Spanish valley below with the reverberating peal of a church bell. For most, church bells are ...

  9. Clock chime - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clock_chime

    The practice of using bells to mark time dates at least to the time of the early Christian church, which used bells to mark the "canonical hours". [2] An 8th-century Archbishop of York gave his priests instructions to sound church bells at certain times, and by the 10th century Saint Dunstan had written an extensive guide to bell-ringing to mark the canonical hours.