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  2. Red House (Trinidad and Tobago) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_House_(Trinidad_and...

    The Red House is the seat of Parliament in Trinidad and Tobago. The architectural design of the Red House is of Beaux-Arts style. The original building was destroyed in the 1903 Water Riots and was rebuilt in 1907. The Red House is located centrally within the capital city Port of Spain. It is currently used as a meeting place for parliament ...

  3. List of Catholic artists - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Catholic_artists

    Jacques Courtois (Jesuit), painted, in the Cistercian monastery, the Miracle of the Loaves [161] [162] Wouter Crabeth I [163] and Wouter Crabeth II, [164] grandfather and grandson whose works include Catholic religious art; Caspar de Crayer, Flemish Baroque painter; works include Martyrdom of St Blaise and Centurion and Christ [165] [166]

  4. The Priest House, West Hoathly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Priest_House,_West_Hoathly

    The Priest House is a Grade II* listed [1] fifteenth century timber framed hall house in the centre of West Hoathly, in West Sussex, England. It is close to The Cat Inn and St Margaret's Church . It is now a museum, open to the public six days a week from March to October.

  5. Red Priests (France) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Priests_(France)

    The term "Red Priests" was first coined by Gilbert Brégail in 1901 [1] and later adopted by Edmond Campagnac in 1913. [2] It has been utilized by academic historians such as Albert Mathiez, [3] Albert Soboul (Marxist historian), and Father Bernard Plongeron from the Catholic Institute of Paris, specialist about the Constitutional Church.

  6. Preface (liturgy) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Preface_(liturgy)

    Priest: Therefore with Angels and Archangels, and with all the company of heaven, we laud and magnify thy glorious Name; evermore praising thee, and saying: Then the Sanctus is said or sung. In more modern orders of service, it is common for the Dominus vobiscum to introduce the Sursum corda .

  7. Priest's House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Priest's_House

    Priest's House or The Priest's House may refer to: A clergy house; Priest's House, Barden in Barden, Craven, North Yorkshire, in England;

  8. Clergy house - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clergy_house

    Above the parish level, a bishop's house was traditionally called a "Bishop's palace", a dean's residence is known as a deanery, and a canon lives in a canonry or "canon's house". Other clerical titles have different names for their houses. [5] A parsonage is where the parson of a church resides; a parson is the priest/presbyter of a parish church.

  9. House of Priests - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_of_Priests

    The house is 440.5 m 2 and has a total of 15 rooms with one entrance at H2-D6. There is no evidence of when the house was constructed. [5]At the time of discovery the four courtyards, H2-D1, H2-G1, H2-F1, and H2-D'5, provided reason to believe that the unit contained four homes, but upon further excavation, all of the houses had connecting doorways except for H2-F, which was formerly connected ...