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19 Sentences With "necrologies"

How to use necrologies in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "necrologies" and check conjugation/comparative form for "necrologies". Mastering all the usages of "necrologies" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Wojciecha with its collection of nekrologi – necrologies – posted on a board in front of the church.
Another religious house possibly founded by Fergus was the abbey of Soulseat, a Premonstratensian house seated near Stranraer.McDonald (1995) pp. 196–197. Walter Bower and the necrologies certainly state as such.Oram, RD (1988) p.
Lawrence Arthur "Speed" Webb (18 July 1906 - 4 November 1994"Necrologies" Washington University Libraries. Retrieved 2 May 2013.) was an American jazz drummer and territory band leader especially active in the late 1920s and early 1930s.
Matilda of Sulzbach (died 31 October or 3 November 1165) was Margravine of Istria by marriage to Engelbert III of Istria. Different dates of death are given in the necrologies of Baumburg Abbey and two monasteries of Salzburg.
Adelheid of Wolfratshausen (d. 11 January/12 January 1126) was a countess of Sulzbach as the second wife of Berengar II, Count of Sulzbach. Slightly different dates for her death are given in the necrologies of Tegernsee and the Salzburg Cathedral.
Kerr was born April 2, 1875, to Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Kerr in Slippery Rock, Pennsylvania.Chronicles of Oklahoma, "Necrologies: Charles William Kerr", p. 510.[digital.library.okstate.edu/Chronicles/v029/v029p510.pdf] The Kerrs were an old Scots Presbyterian Lowland family who had immigrated to western Pennsylvania in the 19th century.
Balderic returned to Liège and the Vita says he was trying to gather a military force when Arnulf died. This has been determined by modern historians to have been in 2011. Matching dates, different by one day, can be found in necrologies in Liège and Cambrai.See Marchandisse and Koch & De Meyer.
The Battle of Pressburg is mentioned in several annals, including the Annales iuvavenses, Annales Alamannici,Werra, Joseph: Über den Continuator Reginonis; Gressner & Schramm, Leipzig, 1883, p. 68 Continuator Reginonis,Werra, Joseph 1883, p. 68 Annales Augienses,Werra, Joseph 1883, p. 70 and in the necrologies of important people such as kings, dukes, counts, and spiritual leaders.
It also publishes book reviews, museum exhibition reviews, and necrologies. It is published in January, April, July, and October each year in print and electronic editions. The journal's current editor-in-chief is Jane B. Carter."New Editor-in-Chief of the American Journal of Archaeology (AJA)" December 2, 2015, Archived at the Wayback Machine The journal's first woman editor-in-chief was Mary Hamilton Swindler.
Nicolas de Nonancourt (born at Nonancourt, at a date unknown; died 23 September 1299, the Feast of Saint Maurice). He was a French university Chancellor, Dean of a Cathedral, and Roman Catholic Cardinal.Eubel I, p. 12. Other dates are given in various sources, based on Necrologies, Obituaries, and ecclesiastical commemorations: 8 September (Obituarium Ecclesiae Parisiensis: M. Guerard, Cartulaire de l' Eglise de Notre Dame de Paris IV, p.
The project "involves extracting and analysing detailed information from primary sources, including contemporary chronicles, cartularies, necrologies and testaments." whilst her siblings were John V Palaiologos and Michael Palaiologos. She married in 1336 Tsar Michael Asen IV of Bulgaria.EIRENE Maria Palaiologina In 1355, her husband was killed in battle with the Ottoman Turks near Sofia. Irene decide to stay a nun in the monastery in Mesembria (today Nesebar) and take the name Matiasa.
Newark 2001. In these irregularly-published chronicles (about 30 per year), Castil-Blaze seemed to take certain liberties. Most of the chronicles criticized the lyric works, but others were dedicated to thoughts about music, to composers' necrologies (Weber in 1826, Beethoven in 1828), or to concert reviews. Castil- Blaze wrote for the Journal des débats until 1832 (his replacement there was Hector Berlioz), when he joined le Constitutionnel; he also collaborated in Fétis's Revue musicale (Paris, 1827), as well as other periodicals or reviews.
History and Identity at the monastery of Fulda (744–856), investigates the Fulda monastery including the relics it acquired and their function, and the monastery's position in the "sacred landscape" of the Carolingians. Between 2005 and 2010 she did postdoctoral research on Saint Boniface and the role his life and work played in the building and transformation of various monastic communities. She has published on various aspects of monastic and religious life, including necrologies. Her The Making of the Monastic Community of Fulda, c.
Shortly after the Academy complex was completed, it was regarded as a grotesque, over-ornamented monstrosity, and architectural realism had already moved on to become a more strident theoretical stance in the work of Otto Wagner. Lipsius was a thoughtful and philosophically inclined architect. His writings on the use of iron in architecture have found their way into several histories of architectural theory; his necrologies of both Semper and Nicolai are among the most well-conceived professional biographies of their time. His students remembered him with enormous affection.
The archive is for the purposes of abbey administration and the researching of its history. It contains documents from the 8th to the 20th centuries, in the following series: # Deeds: c. 4,300 deeds up to 1700; # Manuscripts Series A: chronicles, journals, chapter minutes, visitations, endowments, necrologies and rolls, inventories, accounts and so on; # Manuscripts Series B: official records of estate ownership (cartularies, registers, feodaries, court records); # Files: records and correspondence of the abbots, the monks, the chancery and other administrative offices of the abbey; files relating to estate ownership; # Other: photographs, maps and plans.
The work itself remains unpublished but has been described as "unique" and "priceless" by Alexei Yesin, the editor of Necrologies, a weekly paper to which Moskvin was a regular contributor. After Moskvin's arrest, Yesin stated that he was confident there had been a mistake and Moskvin would soon be exonerated. Later Yesin told the Associated Press that Moskvin was a loner who had "certain quirks" but who gave no indication that he was up to anything unusual. Between 2006 and 2010, Moskvin worked as a freelance correspondent for the newspaper Nizhny Novgorod Worker, publishing articles twice a month.
Given his extraordinarily long and productive career, Tellenbach ranks as one of the most influential German historians of the twentieth century. At Freiburg, as well as during his tenure as director of the German Historical Institute in Rome, he trained and served as a mentor to a large number of students of medieval history who went on to receive important academic chairs throughout Germany. His most famous student was Karl Schmid (1923–1993), who further developed Tellenbach's research on medieval noble families and pioneered important new techniques in prosopography and source criticism using monastic necrologies and memorial books. Tellenbach's intellectual formation before World War I, and his scholarly maturation following the catastrophe of the Second World War, also lent his scholarship a unique perspective.
It was not until 25 November that a successful election took place. Cardinal Giovanni Gaetano Orsini, a Roman, became Pope Nicholas III. For a long time it was thought that Cardinal Bertrand de Saint-Martin died during the Second Council of Lyon in 1274 or in 1275, and shortly thereafter was succeeded in the see of Sabina by Giovanni Visconti, nephew of Gregory X. However, modern research has established that "cardinal Giovanni Visconti" never existed, while Bertrand is attested in the papal documents until the Sede Vacante following the pontificate of John XXI (died in Viterbo on May 16, 1277).R. Stapper, Papst Johannes XXI, Kirchengeschichtliche Studien, Munster 1898, p. 34-36 His death has been registered in the contemporary necrologies under March 28 or March 29.
Little is known about Émeric, in particular about the period that preceded his appointment as bishop and there are no known texts personally written by him. The most ancient sources are very short summaries about the date of his death and his pious donations contained in Aostan necrologies until a picture appears in Aosta in 1498 showing Émeric as Blessed, invoked to cure many diseases. The first complete biography of Émeric was written more than three hundred years after his death, around 1650, by an Aostan notary named Jean-Claude Mochet. A more historically correct biography was made in 1875 by bishop Joseph-Auguste Duc (and another in 1908 in his monumental of the Church in the Aosta Valley) who was the same who collected almost all the ancient documents relating to Émeric's episcopacy.

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