「cistercian」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
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The | Cistercian Abbey of St Mary was founded in 1147 by Simo |
Gutun Owain was closely associated with the | Cistercian abbey of Valle Crucis where he was the princ |
Henry de Aldithley endowed the | Cistercian Abbey of St. Mary at Hulton, near the site o |
d E are found in a manuscript written at the | Cistercian abbey of Whitland in south-west Wales in the |
Lannoy Abbey, also called Briostel, was a | Cistercian abbey in present-day Oise, France. |
It owes its origin to the famous | Cistercian abbey founded by St. Bernard in 1140. |
ish Darien Colony (1698-1700) in Panama, the | Cistercian Abbey of Grosbot (Charente, France), the Bis |
Whitland takes its name from the | Cistercian abbey in the medieval period. |
Nearby Vale Royal Abbey was once the largest | Cistercian abbey church in Britain |
Wyke was also the name given to the | Cistercian Abbey near Faringdon, Oxfordshire, England. |
Thame Abbey was a | Cistercian abbey at Thame in the English county of Oxfo |
Strata Florida, the | Cistercian abbey where Llywelyn the Great held council |
s master attempted to amalgamate it with the | Cistercian abbey of Feuillant. |
the road to Courtmacsherry is the ruins of a | Cistercian Abbey - Abbeymahon Abbey. |
The village is home to the | Cistercian Abbey of New Mellifont. |
d in 1228 by the defection of monks from the | Cistercian Abbey of Boyle, which was seen by the Cister |
e 17th century to educate novices from every | Cistercian abbey in southwest France. |
The lands of the parish were part of the | Cistercian Abbey of Strata Florida originally establish |
ive Abbey, daughter abbey of the more famous | Cistercian abbey at Mellifont in County Louth. |
He was born at Bruges and educated at the | Cistercian Abbey of Boneffe in the Province of Namur. |
od Uchtryd were within the boundaries of the | Cistercian Abbey Strata Florida (Welsh: Caron-Uwch-Claw |
A | Cistercian abbey in the village of Szczyrzyc, it is one |
bey (French: Abbaye de Lieu-Croissant) was a | Cistercian abbey in Geney, a commune of Doubs in France |
lur) ( pronunciation (help·info) is a former | Cistercian abbey situated just outside Pontrhydfendigai |
eslaus I of Bohemia signed a treaty with the | Cistercian abbey of Plasy. |
The church of this | Cistercian Abbey was re-roofed and restored to its form |
he Roman fort Nidum at Court Herbert and the | Cistercian abbey of Neath Abbey. |
ster (The Abbey of St. Mary de Graces) was a | Cistercian abbey on Tower Hill in London, founded by Ed |
the present church since the founding of the | Cistercian Abbey of Vale Royal in 1277. |
Loc-Dieu Abbey is a | Cistercian abbey located near Martiel, 9 km west from V |
o be episcopal sees, while in 1148 the great | Cistercian Abbey of Boyle was founded. |
(1148-66), land at Holwell was given to the | Cistercian Abbey at Bruern. |
Cymer Abbey (Welsh: Abaty Cymer) is a ruined | Cistercian abbey near the village of Llanelltyd, just n |
A | Cistercian abbey was founded in Medmenham in the 12th c |
It was formed as a daughter house of the | Cistercian abbey at Morimond, perhaps after Lord Robert |
tic settlement and the village was home to a | Cistercian Abbey in the 12th century. |
studied grammar, theology, and music at the | Cistercian abbey of Vaucelles, near Cambrai. |
Faringdon Abbey was a | Cistercian abbey located at Wyke just north of the smal |
rrikarnon was donated by Hugh de Lacy to the | Cistercian Abbey of Mellifont. |
was named after Arnsburg Abbey, a ruin of a | Cistercian abbey in Wetterau, as a homage of the import |
Monks from the | Cistercian Abbey of Kirkstead, in Lincolnshire had forg |
beginning of the fourteenth century, at the | Cistercian Abbey of Heilsbronn, in Bavaria. |
e Noailles, Archbishop of Paris, he left the | Cistercian abbey of Sept-Fonds, to which he had retired |
Stanlow Abbey (or Stanlaw Abbey) was a | Cistercian abbey situated on Stanlow Point on the banks |
f the cathedral of Nantes, and a monk in the | Cistercian abbey of Buzay. |
Louth Park Abbey was a | cistercian abbey in Lincolnshire, England. |
Meaux Abbey was a | Cistercian Abbey near Meaux. |
Abbeyknockmoy was originally a | Cistercian abbey founded in 1190 by the King of Connach |
when he granted the estates to the Friedland | Cistercian abbey (in today's Neuhardenberg). |
Born in Genoa, Italy, Albert entered the | Cistercian abbey nearby. |
dredd Manuscript was probably written at the | Cistercian abbey of Strata Florida in Ceredigion. |
oric building which was the most significant | Cistercian abbey of Europe, built in 1145. |
rdshire, England, known for its 12th century | Cistercian Abbey, expanded in the 13th century, Dore Ab |
urch of Abbey Dore, the church of the former | Cistercian abbey, whose estates had come to his family |
Also within the site are the remains of a | Cistercian abbey, dating from the 15th Century and adja |
ork at Clonmacnoise, County Offaly, Jerpoint | Cistercian Abbey, County Kilkenny and St Francis Abbey |
urch building in Hungary, formerly part of a | Cistercian abbey. |
rhaps the finest of the thirty-four medieval | Cistercian abbeys in Ireland. |
Strata Marcella was one of a number of | Cistercian Abbeys founded by Welsh Princes which operat |
The | Cistercian Abbeys of Britain, ed David Robinson, Batsfo |
n, Franciscan and Dominican houses, and four | Cistercian abbeys. |
John of Toledo (died 1275) was an English | Cistercian abbot and Cardinal. |
Alain (Alanus) (died 1185) was a | Cistercian abbot of La Rivour, and bishop of Auxerre fr |
riory and its rights was sold in 1396 to the | Cistercian Abbot of Hulton in Staffordshire. |
pter 5 of the Song of Songs; another English | Cistercian abbot, John of Ford, wrote another 120 sermo |
e attending the meeting of King John and the | Cistercian abbots at York. |
Hugo (died 1 December 1158) was a French | Cistercian and Cardinal. |
style, in the restrained and sober manner of | Cistercian architecture, except that the complex was do |
r reprobate Guldholm Abbey, which had become | Cistercian as part of the reform. |
om 1204 until 1538 the manor was held by the | Cistercian Beaulieu Abbey as part of its larger Faringd |
Hugh was the first abbot of the | Cistercian Beaulieu Abbey, which had originally been lo |
He was the first | Cistercian bishop in England, as well as being the firs |
Cistercian bishops were rare in Great Britain, and Joce | |
n are not known, though a thirteenth century | Cistercian chronicle from Clairvaux says that he was "i |
1252) was a medieval | Cistercian chronicler who wrote in Latin. |
Otto and his wife founded the | Cistercian cloister of Frauenroth in 1231, where both a |
He was buried in a | Cistercian cloister in Heidelberg. |
stablished in the buildings of the dissolved | Cistercian College of St Bernard. |
n the Cayman Islands and secondary school at | Cistercian College, Roscrea in County Tipperary. |
rappist since 1878, was the successor to the | Cistercian community of Gomerfontaine, founded in 1207, |
to send 12 monks and an abbott to form a new | Cistercian community there. |
The | Cistercian community was inspired by her spirit of humi |
The abbey has remained a | Cistercian community ever since on the same site, excep |
he patron, Walter Espec, settled another new | Cistercian community, founding Wardon Abbey, Bedfordshi |
It was united with the | Cistercian congregation by a papal brief in 1849. |
Maria died a nun in the | Cistercian Convent in Seville, in 1730. |
lled Hasencomede and was closely tied to the | Cistercian convent at Klosterkumbd. |
At age seven, she entered a | Cistercian convent named Camera Sanctae Mariae, and she |
o have occurred at the Port-Royal-des-Champs | Cistercian convent. |
Pope Eugenius III (also a | cistercian) created him Cardinal-Bishop of Ostia in the |
l and the Night Visitors in the 13th-century | Cistercian Culross Abbey. |
on a different site, in 1141 as part of the | Cistercian expansion into Spain from the "epicenter" at |
ymond of Fitero, as a military branch of the | Cistercian family. |
Cistercian fields teams in eight varsity sports in thre | |
d consecration of Mellifont Abbey, the first | Cistercian foundation in Ireland. |
The original abbey was | Cistercian; founded circa 1133 by Hugh de Malbank, it w |
ning, and developed around, the ruins of the | Cistercian Fountains Abbey in North Yorkshire, England. |
1137 and Saint Robert of Newminster from the | Cistercian Fountains Abbey was appointed as the first a |
ssessor of granges in Leicestershire was the | Cistercian Garendon Abbey whose economy was largely bas |
It is the only | Cistercian Gate Chapel to be open for regular weekly se |
Tregonan Grange was a | Cistercian grange of Beaulieu Abbey at Tregonan in the |
He went to school at the | Cistercian Heiligenkreuz Abbey. |
Genoa, also known as Lambert of Genoa, was a | Cistercian hermit. |
It was built around the former | Cistercian Holmcultram Abbey, the nave of the church of |
Conveniently, it was at | Cistercian house of Clairvaux that, sometime before 15 |
en Abbey, Bedfordshire was one of the senior | Cistercian houses of England, founded about 1135 from R |
tinued to be active in the foundation of new | Cistercian houses, so much so that towards the end of t |
The ruins of the 12th century | Cistercian Knockmoy Abbey |
brazowe Rud Wielkich: "Landscape Park of the | Cistercian Landscape Compositions of Rudy Wielkie") is |
lassee in 1242, the monks of the influential | Cistercian Lehnin Abbey sought nine years later to expa |
ap Iowerth, who was also the founder of the | Cistercian Llantarnam Abbey. |
r Lady behind it were originally part of the | Cistercian Merevale Abbey complex. |
nerally laid out on an east-west axis, while | Cistercian models lay north-south. |
The election was opposed by the | Cistercian monasteries of Yorkshire, and by the archdea |
ck to the 11th century, when Benedictine and | Cistercian monasteries controlled the area. |
ster Kaisheim or Reichsstift Kaisheim) was a | Cistercian monastery in Kaisheim, Bavaria, Germany. |
s at a nearby Jesuit college, he entered the | Cistercian monastery of the Congregation of Feuillants |
er Maulbronn) is the best-preserved medieval | Cistercian monastery complex in Europe. |
Viktring Abbey is a former | Cistercian monastery in the Austrian state of Carinthia |
n arm of the sea, under Deganwy, leaving the | Cistercian monastery of Conwy on the western bank of th |
The village was owned by a | Cistercian monastery in Mnichovo Hradiste. |
6 by the Bavarian state, was re-founded as a | Cistercian monastery by Abbot Leopold Hoechle from Wett |
Kirkstead Abbey is a former | Cistercian monastery in Kirkstead, Lincolnshire, Englan |
st, first documented at Llantarnam, a former | Cistercian monastery located near the present day subur |
Pairis Abbey is a former | Cistercian monastery in Orbey in Haut-Rhin, Alsace, nor |
r Waverley Abbey, near Farnham, the earliest | Cistercian monastery in Britain. |
bot's permission to join the founders of the | Cistercian monastery of Fountains. |
Dieulacres Abbey was a | Cistercian monastery established by Ranulf, Earl of Che |
Late in life he made a donation to the | Cistercian monastery at Nogales (1172). |
pirited out of Mayerling and interred in the | Cistercian monastery at Heiligenkreuz. |
A | Cistercian monastery for nuns stood on the site of Thic |
lage, famous for its well preserved medieval | Cistercian monastery Netley Abbey. |
dissolved, leaving Rein as the oldest extant | Cistercian monastery in the world. |
canon in Cologne, Germany but then entered a | Cistercian monastery where he became known for his piet |
fore he died in 1172, probably at the French | Cistercian monastery of Larrivour. |
In 1307 he became abbot of the | Cistercian monastery of Viktring, near Klagenfurt in th |
sue a military career, he chose to enter the | Cistercian Monastery of Piedra. |
He became abbot of the | Cistercian monastery of Morimond in Burgundy about 1136 |
e business park are located the ruins of the | Cistercian monastery of Mynachlog Nedd, the Tennant Can |
The | Cistercian monastery of Heiligenkreuz Abbey, the associ |
The Monastery of Santa Maria de Poblet is a | Cistercian monastery founded in 1151, and has been a UN |
the location of Walkenried Abbey, the third | Cistercian monastery established on German-speaking ter |
dam is believed to have been a member of the | Cistercian monastery at Dunbrody, County Wexford. |
Beatrix II, abbess of Quedlinburg, founded a | Cistercian monastery here, which was settled in 1146 by |
r 1467, and is buried in the Neukloster, the | Cistercian monastery of that same city, where her tombs |
esent school, located close to the site of a | Cistercian monastery on which the town was founded in 1 |
Sisters of St Joseph of Annecy and a former | Cistercian monastery located in Llantarnam, Cwmbran in |
elsh: Abaty Ystrad Marchell), was a medieval | Cistercian monastery situated at Ystrad Marchell (Strat |
Combermere Abbey is a former | Cistercian monastery which was founded in 1133 and is l |
iental in Lower Saxony, Germany, is a former | Cistercian monastery founded in 1138, along with Marien |
It was the 38th | Cistercian monastery to be founded. |
1140 - 21 April 1214) was the prior of the | Cistercian monastery of Forde, then from 1186 abbot of |
Wienhausen Abbey, former | Cistercian monastery from the 13th century |
Joined the | Cistercian Monastery at Seligenthal as a nun. |
ey (French: Abbaye des Vaux-de-Cernay) was a | Cistercian monastery in northern France (Ile-de-France) |
ie-Albert van der Cruyssen, the Abbot of the | Cistercian Monastery of Orval, Belgium, and took a lead |
in the province of Antwerp in Belgium, was a | Cistercian monastery founded in 1243 and dissolved duri |
or of Bagnoregio, Abbot commendatario of the | Cistercian monastery of Valdigna, and of the Benedictin |
ts name derives from Furness Abbey (a former | cistercian monastery) which lies at the northern end of |
An important | Cistercian monastery, Lucelle Abbey, was located here f |
It was formerly a | Cistercian monastery, and is located near Engelhartszel |
It is home to Mount Melleray Abbey, a | Cistercian monastery, the first such monastery to be bu |
proceeded to Rome, where he painted, in the | Cistercian monastery, the "Miracle of the Loaves." |
as originally built in the 12th-century as a | Cistercian monastery. |
at first by Augustinians and afterwards as a | Cistercian monastery. |
tains a cemetery wherein lies the ruins of a | Cistercian monastery. |
founded in 1148 by the Earl of Hereford as a | Cistercian monastery. |
, Henry Carey, was educated at a prestigious | Cistercian monastery. |
les coastline, a small island inhabited by a | Cistercian monastery. |
to the world, and entered La Trappe Abbey, a | Cistercian monastery. |
n complex is the most complete survival of a | Cistercian monastic establishment in Europe, in particu |
ime after 1211) was an Augustinian canon and | Cistercian monk in 13th-century Scotland. |
1150 - c. 1220) was a German | Cistercian monk and author, writing in Latin. |
(died 1220) was a 13th century Scoto-Norman | Cistercian monk and abbot. |
asures of the world, after which he became a | Cistercian monk at the monastery of Froidmont in the Di |
1100-1167) was a | Cistercian monk and abbot of the Ten Duinen abbey. |
nei, Toeni, Toeny, Toney) was a 12th century | Cistercian monk and prelate. |
Another brother was Stephen of Lexington, a | Cistercian monk and abbot of Clairvaux abbey. |
Cathal died a | Cistercian monk and was buried there in 1224. |
He was later a | Cistercian Monk at Mount Saint Bernard Monastery in Eng |
(d. after 1417) was a | Cistercian monk and bishop in the late 14th century and |
Francis Mahieu, a | Cistercian monk from the Scourmont Abbey, in Belgium (l |
called Reginald] (died 1213) was a medieval | Cistercian monk and bishop, active in the Kingdom of Sc |
on, but by 1143 he had given up and become a | Cistercian monk at Rievaulx Abbey. |
(17 November 1808 - 18 November 1854) was a | Cistercian monk who composed in 1841 the Swiss Psalm, t |
The seal or signet of Jocelin, a | Cistercian monk and former Abbot of Melrose, who became |
Baldwin (died 6 October 1145) was a | Cistercian monk and later Archbishop of Pisa, a corresp |
Arnaud (or Arnau) Amalric (died 1225) was a | Cistercian monk remembered for giving advice during the |
Fr. John-Paul Sanderson OCSO (b.1967) | Cistercian monk and priest. |
Pope Eugenius III, himself a former | Cistercian monk, speaks of Henry in 1147 as humbly wash |
After becoming a | Cistercian monk, he was named abbot of his monastery be |
d by some scholars that Christian had been a | Cistercian monk, possibly one of the brethren at Holm C |
He was a | Cistercian monk, of Thame Park Abbey, and the last Abbo |
Adam of Ross, | Cistercian monk, fl. |
a | Cistercian Monk, uncle of Roderic O'Conor, King of Irel |
ncertain) (died 1537) was a martyred English | Cistercian monk. |
gians, including St. Bernard of Clairvaux, a | Cistercian monk. |
ty of Arts before embarking on a career as a | Cistercian monk. |
as so demoralising to the faithful that some | Cistercian monks from Villemagne near Agde abandoned th |
Loccum Abbey was founded in 1163 by | Cistercian monks from Volkenroda Abbey in Thuringia. |
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