At the same time, a chantry was established, served by five priests, who soon afterwards assumed full control of the church. |
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Priests received a fee to celebrate a memorial mass in the chantry and further alms were given to those who attended the service. |
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Two candles were burning on the altar of the King's chantry throughout Margaret's funeral service. |
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The now ruined Spofforth Castle was the base he established in the area and would have had a chantry chapel for private family worship. |
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The village is named after St Wrw, whose remains are said to be buried in the chantry chapel in the churchyard. |
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They too had social selves, identities which ranged far outside church or chantry. |
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The warehouse, which includes a watermill and a chantry chapel, won the grant under the Heritage Economic Regeneration Scheme. |
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Joseph Elianore obtained royal licence in 1338 to found a chantry there which during the 1340s he endowed with numerous lands and rents. |
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A little Green Man on the high frieze of the fourteenth-century chantry chapel of Edward le Despenser, in Tewkesbury Abbey, faces the south choir aisle. |
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The practice of founding chantries, or chantry chapels, in western Europe began during the 13th century. |
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The leaders of society endowed chantry priests, who were permanently employed to say a daily mass for the soul of the chantry founder and his or her relations. |
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An April 2009 conference at Oxford explored chantries and chantry chapels as vehicles of religious, social, and architectural expression. |
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In 1825, this privilege was reduced to the south aisle and in 1895 to the former chantry chapel of the Black Prince. |
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Burnley Grammar School was first established in St Peter's Church in 1559, with its first headmaster a former chantry priest, Gilbert Fairbank. |
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This chapel is one of four chantry chapels built around Wakefield and the oldest and most ornate of the four surviving in England. |
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This also accounts for the large number of dead in Dadlington parish, leading to the setting up of the battle chantry there. |
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He planned the establishment of a large chantry chapel in York Minster, with over one hundred priests. |
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Fisher's foundations were also dedicated to prayer for the dead, especially through chantry foundations. |
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The island of Lady Holme is named after the chantry that formerly stood there and in former centuries was sometimes called St Mary Holme or just Mary Holme. |
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Apart from these more spectacular pieces of resistance, in some places chantry priests continued to say prayers and landowners to pay them to do so. |
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The nearest public conveniences in Chantry Lane do not have any disabled facilities. |
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Daniel Ostridge notched for the Bull and Gary Crawford was on target for Chantry as it ended 1-1, the Bull triumphing 4-2 on penalties. |
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In 1356 the Chantry Chapel of St Mary the Virgin on Wakefield bridge was built originally in wood, and later in stone. |
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The old Wakefield Bridge with its Chantry Chapel, Sandal Castle, and Lawe Hill in Clarence Park are ancient monuments. |
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Flats and offices were built at Chantry Waters, on an island between the river and canal. |
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