THE PARISH of SAINT MARY CHURCH in LOWER SLAUGHTER ENGLAND
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Lower Slaughter The Cotswolds Gloucestershire.
Lower Slaughter is a village in the English county of Gloucestershire, located in the Cotswold district, 4 miles (6.4 km) south west of the town of Stow-on-the-Wold.
The village is built on both banks of the River Eye, which also flows through Upper Slaughter. At the west end of the village there is a 19th-century water mill with an undershot waterwheel and a chimney for additional steam power. There is a ford where the river widens in the village and several small stone footbridges join the two sides of the community. While the mill is built of red brick most of the 16th and 17th century homes in the village use Cotswold sandstone and are adorned with mullioned windows and often with other embellishments such as projecting gables.
Records exist showing that Lower Slaughter has been inhabited for over 1000 years. The Domesday Book entry has the village name as Sclostre. It further notes that in 1066 and 1086 that the manor was in the sheriff's hands.
The 13th century Anglican parish church is dedicated to St. Mary the Virgin. Much of the current structure was built in 1866; however, the spire and peal of six bells was recently restored.
Lower Slaughter Village Fete
The Village fete at Lower Slaughter on Bank Holiday Monday, August 31 had a fun dog show, Punch and Judy Show, stalls, produce, games, refreshments, a barbecue and live jazz music with the band, Anything Goes. Everything in aid of the villages Saint Marys parish church.
Temple Guiting St Mary
Places to visit in and around Stratford: Temple Guiting
The villages of Temple Guiting and Guiting Power were known as Upper and Lower Guiting, they were renamed in the 19th century. Temple Guiting is built on the steep slopes of a valley through which the River Windrush flows.
Temple Guiting takes it's name from the Knights Templar who were given lands here by Gilbert de Lacy and Roger de Waterville in the middle of the 12th century. A Templar preceptory was founded to administer these properties, they built the present parish church in 1170.The preceptory consisted of serving brethren, a chaplain and one or more knights under a preceptor, a knight who gathered revenues to be sent to their order in Palestine. The Templars were suppressed by pope Clement V, on the 8th January 1308, the Templars were arrested under orders from Edward II who seized their properties. John de Coningston, the preceptor of Guiting was detained and sent to London, Templars were examined and tortured, eventually the belief that their master could grant absolution from sin brought the charge of heresy. They made a public abjuration of error in June 1311, were absolved and reconciled to the church but their lands were confiscated. John de Coningston and six other Templars did penance at monastries in the diocese of Worcester where they were maintained by a charge on their lands at Temple Guiting.
The south and north chancel walls of the church with their corbel table, the south wall of the nave, the winged lion corbel now in the chancel, some carved fragments in the porch and the capitals of the tower arch are survivors from the Templar church. In the 13th century the east end of the chancel was altered, the remains of two chancel windows and a corbel in the porch are of this period. 14th century work includes the north chapel with its piscina and aumbry, the low window of the south wall and the north and south chancel windows. The 15th and 16th centuries saw the addition of battlements, the east window, nave and north chapel windows, the priest's door and the font. The west tower and it's bells are 17th century. 18th century features include the westernmost nave windows, the north window of the north chapel, the Royal Arms, a hatchment and a gilded decalogue. The north porch and the chancel and north chapel arches are 19th century.
The church has three panels of 15th century stained glass depicting Mary Magdalene, James the Lesser and the Virgin Mary. There is also a beautiful modern window by Tom Denny.
Temple Guiting lies between Stow-on-the Wold and Winchcombe about an hour from Stratford-upon-Avon, Adam Henson's Cotswold Farm Park is nearby.
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Cedd of Lastingham
Crypt where St Cedd's body was first laid to rest in 664AD
Places to see in ( Blockley - UK )
Places to see in ( Blockley - UK )
Blockley is a village, civil parish and ecclesiastical parish in the Cotswold district of Gloucestershire, England, about 3 miles northwest of Moreton-in-Marsh. Until 1931 Blockley was an exclave of Worcestershire. The civil and ecclesiastical parish boundaries are roughly coterminous, and include the hamlets of Draycott, Paxford and Aston Magna, the residential development at Northwick and the deserted hamlets of Upton and Upper Ditchford.
Blockley village is on Blockley Brook, a tributary of Knee Brook. Knee Brook forms the northeastern boundary of the parish and is a tributary of the River Stour. In AD 855 King Burgred of Mercia granted a monastery at Blockley to Ealhhun, Bishop of Worcester for the price of 300 solidi. In 1086 the Domesday Book recorded that the Bishop of Worcester held an estate of 38 hides at Blockley.
The Church of England parish church of St. Peter and St. Paul is late Norman, built in about 1180. The ecclesiastical parish now forms part of the Vale and Cotswold Edge team of Church of England churches, with the Team Vicar remaining responsible for Blockley and its outlying villages of Paxford, Draycott and Aston Magna, as well as the parish of Bourton-on-the-Hill.
The Oxford, Worcester and Wolverhampton Railway, built between 1845 and 1851, passes through the parish. Blockley railway station was more than 1.5 miles (2.4 km) northeast of the village and nearer to Paxford. British Railways closed Blockley railway station in 1966 but the railway remains open as part of the Cotswold Line. The nearest railway station still open is Moreton-in-Marsh. Blockley is home to Watsonian Squire, the largest UK manufacturer of sidecars and trailers for motorbikes. It has been based in the village since 1984.
Blockley has two public houses. The Crown Inn and Hotel is a former coaching inn. The Great Western Arms belongs to the Hook Norton Brewery. and The post office closed in 2007. In May 2008, under a co-operative agreement, the village residents opened a new local not for profit store.
( Blockley - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Blockley . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Blockley - UK
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St Marys Painswick
Painswick is in the heart of the Cotswolds and has a population of about 2000 people. It is often referred to as the The Quenn of the Cotswolds. Painswick is surrounded by the village parishes of Cranham, Sheepscombe, Edge, Pitchcombe and Harescombe with Brookthorpe. Together with Painswick they form the Beacon Benefice.
For Properties Nearby:
Bibury, The Rack Isle, The Cotswolds
Bibury, The Rack Isle, The Cotswolds, Gloucestershire
Tetbury Town In The Cotswolds Gloucestershire
Tetbury is a small town and civil parish within the Cotswold district of Gloucestershire, England. It lies on the site of an ancient hill fort, on which an Anglo-Saxon monastery was founded, probably by Ine of Wessex, in 681. The population of the parish was 5,250 in the 2001 census, increasing to 5,472 at the 2011 census.
During the Middle Ages, Tetbury became an important market for Cotswold wool and yarn. The Tetbury Woolsack Races, Founded 1972, is an annual competition where participants must carry a 60-pound (27 kg) sack of wool up and down a steep hill (Gumstool Hill). The Tetbury Woolsack Races take place on the late May Bank Holiday, the last Monday in May each year (27 May for 2013).
Notable buildings in the town include the Market House, built in 1655 and the late-eighteenth century Gothic revival parish church of St Mary the Virgin and St Mary Magdalene and much of the rest of the town centre, dating from the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. The Market House is a fine example of a Cotswold pillared market house and is still in use as a meeting place and market. Other attractions include the Police Bygones Museum. Chavenage House, Highgrove House and Westonbirt Arboretum lie just outside the town.
Tetbury has won five consecutive Gold awards in the Regional Heart of England in Bloom competition in 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009 and 2010 and was category winner Best Small Town in 2008, 2009 and 2010. In 2010 Tetbury was Overall Winner of Heart of England in Bloom and won a Judges Discretionary Award for Community Achievement. Tetbury won Silver Gilt as a first-time entrant in the National Britain in Bloom Campaign in 2009 and a second Silver Gilt in Britain in Bloom in 2011.
20171222 Cotswolds Stow on the wold St Edward's Church
The Charming Village Of Bampton In The Cotswolds.
Bampton, also called Bampton-in-the-Bush, is a settlement and civil parish in the Thames Valley about 4.5 miles (7.2km) southwest of Witney in Oxfordshire. The parish includes the hamlet of Weald. The 2011 Census recorded the parish's population as 2,564.
Bampton is variously referred to as both a town and a village. The Domesday Book recorded that it was a market town by 1086. It continued as such until the 1890s. It has both a Town Hall and a Village Hall.
The core of Bampton is on gravel terraces formed of Summertown-Radley or Flood Plain Terrace deposits.
The Bampton area has been settled since Iron Age and Roman times. The earliest settlement was probably somewhat to the east of the centre of Bampton today, the triangular space known as Market Square. Bampton was an important place in the Saxon and Middle Ages.
United States troops were billeted in Bampton at various times during the Second World War.
The Church of England parish church of Saint Mary the Virgin dates from the 12th century. It is on the site of a late Saxon Minster, the tower of which survives in the present church. It has a 13th-century spire, and a carved stone reredos of Christ and his Apostles from about 1400.
Bampton is the setting for the fictional crime novels The Chronicles of Hugh de Singleton, set in about 1366, by Mel Starr.
Bampton was used for outdoor filming of the fictional village of Downton, North Yorkshire in ITV's period drama TV series Downton Abbey.
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Gloucestershire Cotswolds - Parish of Bibury
Parish of Bibury in the Cotswolds, Gloucestershire
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Pershore Abbey, Tewkesbury Abbey, Evesham Bell Tower
Outside views of Pershore Abbey, Tewkesbury Abbey and Evesham Bell Tower.
Once an Anglo-Saxon Abbey, Pershore Abbey in the town of Pershore, Worcestershire, UK today is an Anglican Parish Church. The abbey church is the structure we see today and was completed in 1130. Pershore's Abbey Park was originally the Abbey Grounds and now provides a wonderful idyllic setting.
Tewkesbury Abbey in Gloucestershire (Church of St Mary the Virgin) is the second largest parish church in the country. The tower originally had a wooden spire, but this collapsed in 1559 and never reconstructed. The Abbey has been hit by floods in July 2007 and also in 1760.
Evesham Abbey Bell Tower in Evesham, Worcestershire, UK.
The tower has recently had restoration work from April 2015 to April 2016. The actual abbey was demolished during the 'Dissolution of the Monasteries' leaving just the magnificent bell tower we see today.
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Stanton St Michael Part Three
An ancient village on the edge of the Cotswold ecarpment a few miles from Broadway in one direction and Winchcombe in the other. The beauty of Stanton is the stone from which it is built and out of which it appears to grow sliding down the hillside to form a cluster of homes on the flat land below. The church is Norman in origin but this is disguised by a fine Perpendicular exterior culminating in an embattled tower with a ribbed spire. The medieval architecture of the building was enhanced in the early 20th century by the work of the eminent architect Sir Ninian Comper who designed a Rood screen, the west gallery, two stained glass windows in the transepts, a fine reredos and a War Memorial in the form of a churchyard cross.
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Cotswolds Sherborne
Places to visit in and around Stratford: Sherborne
The Sherborne brook once powered four watermills as it passed through the village, it's course along the valley floor. filling lakes and cascading over a weir is the focal point of a landscape of immense charm. Cotswold estate cottages stretch along the valley skirting the stream until the road climbs to reach Windrush church. All is honeyed limestone, all is bubbling silence, all is sculpted neglect.
The manor of Sherborne was gifted to Winchcombe Abbey by Coenwulf of Mercia in the 9th century. Edward I visited Sherborne in 1382. After the Dissolution of the Monasteries the parish bcame part of the Royal estate. A Norman church was recorded as early as 1175 in the records of Winchcombe Abbey. A 19th century cottage at the east end of the village has a Norman doorway said to have been recovered from an orchard nearby which must be a relict of this early church.
The present church, St Mary Magdalene is joined to Sherborne House by an open arcade, it retains a tower and spire c1300. The church has six bells, one 14th century and another by Edward Neale of Burford cast in 1653. A new chancel was built in 1750 for James Lenox Dutton. The nave and aisle were demolished (1850-1859) to allow more light into the house, nave and chancel were built slightly to the north, completed by 1859 the work was commissioned by the second Lord Sherborne and is probably the work of Anthony Salvin. The church is famed for it's magnificent monuments particularly an angel who triumphs over the skeletal figure of Death.
Sherborne House was built by Thomas Dutton some time after 1551, a substantial building must have provided lodgings for Elizabeth I and her entourage when she visited in 1592. This house underwent a series of alterations taking it's present form when it was entirely rebuilt in 1829-1834 by Lewis Wyatt who was influenced by the form of the mid 17th century house.
Astronomer Royal James Bradley was born in Sherborne in 1693.
Sherborne lies four miles east of Norhtleach and follows the Sherborne brook, a tributary of the Windrush, for more than a mile. About an hour from Stratford-upon-Avon, it is within easy distance of Burford and Northleach.
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Part 3 St James Church Bell Ringing Chipping Campden Cotswolds
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Catholics and Political Parties
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Responding to a caller who struggles picking one political party over another, Tim Staples explains that the Church is not definitively for or against any political party, but that voting Catholics should keep in mind non-negotiable issues like abortion, euthanasia, and same-sex marriage when deciding who to vote for.
Tim Staples is Director of Apologetics and Evangelization here at Catholic Answers, but he was not always Catholic. Tim was raised a Southern Baptist. Although he fell away from the faith of his childhood, Tim came back to faith in Christ during his late teen years through the witness of Christian televangelists. Soon after, Tim joined the Marine Corps.
During his four-year tour, he became involved in ministry with various Assemblies of God communities. Immediately after his tour of duty, Tim enrolled in Jimmy Swaggart Bible College and became a youth minister in an Assembly of God community. During his final year in the Marines, however, Tim met a Marine who really knew his faith and challenged Tim to study Catholicism from Catholic and historical sources. That encounter sparked a two-year search for the truth. Tim was determined to prove Catholicism wrong, but he ended up studying his way to the last place he thought he would ever end up: the Catholic Church!
He converted to Catholicism in 1988 and spent the following six years in formation for the priesthood, earning a degree in philosophy from St. Charles Borromeo Seminary in Overbrook, Pennsylvania. He then studied theology on a graduate level at Mount St. Mary’s Seminary in Emmitsburg, Maryland, for two years. Realizing that his calling was not to the priesthood, Tim left the seminary in 1994 and has been working in Catholic apologetics and evangelization ever since.
If you are interested in booking Tim Staples for an upcoming event, please contact Catholic Answers at (619) 387-7200 or seminars@catholic.com.
Myron C. Fagan - Les Illuminati et le CFR (1967)
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Il s'agit d'un enregistrement de 1967 de Myron Coureval Fagan, pour lequel j'ai mis des sous-titres en français. J'ai moi-même corrigé la traduction jusqu'à 23 minutes, ensuite c'est une traduction automatique. Aussi, ce qui serait bien c'est que vous m'aidiez à finir la traduction des sous-titres ; )
ici:
Myron Coureval Fagan (31 octobre 1887 - 12 mai 1972) est un dramaturge, réalisateur et producteur de cinéma américain. Il fut également essayiste de théories du complot, anticommuniste fervent et l'un des premiers à parler du complot Illuminati.
Myron Coureval Fagan fut le mari de Minna Gombell.
Il fut inspiré par John Thomas Flynn pour ses essais conspirationnistes.
Voici une liste de ses oeuvres:
Films :
1926 Mismates (scénariste)
1929 The Great Power (scénariste et réalisateur)
1931 Smart Woman (scénariste, adapté de sa pièce Nancy's Private Affair)
1931 A Holy Terror (scénariste)
Livres et articles :
1932 Nancy's Private Affair, A comedy in three acts
1932 Peter Flies High, A comedy in three acts
1934 The Little Spitfire, A comedy-drama in three acts
1948 Red stars in Hollywood: Their helpers, fellow travelers, and co-conspirators
1948 Moscow over Hollywood (published by R.C. Cary, Los Angeles)
1949 Moscow marches on in Hollywood (News-bulletin/Cinema Educational Guild)
1950 Reds in the Anti-Defamation League (Cinema Educational Guild. News-bulletin, May 1950)
1950 Reds in crusade for freedom! (News bulletin)
1950 Hollywood reds are on the run!
1950 Documentation of the Red stars in Hollywood.
1950 Reds in the Anti-Defamation League.
1951 What is this thing called anti-semitism? (News-bulletin / Cinema Educational Guild)
1951 Saga of Operation Survival (News-bulletin / Cinema Educational Guild)
1953 Hollywood backs U.N. conspiracy
1954 Red Treason on Broadway (Cinema Educational Guild)
1956 United Nations on trial in Washington, D.C (News-bulletin)
1962 Must we have a Cuban Pearl Harbor? (News-bulletin / Cinema Educational Guild)
1964 How Hollywood is brainwashing the people (News-bulletin / Cinema Educational Guild)
1964 Civil rights, most sinister tool of the great conspiracy (News-Bulletin)
1965 How greatest white nations were mongrelized, then negroized: That is the fate planned for the American people (News-bulletin)
1966 The UN already secret government of U.S.!: Our recall project can smash it! (News-bulletin)
1966 The complete truth about the United Nations conspiracy! (News-bulletin)
1967 You must decide fate of our nation!!!: The Negro (CFR) plot is our greatest menace! (News-bulletin)
1969 Proofs of the great conspiracy and how to smash it!!! (News-bulletin / Cinema Educational Guild)
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Snowshill St Barnabas
High on the valley side clings the village of Snowshill, indeed you could believe that the houses are slowly sliding down the escarpment. The heart of the settlement is a square of 17th century cottages which surround the Victorian church and on a lower road the famous Snowshill Manor now in the hands of the National Trust. Although the views across the steeply sloping village are wonderful in the winter months with snowdrops pouring down the wooded slopes the bleak winds that tear through the treetops prove how apt a name Snowshill is. The sunken lanes that climb the ridge above the cottages lead onto the high wolds that were once the sheep downs, the medieval source of the Cotswold's wealth. Nowadays, the large fields scattered with broken stone grow billowing expanses of wheat with only the skylarks and the yellowhammers for company. Towards the peak of this open landscape is a blaze of purple lavender, the Cotswold Lavender farm that attracts many visitors in the summer months.
Although the church St. Barnabas was built in 1864 Snowshill is an ancient parish, the manor, tithes and chaplaincy of Snowshill and nearby Stanton were granted to the Abbey of Winchcombe by King Kenulf of Mercia in the early 9th century. It remained in the Abbey's hands until the Dissolution when it was moved from the Diocese of Worcester to the newly formed Diocese of Gloucester. There are tithe records as early as 1183 and several references to the chapel throughout it's history however no illustrations of the old church have been found.Descriptions of the medieval church by a Dr Parsons and the more famous Sir Robert Atkins both describe a small church with a west tower and battlements.
The present church cost £1700 but funds were not sufficient to provide a spire as originally intended and the window surrounds which should have been carved remain as square blocks of stone. The architect is unknown although Pevsner suggests Henry Day of Worcester, the windows are late 13th century Geometrical in style let into walls of unusual thickness. There are a few survivals from the original church, a Perpendicular octagonal font with quatrefoils with floral centres, a pulpit with Jacobean panels and a single bell cast in Bristol c1350 which bears the impression of a coin and the inscription + In the name on Trinite Gillis Belle Men Call Me. The church has several attractive stained glass windows, an east window of 1864 by Ward & Hughes, chancel north and south windows probably by Frederick Preedy c1870 and the west window also Preedy c1885. The churchyard has several 17th century table tombs and a churchyard Memorial cross by F.L. Griggs, 1923.
The village is also well known for the Manor c1500, remodelled c1600 and bought by Charles Paget Wade in 1919, who restored the ruinous building in the Arts and Crafts spirit. He used the Manor to display an eccentric collection of antiques including Japanese armour and church-wardens' staves, the property was acquired by the National Trust in 1951.
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