翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Christ Presbyterian Academy
・ Christ Presbyterian Church (Edina, Minnesota)
・ Christ Presbyterian Church (Nashville, Tennessee)
・ Christ Recrucified
・ Christ Recrucified (TV series)
・ Christ School
・ Christ School (North Carolina)
・ Christ School, Bangalore
・ Christ Silas Djio
・ Christ Stopped at Eboli
・ Christ Stopped at Eboli (film)
・ Christ taking leave of his Mother
・ Christ Temple AME Zion Church
・ Christ the Healer Project
・ Christ the King
Christ the King (Almada)
・ Christ the King (disambiguation)
・ Christ the King (Świebodzin)
・ Christ the King Anglican College
・ Christ the King Cathedral
・ Christ the King Cathedral (Gaborone)
・ Christ the King Cathedral School
・ Christ the King Catholic High School (North Carolina)
・ Christ the King Catholic High School, Preston
・ Christ the King Catholic High School, Southport
・ Christ the King Catholic School (Oklahoma City)
・ Christ the King Catholic School (Pleasant Hill, California)
・ Christ the King Catholic School (Toronto)
・ Christ the King Catholic Secondary School
・ Christ the King Catholic Voluntary Academy


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Christ the King (Almada) : ウィキペディア英語版
Christ the King (Almada)

The Christ the King statue ((ポルトガル語:Cristo Rei)) is a Catholic monument and shrine dedicated to the Sacred Heart of Jesus Christ overlooking the city of Lisbon in the central part of Portugal. It was inspired by the Christ the Redeemer statue in Rio de Janeiro (Brazil), after the Cardinal Patriarch of Lisbon visited that monument. The project was inaugurated on 17 May 1959, at a time when Portugal was being ruled by the authoritarian President of the Council of Ministers António de Oliveira Salazar (permission to build the monument was ultimately given by Salazar). The giant statue in cement was erected to express gratitude because the Portuguese were spared the effects of World War II.
==History==
The construction of the Christ the King monument was approved on a Portuguese Episcopate conference, held in Fátima on 20 April 1940, as a plea to God to release Portugal from entering World War II. However, the idea had originated on a visit by the Cardinal Patriarch of Lisbon to Rio de Janeiro in 1934, soon after the inauguration of the statue of Christ the Redeemer in 1931.〔
In 1941 the land that would eventually be used to construct the monument was acquired. 〔 It was only in 1949, when the cornerstone was finally placed on the site, and managed by the Portuguese Episcopate.〔〔 Construction started in 1949 and took ten years to complete, funded and supported by Apostleship of Prayer members.〔 Yet, it would only be in 1952 that the first construction would occur on the site: at that time the foundations of the monument were established by ''Empresa de Construções OPCA'' (at the time, at a cost of 3.020 contos).〔
The inauguration of the many structure officially began on 17 May 1959, and continued during the middle of the 20th century. It was in 1984, the 25th anniversary of the Shrine, that the Chapel of Nossa Senhora da Paz was first inaugurated.〔〔 In addition, a general plan was approved to recondition the grounds of the Shrine, under the direction of Luiz Cunha and Domingos Ávila Gomes, which included the construction of the ''Sanctuary'' building, that included rectory, administration, chapel, meeting rooms and exhibition galleries.〔〔
When, on 16 July 1975, Pope Paul VI created the Diocese of Setúbal under the Papal bull ''Studentes Nos'' the Monument to Christ the King and the Seminary of Almada stayed under the control of the Patriarchate of Lisbon.〔 In June 1999 the site came under the authority of the Diocese of Setúbal, which immediately worked to restore the monument.〔 The municipal authority was responsible for public works beginning in May 2001 to clean the area and reorganize the public spaces, under the technical supervision of the School of Sciences and Technology of the Universidade Nova de Lisboa.〔 Following these restorations and maintenance projects, the monument was reopened in a solemn ceremony occurring on 1 February 2001. Owing to its national importance the Conference of Bishops determined that funds collected throughout the country on 23 November 2003 would be used to pay for the restoration.
In order to support pilgrimages to the site, in June 2004 new spaces in the Sanctuary building were inaugurated, that included a dining room with capacity for 150 people and two segregated dormitories.〔〔 This was followed on 17 May 2005, with the inauguration of a 150-person dining area and 80-person meeting hall, in addition to two segregated dormitories, dining room and kitchen.〔
Improvements to the monument of Christ the King began in 2006.〔 By 17 May of that year, the Chapel of Our Lady of Peace was inaugurated, under the collaboration of architect João de Sousa Araújo.〔 At about the same time, in the following year (17 May 2007), the Pope John XXIII hall was opened, containing eight oil paintings by the same architect, including images from the enclyclical ''Pax in Terris'' and statue of the ''Angel of Portugal''.〔 Similarly, the old high cross from the Shrine of Fátima was donated to Sanctuary, and unveiled on the same day.〔 On 25 November 2005, the newly remodeled main sacristy in the monument's chapel, that featured the original statue of the monument by sculptor Francisco Franco, was reopened.〔
On 17 May 2008, the ''Chapel of the Confidants of the Heart of Jesus'', containing valuable reliquaries was inaugurated, along with the Ten Commandments in bronze, which were placed on the main face of the Monument.〔
The inauguration of the ''Chapel of the Blessed Sacrament'' (6 January 2009) witnessed the apresentation of two paintings related to the revelations made Saint Margaret Mary Alacoque and another, which was placed above the tabernacle.〔
Pope Benedict XVI over flew the shrine in his apostolic visit to Portugal in May 2010.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Christ the King (Almada)」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.