翻訳と辞書 ・ St. Rose of Lima's Old Church (New York City) ・ St. Rose of Viterbo Convent ・ St. Rose Priory ・ St. Rose Roman Catholic Church Complex ・ St. Rose Roman Catholic Church Complex (Lima, New York) ・ St. Rose's Catholic Church (St. Rose, Ohio) ・ St. Rose's Church ・ St. Rose's High School, Guyana ・ St. Rose, Louisiana ・ St. Rose, Nova Scotia ・ St. Rumbold's Cathedral ・ St. Rupert's Church, Vienna ・ St. Rynagh's GAA ・ St. Sabbas Russian Orthodox Monastery (Harper Woods, Michigan) ・ St. Salvator's Cathedral ・ St. Salvator's Church ・ St. Sarkis Church (Dearborn, Michigan) ・ St. Sava Academy ・ St. Sava Church, Paris ・ St. Sava Orthodox School ・ St. Sava Peak ・ St. Sava Serbian Orthodox Cathedral ・ St. Sava Serbian Orthodox School, Adelaide ・ St. Sava's Serbian Orthodox Seminary ・ St. Saviour Church, Dubrovnik ・ St. Saviour's Anglican Church ・ St. Saviour's Anglican Church (Barkerville, British Columbia) ・ St. Saviour's Anglican Church (Orono, Ontario) ・ St. Saviour's Church, Riga ・ St. Saviour's Church, Tremishtë
|
|
St. Salvator's Church : ウィキペディア英語版 | St. Salvator's Church
The Sint-Salvator church (also called the Old-Munster church) was one of five Catholic Church collegiate churches in Utrecht, Netherlands, before the Protestant Reformation. The others were St. Martin's Cathedral (the present-day Dom Church), St. Peter's Church, and St. Mary's church. The church building was situated on the present-day and was demolished during the Protestant Reformation, after the 1587 outlawing of Catholicism in the Dutch Republic. ==The first St. Salvator church== The exact history of first church building is not known but it was possibly built and its presence was definitely established by 724. It was established by Willibrord, after he had received his mission from pope Sergius I. The patron saint of the church, Salvator, is a possible reference to the Basilica of St. John Lateran, the ecclesiastical seat of the Pope and the mother church of the Catholic Church, as this church was at first also dedicated to St. Salvator. The name Salvator means ''savior'' and is a direct reference to Jesus the Savior. During World War II, the former church building location was subject to an archaeological excavation. At the site of the former crossing, on the axis of the church, wall remnants and limestone sarcophagi were found. From the positioning of the remnants it was concluded that the eastern annex of the church had been found. By studying the groundplan of the second church which included a very broad and extremely short nave and a heavy tower, the dimensions of the connecting hall were deduced. The original church was a rectangular single-nave building with an attached rectangular annex on the east side. The excavation showed that the annex, which contained many tombs within its walls, may have been a grave chapel and possibly a choir. The St. Salvator church was located southwest of a second small church building, known as the Holy-Cross chapel, which was likely the original St. Martin's church. That small church building was demolished in 1826. Until the 10th century, these two churches formed a double cathedral building but it is not clear whether both church functioned as a cathedral. The bishop's cathedra was installed, , in St. Martin's church, the direct predecessor of the later Dom Church, which from then on was known as St. Martin's Cathedral.
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「St. Salvator's Church」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.
|
|