Listing 1 - 3 of 3 |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
Tracing its distant origins to the villa of the Roman emperor Hadrian in the second century AD, the eccentric phenomenon of the ornamental hermit enjoyed its heyday in the England of the eighteenth century It was at this time that it became highly fashionable for owners of country estates to commission architectural follies for their landscape gardens. These follies often included hermitages, many of which still survive, often in a ruined state. Landowners peopled their hermitages either with imaginary hermits or with real hermits - in some cases the landowner even became his own hermit. Those
Garden ornaments and furniture. --- Follies (Architecture) --- Hermitages. --- Hermits. --- Gnomes. --- Fairies --- Anchorites --- Eremites --- Persons --- Hermitages --- Recluses --- Cells of hermits --- Hermits' cells --- Hermits --- Monasteries --- Follies --- Folly (Architecture) --- Architecture --- Pavilions --- Garden fixtures --- Decoration and ornament --- Garden structures --- Outdoor furniture
Choose an application
Christian religious orders --- Carthusians --- United States --- Camaldolese --- History --- Hermitages --- Monasteries --- 271.14 --- Cloisters (Religious communities) --- Friaries --- Church property --- Religious institutions --- Scriptoria --- Cells of hermits --- Hermits' cells --- Hermits --- Camaldulen--(1000) --- Camaldolites --- Kamalduliak --- Congregation of Monk Hermits of Camaldoli --- Order of Camaldoli --- Benedictines, Camaldolese --- Congregatio Monachorum Eremitarum Camaldulensius Ordinis Sancti Benedicti --- Kameduli --- History. --- 271.14 Camaldulen--(1000) --- United States of America
Choose an application
Calificado como fórmula rígida del eremitismo, el emparedamiento se desarrolló con gran adaptabilidad, dentro de una gran proliferación de fórmulas religiosas, más entre las mujeres que entre los hombres. Se realizaba en celdas adosadas a iglesias y cementerios, en hospitales y monasterios, en puentes y en murallas, localizadas en el centro urbano o en su derredor; pero siempre provocando un gran impacto sobre la sociedad que les rodeaba. Celdas dependientes de concejos o de iglesias, celdas independientes, pequeños habitáculos (identificados con sepulcros), con dos ventanillas (una hacia la calle, otra hacia la iglesia) y una puerta. Alejada del claustro tradicional, la vida emparedada se iniciaba con una despedida del mundo, una ceremonia litúrgica con el oficio de difuntos y una entrada en la celda, cuya puerta era tapiada: vestidas de penitentes, con bendición o sin ella, la vida en la celda transcurría en unas condiciones físicas muy duras: poca comida, sobre el suelo una tabla por lecho y escasas ropas; una vida de mortificación y disciplinas, de oración y salmos, de privación y lágrimas.
Hermitages --- Hermits --- 271 <460> "04/14" --- Anchorites --- Eremites --- Cells of hermits --- Hermits' cells --- History --- Kloosterwezen. Religieuze orden en congregaties. Monachisme--Spanje--Middeleeuwen --- Persons --- Recluses --- Monasteries --- reclusión --- historia --- España --- Edad Media --- Clausura (Monacato) --- Clausura monástica --- Clausura religiosa --- Religiosas --- Religiosos --- Monacato --- Órdenes contemplativas --- Clausura
Listing 1 - 3 of 3 |
Sort by
|