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  2. Durham Rite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Durham_Rite

    In the "Galilee" was a chapel of Our Lady for women (ch. xxii, ed. cit., p. 42). When a monk died his body was carried to St. Andrew's chapel, two monks watched before it all the time; after the dirge and the requiem Mass it was buried in the sanctuary garth with a chalice of wax laid on the breast (ch. xxiii).

  3. Durham Cathedral - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Durham_Cathedral

    The Galilee chapel was added to the west end of the cathedral in the 1170s, and the western towers built in approximately 1200. The east end was expanded in the Early English Gothic style in the 1230s, and the Perpendicular Gothic central tower was built in two stages in the fifteenth century.

  4. Galilee (church architecture) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galilee_(church_architecture)

    The galilee porch at Lincoln Cathedral. A galilee is a chapel or porch at the north end of some churches. Its historical purpose is unclear. [1]The first reference to this type of narthex is most likely found in the consuetudines cluniacensis of Ulrich, or the consuetudines cenobii cluniacensis of Bernard of Cluny, (See De processione dominicali).

  5. Portal : North East England/Selected article - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portal:North_East_England/...

    The Galilee chapel was added to the west end of the cathedral in the 1170s, and the western towers built in approximately 1200. The east end was expanded in the Early English Gothic style in the 1230s, and the Perpendicular Gothic central tower was built in two stages in the fifteenth century.

  6. Hugh de Puiset - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_de_Puiset

    As a bishop, Hugh was noted as a builder, including a stone bridge in the city of Durham and the Galilee Chapel in Durham Cathedral. His administration of the episcopal lands included an inquest into the exact holdings of the bishopric. As a patron, Hugh sponsored the career of the medieval chronicler Roger of Hoveden. Hugh had a long-term ...

  7. Thomas Langley - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Langley

    Langley's alterations to the Galilee Chapel. In October 1404, Langley was elected Bishop of London but the new Pope, Innocent VII, refused to allow his installation and on 2 March 1405 he was appointed Chancellor for the first time. [2] From then on until his semi-retirement in 1430, Langley spent 5,670 days in the service of the crown.

  8. The inside story behind ‘Bull Durham’: ‘Fights, lies ...

    www.aol.com/news/inside-story-behind-bull-durham...

    Ron Shelton wrote and directed ‘Bull Durham,’ which was filmed in Durham, North Carolina, more than 30 years ago. Shelton left the table, nixing Hall as Nuke. Still, newcomer Tim Robbins ...

  9. Thomas Sharp (priest) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Sharp_(priest)

    He was created D.D. at Cambridge in 1729. On 1 December 1732 he was installed in the tenth prebend of Durham Cathedral at Durham, and in 1755 he succeeded Thomas Mangey as official to the dean and chapter of the cathedral. Sharp died at Durham on 16 March 1758, and was buried at the west end of the cathedral in the chapel called the Galilee.