Money A2Z Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Veit Stoss altarpiece in Kraków - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Veit_Stoss_altarpiece_in...

    It is located behind the high altar of St. Mary's Basilica in the city of Kraków. The altarpiece was carved between 1477 and 1489 by the German-born sculptor Veit Stoss (known in Polish as Wit Stwosz) who lived and worked in the city for over 20 years. In 1941, during the German occupation, the dismantled altarpiece was shipped to the Third ...

  3. St. Peter's Baldachin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Peter's_Baldachin

    St. Peter's Baldachin ( Italian: Baldacchino di San Pietro, L'Altare di Bernini) is a large Baroque sculpted bronze canopy, technically called a ciborium or baldachin, over the high altar of St. Peter's Basilica in Vatican City, the city-state and papal enclave surrounded by Rome, Italy. The baldachin is at the center of the crossing, and ...

  4. Order of Nine Angles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Order_of_Nine_Angles

    — Scholar of esotericism Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke The ONA are strongly critical of larger Satanic groups like the Church of Satan and the Temple of Set, whom they deem to be "sham-Satanic" because they embrace the "glamour associated with Satanism" but are "afraid to experience its realness within and external to them". In turn, the Church of Satan has criticised what they alleged was the ...

  5. St John Altarpiece (Memling) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St_John_Altarpiece_(Memling)

    St John Altarpiece, c. 1479, oil on oak panel, 173.6 × 173.7 cm (central panel), 176 × 78.9 cm (each wing), Memlingmuseum, Sint-Janshospitaal, Bruges. The St John Altarpiece (sometimes the Triptych of the two Saints John or the Triptych of St John the Baptist and St John the Evangelist) is a large oil-on-oak hinged-triptych altarpiece completed around 1479 by the Early Netherlandish master ...

  6. Pergamon Altar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pergamon_Altar

    The reconstructed Pergamon Altar in the Pergamon Museum in Berlin. Side view Carl Humann's 1881 plan of the Pergamon acropolis. The Pergamon Altar (Ancient Greek: Βωμός τῆς Περγάμου) was a monumental construction built during the reign of the Ancient Greek King Eumenes II in the first half of the 2nd century BC on one of the terraces of the acropolis of Pergamon in Asia Minor ...

  7. Altar society - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Altar_society

    Altar society. An altar society or altar guild is a group of laypersons in a parish church who maintain the ceremonial objects used in worship. [1] Traditionally, membership was limited to women and their most common functions are making floral arrangements for the sanctuary, caring for linens, and holding fundraisers to purchase items for the ...

  8. Iconostasis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iconostasis

    In Eastern Christianity, an iconostasis ( Greek: εἰκονοστάσιον) is a wall of icons and religious paintings, separating the nave from the sanctuary in a church. [1] Iconostasis also refers to a portable icon stand that can be placed anywhere within a church. The iconostasis evolved from the Byzantine templon, a process complete by ...

  9. Altar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Altar

    The word altar, in Greek θυσιαστήριον ( see: θυσία ), appears twenty-four times in the New Testament. In Catholic and Orthodox Christian theology, the Eucharist is a re-presentation, in the literal sense of the one sacrifice of Christ on the cross being made "present again". Hence, the table upon which the Eucharist is ...