Nobility Newsletter: "Video: Thatcher’s coffin taken by gun carriage to St Paul’s Cathedral for her funeral – The Telegraph" and other posts |
- Video: Thatcher’s coffin taken by gun carriage to St Paul’s Cathedral for her funeral – The Telegraph
- Moslem Seville surrenders to Saint Ferdinand
- Organic society and human progress
- April 18 – Blessed Marie de l’Incarnation
- April 19 – As pope, he led his army against the Normans
- April 19 – Hostage of the Danes
- April 21 – The Noble Saint who tamed William the Conqueror, abolished slavery in England, and founded Scholasticism; his prayer to Saint Mary Magdalene
Posted: 17 Apr 2013 10:15 PM PDT According to The Telegraph: Margaret Thatcher’s coffin was paraded solemnly through the streets of London en route to St Paul’s Cathedral for her funeral, where the Queen led mourners from 170 countries to bid farewell… Parliament’s famous Big Ben bell was silenced as Baroness Thatcher’s coffin draped in the Union Jack was carried to a [...] |
Moslem Seville surrenders to Saint Ferdinand Posted: 17 Apr 2013 10:12 PM PDT The Moors had no choice but to accept the iron will of that King Ferdinand, who, like a curse of Allah, crossed Andalusia exterminating Islam. The ambassadors returned with broader powers to act, and then Don Ferdinand received them. After they had been conducted to his tent, they found him waiting surrounded by his whole [...] |
Organic society and human progress Posted: 17 Apr 2013 10:11 PM PDT (based on a talk by Prof. Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira – MNF of Sept. 29, 1993) Organic society precedes aristocracy. The very principles from which an organic society may be reborn stem from an action of the Holy Ghost. Everything we say about organic society is part of a global view of the foundations [...] |
April 18 – Blessed Marie de l’Incarnation Posted: 17 Apr 2013 10:05 PM PDT Bl. Marie de l’Incarnation Known also as Madame Acarie, foundress of the French Carmel, born in Paris, 1 February, 1566; died at Pontoise, April, 1618. By her family Barbara Avrillot belonged to the higher bourgeois society in Paris. Her father, Nicholas Avrillot was accountant general in the Chamber of Paris, and chancellor of Marguerite of [...] |
April 19 – As pope, he led his army against the Normans Posted: 17 Apr 2013 10:04 PM PDT |
April 19 – Hostage of the Danes Posted: 17 Apr 2013 10:03 PM PDT St. Alphege (or Elphege), Saint, born 954; died 1012; also called Godwine, martyred Archbishop of Canterbury, left his widowed mother and patrimony for the monastery of Deerhurst (Gloucestershire). After some years as an anchorite at Bath, he there became abbot, and (19 Oct., 984) was made Bishop of Winchester. In 994 Elphege administered confirmation to [...] |
Posted: 17 Apr 2013 10:02 PM PDT Saint Anselm, Confessor, Archbishop Of Canterbury (A. D. 1109) If the Norman conquerors stripped the English nation of its liberty and many temporal advantages, it must be owned that by their valor they raised the reputation of its arms and deprived their own country of its greatest men, both in church and state, with whom [...] |
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