Memento Mori III
Our Free Lectures
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1h 16m
The Gravestones for many families were decorated with the trade symbols and tools of their family trade, whilst other families chose portraiture to memorialise their dead. Mark Hatton takes us through images that provide us with a deeply personal view of the people, their lives and livelihoods and their faith and fears.
Up Next in Our Free Lectures
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The Penwortham Breviary
William will primarily look at the Breviary from a musical point of view, discussing some of the musical variants and explaining how they are truly variant and not simply errors. His research interests encompass studies in tonal counterpoint and analysis and Gregorian chant as well as computer ap...
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St Peter’s Church and Middle Anglo-Sa...
Excavations in the 1980s uncovered the remains of a large timber hall, dating to the 8th century AD, which stood to the east of St Peter’s church and west of the lost early church of St Gregory. The timber hall was later replaced by a similarly large stone hall, which fell out of use in the 10th ...
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The Fifteenth Century Prelacy – a Pre...
Des will discuss how the submission of the clergy to Henry VIII and their acquiescence to the break with Rome represent a puzzle. Why did the late medieval Church come to an end in what seems such a meek and even impotent fashion? What was the role of the prelacy in that process?
This talk wil...