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Its been a few weeks since I did any churchcrawling, so here we are near to the north Kent coast, looking to find which churches are open.
We had a couple of locked doors, but preparations at Holy Cross were well under way for Messy Church later.
I was last here six years ago, back when I was still green on the fixtures and fittings of a Kentish parish church. Original gas lamps, although there is now goof electrical lights and heaters.
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HOTHE,
OTHERWISE called Hoad borough, lies the next parish south-eastward from Herne. It was antiently, as its name implies, accounted but as a borough to the adjoining parish of Reculver, to which, as to its ecclesiastical jurisdiction, it still belongs.
THE PARISH of Hothe is situated in a lonely unfrequented country, both unwholesome and unpleasant, the soil being for the most part a deep stiff clay. The road from Sturry, through Rushborne to Reculver, goes along the western part of it, upon which stands Maypole-street, one side of which only is in this parish, the other side being in Herne; further in the valley, close to a rill of water, stood the old palace of Ford, and several houses near it; a habitation, says archbishop Parker, in such a soil, and in such a corner as he thought no man could delight to dwell there. The street or village of Hothe, in which the chapel stands, though as well as Maypole-street, situated on high ground, are both very wet, from the land springs which the ground is much subject to. Towards the south this parish is mostly woodland.
A fair, formerly held on Easter-Monday, is now held yearly on the 27th of May.
A branch of the Knowlers resided for several generations in this parish, possessed of Wainfleets, and farms in Maypole and Breadless-streets in it.
Within the bounds of this pairsh is THE MANOR OF FORD, alias SHELVINGFORD, which was once the patrimony of the family of Shelving, who possessed it in the beginning of the reign of king Edward III. and prefixed their name to it. Soon after which it passed, by the marriage of Benedicta, daughter and heir of John Shelving, to Sir Edmund Haut, in whose descendants it continued down till king Henry VIII.'s reign, when Sir William Haut, of Bishopsborne, leaving two daughters his coheirs, the eldest of them, Elizabeth, carried it in marriage to Thomas Culpeper, esq. of Bedgbury, in Goudhurst, son and heir of Sir Alexander Culpeper, who by an act in the 35th year of that reign exchanged this manor with the archbishop of Canterbury, for other premises. (fn. 1) Since which it has remained parcel of the possessions of that see to the present time.
FORD PALACE, in the northern part of this parish, was parcel of the antient possessions of the see of Canterbury, built probably on lands given to it sometime before the Norman conquest, and from the few remains left of it, appears to have been the most antient palace, excepting that of Canterbury, which had been erected for the archiepiscopal residence. Archbishop Moreton, in king Henry VII.'s reign, a magnificent prelate, who expended large sums, in the building and augmenting of his different palaces, almost rebuilt the whole of this of Ford, at which afterwards, in the summer of the year 1544, king Henry VIII. in his journey towards France, dined with archbishop Cranmer, who frequently resided here, and rode the same night to Dover, to go over thither. But in the beginning of queen Elizabeth's reign, it had fallen greatly to ruin, insomuch that archbishop Parker, made his petition in the year 1573, to the queen, though in vain, for her consent to pull it down, in order to enlarge his palace at Bekesborne, representing it, though large, yet as very inconvenient, being an old, decayed, wasteful, unwholesome, and desolate house; for Forde was in such a corner, and in such a soil, as he thought no man could have any delight to dwell there. After which archbishop Abbot, in 1627, being suspended from all his archiepiscopal functions, retired with the king's consent to this palace. (fn. 2) Archbishop Whitgift, his next successor in the see, used at times to reside here, and is said to have hunted in the park of Ford. Nearly in which state this palace continued till the civil wars, when the revenues of the archbishopric being seized on by the state, and sold to different purchasers, this house of Ford was pulled down in 1658, and the materials disposed of. On the restoration, the scite of Ford palace, with the park and other lands belonging to it, returned again to the see of Canterbury, and were soon afterwards demised by the archbishop on a beneficial lease. In which state it still continues, Mr. Vincent Varham being the present lessee of it. There are but very small remains left of this antient palace. Some of the walls have flues in them, the use of which cannot be ascertained, part of the old gateway is still remaining. The park and vineyards still netain their names, and the forms of the fish-ponds are yet visible. (fn. 3) There is a farm-house now built on the scite of the old lodge, a small part of which yet remains.
Charities.
WILLIAM YVE, of Hothe, by his will in 1526, gave to Margery his daughter, wife of William Alyn, land in Parkfield, beside Chistlet park pale, and beside the chantry meadow in Hothe, and wood lying in Combe wood, on condition, that she and her heirs should evermore brew, against the nativity of St. John Baptist, a quarter of malt; and bake half a quarter of wheat yearly against that feast; and the bread and ale thereof coming, to be distributed within the borough of Hothe, on that and the days following, as long as it should last, to such persons as would eat and drink of it.
A PERSON, of the name of WILMOT, gave to the relief of the poor, wheat to the value of 8s. to be made into bread; to be paid out of the farm at the old tree in this parish.
THERE ARE likewise vested in the chapel wardens, for the use of the poor, three acres of land in Herne, of the yearly rent of 3l. and lands in this parish, of the yearly rents of 5l. 10s.
CHRISTOPHER MILLES, esq. of Herne, by his will in 1638, devised to the poor of this parish, 40s. to be paid yearly, (as has been already mentioned under Westbere and Herne) out of his lease of the parsonage of Reculver, Hoade, and Herne, so long as the lease should continue in any of his surname. Which lease is now in the name of his descendant Richard Milles, esq. of Nackington.
The poor constantly relieved are about fifteen, casually eleven.
HOTHE BOROUGH is within the ECCLESIASTICAL JURISDICTION of the diocese of Canterbury, and deanry of Westbere.
The church, called Hothe chapel, is dedicated to the Virgin Mary and the Holy Trinity. It is a small neat building, of one isle and a chancel, having a low square turret of wood at the west end, in which hang three bells. In the isle is an inscription in brass, for Anthony Maycot and Agnes his wife, with their figures, and underneath two sons and five daughters. He died in 1535. And a memorial for Richard Wightwick, A. B. obt. 1779. In the chancel an inscriptions in brass, for Isabella Chakbon, the date obliterated.
This chapel is annexed to the church of Reculver, in the parsonage and vicarage of which the tithes and profits of it are included, being distant about four miles from it. It was probably built at the charge of the inhabitants, to prevent the trouble of going to the mother church, on account of which distance, at their petition in 1303, they had granted the privilege of a church-yard, near their chapel here, to bury their dead in; and in the year 1410, archbishop Arundel dedicated and consecrated this chapel anew, and granted it the right of sepulture, so that the vicar of Reculver should not by that means be any ways prejudiced. And lastly, he decreed that they should be bound to contribute to the repair of the church of Reculver.
¶In the year 1360, Thomas Newe, then vicar of Reculver, for the perpetual discharge of himself and successors, from officiating in the cure of this chapel, and for furnishing it with a constant resident priest, who beside the duty of the chantry which he at that time founded in it, should officiate in the cure here, partly of himself, and partly of the inhabitants, endowed it with competent means, and a house, and glebe, for the priest, who from that time till the dissolution duly served the cure of Hothe, the vicar of Reculver being during that time acquitted of all care and attendance on it. But this chantry being dissolved among others, in the 2d year of king Edward VI. frequent disputes arose between the inhabitants of Hothe and the vicar of Reculver, the latter often neglecting the cure of this chapel for years together, holding himself acquitted of the cure by the antient endowment made as above-mentioned, which plea was allowed by the visitors in queen Mary's days, and by archbishop Abbot, on a suit between them, which lasted some years. But the vicar of Reculver has for some years past constantly served the cure of this chapelry, and received the emoluments belonging to it.
There is a yearly pension of forty shillings paid from the archbishop's estate of Forde. The profits of the tithes of it do not amount to fourteen pounds per annum. (fn. 4) It is valued in the king's books with the vicarage of Reculver. In 1640 here were one hundred and forty communicants.
Seattle artist group Implied Violence performs in the Frye Art Museum reflecting pool on October 9, 2010.
Photo: Steven Miller
* Implied Theme * Become your satellite: If everybody is really a small satellite,then you’re my world. * Popular Elements * The elegant and trendy set of earrings is made by two mix linked transformative circle having a round cz stone set in the centre, the fluent design is inspired by soft and elegant silk fluttering on the horizon and revolving arround the real love. * Specs * Size: .43in*.43in/1.1cm*1.1cm Weight: 1.36*2 g/.05*2oz. * Audience * A flexible piece for ladies,ladies,women. Appropriate as Love Day Gifts, Moms day gifts, Christmas presents, wedding anniversary gifts, birthday gifts, wedding gifts, party gifts,
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chixink & pinkghost brought you: Implied Form - a T-Shirt design contest. To buy the winning designs go here: www.pinkghost.net/osCommerce/catalog/index.php/cPath/28
chixink & pinkghost brought you: Implied Form - a T-Shirt design contest. To buy the winning designs go here: www.pinkghost.net/osCommerce/catalog/index.php/cPath/28
Installment #3 of the Cheeky Chimera Collection-
As implied by the title, these earrings are dripping with a glam rock glittering excess that still, somehow, stays both classy and elegant. How miraculous!
In fact, these earrings embody my notions of a Cheeky Chimera: a fantastical monster composed of vignettes from dreams and waking life...
Each earring is unambiguously different from it's mate, and still clearly belonging to it.
Hammered brass wire is intermixed with freshwater pearls, rhinestones, Swarovski crystals, and glass beads, and several accent details from recycled costume jewelry.
Chains dangle from each earring, adding graceful movement and accentuate a slender neckline.
Though loaded with panache, the earrings are amazingly lightweight!
* Implied Theme * Beautiful Existence: Existence is really a festival, a great celebration, which is only the moment we’re now experiencing. * Popular Elements * The sparkling necklace uses Swarovski’s Aurore Boreale crystals that reflect light of all of the colors from the rainbow. Using the silver chain directly with the very, constitutes a beautiful and straightforward look, which is ideal for a stylish lady. * Specs * Chain Length: 45cm+5cm/17.7in+2in Pendant Size: .8cm*.8cm/.31in*.31in Weight: 2.61g/.09oz. * Audience * A flexible piece for ladies,ladies,women. Appropriate as Love Day Gifts, Moms day gifts, Christmas presents, wedding anniversary gifts, birthday gifts,
www.inspiredbycreativityjewels.co.uk/product/alex-perry-s...
chixink & pinkghost brought you: Implied Form - a T-Shirt design contest. To buy the winning designs go here: www.pinkghost.net/osCommerce/catalog/index.php/cPath/28
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The picture meets the project goal by displaying visual and implied texture on the baseball. The visual texture are the seams that are undone and sticking up, and the implied texture are the scuff marks on the baseball cover. In order to take the picture, I found an old baseball and then I cut the seams on one side of the baseball to create visual texture. I took the baseball into the bathroom and turned of all of the lights. Then, my brother held his phone from the right side of the ball to create shadows acrossed the ball. I stood back and zooomed the camera lens in order to take the picture. On Camera Raw, I turned up the clarity on the image of the baseball, so the texture would become more prominent. I also turned down the brightness on the right side of the ball, and I increased the shadows on the left side. Then, I turned up the brightness of the color red to make the visual texture stand out on the baseball seams. The strength of the photo was that the baseball clearly shows the implied and implied texture. The weakness of the photo as that I was not able to get the picture as clear as I wanted it to be.
Dean Baker the 53 year old US macroeconomist and author of a weekly online commentary on economic reporting, questions the implied value of Facebook in its latest IPO (initial public offering) and whether the business is really worth that much money. Baker states “Facebook is going public… that is likely to place the market value of the company in the range of $100 billion. This price would put Facebook among the corporate giants in terms of market value… Some simple back of the envelope calculations show that Facebook would have to gain an enormous share of advertising expenditures over the next 5 to 10 years in order to generate the sort of profits needed to justify this current price… there have been numerous cases of companies becoming market darlings which were most definitely not worth the price. The best example of a failed market darling is probably the internet giant AOL, which had a peak market value of over $220bn in 2000. The price tag for AOL today is $1.8bn.”
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AKHIL BHARATIYA VIDYARTHI PARISHAD .
31/1012004.
SAFFRON IS RAMPANT! .
"But the Independence ofHindustan does and must inevitably imply in itselfthe unityandIntegrity ofIt This unity ofHindustan, our Motherland and Holy Land from the Indus to the seas, had been through a thousand generations ofourpeople, the vision ofourseers, the theme ofourpoets ... and the battle cry ofour warriors -till at last It got identified with the oneness oftiJe National Being itself." (V.D. Savarkar, .
The 10th May: The Independence Day of Hindustan', leaflet, 1945) .
Friends, .
.onyto.
This statement, showing Savarkar's opposition to Partition and his commitment to 'A~hand B~arat', sta~ds t~stimthe hollowness of Marxist propaganda a1med at malignrng him and blaming him for Part1t1on. Netther Marx1st d.tstort1on of .
history, nor their boot licking of Sonia Gandhi's Congress, can conceal the fact that the C~l was.. apart from the Muslim League, .
the only national party which openly supported Partition. So far as our stand on campus 1ssues 1s concerned, the SFI-AISFare We understa_nd th_at they.
still silent on our demand for display of M.Phil. written examination and interview mar~s. .
,'lave many skeletons in their cupboard, which they fear may start rolling down ifacadem1c transpare':JCY IS achJ.eved. .
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Before gotng rnto the nitty-gritty of electoral polittcs in JNU, whtch, incidentally, seems to be respondJ.ng energe~tcally to the ABVP-campa1gn. one should like to quote the Mahatma; writing in Young India, the publication he had edtted for qu1~e so_me .
time, on 6th October, 1921, Gandhiji had stated clearly. 'Cow-protection is the gift ofHinduism to the world. And Hmdwsm will live so long as there are Hindus to protect the cow.' It is interesting to note that the person sought to be .
misappropriated, nowadays with disturbingly-hetghtened frequency, by the shrewd Communists, was not averse to identifying .
lndtc' way of life. Thus, far from differing from the RSS on questions ofhimself firmly w1th the supreme icons of the '.
fundamental, national interest, e g. the removal of untouchability, the integration of our national life, the identification and celebration of nationally-relevant hentage, Bapu was not at odds with the denizens of Hindutva, and the so-called Extremist nationalists like Bal Gangadhar Tilak, Lala Lajpat Rai, Pandit Madan Mohan Malaviya, etc. Hence, it is rather disturbing to note .
the shameless extent of Leftist skullduggery, which stops short of no mendactty in tts attempt to corner the national ideological space; but, it is grattfying to note, is confined to unfurling its pseudo-revolutionary buntings in the spacious lawns of elitist South Delhi. Lefttsts, at least, those of the self-styled variety, seem to share this zany class-character universally, more so in JNU than elsewhere; which ts why it ts so very tmportant to throw them out of this potentially-dynamic campus, and liberate what could have been India's Harvard from the dungeons of stale dogma. However, before we can get gomg with this noble task of mobil1smg the campus, it rs necessary to review the precise parameters of the ideology dear to our hearts and souls-the .
the Way of the Saffron Pennant', which is better known to all of us as Hindutva. the destiny of'Bhagava Dhvajah Patha', or '.
India Equitable Treatment of All Creeds', and the working ideology of.
C?ur baste 1dea is 'Sarva Dharma Samabht:w a', or the '.
Htndu Nat10nalrsm ts the realisation, identiftcation, celebration and triumphal march of this very pacific and egalitarian ideology, wh1ch has .bee~ hailed as 'the Light ofthe Civilised World' by many an occidental and 'oriental' scholar and sage. However, true ... to the rarr.1ficattons of a socto-political situation that is dominated by shallow-minded and vacuous-hearted hypocrites, this very .
gentle ·way of l1fe is under sieg~ fr?m all.sides, and, 'Oeo volente', the Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad, under the aegis,of t~e Samgha Panvar, Will defend 1t With all rts physical, mental, spiritual, intellectual moral and ethical might. Following what SrT h.r~na s~ys m the Bhagavat Gila about his taktng birth on as many occasions as there wtll be a preponderance of evil, the ABVP Wt~l defend the abstract and concrete boundaries of the 'lndic' Weltanschauung, come what may! Not for us is to say that nothmg can be done, and ltke Lady Macbeth, in William Shakespeare s Macbeth we should 'screw our courage to the st1ckmg-place, ~nd [weJ shall not fail.' The emotional attachment shown by the not-so-ordinary karyakarta to the timeless call of .
the Motherland ts a pomter to the fact of the unfading appeal of Hindutva which is the only possible way to reinstate India on .
the W?rld-stage. Under thts awe-inspiring Ideological umbrella, we reaffirm our fatth in the bas1c unity of all humanity, and .
rededicate ourselves to the goal of drawing up the blueprint of a just and egalitarian society which should be able to ensure JUSttce and ldeologtcal punty, for the evolution of a new India. In conclusion, we should ltke to call upon all of you to.
both so~ral.
defeat, tn the JNUSU-Eiect10ns, the forces that seek to degrade the soul of India, chiefly by refusing to accept her pristine .
greatness and strengthen the hands of the ABVP .
CENTRAL PANEL .
DHANANJAY SINGH -PRESIDENT ANKITA BHATTACHARJEE -VICE-PRESIDENT PRITISH KUMAR SAHU -GEN-SECRETARY MANOJ PANT -JOINT-SECRETARY SL SIS sss Special C entre for Sanskrit S tudies .
BHARTI TANWAR ARIJIT RAKSHlT RAJEEV NARAYAN VJKAS SHARMA.
DZHKHA KARUNA SAURABJYOTISARMA RAKESH RANJAN .
NAVNEET RADHAY SHYAM .
PUSP RANJAN VIKAS ANAND .
SATISH VIVEK KUMAR OJHA .
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VANDE MATARAMI .
Sd/-.
Ran Vijay .
Central Campaign Coordinator .
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Fire & Flood Restoration Services lot to purchase the house. More seasoned homes have incredible character, and by rebuilding the inside and even outside of it, can mean extraordinary speculation for where you live, which implies a great deal in the present monetary occasions.
As its name implies, the Three Pagodas comprise three independent pagodas forming a symmetric triangle. The elegant, balanced and stately style is unique in China’s ancient Buddhist architectures, which makes it a must-see in the tour of Dali. The Three Pagodas, visible from miles away, has been a landmark of Dali City and selected as a national treasure meriting preservation in China. The Three Pagodas are made of brick and covered with white mud.
The main pagoda, known as Qianxun Pagoda (pinyin Qian Xun Ta), reportedly built during 824-840 AD by king Quan Fengyou (劝丰佑) of the Nanzhao state, is 69.6 meters (227 feet) high and is one of the tallest pagodas in China’s history.[1] The central pagoda is square shaped and composed of sixteen stories; each story has multiple tiers of upturned eaves.
During repairs in 1979, three copper plates were found at the bottom of the steeple which recorded the exact years of previous repairs, those being 1000, 1142, and 1145.[
The other two sibling pagodas, built about one hundred years later, stand to the northwest and southwest of Qianxun Pagoda. They are 42.19 meters (140 feet) high. Different from Qianxun Pagoda, they are solid and octagonal with ten stories.
The most recent record of severe earthquake in the Dali area occurred in 1925. Only one in a hundred of the buildings in Dali survived, but the Three Pagodas were undamaged.