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Martyrs' Square (Place des Martyrs; Martelarenplein) : Monument dedicated to the martyrs of the 1830 revolution. Over 400 heroes of the Belgian Revolution of 1830 lie buried in a crypt beneath the cobblestones.
Today this decimated village has been degraded !!!!! What a shame !
Tribute to Oradour Sur Glane (39-45) and all the victims of this Martyr village !! French
www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vkd3PNibon0
www.youtube.com/watch?v=f3LKfloS0Eo
www.youtube.com/watch?v=L9FocQoyHDQ
Le 10 juin 1944, une division SS a incendié le village et massacré tous ses habitants. Les nazis ont tué 642 personnes dont plus de 450 femmes et enfants et ont incendié le village... Ce village est un lieu de mémoire symbole de la barbarie nazie. Marcel Darthout, aujourd'hui décédé, était l'un des derniers rescapés du massacre d'Oradour-Sur-Glane perpétré par la Panzer-Division SS "Das Reich". Il avait 20 ans à l'époque, mais en 2013, au micro de Stéphane Robert, il s'en souvenait comme si c'était hier. Cela s'est passé le 10 juin 1944 en début d'après-midi.
Source France Culture
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On June 10, 1944, an SS division burned down the village and massacred all its inhabitants. The Nazis killed 642 people, including more than 450 women and children, and set the village on fire ... This village is a place of memory, a symbol of Nazi barbarism. Marcel Darthout, now deceased, was one of the last survivors of the Oradour-Sur-Glane massacre perpetrated by the SS Panzer-Division "Das Reich". He was 20 at the time, but in 2013, at Stéphane Robert's microphone, he remembered it as if it were yesterday. This happened on June 10, 1944 in the early afternoon.
Source France Culture
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'These twin spires rising above the tree line is the historic Martyrs' Shrine. The Shrine honors the eight Jesuit missionaries who lived, worked and died in the 1600's and who were responsible for bringing Christianity to Canada.'
Pope John Paul II visited the Martyrs’ Shrine in September, 1984
The martyrdum of Le Cat
Grand format pour les oiseaux
C'est la seule de ses réalisations devant laquelle Geluck ne peut sourire, dit-il lui-même : Le Martyre du Chat est un hommage à ses amis de Charlie Hebdo assassinés le 7 janvier 2015 et par-delà à tous les dessinateurs et caricaturistes victimes des opposants à la liberté de la presse. Les oiseaux perchés sur les crayons symbolisent la liberté et l'espoir, notamment en les jeunes générations.
"Le Chat déambule"
Du 26 mars au 9 juin 2021 sur les Champs-Elysées
Entre le Rond-Point et la place de la Concorde
At this site in 1834, thousands marched to support the Tolpuddle Martyrs. The clock tower was built in 1855 by the Metropolitan Cattle Market as a centrepiece. The cattle market has since been replaced by Smithfield's Meat Market and is now a recreational park.
St Cyricus by Francesco Laurana cir.1500.
for more information on this statue follow this link www.getty.edu/art/gettyguide/artObjectDetails?artobj=1528
A martyr is someone who suffers persecution and death for advocating, renouncing, refusing to renounce, or refusing to advocate a religious belief or cause as demanded by an external party.
James Hannington (3 September 1847 – 29 October 1885) was an English Anglican missionary and martyr. He was the first Anglican bishop of East Africa.
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It commemorates the Oxford Martyrs accused of heresy. The bishop of Worcester Hugh Latimer and the bishop of London Nicholas Ridley were burned nearby in 1555 and the Archbishop of Canterbury Thomas Cranmer was burned at the stake in 1556.
The monument on the Place des Martyrs in Brussels, reflected in the window of a nearby house.
Le monument de la place des Martyrs à Bruxelles, reflété sur la fenêtre d'une maison voisine.
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The Rue des Martyrs is a busy street that many tourists use to get from the Place de Clichy station of the Paris Métro to Sacré-Cœur. Around 200 busy shops line this street today.
The name Rue des Martyrs derives from the first bishop of Paris and patron saint of Paris, Saint Denis. He was decapitated during the time of the Roman Empire in the 3rd century on the hill where Sacré-Cœur now stands. After his head was cut off, Denis is said to have picked it up and walked several miles from the summit of the hill, preaching a sermon.
The old historic route is a pilgrimage to this day. Sacré-Cœur was built for and is part of that pilgrimage, that last walk of Saint Denis. It took me a long time to learn that.
The three figures represent an angel keeping watch over two young girls, one of whom is reading the Bible to the other. The reader is Margaret Wilson, the listener is her younger sister Agnes. Such is the logic of legend that they are known locally as the ‘Mary Martyrs’.
The two girls belonged to Wigtonshire, the daughters of Gilbert Wilson, a committed Episcopalian. Despite this, the sisters were followers of the Covenanters, an extreme Presbyterian group strongly opposed to the Anglican reforms of Charles II. Margaret and Agnes, aged 18 and 13 respectively, were arrested for their beliefs and along with Margaret McLauchlan, an elderly neighbour, tried for and found guilty of high treason. All three were sentenced to death by drowning. Agnes’s father was able to buy her freedom but despite a temporary reprieve the others were led to a point below high water mark on the treacherous Solway Firth, tied to stakes, and left to drown in the incoming tide. Margaret McLauchlan, by then in her late 60s, had no resistance to the powerful current and soon succumbed to its force. Margaret Wilson was offered her freedom, but refused to relinquish her convictions and died for her faith on May 11th 1685.
These are photos taken on my trip to Europe and the UK with a girl friend in October to November 2012. My camera I had then wasn't good with low light so some of these shots are not great but I have put them as my memories of the trip.
Day 2: Oxford on a cold October day in 2012. We stayed here two nights.
The Martyrs' Memorial is a stone monument. It commemorates the 16th-century Oxford Martyrs.
For More Info: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martyrs%27_Memorial,_Oxford
Oxford, a city in central southern England, revolves around its prestigious university, established in the 12th century. The architecture of its 38 colleges in the city’s medieval center led poet Matthew Arnold to nickname it the 'City of Dreaming Spires'. University College and Magdalen College are off the High Street, which runs from Carfax Tower (with city views) to the Botanic Garden on the River Cherwell.
St. Peregrin the martyr was an early Christian martyr who died because he and others refused to worship the Roman Emperor Commodus on his birthday.
Died August 25, 182, Rome
Venerated in Roman Catholic Church
Major shrine Saint John's Abbey, Collegeville Minnesota
Feast August 25 (Martyrdom); May 6 (Translation)
Attributes Chi Rho on his chest, in a dungeon with the rack, the scourge, clubs or fire's flames
Patronage young men and women discerning their vocations
"O dear friends," they cried, "abandon the worship of demons. Give honor to the one God, the Blessed Trinity, the omnipotent Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost. Do penance and be baptized, lest you perish together with Commodus!"
Holy Family Chapel, Carondelet Sisters of St. Joseph, St. Louis Province, St. Louis, Missouri.
The 1889 Romanesque chapel contains a large collection of religious relics including the bodily remains of Christian martyrs. The upper left niche appeared to be the remains of Saint Aurelius; St. Vincent at upper right niche. Below, the body of child martyr St. Aurelia is encased in a waxen figure.
See previous photo for location of this photo within the Chapel.
For more information, see:
www.ichrusa.com/saintsalive/motherhouse.html
6351-6355-HDRPHX-2-OrtonPin-3
In the 8th century two brothers, David and Constantine, led a rebellion against occupying Arabs. This failed and they were captured, tortured and killed after refusing to convert to Islam. Tradition holds that their bodies were thrown into the Tskaltsitela River and that lions dragged their remains to a hill overlooking the river. Motsameta means "place of the martyrs" and King Bagrat IV (ruled 1027-1072) had the Motsameta Monastery built on the hill after they were recognized as Saints by the church. Relics of the brothers are kept at the monastery.
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