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boyakko [2]
3 years ago
7

What are two purposes for the Sainte-Foys Abbey during the Romanesque Period?

History
1 answer:
Genrish500 [490]3 years ago
5 0

<u>Purposes for the Sainte-Foys Abbey during the Romanesque Period:</u>

Sainte Foy is a famous church in Conques, France. During the Romanesque period, art and architecture were developed as Gothic style. Also, people took pilgrimages to holy sites which means visiting a holy site is getting closer to the god.

Sainte-Foy church also a holy site was a monastery that helped monks to lived, worked and prayed. Because it was a monastery church in the route of Santiago de Compostela.

Also, it explained why people need to get close to the god via the carvings at the central port. That explains a scene of God's judgment, served as a reminder for the people about the torment in hell and joy in heaven.

And made hem to believe there was a door for the heaven and hell which means getting closer to god that let you go to heaven.  

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By 1892, the Washington Grange had grown to 36 subordinate chapters with 1,219 members. One year later, the railroad companies again dragged the nation's economy down, causing the Panic of 1893 and five years of economic stagnation. By the end of 1894, only 28 local Granges remained in Washington, and the only thing keeping many members in the organization was its cooperative fire-insurance association, started that same year. But that alone was not enough, and by 1898 there were only 20 subordinate chapters and fewer than 500 members. This was the low point; from there the state Grange would rebuild, first gradually, then rapidly. By 1909 membership had grown to 9,000; three years later it had nearly doubled, to 17,000.

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