Laudian rails
Laudian rails. Altar- or communion-rails, often with balusters, and usually of oak, dating from the time (1633–40) when William Laud (1573–1645) was Archbishop of Canterbury, and endeavoured to restore something of dignity to Anglican worship.
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Restore , re·store / riˈstôr/ • v. [tr.] bring back (a previous right, practice, custom, or situation); reinstate: the government restored confidence in the ho… Reinstate , re·in·state / ˌrē-inˈstāt/ • v. [tr.] (often be reinstated) restore (someone or something) to their former position or condition: the union is fighti… Date , date1 / dāt/ • n. 1. the day of the month or year as specified by a number. ∎ a particular day or year when a given event occurred or will occur: sig… Art Conservation And Restoration , art conservation and restoration, the preservation of structurally sound works of art, the halting of processes that lead to the damage of works of a… George Farquhar , Farquhar, George
BORN: 1677, Londonderry, Ireland
DIED: 1707, London
NATIONALITY: British
GENRE: Poetry, drama
MAJOR WORKS:
Love and a Bottle (1698)… Restoration (england) , the idea of restoration, in theory and in practice
restoration in the international arena
conservative alternatives to restoration
1830: the abandonm…
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Laudian rails