Difference between revisions of "Archive:Welsh Cistercians"

From WRG
Jump to navigationJump to search
m
m
Line 3: Line 3:
 
Transcribed by Adrian Benjamin Burke, Esq.
 
Transcribed by Adrian Benjamin Burke, Esq.
  
''The Welsh Cistercians: Written to Commemorate the Centenary of the Death of Stephen William Williams'' By David H Williams Gracewing Publishing 2001
+
''The Welsh Cistercians: Written to Commemorate the Centenary of the Death of Stephen William Williams'', by David H. Williams (Gracewing Publishing, 2001)
  
 
Page 128
 
Page 128

Revision as of 01:57, 2 April 2007

Archives > Archive:Extracts > Welsh Cistercians

Transcribed by Adrian Benjamin Burke, Esq.

The Welsh Cistercians: Written to Commemorate the Centenary of the Death of Stephen William Williams, by David H. Williams (Gracewing Publishing, 2001)

Page 128

In central Wales, the names of but thiry-five monks and eleven conversi of Strata Florida have come down to us. They are practically all Welsh down to Tudor times, when the presence of monks such as Henry Howtone (1515), James Whitney (1515) and Thomas Durham (1539), suggests a wider net being cast for vocations.


Copyright © 2006, Adrian Benjamin Burke, Esq., and the Whitney Research Group