vestry$90174$ - traduzione in greco
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vestry$90174$ - traduzione in greco

PARISH COMMITTEE
Vestries; Select Vestry; Administrative vestry; Select vestries; Open vestries; Vestries Acts 1818 to 1853; Select vestry; Open vestry; Parish chest; Vestry meeting; Vestry committee
  • [[St. George's Parish Vestry House]] built in 1766 at Perryman, Maryland
  • Parish chest in [[St Mary's Church, Kempley]], Gloucestershire.
  • A plaque commemorating an 1897 bridge building initiative in London. [[George Bernard Shaw]] was elected to the St Pancras vestry in 1897. It became the Metropolitan Borough of St Pancras in 1900.
  • Satirical cartoon of the select vestry of [[St. Paul's, Covent Garden]]. Thomas Jones 1828
  • Notice dated April 1843 (which would have been pinned to the church door<ref>Parish Notices Act 1837</ref>) calling a meeting of the select vestry of the parish of [[St Bees]], for rating and assessing property in the parish to raise money for the repair of the church and the provision of ornaments and other necessary goods for the coming year. It is signed by the Rev R P Buddicom, vicar of St Bees, and three of the four churchwardens

vestry      
n. σκευοφυλάκιο, ιεροφυλάκιο, επίτροποι ναού

Definizione

vestry
(vestries)
A vestry is a room in a church which the clergy use as an office or to change into their ceremonial clothes for church services.
N-COUNT

Wikipedia

Vestry

A vestry was a committee for the local secular and ecclesiastical government of a parish in England, Wales and some English colonies, which originally met in the vestry or sacristy of the parish church, and consequently became known colloquially as the "vestry". At their height the vestries were the only form of local government in many places and spent nearly one-fifth of the budget of the British government. They were stripped of their secular functions in 1894, and were abolished in 1921.