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(→‎Mission San José: Mission San Gabriel Arcángel)
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== '''[[Mission San Gabriel Arcángel]]''' ==
== '''[[Cowdray House]]''' ==
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'''Mission San Gabriel Arcángel''' is a former religious outpost established by [[Spain|Spanish]] colonists on the west coast of [[North America]] in the present-day State of [[California]]. Founded on September 8 ("The Feast of the Birth of the Blessed Virgin Mary"), 1771 by [[Roman Catholic Church|Roman Catholics]] of the Franciscan Order, the settlement was the fourth in the twenty-one mission [[Alta California]] chain. Named for the Archangel Gabriel, the Mission (site of the first hospital in Alta California) has been historically referred to as the "Godmother of the Pueblo of Los Angeles." Mission San Gabriel also unknowingly witnessed the origin of the California citrus industry with the planting of the region's first significant orchard in 1804. Designated as both a National Historic Landmark and a California Historical Landmark, today the Mission serves as a museum as well as a parish church within the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Los Angeles.


''[[Mission San Gabriel Arcángel|.... (read more)]]''
{{Image|Cowdray House, 2008.jpg|300px|right|The front of Cowdray House seen from the west}}
 
'''Cowdray House''' in [[Sussex]] is a 16th-century Tudor mansion which was badly damaged by fire in 1793. Construction began in the 1520s after Sir David Owen demolished a 13th-century manor house on the site and was completed by William Fitzwilliam in 1542. The ruins have been open to the public since the early 20th century.
 
===History===
The Bohun family owned Coudreye, and in 1273 Sir John Bohun began building a manor house there. The estates descended with the family until the late 15th century. When the Bohun line became extinct in the late 1490s Sir David Owen inherited the family property through his marriage to the daughter of the last John Bohun.<ref>Howard, Bridget (2009). ''Cowdray''. Midhurst: Cowdray Heritage Trust. p. 27. ISBN 978-0-85101-428-9.</ref> Beginning in around 1520, Owen set about demolishing the 13th-century manor house at Coudreye and building a grand house for himself. Owen did not live to see Cowdray completed, and died in 1535.<ref>Woodburn, Bill and Guy, Neil (2005&ndash;6). [http://www.castlestudiesgroup.org.uk/Cowdray.PDF "Cowdray House"], ''Castle Studies Group Journal'' vol 19. p. 32.</ref>
 
''[[Cowdray House|.... (read more)]]''


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Revision as of 08:41, 3 February 2013

Cowdray House


(CC [1]) Photo: Ivanka Majic
The front of Cowdray House seen from the west

Cowdray House in Sussex is a 16th-century Tudor mansion which was badly damaged by fire in 1793. Construction began in the 1520s after Sir David Owen demolished a 13th-century manor house on the site and was completed by William Fitzwilliam in 1542. The ruins have been open to the public since the early 20th century.

History

The Bohun family owned Coudreye, and in 1273 Sir John Bohun began building a manor house there. The estates descended with the family until the late 15th century. When the Bohun line became extinct in the late 1490s Sir David Owen inherited the family property through his marriage to the daughter of the last John Bohun.[1] Beginning in around 1520, Owen set about demolishing the 13th-century manor house at Coudreye and building a grand house for himself. Owen did not live to see Cowdray completed, and died in 1535.[2]

.... (read more)