Cathedral.
he built large churches such as the Hagia Sophia.
he built large churches such as the Hagia Sophia.
he built large churches such as the Hagia Sophia.
he built large churches such as the Hagia Sophia.
he built large churches such as the Hagia Sophia.
Some large churches were cathedrals, but the fact that a church was large did not make it a cathedral. The thing that made it a cathedral was that it was the church of a bishop. Westminster Abbey was not a cathedral, except for a period of about ten years when a bishop was presiding there.
Most large dams are built in the North, but small ones are mainly in the middle of pakistan.
A cathedral is a church having the seat of a bishop. It is the site of the administrative center of a diocese, which is a geographical grouping of smaller churches. Cathedrals are usually very large churches, and often very grand. During the Middle Ages there were several types of cathedrals. Most important of these in Europe are the Byzantine, Romanesque, and Gothic styles. There are links below to pictures showing cathedrals of these styles.
Cathedrals were very large churches, which were used as other churches were except in one respect. They were the churches administered by bishops instead of priests, the bishops being the central authorities for dioceses, which were ecclesiastical areas analogous to counties.
A lot of the churches in large cities offer child care during church services. You might want to call ahead of time to check and be sure before you attend.
For administrative purposes, local churches were grouped in dioceses, which were headed by bishops. A bishop's own church, where he presided at services, was the cathedral. The cathedral also had the central offices, and usually one or more monasteries, hospitals, schools, libraries, or other types of institutions associated with it. Cathedrals were built to be churches from which these functions could be provided. During parts of the Middle Ages, the presence of a cathedral was the thing that distinguished a city from a town.
Priest Holes were usually secret rooms which were hidden inside the walls of large houses, manors or churches. Usually in Catholic buildings in England within the countryside. They were used for hiding priests during times of persecution against Catholics.