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5 kirjaa tekijältä Tony Reynolds
During the reigns of Elizabeth I and James I it was high treason, and therefore death, to be a Catholic priest in England. It was consequently vital that there be somewhere to hide when the pursuivants came battering at the door. One name is prominent in the construction of priest-holes that of Nicholas Owen. A very short and later crippled man, he built the majority of these shelters, so saving the lives of untold numbers of priests and fugitives. His early apprenticeship as a joiner and his knowledge of construction served him well as he burrowed into walls and constructed near-invisible entrance holes. Although a well-known figure in Recusant studies, and almost invariably mentioned in histories of the Gunpowder Plot, this is his first detailed biography. St Nicholas Owen was born in Oxford, the son of a carpenter. Two of his brothers were to train as Catholic priests on the continent. A third, Henry, the first apprentice at what was to become the Oxford University Press, went on to assist the Mission with the production of Catholic books and pamphlets. Nicholas was himself apprenticed to an Oxford joiner in 1577. Acting as a servant to Fr Henry Garnet SJ for nearly twenty years, Owen had many adventures, narrowly evading capture, and assisted in the escape of the Jesuit Fr John Gerard from the Tower of London in 1597. St Nicholas was tortured at the Poultry Compter in 1594 but later released. He was finally taken in one of his own priest-holes during the rigorous pursuit of Catholics that followed the failure of the Gunpowder Plot, and died upon the rack in the Tower of London in 1606. Evidence of St Nicholas Owen's work is still visible in country houses and mansions across England, and recent research has unveiled greater detail of his fascinating career assisting the English Mission at the close of the 16th and beginning of the 17th centuries. Tony Reynolds read Architecture at University College London in the 'sixties, and became interested in the application of computers to architecture, then very much in its pioneering stages. A staunch member of the caving club at college, this love of confined spaces combined with his architectural training may have given him special insight into the construction of priest-holes. Working as a computer manager and resident programmer, he has published several textbooks on computer use by architects, and, most recently, a well-received book of pastiche Sherlock Holmes stories.
In the dead of night two young women meet by chance on a hillside. Chris is the squire's daughter and Gerry a visitor to her village.Although Chris has lived all her life in the countryside and Gerry is a London sophisticate, they become close friends.They are taking a walk when Chris timidly enquires how long Gerry intends to stay in the village. In response, Gerry indicates a small wood a mile or two away. 'My lover is buried there, ' she announces. 'Soon it will be a year and a day since his death and I've come to stand by his grave.'
In the dead of night two young women meet by chance on a hillside. Chris is the squire's daughter and Gerry a visitor to her village.Although Chris has lived all her life in the countryside and Gerry is a London sophisticate, they become close friends.They are taking a walk when Chris timidly enquires how long Gerry intends to stay in the village. In response, Gerry indicates a small wood a mile or two away. 'My lover is buried there, ' she announces. 'Soon it will be a year and a day since his death and I've come to stand by his grave.'