Значение слова "AGRA" найдено в 10 источниках
найдено в "Crosswordopener"

• ___ Fort (UNESCO World Heritage Site in India)

• ___ Fort (Uttar Pradesh monument)

• ___ Fort (World Heritage Site in India)

• 16th-17th-century Mughal Empire capital

• A famous boot

• Akbar's capital

• Akbar's city

• Ancient capital of India

• Asian city that draws many tourists

• Asian tourist city

• Center of Mughal architecture

• City about 270 miles north of Bhopal

• City between Delhi and Mumbai

• City east of Jaipur

• City founded by Akbar the Great

• City founded by emperor Akbar

• City in India

• City in India that's home to the Taj Mahal

• City in Slumdog Millionaire

• City in Uttar Pradesh

• City known for a tomb

• City near Delhi

• City near Fatehpur Sikri

• City near Keoladeo National Park

• City near New Delhi

• City near the Yamuna River

• City of the Taj Mahal

• City on the Ganges

• City on the Jumna

• City on the Jumna River

• City on the Yamuna

• City on the Yamuna River

• City S. of Delhi

• City SE of New Delhi

• City seen in Slumdog Millionaire

• City southeast of New Delhi

• City that's a center of anagrams

• City where a raga might be heard

• City with a 350-year-old mausoleum

• City with an Indian fort

• City with the burial site of a noted Indian

• City with the Taj Mahal and a lot of pollution

• Con or Vi ending

• Famous mausoleum site

• Former Mogul capital

• Gateway to a mausoleum

• Gateway to an Indian wonder

• Historic city in India

• Home of the Taj Mahal

• Home to a famous tomb

• Home to a much-visited tomb

• Home to the Taj Majal

• India tour stop

• India tourism magnet

• India tourism mecca

• India tourist city

• India tourist stop

• Indian city

• Indian city in Slumdog Millionaire

• Indian city known for a tomb

• Indian city on the banks of theYamuna

• Indian city that's home to the Taj Mahal

• Indian city that's the site of the Taj Mahal

• Indian city with a major UNESCO World Heritage Site

• Indian fort city

• Indian fort locale

• Indian landmark

• Indian landmark city

• Indian mausoleum city

• Indian mecca

• Indian shrine site

• Indian sight site

• Indian tomb site

• Indian tourist destination

• Indian tourist draw

• Indian tourist locale

• Indian tourist site

• Indian tourist spot

• Indian tourist town

• Indian tourist-attraction city

• Indians' manager lets men go here

• It's southeast of New Delhi

• Jahan built here

• Locale in Slumdog Millionaire

• Locale of a much-visited mausoleum

• Locale of the Taj Mahal

• Marble tomb site

• Mausoleum site

• Mogul capital of India

• Mogul capital until 1658

• Mogul Empire capital

• Mogul Empire capital until 1658

• Mogul Empire capital: 1566

• Mogul Empire center

• Moti Masjid city

• Much-visited Indian tomb site

• Much-visited tomb site

• Mughal Empire capital

• Mughal Empire capital of the 16th-17th century

• Mughal Empire capital of yore

• Northern Indian city

• Noted mausoleum site

• Old Mogul capital

• Onetime capital of India

• Onetime Mogul capital

• Onetime Mughal capital

• Pearl Mosque city

• Pearl Mosque locale

• Pearl Mosque place

• Pearl Mosque setting

• Place to see the Taj Mahal

• Popular Indian destination

• Red Fort city

• Seat of the Mughal Empire

• Setting for part of Slumdog Millionaire

• Setting for part of The Bucket List

• Shah Jahan building site

• Shah Jahan built here

• Shah Jahan's burial city

• Shah Jahan's domain

• Shah Jahan's memorial site

• Shah Jahan's tomb site

• Shah's building site

• Shrine site

• Site of a great tomb

• Site of a Mogul memorial

• Site of a much-visited mausoleum

• Site of a noted mausoleum

• Site of a Shah Jahan construction

• Site of Akbar's fort

• Site of Akbar's Red Fort

• Site of Mumtaz Mahal's tomb

• Site of Queen Mumtaz Mahal's tomb

• Site of Shah Jahan's memorial

• Site of Taj Mahal

• Site of the Pearl Mosque

• Slumdog Millionaire locale

• Subcontinental tourism destination

• Subcontinental tourist draw

• Subcontinental tourist site

• Taj city

• Taj Mahal city

• Taj Mahal home

• Taj Mahal locale

• Taj Mahal location

• Taj Mahal setting

• Taj Mahal spot

• Taj Mahal stopover

• Taj Mahal town

• Taj Mahal's place

• Taj Mahal's site

• Taj town

• The Taj Mahal was built here

• The Taj Mahal's city

• The Taj Mahal's town

• Tour of India stop

• Tour of India stopover

• Tourist city between Jaipur and Lucknow

• Tourist city east of Jaipur

• Tourist city in India

• Tourist city in northern India

• Tourist city near Delhi

• Tourist city of Uttar Pradesh

• Tourist city on the Jumna

• Tourist city SE of New Delhi

• Tourist destination in India

• Tourist destination south of Delhi

• Tourist mecca in India

• Tourist site of India

• Tourist spot near Delhi

• Tourist stop in India

• Tourist stop in Uttar Pradesh

• Town northeast of Oklahoma City

• Train stop between Delhi and Mumbai

• United Provinces of ___ and Oudh (former name of Uttar Pradesh)

• University site in India

• Uttar Pradesh city

• Uttar Pradesh locale

• Uttar Pradesh metropolis

• Uttar Pradesh tourist city

• Where an Indian plot developed

• Where Shah Jahan is entombed

• Where Shah Jahan mourned

• Where the Taj Mahal is

• Where to see the Taj Mahal

• Wonder city

• Yamuna river city

• A city in northern India

• Former capital of the Mogul empire

• Site of the Taj Mahal


найдено в "Catholic encyclopedia"
Agra: translation

Agra
Archdiocese situated in British India

Catholic Encyclopedia..2006.

Agra
    Agra
     Catholic_Encyclopedia Agra
    Archdiocese; it is situated in British India, and lies between 25°30' and 32' N. lat., and 75° and 81° E. long. The area in square miles is 91,843. The population, according to the last census, is 28,086,364. The predominant religion of India when missions were first introduced was Mohammedanism. The primitive religion is Hinduism. The bulk of the population then, as now, belonged to this sect. The Archdiocese of Agra is an outcome of the Tibet Mission, which was the first regularly established in this part of India. Pellegrino da Forli in his "Annali dei Cappuccini", IV, 115, states: "Since 1703 the Sacred Congregation of the Propagation of the Faith has assigned to the Capuchins of the Marca d'Ancona the Mission of Tibet". The first decree of the Sacred Congregation which refers to the Tibetan Mission is dated 11 January, this instrument Father Felix, a, Montecchio of the Capuchin Order, is appointed Missionary Apostolic for ten years under the Prefect John Francis a Camerino (Bull.Ordin. F. Min. Cap. S. Francisci, t. VII, 250). From 1704 to 1808 thirty hands of missionaries, varying in number from two or three to eleven or twelve, were sent out. Owing to the unsettled condition of Europe, none were sent, from 1808 to 1823, to re-enforce these. Ludovic Micara, a Capuchin of Frascati, was consecrated Bishop on 13 April, 1820, and appointed Apostolic of the Tibet-Hindustan Mission. But circumstances prevented his leaving Europe, where he died, Cardinal Archbishop of Frascati. The Right Rev. Zenobius Benucci, O. C., Bishop of Herma, was appointed Vicar-Apostolic of Agra, and died at Agra, 23 June, 1824. From then up to 1886 there was a regular succession of vicars-apostolic of Agra. Pope Leo XIII, by the Bull "Humanae Salutis Auctor", 1 September, 1886, constituted and erected the Catholic hierarchy of India, and converted the vicariate apostolic of Agra, into metropolitan see. The Mission of Tibet had been productive of good results, and after two centuries (1703-1906) it has expanded into a metropolitan province. The suffragans of the Archbishop of Agra are the Bishops of Allahabad and Lahore and the Prefects Apostolic of Rajputana, Bettiah and Nepal Kafristan and Kashmer. The Metropolitan, with his suffragans rules over a country comprised in the following political divisions of India: The United Provinces of Agra and Oudh, the Central India Agency, the Punjab, the North-West Frontier Province, Kashmir, and portions of Bengal and the Central Provinces.
    The Begum Sumroo, who ruled over Sardhana as a vassal of Delhi, was a convert from Mohammedanism. With this princess the fathers of the Tibetan Mission found a home. She obtained from the Holy See the promotion of Father Giulio Cesare, one of the members of the Mission, to the episcopal dignity. His Holiness Pope Gregory XVI wrote to her, and sent her tokens of his paternal approbation. This gifted and great woman caused Catholicism to be respected even amidst the decay of the great Mogul empire. She bequeathed to her posterity not only an example of regal munificence in her many charitable endowments, but also a holy heritage in the colony of Christians that survive to this day in her beloved Sardhana. The following list of Bishops of Tibet-Hindustan, with their dates of consecration, is culled from the compilation made by Father Felix of the Diocese of Lahore (Cath. Calendar and Directory of the Archdiocese): Rt. Rev. Ludovic Micara, O.C., consecrated 13 April, 1820; Rt. Rev. Zenobius Benucci, O.C., 1823; Anthony Pezzoni, O.C., 1826; Dr. Joseph Angelus Planella, O.C., consecrated Bishop of Toposo with right of succession of the Vicar-Apostolic of Agra; Joseph Anthony Borghi, O.C., consecrated 1839; Cajetan Carli O.C., 1844; Ignatius Persico, O.C., 1854; Angelicus Bedenik, O.C., 1861; Michael Angelus Jacobi, 1868.
    Bishop Jacobi was created first Archbishop of Agra 1 September, 1886, and died at Mussoorie 14 October, 1891. The Most Rev. Dr. Emmanuel Van Den Bosch was consecrated Bishop of Lahore in 1891 and transferred to the Archbishopric of Agra in 1892. He resigned in 1898. The Most Rev. Dr. Charles Gentili, O.C., was consecrated Bishop of Allahabad 29 June, 1897, and appointed Archbishop of Agra 27 August, 1898.
    The Archdiocese of Agra has a Catholic population of 9,442; regular priests, 38; secular priests, 16; sisters, 228; brothers, 11; parochial schools for boys, 11; for girls, 5; colleges for boys, 2; for girls, 1; convents, 6; orphanages for boys, 3; inmates 403; orphanages for girls, 5; inmates 459; preparatory seminary for native priests, 1.
    Imperial Gazetteer; KEENE, India; KEEGAN, Sardhana; PELLEGRINO DA FORLI, Annali dei Cappuccini, Analecta Ordinis Minorun Capuccinorum; Catholic Calendar and Directory of the Archdiocese of Agra and its Suffragan dioceses.
    S. O'BRIEN
    Transcribed by Michael Christensen

The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume VIII. — New York: Robert Appleton Company..1910.



T: 451