Pilgrims are not unaware of such tactics, however, and some remarked upon his craftiness. |
|
Inexperienced in a large battle, using combined forces, they had overestimated the ability of the Pilgrims to keep pace with them. |
|
Pilgrims are treated to plays enacted from stories of Hindu mythology, featuring the well known adventures of gods and heroes. |
|
Pilgrims come to pray for lovers, to keep their lovers, for children, or anything pretty much. |
|
Almost four centuries ago, the Pilgrims celebrated a harvest feast to thank God after suffering through a brutal winter. |
|
The Pilgrims poured into the great gaping hole Nukurren was tearing in the Utuku center, ululating, their mantles blue and black. |
|
Pilgrims are required to circle the Kaaba seven times, counterclockwise, praying as they go. |
|
Within a generation, if current trends continue, America could return to levels of forestation last seen by the Pilgrims. |
|
It is appropriate to remember the Pilgrims as Americans celebrate Thanksgiving. |
|
The religion of the Pilgrims did not seem to be much preoccupied with questions of cosmology and cosmogony. |
|
I'm worried people have forgotten why those Pilgrims shipped over here in that floating breadbox. |
|
The attempted robbery took place at around 11.10 pm on Sunday in Pilgrims Lane, South Ockendon, turning an unwitting driver into a vigilante. |
|
The exhibition includes original town maps used by the Pilgrims visiting temples in Indian cities and drawings of early Orcadian settlements. |
|
Pilgrims returning from the monastery at Mount Melleray have been known to stop and say a decade of the rosary for the departed. |
|
Pilgrims occupy every available space and the dimensions of the projects are too grand to be appreciated simply by craning the neck. |
|
Pilgrims would go up to the Temple in order to bring offerings or else to have sacrifices offered such as thanksgiving or expiatory sacrifices. |
|
Pilgrims travel long distances, leaving comfort and familiarity behind, in their desire to enter into holy space. |
|
During the middle of this Golden Age, in 1620, the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock. |
|
The Pilgrims took their black hats with the buckles from their heads in a gesture of respect for Rabbi Squanto. |
|
Did the Pilgrims re-enact an English harvest festival, alcoholic and semi-pagan? |
|
|
Having withdrawn from the world, the new Benedictines, the new Cistercians, the new Pilgrims would no longer put off others with their sanctimonious, judgmental presences. |
|
There are a number of former tribespeople among the Pilgrims. |
|
Probably in October, the Pilgrims met their Wampanoag neighbors for three days of feasting on wildfowl and venison. |
|
This is a monument dedicated in 1910 to commemorate the first landing of the Pilgrims in 1620 at Provincetown, where they wrote and signed the Mayflower Compact. |
|
We get plenty of rain, but the hilliness of the land has dictated an agriculture based on animals since the time of the Pilgrims. |
|
Pilgrims use the courtyard to perform the ritual circumambulation of the Kaʿbah, known as the ṭawāf. |
|
Pilgrims will experience and be guided through the trenches of WWI and the beaches of Normandy. |
|
Nearby Pilgrims Rest is an old gold-mining town which has seems to have been forgotten by time. |
|
Pilgrims often wander among the akhara camps, seeking blessings and observing the holy men, especially the reclusive naga sadhus, many of whom live in forest hideaways and caves. |
|
Pilgrims came to touch the royal shrine of the murdered Henry VI, the fragment of the True Cross and other important relics. |
|
Pilgrims would journey to cathedrals that preserved relics of saints, believing that such relics held miraculous powers. |
|
Pilgrims travelled to Papay from all of Orkney and the north seeking a cure. |
|
They helped the Pilgrims, who arrived in the fall of 1620, survive at their new Plymouth Colony. |
|
The almost lurid colors of the statues take a little getting used to if you have grown up on notions of Puritan somberness, and the general splendor of the little church is an important clue to the Pilgrims. |
|
Pilgrims who enter the temple for darshan of the Shivalinga in its bull humpshaped rock form apply ghee to it with their bare hands. |
|
I thought back to the first Thanksgiving dinner, where the Pilgrims cooked unfamiliar food with familiar recipes. |
|
Pilgrims and tourists who visit Mount Royal come through a gated entryway and walk along a sacred path, the Way of the Cross and the gardens that lead to the basilica. |
|
Pilgrims want to be energized and changed in some way by entering a place with which they are somehow familiar, yet which they recognize as bigger than what they know. |
|
Every November, when American schoolchildren are taught about Thanksgiving, they are insistently told the story of how the Pilgrims, in their gratitude, entertained the kindly Wampanoag. |
|
The Pilgrims had arrived in 1620, crossing the Atlantic Ocean to separate themselves from the official Church of England and practice freely their particular form of Puritanism. |
|
|
In 1620, Plymouth was founded as a haven for Puritan religious separatists, later known as the Pilgrims. |
|
In the 17th century, the Pilgrims settled a small colony at Plymouth, Massachusetts. |
|
The English Pilgrims of the North American colonies brought the recipes across the ocean with them. |
|
Pilgrims from all over Scotland came in large numbers hoping to be blessed, and in many cases to be cured, at the shrine of Saint Andrew. |
|
When the first house was finished, it immediately became a hospital for the ill Pilgrims. |
|
On March 22, 1621, the Pilgrims of Plymouth Colony signed a peace treaty with Massasoit of the Wampanoags. |
|
Known as Pilgrims, they successfully established a settlement in what became Massachusetts. |
|
The Pilgrims arrived by the Mayflower ship and founded Plymouth Colony so they could practice religion freely. |
|
It was the story of how the early Pilgrims had survived in the new land with the help of the native Wampanoag. |
|
In Tennessee, meet the Melungeons, a people who claim their roots date back prior to the Pilgrims. |
|
To commemorate the 1621 feast enjoyed by the Pilgrims of Plymouth Colony and the Wampanoag Indians in Massachusetts, Americans ate 46 million turkeys last Thanksgiving. |
|
Pilgrims was not mentioned, other than in Robbins' 1793 recitation. |
|
There is no record of the term Pilgrims being used to describe Plymouth's founders for 150 years after Bradford wrote this passage, except when quoting him. |
|
Pilgrims from all over Europe opened a channel of communication between the isolated Asturias and the Carolingian lands and beyond, centuries later. |
|
The Pilgrims were a small group of Puritan separatists who felt that they needed to physically distance themselves themselves from the Church of England. |
|
He traces the lawn's history from colonial days, when the Pilgrims transplanted turf from England, to its proliferation among post-World War II conformist suburbanites. |
|
Throughout Umrah, Pilgrims are prompted with the key Duas and supplications that they can listen to as well as read in Arabic, English or English transliteration. |
|
The visitors took the lead early on when a slide tackle from Pilgrims defender Paul Connolly 30 yards out looped the ball into the net for a bizarre own goal. |
|