It's my responsibility as protectress to this town to make sure everyone is alright! |
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The goddess Hathor was the protectress of an important wine-producing area, and myths linked her to wine and drunkenness. |
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The theme of the window is the Virgin as protectress of mariners in distress. |
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She is, above all, the Goddess of the City, the protectress of civilized life, of artesian activities, and of agriculture. |
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Many times I offered cakes and fruit, especially to my patron Goddess Artemis, protectress of children. |
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One of Boucher's closest associates had been Diderot's protectress, Mme de Pompadour. |
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There she is named as one who is prosperous, yet fierce and passionate, a great mother, a refuge, a divine destroyer, a benevolent goddess, a protectress. |
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Like Diana, she was a protectress of pregnant women and, like the Camenae, was considered prophetic. |
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The protectress of this small centre is the Madonna of the Perpetual Help, that r is celebrated on the last Saturday of June. |
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The protectress of Parabita is the Madonna della Coltura, that is celebrated on the last Sunday of May. |
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After the retreat we journeyed to Lyons to visit Our Lady of Fourvière, the protectress of many occasions for the people of that ancient city. |
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The protectress of Trepuzzi is Our Lady of the assumption, that is celebrated solemnly on August 15th. |
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The protectress of the small town is St Cesarea, that is celebrated solemnly on September 11th. |
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Ekajati is a female dharma protector especially popular in Nyingma, where she is also considered a protectress of Dzog Chen. |
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The statuette is traditionally identified as a dancer, but she may equally represent a Nymph, the protectress of brides-to-be. |
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In Pompeii we come across her in numerous statuettes and wall paintings as the protectress of the garden. |
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The protectress of Sanarica is the Madonna of the Graces, that is celebrated on September 8th. |
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At the front of what became a giant yin-yang symbol stands a rough stone statue of Kwan Yin, our household protectress, with Japanese flowers at her feet. |
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The key to the most profound meaning of the altarpiece may well be St Margaret of Antioch, the saint in red on the right, and the protectress of all pregnant women. |
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One of the most important processions on the coast is that of Our Lady of Mt. Carmel, the patroness and protectress of sailors, which takes place in Palamós, in boats. |
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Nimsay is the charming protectress of the flying elf horses. |
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Athena, also spelled Athene, in Greek religion, the city protectress, goddess of war, handicraft, and practical reason, identified by the Romans with Minerva. |
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I think of Our Lady worshipped with the name of Carmine, protectress of my family. I trust in Our Lady del Carmine, who enriches the dying with spiritual gifts and frees the dead's soul through Our Lord! |
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Mary Immaculate was her patroness and protectress since her birth. |
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Nimsay, the protectress of all elf horses. |
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They may be emblems of the arachnid as our supreme protectress – but, more to the point, they are also there to repel by the sheer horror of their looming, predatory-looking presence. |
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To Bourgeois, the spider was often the symbol of the motherly protectress. |
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Taurt, also called Taweret or Thoueris, goddess of ancient Egypt, the benevolent protectress of fertility and childbirth, associated also with the nursing of infants. |
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The second sphere naturally made her the protectress of women in childbirth, and she bore the title of Eileithyia, the birth goddess, at Argos and Athens. |
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