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Sanctuary   /sˈæŋktʃuˌɛri/   Listen
Sanctuary

noun
(pl. sanctuaries)
1.
A consecrated place where sacred objects are kept.
2.
A shelter from danger or hardship.  Synonyms: asylum, refuge.
3.
Area around the altar of a church for the clergy and choir; often enclosed by a lattice or railing.  Synonyms: bema, chancel.



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"Sanctuary" Quotes from Famous Books



... the Christian religion," as, "without a resident clergyman, an experience of fourteen years convinced him that all efforts would prove abortive. It had likewise become necessary to discontinue using the chapel as a school-room, since the doing so had been found to lessen the reverence due to the sanctuary in the minds both of the parents and children. A new schoolroom was therefore immediately built of the best stone, with two fireplaces, and a partition in the middle; over the door is the following inscription,—'The ...
— The Forest of Dean - An Historical and Descriptive Account • H. G. Nicholls

... crowding the canvas of the altar-piece, a justly-admired specimen of German religious art. Before it, dimly seen, two nuns knelt, types of conventual piety, absorbed in spiritual contemplation amid the tumult of the world's invasion of their sanctuary. Another door led to the garden. Here a fountain played into a great stone basin, and neat gravel walks intersected each other at sharp angles among flower-beds. The grass which lay around the maze of paths was sacred ...
— Hyacinth - 1906 • George A. Birmingham

... peoples whose religion is barbarous, there were ways of obtaining sanctuary and many a man has saved his life by taking advantage of the tabus which secured their operation. No matter how desirous your host might be of murdering you, as long as you remained a guest under his roof you were safe, although were you only a few yards away from ...
— Popular Science Monthly Volume 86

... that alone. It was all staircases and galleries and halls, black oak darknesses and sudden clear spaces and beautiful chintzy, silky rooms—lots of them, for Mrs. Wrackham—and books and busts and statues everywhere. And these were only his outer courts; inside them was his sanctuary, his library, and inside that, divided from it by curtains, was the Innermost, the shrine itself, and inside the shrine, veiled by his curtains, ...
— The Return of the Prodigal • May Sinclair

... matches. He thought of flying to the Pasteur, but remembered that to do so, first he must get out of bed, and perhaps expose his bare legs to the assault of ghostly hands, and next that, to reach the chamber of Monsieur and Madame Boiset, he must pass through the sanctuary of the room occupied by Juliette. So he compromised by retiring under the clothes, much as a tortoise draws its ...
— Love Eternal • H. Rider Haggard


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