Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
He was a member of the Congregation of Marian Fathers.
In August 1967 Gajek, joined the Congregation of Marian Fathers.
In 1921 the church was assigned to the Congregation of Marian Fathers and a monastery was built nearby.
In 1953 the house and surrounding park were purchased by the Congregation of Marian Fathers, to be used as a school, Divine Mercy College, for Polish boys.
After the disaster the wife of contemporary starost of Prienai, Franciszka Szczukowa née Butler, financed a new church and a monastery for the Congregation of Marian Fathers.
The young Januszczak attended Divine Mercy College, a school for the children of Polish refugees which the Congregation of Marian Fathers had set up at Fawley Court, Henley-on-Thames.
The John Paul II Institute of Divine Mercy is managed by the Congregation of Marian Fathers, which takes an active role in promoting the Divine Mercy message.
Kovalenko actively helped the Congregation of Marian Fathers' monks George (Bryanchaninov) and Andrei Katkov and they joined the Jesuit Frenchman Philippe de Regis.
The parish included a parish school run by the Congregation of Marian Fathers, and until 1945, the parish functioned as a nursing home for the elderly and the physically disabled as well as an orphanage.
The priests and brothers of the Congregation of Marian Fathers of the Immaculate Conception of the Most Blessed Virgin Mary have resided on Eden Hill in Stockbridge, since June 1944.
George (Bryanchaninov), Congregation of Marian Fathers (born June 8, 1919 in Blagoveshchensk, Russian Federation) is a Russian Greek Catholic priest, Archimandrite and a member of Russian apostolate in the Diaspora.
Also known as the Congregation of Marian Fathers of the Immaculate Conception of the Most Blessed Virgin Mary, this is a community of more than 500 Roman Catholic priests and brothers in 19 countries on 6 continents.
Another substantial riverside property on the outskirts of Henley-on-Thames and once owned in the nineteenth century by a Scottish banker, it was sold in controversial circumstances by the Congregation of Marian Fathers, a Polish religious community which had no further use for it.