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==Practice in Gallowmere== | ==Practice in Gallowmere== | ||
Christianity was practiced in the kingdom of [[Gallowmere]] during the 13th and 14th centuries (and likely earlier as well). The settlement of [[Gallows Town]] had a small church where its people gathered in worship. In the nearby [[the Graveyard|graveyard]], the graves of many dead were marked by wooden crosses. There was also a prominent statue of an angel positioned roughly in the middle of the graveyard. | Christianity was practiced in the kingdom of [[Gallowmere]] during the 13th and 14th centuries (and likely earlier as well). The settlement of [[Gallows Town]] had a small church where its people gathered in worship. In the nearby [[the Graveyard|graveyard]], the graves of many dead were marked by wooden and stone crosses. There was also a prominent statue of an angel positioned roughly in the middle of the graveyard. | ||
==Practice in Victorian London== | ==Practice in Victorian London== | ||
The people of 19th century [[London]] still practiced Christianity. This was most evident in the [[Whitechapel]] graveyard which featured the statue of an angel and where the coffins bore crosses on their front. | The people of 19th century [[London]] still practiced Christianity. This was most evident in the [[Whitechapel]] graveyard which featured the statue of an angel and where the coffins bore crosses on their front. |