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<rdf:Description rdf:about="https://sacredlandscapes.org/omeka/items/show/222">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[Carmelite Convent, Dysart]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[In May 1930 Dysart House, first built in 1756, was sold to Mrs Elsa af Wetterstedt Mitchell, and a month later she gifted it to the trustees for the Sisters of the Carmelite Community.  They established a closed community with room for 24 nuns. The nuns belong to the order known as the Discalced or Teresian Carmelites, who were formed in the sixteenth century by St Teresa of Avila. The convent is dedicated to St Thérèse of Lisieux, a Carmelite nun who died in 1897. In the 1980s it became an Infirmary Carmel, dedicated to caring for sick and older nuns of the order. Mass and other services are now held in the convent for members of the public.]]></dcterms:description>
    <dcterms:source><![CDATA[sacredlandscapesoffife]]></dcterms:source>
    <dcterms:date><![CDATA[1930]]></dcterms:date>
    <dcterms:dateSubmitted><![CDATA[18/06/2021]]></dcterms:dateSubmitted>
    <dcterms:modified><![CDATA[10/05/2023 02:38:58 pm]]></dcterms:modified>
    <dcterms:contributor><![CDATA[tt27@st-andrews.ac.uk]]></dcterms:contributor>
    <dcterms:references><![CDATA[(1) Jim Swan & Carol McNeill, Dysart, A Royal Burgh (Dysart, 1997)]]></dcterms:references>
    <dcterms:extent><![CDATA[cm x cm x cm]]></dcterms:extent>
    <dcterms:type><![CDATA[Site]]></dcterms:type>
    <dcterms:identifier><![CDATA[107]]></dcterms:identifier>
    <dcterms:spatial><![CDATA[current,56.12420015504941,-3.124798536082381;]]></dcterms:spatial>
</rdf:Description></rdf:RDF>
