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Topic: Ludgate Circus


  
  London’s Sacred Sites
The site is also connected with the King Lud, who gave his name to the present day Ludgate Circus and Ludgate Hill, on on which St. Paul's Cathedral stands.
At his death, Lud was buried in an entrance to the city that still bears his name, Ludgate.
My intuition tells me that Ludgate Hill was a scared site for the Celts, probably because of it's connections with Brutus and Lud.
www.fantompowa.net /Flame/pagan_london.htm   (2128 words)

  
 Leonard Barnett and the church youth club
The Methodist Youth Department had been established in 1943 (bringing together the existing Sunday School and Guild Departments) and under the guidance of Rev. Douglas A. Griffiths MAYC came into existence in 1945 (Hubery 1963: 80).
When Leonard Barnett joined MAYC it was working from buildings in Ludgate Circus.
Under his secretaryship special attention was given to training and laying a proper foundation for youth club work within the Methodist Church.
www.infed.org /thinkers/leonard_barnett.htm   (3975 words)

  
 First Century Britain and the Gospel of the Messiah
And Paul abode in his lodgings three months, confirming in the faith and preaching Christ continually.
The "Mount Lud" mentioned in the Sonnini Manuscript can be identified with the modern-day Ludgate Hill, located within the City of London.
Notes Ivor Fletcher: "A variety of objects dating to the first century have been unearthed in this area showing that it was a spot used by Romans and the local Britons during Paul's day" (The Incredible History of God's True Church, p.
www.hope-of-israel.org /1stcent.htm   (10302 words)

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