AMDG

Confraternity of Christ the King

Consociatio Christi Regis

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Sources

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Like all creators, our work relies on the work of others. We always seek to credit the work created by others, and so we will do so here.

The image of the knight was (very slightly) modified from the image uploaded by user j4p4n, “Knight on Wild Horse”, from openclipart.org. Like all material from OpenClipart, it is in the public domain.

The image of the three soldiers is an image uploaded by user Firkin, “Soldiers from the 13th century”, from openclipart.org. Like all material from OpenClipart, it is in the public domain.

The image of the Roman helmet is a trimmed version of an image uploaded by user dordy, “CASSIS ROMANVS”, from openclipart.org. Like all material from OpenClipart, it is in the public domain.

The image of the husband and wife in prayer is an image uploaded by user Firkin, “Praying couple”, from openclipart.org. Like all material from OpenClipart, it is in the public domain.

The image of St. Jerome fasting is extracted from Saint Jerome in the Desert, ca. 1575, by Cherubino Alberti, from the excellent gallery of the Art Institute of Chicago. It is in the public domain.

The image of the open book on the blog page for The Readings for the Feast of Christ the King is from openclipart.org. Like all material from OpenClipart, it is in the public domain.

The image of the calendar on the blog page for When is the Feast of Christ the King? is from openclipart.org. Like all material from OpenClipart, it is in the public domain.

The image of the praying man on the Faith page for the Litany of Christ the King is from openclipart.org. Like all material from OpenClipart, it is in the public domain.

The image for the blog post “Who is Christ the King?” on the blog page is a crown image uploaded by Firkin on openclipart.org and a question mark image uploaded by rejon on openclipart.org. Like all material from OpenClipart, they are in the public domain.

Many of our icons, including the social media icons beneath the title of every page and the icons on our Follow page, are taken from the incredible SuperTinyIcons project, which produces many icons in SVG format, all of which are under 1 kilobyte in size. This helps out site load faster and saves resources. Some of them have been slightly altereed (primarily to introduce transparency and to round corners).

All other images, text, and materials are created by the Confraternity itself.

Christus vincit! Christus regnat! Christus imperat!