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St Thomas Aquinas Catholic School, Birmingham

Academies in Birmingham, West MidlandsCatholic secondary schools in the Archdiocese of BirminghamSecondary schools in Birmingham, West MidlandsUse British English from February 2023West Midlands (county) school stubs

St. Thomas Aquinas Catholic School is a mixed Catholic secondary school in Kings Norton, Birmingham, England. The school, which is part of the Birmingham Catholic Partnership, consists of key stage three (Yr 7 and 8), key stage four (years 9 to 11) and a sixth form. The sixth form provision is offered as part of Oaks Sixth Form College, a consortium of 7 secondary schools in South-West Birmingham.The school has a library, known as the Aquinas Resource Centre or the "ARC". Facilities also include a large playground, a large sports hall, a gym, and a music technology suite.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article St Thomas Aquinas Catholic School, Birmingham (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

St Thomas Aquinas Catholic School, Birmingham
Popes Lane, Birmingham West Heath

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N 52.4099 ° E -1.9472 °
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St Thomas Aquinas Catholic School

Popes Lane
B38 8AP Birmingham, West Heath
England, United Kingdom
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call+441214644643

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stacs.org

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Nearby Places

Church of the Holy Prince Lazar, Birmingham
Church of the Holy Prince Lazar, Birmingham

The Serbian Orthodox Church of the Holy Prince Lazar (Serbian: Српска православна црква Светог кнеза Лазара, romanized: Srpska pravoslavna crkva Svetog kneza Lazara), also known as Lazarica (Лазарица), is a Serbian Orthodox church located at Cob Lane in Bournville, Birmingham, England and was built for political refugees from Yugoslavia after World War II, with the support of the exiled Prince Tomislav of Yugoslavia. Serbs have been associated with Bournville since Dame Elizabeth Cadbury sponsored thirteen Serbian refugee children of World War I. Built in traditional 14th-century Byzantine form by Yugoslavian architect Dr Dragomir Tadic and Bournville Village Trust, it is a replica of a church in Serbia using the same materials from sacred places of worship. Completed in 1968, it is of brick and stone with three sets of bronze doors and a candelabrum from Serbia. It has no seats, which is the usual thing for traditional Orthodox churches. Moreover, the interior has a full scheme of traditional Byzantine decoration. The dome contains the image of Christ Pantocrator, and the hemi-dome of the apse contains that of the Virgin Mary. At the bottom of the walls are the warrior saints, above these are patriarchs and priestly saints, and at the top are the apostles and scenes from the twelve major Christian feasts. These murals are painted fresco, meaning that the paint was applied meticulously to wet walls. The cultural centre is a Grade C locally listed building.