whose death she lost the motivation to paint after/the hotel I am staying at

Could you please give examples of sentences with relative clause where stranding is not possible, but the relative pronoun is other than "whose"?
Here's a sentence that I came upon today in a famous old essay, titled "Self-Reliance" (1841), by Ralph Waldo Emerson:

"There are two confessionals, in one or the other of which we must be shriven."

To me, that sentence would sound hideous with stranding, though I shan't call it impossible, lest others should differ.

?? There are two confessionals, which we must be shriven in one or the other of.
 
Well, it's possible, but "whose" by itself can work fine in a related relative clause:

He is the man whose death caused her to lose the motivation to paint.

Also, when a prepositional phrase containing a "whose"-phrase is a complement within the relative clause (consider relative clauses with "put," which takes a prepositional-phrase complement), there is no problem:

a) She is the woman in whose purse I put my book.
b) She is the woman whose purse I put my book in.

So, I tend to think the bad apples here have to do with the "whose"-phrase being nested in an adjunct (i.e., an only peripherally modifying) prepositional phrase within a relative clause in which the preposition is stranded:

c) She is the woman in whose house a dog has been barking.
d) ?? She is the woman whose house a dog has been barking in.
Could you please tell whether the pattern that you kindly explained here can apply to relative clauses that have words other than WHOSE?
 

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