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Topic: John Moore (Archbishop)


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In the News (Mon 4 Jun 12)

  
  The Archbishop of Canterbury
The Archbishop is the diocesan bishop of the Diocese of Canterbury.
The Archbishop is the chief ecclesiastical authority of the Church of England.
A Province in the Anglican Communion is the territory of one of the 38 national or regional Churches in communion with the Archbishop of Canterbury.
www.southbear.com /Archbishop_Canterbury.html   (2354 words)

  
 Archbishop of Canterbury: Definition and Links by Encyclopedian.com
Since Henry VIII broke with Rome, archbishops of Canterbury have been selected by the English (latterly British) monarch; at present, the choice is made in his or her name, but by the prime minister, from a shortlist of two selected by a committee of clergy and laity.
The current Archbishop of Canterbury, the 104th, is Dr Rowan Douglas Williams, previously Archbishop of Wales[?].
The first Archbishop of Canterbury was Saint Augustine of Canterbury, who arrived in Kent in 597, all Archbishops of Canterbury since have been referred to as occupying the Chair of St Augustine.
www.encyclopedian.com /ar/Archbishop-of-Canterbury.html   (251 words)

  
 George Moore, 1852-1933   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-20)
Moore had worked with Lavelle earlier in political causes, as both were protégés of Archbishop John MacHale, the most nationalist of prelates, and enemies of Cardinal Paul Cullen, who had tried to keep the priests out of independent opposition politics and to bring the Irish Church under the control of Rome.
Moore, sidestepping the subject of landlord assassination, objected that Mitchell was not the leader of the Fenians.
Moore rejoiced that the victory in the Chester Cup had given him the means to be useful to the poor in the first year of suffering.
partners.nytimes.com /books/first/f/frazier-moore.html   (6539 words)

  
 Apostolic Lineages
Archbishop Peter Paul Brennan was consecrated a Bishop by Bishop Francis Anthony Voyt of the African Orthodox Church on June 10, 1978 assisted by Bishop Thomas McFarland of the Holy Orthodox Catholic Church in America and Bishop Leonard Joseph Curreri of the Tridentine Catholic Church.
Archbishop Nils Bertil Alexander Persson of Sweden, was consecrated by Archbishop Perry Nikolaus Cedarholm on December 12, 1971.
Archbishop Persson is recognized as a Bishop of the Church of Sweden (Lutheran), is the Primate Emeritus of the Apostolic Episcopal Church (The Holy Eastern Catholic and Apostolic Orthodox Church) and is the Primate Emeritus of the Order of Corporate Reunion.
www.orgsites.com /pa/rac/_pgg7.php3   (609 words)

  
 John Moore   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-20)
John Moore (1730-1805), Archbishop of Canterbury from 1783 to 1805.
John Moore (born 1936) was Australian defence minister under John Howard.
John Moore (born 1937) was a British Cabinet minister under Margaret Thatcher.
john-moore.iqnaut.net   (184 words)

  
 The Archbishop Speaks: An Interview With Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre Given on 3 May 1982
Moore put his very perceptive questions, and we are grateful to him for allowing us to use the interview.
Moore asked His Grace about the theory that the Holy See is vacant, thus giving the Archbishop the opportunity to repudiate this error yet again before the attempt on the Pope's life.
It is true that Pope John Paul II has apologized for all the affliction perpetrated in the Church relating to the liturgy, and, as you say, this is an absolutely extraordinary event in the Church.
www.sspx.ca /Angelus/1982_June/Archbishop_Speaks.htm   (3440 words)

  
 Joseph White, Bampton Lecture (1784), University of Oxford
The Rev. John Bampton, 1690-1751, was a B.A. and M.A. graduate of Trinity College, University of Oxford.
Moore (1730-1805) served as Archbishop of Canterbury, 1783-1805, after having ministered in churches at Durham, Christ Church, Oxford, and Bangor.
In addition, Moore was a supporter of the Christian missionary enterprise, possibly another reason for White's dedication of the volume to him.
www.wmcarey.edu /carey/white   (860 words)

  
 The International Free Protestant Episcopal Church - Lubimovka Village,Kherson Region
Due to a lack of episcopal oversight, the western congregations at Calgary in Alberta, Regina in Saskatchewan, and Brandon and Winnipeg in Manitoba disappeared and the Western Diocese was formally dissolved on 15 March 1991.
Archbishop Rivette was consecrated in New York City on 19 October 1971 by Bishops Albert J. Fuge, Sr., assisted by Benjamin C. Eckardt, William C. Thompson, and Ernest P. Parish.
John Moore, Archbishop of Canterbury consecrated in 1787 William White as the PECUSA bishop of Pennsylvania.
netministries.org /see/churches.exe/ch26165   (964 words)

  
 Archbishop of Canterbury - OrthodoxWiki
The Archbishop of Canterbury is the primate of the Church of England and the spiritual head of the Anglican Communion.
The current Archbishop of Canterbury is the Right Honorable and Most Reverend Rowan Williams, 104th successor to the Chair of St. Augustine of Canterbury.
He chose a to send a group of Benedictine monks, under the leadership of St. Augustine of Canterbury (not to be confused with Augustine of Hippo).
orthodoxwiki.org /Archbishop_of_Canterbury   (587 words)

  
 THE ARCHBISHOP OF CANTERBURY
Nevertheless, in 1783, Seabury was sent to Lambeth by the clergy of Connecticut to ask in desperation for a bishop to be consecrated for the new Episcopal Church in the United States.
Moore could not understand that he faced an entirely unprecedented situation – the birth of a new Anglican church, on another continent, in a political context completely different from that of the Church of England.
William White, the bishop of Pennsylvania eventually consecrated by Moore at Lambeth, was said to be ‘persistently gentle,’ but Seabury was ‘gently persistent.’ His consecration in the face of great odds not only provided North America with its first bishop, but was also a turning point in the history of the Scottish Episcopalians.
www.archbishopofcanterbury.org /carey/speeches/001116.htm   (3326 words)

  
 MichaelMoore.com : Catholic archbishop abducted in Iraq as deadly unrest dogs poll run-up
MOSUL, Iraq (AFP) - Gunmen kidnapped a Catholic archbishop in Iraq's main northern city of Mosul in what the Vatican condemned as a "terrorist act" as persistent violence dogged the run-up to landmark January 30 elections.
Archbishop Basile Georges Casmoussa, 66, leader of Mosul's Syrian Catholic community, was seized by gunmen at around 5:00 pm (1400 GMT) as he was about to get into his car, local priest Father Faraj told AFP.
In Baghdad, a spokesman for one of the main Christian political parties suggested the abduction might be an attempt to intimidate the community into staying at home on polling day.
www.michaelmoore.com /words/latestnews/index.php?id=997   (816 words)

  
 Genealogy 2
Ordination of the moderate Matthew Parker as 71st archbishop of Canterbury.
The Rev. John Arthur, DD, rector of Grace Church in Cedar Rapids, becomes priest-in-charge of St. John’s, an unorganized mission parish.
Land from St. John's is deeded to St. Michael's in Cedar Rapids.
www.christepiscopal.org /geneology2.htm   (1275 words)

  
 Hobby-O - Byron's Wedding (The Diary of John Cam Hobhouse, edited by Peter Cochran)
24 Sir Ralph said that Moore, Archbishop of Canterbury,25 informed him that he had changed the archepiscopal signature from “Cant” to “Cantuar” because he wished to avoid the mistakes which the bad writing of his predecessor Cornwallis26 had caused the readers of his processes to commit.
John Moore was Archbishop of Canterbury from 1783 to 1805.
Frederick Cornwallis was Archbishop of Canterbury from 1768 to 1783.
www.hobby-o.com /wedding.php   (3046 words)

  
 John Moore (Archbishop) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
John Moore (1730-1805) was an English cleric and Archbishop of Canterbury from 1783 to 1805.
 This article about an Archbishop of Canterbury is a stub.
This page was last modified 16:07, 29 June 2006.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/John_Moore_(Archbishop)   (65 words)

  
 John Moore - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
John Moore (Archbishop) (1730–1805), Archbishop of Canterbury, Privy Counsellor
John Moore (regicide) (1599–1650), regicide of King Charles I of England
John Moore (human patent), had his body's cell line patented without his consent
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/John_Moore   (321 words)

  
 Rev John Moore Heath (1808-1882) of Enfield, then Milland, Liphook, Hampshire and later Westbrook, Godalming, Surrey, ...
John Moore, the eldest son, named after his godfather, General Sir John Moore, K.B., was born in Chancery Lane, December 27th, 1808, and educated at Westminster School, becoming a King's Scholar in 1822, and was duly elected with exhibitions to Trinity College, Cambridge, in 1826, being elected Scholar in 1827.
His deputy was Rev. W.D.Maclagan, afterwards so well known as Bishop of Litchfield, and Archbishop of York, who had charge of Enfield till July 1869, and the Vicar resigned the living in 1870.
Sir John Hawkshaw, a great engineer, lived on the adjoining property of Hollycombe, Tennyson was about five miles away, at Haslemere, and Professor Tyndall on Hindhead.
www.jjhc.info /heathjohn1882.htm   (1464 words)

  
 January 16th
But the commander, Sir John Moore, more than redeemed himself from any censure to which he was liable, by the skill and patience with which he conducted the troops on their withdrawal to the coast.
While a boy of eleven years old, Moore had a great advantage, for his education in matters of the world, by accompanying his father, Dr. Moore, on a tour of Europe, in company with the minor Duke of Hamilton, to whom Dr. Moore acted as governor or preceptor.
The Duke continued this sport till Moore unluckily started in the line of the sword, and received it in his flank.' The elder Moore was speedily on the spot, and found his son wounded on the outside or the ribs.
www.thebookofdays.com /months/jan/16.htm   (1816 words)

  
 Amazon.com: John Paul II: A Personal Portrait of the Pope and the Man: Books: Raymond Flynn,Robin Moore,James Vrabel   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-20)
His "Portrait of the Pope," written in collaboration with Moore, author of The French Connection, is largely a warm recollection of the special and intimate moments Flynn enjoyed in the presence of the pope.
With coauthor Moore (The French Connection), the author describes his on-the-scene impressions, from the Pope's visit to Boston in 1978 to current speculations as to his successor.
John Paul II is a publishing indusrty unto himself, Either his own dense,sometimes obtuse tomes or the cottage industry of mostly fawning books about his pontificate.
www.amazon.com /John-Paul-II-Personal-Portrait/dp/0312283288   (1736 words)

  
 Anglican Communion: Archbishops of Canterbury
The Archbishop of Canterbury is the Focus for Unity for the three Instruments of Communion of the Anglican Communion, and is therefore a unique focus for Anglican unity.
The Most Revd Rowan Williams is the 104th Archbishop of Canterbury.
George Carey was the 103rd Archbishop of Canterbury, from 1991 until 2002.
www.aco.org /archbishops   (169 words)

  
 Panel of Reference named
Peter Carnley of Australia, has accepted the Archbishop of Canterbury’s request to serve as chair of “The Panel of Reference” created by Archbishop Williams in response to the request of the Primates Meeting in February.
Carnley is the Archbishop of Perth, Anglican Co-Chairman of Anglican Roman Catholic International Commission, a member of the original “Eames Commission” on Women in the Episcopate and was spokesperson for the Primates at their recent meeting in Ireland.
The Archbishop is pleased to announce now that the following clerical and lay members of churches of the Anglican Communion have accepted his invitation to become members of the Panel, and has expressed his great appreciation for their interest and commitment.
www.fwepiscopal.org /news/PanelRef.html   (999 words)

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Abbey of Deer
It was then also discovered that the university had come into its possession in 1715 among the books of Dr. John Moore, Bishop of Norwich, which had been purchased by George I and presented by him to the university; how Bishop Moore had obtained it is not known.
The manuscript is a small, nearly square octavo numbering eighty-six folios of parchment, written on both sides of the leaf in a dark brown ink, in a hand wonderfully clear and legible.
The text is from the Latin Vulgate with some peculiarities common to Irish Bible editions, and is written in the well-known minuscule lettering of the Irish scribes; the initial letters were greatly enlarged and ornamented with patches of colour in dragonesque forms, and the pages have ornamental borders.
www.newadvent.org /cathen/04674b.htm   (470 words)

  
 A Short Biographical Dictionary of English Literature, by John W. Cousin (w)
In 1372 he took the degree of Doctor of Theology, and became Canon of Lincoln, and in 1374 was sent to Bruges as one of a commission to treat with Papal delegates as to certain ecclesiastical matters in dispute, and in the same year he became Rector of Lutterworth, where he remained until his death.
It says much for the position which he had attained, and for the power of his supporters, that he was permitted to depart from Oxford and retire to Lutterworth, where, worn out by his labours and anxieties, he died of a paralytic seizure on the last day of 1384.
— Diplomatist and satirist, son of John Hanbury, a Welsh ironmaster, assumed the name of Williams on succeeding to an estate, entered Parliament as a supporter of Walpole, held many diplomatic posts, and was a brilliant wit with a great contemporary reputation for lively and biting satires and lampoons.
etext.library.adelaide.edu.au /c/cousin/john/biog/w.html   (11878 words)

  
 Rev. John Warren 1730
John was born on 12 May 1730, the son of Dr. Richard Warren and Priscilla Fenner, at Cavendish, Suffolk, where his father was the rector.
He was educated for seven years at Bury St. Edmunds school, and was admitted a sizar of Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, on 6 July 1747.
The service was read by by the Bishop of Rochester, assisted by the Prebends of the Cathedral.
members.cox.net /ggthomp/johnwarren1730.html   (422 words)

  
 Mivart, St   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-20)
The third son of the hotelier James Edward Mivart, he was educated at Clapham Grammar School, Harrow, and King’s College London, and was fully expected to enter Oxford or Cambridge.
Following exposure in Harrow and King’s College to the Tractarians, and a series of meetings with the Reverend John Moore at St. Chads (Birmingham), he converted to Catholicism, being confirmed by none other than Nicholas Wiseman in 1845.
This precluded attendance at an Oxbridge college, and in 1846 he became a student of the law at Lincoln’s Inn, being called to the Bar in 1851.
darwin.bc.asu.edu /john/19mivart.html   (1992 words)

  
 Alternate Episcopal Lines   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-20)
Archbishop Sancroft was one of the clergy of the Church of England who after 1688 would not take an oath of allegiance to William and Mary because he had already taken an oath to James II.
Sancroft, who was the Archbishop of Canterbury, became "Nonjurors" and were deprived by their livings by an act of Parliament in 1689.
When JamesII/IV arrived in France with Bishop John Gordon of the Scottish Episcopal Church he was then received without re-consecration into the Roman Church by the Bishop of Meaux at the request of Clemens PPXI.
www.cinemaparallel.com /nonjuror.epislines.html   (1634 words)

  
 Five Sermons eBook
The bishops and Robert Kilgour, Bishop of Aberdeen, Arthur Petrie, Bishop of Moray, and John Skinner, Coadjutor Bishop of Aberdeen, who preached the sermon.
The prayers were ended; Samuel Seabury, a kingly man, kneels for the imposition of apostolic hands, and, according to the godly usage of the Catholic Church, is consecrated bishop, and made the first apostle for the New World.
Samuel Provost, D.D., were consecrated bishops in Lambeth Chapel, by John Moore, Archbishop of Canterbury, William Markham, Archbishop of York, Charles Moss, Bishop of Bath and Wells, and John Hinchcliffe, Bishop of Peterborough.
www.bookrags.com /ebooks/8731/5.html   (432 words)

  
 Untitled Document
Leo Glancy, Mgr Simpson, Canon John Agnew, Fr Aidan Canon, Fr Pat Clarke, Urseline Sisters of Jesus- Brigid, Mary and Patricia and Nigerian Fathers at Mass of Thanksgiving, Gillis Centre, Edinburgh.
In April 2004 St John’s, Popandi, the first new church in the diocese of Bauchi, was opened.
Bishop John Moore thanked the priests and people from Edinburgh, and the Pontifical Mission Societies for their continued help and support to Bauchi
www.shctk.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk /Bauchi.htm   (850 words)

  
 About Thomas Moore
02/07/1478 was born in Milk street, London to John Moore who was a lawyer and would become a judge on the king`s bench.
1491 After studying at St. Anthony`s School in Threadneedle street, is placed in the household of John Morton, Lord Chancelor to Henry VII and Archbishop of Canterbury
Of course, your email address is never shared with anyone, and is never used except for the sole purpose outline above.
moore.classicauthors.net /index.html   (330 words)

  
 John Moore Capes and The "Rambler", 1848-1854
Nonetheless, some of the converts, as early as 1846, expressed an interest in a journalistic venture, which was actually commenced in 1848 with the founding of the The Rambler by John Moore Capes.
Only a few friends were ever told of his doubts; Newman, who was one of them, did not consider the difficulty very serious.
As late as 1857 Newman was able to write: "Capes is too good a fellow for one to have any fears of him" (Newman to Ambrose St. John, 7 May 1857, cited by Ward, Life of Newman, I, 437).
www.victorianweb.org /religion/altholz/1.html   (5104 words)

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