「bishopric」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

bishopric

1 2 3 次へ>

1語右で並び替え

該当件数:487件

  • ranada, where he promoted, together with the bishopric, a significant undertaking in construction p
  • He renounced his rights to the bishopric a few months later, on 11 February 1639, aft
  • It became a bishopric about 304, under Saint Satyrus.
  • remained a town only on paper: the seat of a bishopric, administered by a count, from which royal c
  • utor in September 1903, and succeeded to the bishopric after the death of Bishop Potter in Cooperst
  • urt chaplain and archivist at the Alba-Iulia Bishopric after 1930, and priest of the University of
  • in Cracow in 1525, he managed to defend the bishopric against demands of both the Polish king and
  • ent where they would divide the lands of the bishopric amongst themselves.
  • ings which were part of the hierarchy of the bishopric; an additional four parish churches were con
  • has been a member of the church's presiding bishopric and a member of the Presidency of the Sevent
  • B. G. Prasada Rao also contested the vacant Bishopric and was declared elected by the then Moderat
  • map shows Southern Norway with the Stavanger bishopric and the adjoining area of the Bergen and Osl
  • On 1839 he resigned his bishopric and retired to the city of Talca, where he c
  • ver the abbey of Coventry as the seat of his bishopric, and managed to establish himself there perm
  • copacy, Rollock was compelled to give up his bishopric, and James Nicolson was appointed in his pla
  • Ashton served in the presiding bishopric and as a general authority until his death f
  • r had already made an election to the vacant bishopric, and he was consecrated bishop on 20 July 13
  • terested in the territorial expansion of his bishopric, and had the city of Passau fortified in 120
  • ueen Anne's accession Jane again hoped for a bishopric, and from Francis Atterbury's letters it app
  • t VIII, who confirmed the possessions of his bishopric and its jurisdiction, including over Ribagor
  • He has served as a member of a bishopric and on a stake high council.
  • Basel is Switzerland's largest bishopric and has a history of choosing young heads.
  • ted and strengthened the jurisdiction of his bishopric and lived alternately at Neuburg an der Dona
  • watchful and vigilant in the affairs of his bishopric and the cathedral.
  • In his later years, he resigned his bishopric and returned to monastic life.
  • eligion was shrinking Sophianos resigned his bishopric and became a wandering missionary, preaching
  • original record relating to Cornwall, or its Bishopric, anterior to the Norman Conquest.
  • Anagni as a bishopric appears in history in the fifth century.
  • to implement a Lutheran church order in his bishopric, appointed Protestant Christopher, Duke of M
  • of British Chronology gives the dates of his bishopric as 1032 through November or December 1038.
  • The city was a logical choice for a new bishopric, as it was a hub for the southern road netwo
  • The bishopric as a functional Glasgow institution originat
  • of an Assyrian Church of the East Christian bishopric as late as the 8th century AD.
  • 1778 as bishop of Exeter, and held with the bishopric, as was the case with many successive occupa
  • Thor Bishopric as Prince Justin
  • when the manor was finally removed from the Bishopric as part of the Bishops' Resignation Act of 1
  • He was elected to the bishopric as early as 1198 or 1199 when he appears as
  • lustrious status as the seat of an important bishopric, as well as the ancient resting place of the
  • was Joseph Xing Wenzhi, who was named by the bishopric as helper bishop on 28 June 2005.
  • ad resided in Deventer, was able to move the bishopric back to Utrecht.
  • During the Livonian War in 1559 the bishopric became a possession of Denmark, and in 1562
  • he was unlikely to be allowed to retain his bishopric because of his marital status, instead of at
  • Apparently, his goal was to make the bishopric become a metropolis, so it would no longer b
  • He did however obtain a bishopric, becoming Bishop of Caithness.
  • ese of Senigallia, but he resigned from that bishopric before September 1, 1659 and died on August
  • Once there, he renounced the bishopric, being accepted in 1588.
  • r" and "Man" had become interchangeable, the bishopric being spoken of as that of "Sodor" or "Man"
  • Thirty-five documents survive from his bishopric, but few of them can be attributed to a spec
  • urch the title still continues as a separate bishopric, but in the Church of Ireland it has been un
  • Charles II appointed him to an Irish bishopric, but he was never consecrated, dying on 10 D
  • nd, which had previously been granted to the bishopric by Henry IV, Holy Roman Emperor.
  • In September 1934 Wurm was deposed from his bishopric by Muller because of his views on church pol
  • on 1 October 1558, and was succeeded in the bishopric by Henry Sinclair.
  • il 28 June 1379, when he was deprived of his bishopric by Pope Urban VI, for having espoused the ca
  • The fiction of elections to bishopric by canons and to abbacies by monks was disco
  • Lucus was the seat of a bishopric by the later 5th century at the latest and r
  • He was succeeded to the bishopric by William Bell.
  • frica, was chosen to be consecrated into the bishopric by Bishop William L. Bonner, Chief Apostle o
  • tor of Dunkeld before being appointed to the bishopric by Pope Innocent VI on 18 May 1355.
  • after April 18, 1378, he was provided to the bishopric by Urban, and consecrated before March 26, 1
  • Kirkton, referring to his appointment to the bishopric, calls him ‘the degenerate son of ane excell
  • A bishopric castle was erected in 1479 and destroyed in
  • iven his subsequent elevation to the Mercian bishopric, clearly Seaxwulf was successful in his work
  • Bishopric coat of arms
  • He held the two abbacies and the bishopric concurrently until his death.
  • This dependency on the bishopric continued until 1584 at which time King Feli
  • This poor bishopric could not afford to have its own missal prin
  • The bishopric covered Agder and Rogaland at that time.
  • was the in the supervision of a subordinate bishopric created circa 730 in Galloway, which was the
  • and, at Ely, and Hervey was appointed to the bishopric created.
  • His bishopric currently sits as St. Thomas the Apostle Cha
  • 1005: Pomerania regains independence, bishopric dissolved
  • The bishopric, established in the early 10th century and l
  • In 1595 it joined Valladolid's Bishopric, even though it kept being part of the Provi
  • A constitutional bishopric existed at Laval for a short time during the
  • The bishopric fell victim to the invasion by the Danes and
  • Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, the Presiding Bishopric, First Quorum of the Seventy, and as Commiss
  • Herspolz held the bishopric for two decades, dying sometime between his
  • ifornia where Woolsey was a counselor in the bishopric for ten years.
  • He held that bishopric for more than three decades.
  • After holding the Dunblane bishopric for several decades, on 2 August 1635, he wa
  • In 1526, James partially gave up the bishopric for his half-brother William Chisholm; on 6
  • the Norwich deanery to 1614, and the Raphoe bishopric for the rest of his life.
  • er he became Bishop of Brechin, holding that bishopric for two years before being translated to the
  • He held the bishopric for 16 years, until his death on 28 December
  • Archbishop Theodore of Canterbury, forming a bishopric for the country between the Rivers Aln and T
  • led from local liturgies generally place his bishopric fourth in a largely legendary list.
  • hat Gilbert's episcopate saw the move of the bishopric from Halkirk in the far north of the diocese
  • ulphus (Monulf), transferred the seat of the bishopric from Tongeren to Maastricht, which thencefor
  • He was Second Counselor in the Presiding Bishopric from 1887 to 1901, and First Counselor in th
  • time was a member of the church's presiding bishopric, fulfilled a request by the church's Strengt
  • ssolved with Henry's deposition in 1180, the Bishopric gained Imperial State (reichsunmittelbar).
  • Bernardo Clesio and Cristoforo Madruzzo, the bishopric had gained a substantial independence from t
  • As the bishopric had become of small value, Woolton was allow
  • Although the bishopric had its origins in the 1150s or before, the
  • tz by pope John XXII on 4 May 1319 after the bishopric had been vacant for 3 years after the death
  • rst Bishop of Aberdeen after the seat of the bishopric had been moved to Aberdeen from Mortlach.
  • This was the first time any Scottish bishopric had received metropolitan status from the pa
  • Viceroy of Ireland, and his nomination to a bishopric had been proposed by his close friend, Visco
  • By the time of his election to the bishopric, he was already a priest and was styled magi
  • This bishopric he held till his death.
  • Before election to the bishopric, he had been and Royal Chancellor of King Al
  • St Patrick established a bishopric here about 450 AD, which he placed in the ca
  • considered Montfort a viable choice for the bishopric, however due to his relations to the excommu
  • rly, "but I love you never the worse, as the bishopric I give will convince you."
  • f 1913, it remained a Roman Catholic titular bishopric in the former Roman province of Mesopotamia.
  • alissus as synonymous with Balbisse, another bishopric in Cappadocia, known only in 1143.
  • ijsbrecht agreed to retract his claim to the bishopric in return for a large financial compensation
  • own that Turgot of Durham was elected to the bishopric in 1107, and so Giric may have been in offic
  • William of Scotland and was appointed to the bishopric in 1203.
  • fficio canons of Dunblane Cathedral, and the bishopric in this period rotated between full-time Dun
  • al on the translation of Edmund Grindal to a bishopric in November 1551.
  • ewder van Culemborg, nominated to the town's bishopric in 1423; he was, however, unable to take his
  • Although a bishopric in Essex had been created under Mellitus, th
  • intment as Bishop of Willesden, (a suffragan bishopric in the Diocese of London) in 1992.
  • were subjected to hostile policies by German bishopric in Pelplin.
  • ter further questionings was deprived of his bishopric in October 1551.
  • The area first held a bishopric in 680, and the Anglo-Saxon cathedral was pr
  • lvinists and Lutherans - see Anglican-German Bishopric in Jerusalem.
  • own favourite, Rhabanus von Helmstatt to the bishopric in 1422.
  • d regional focus with the establishment of a bishopric in the fifth century, a role it maintained t
  • elevated and ceremonially consecrated to the Bishopric in November 1985 by his father, Bishop J.O.
  • He resigned his bishopric in 1773.
  • He resigned his Bishopric in 1975.
  • Wilfrid resigned the bishopric in 732.
  • He resigned his Bishopric in 1857.
  • p of Versailles, created as a constitutional bishopric in 1790 and confirmed by the Concordat of 18
  • reason of his advanced age, he resigned the Bishopric in favour of James Livingston, the Dean.
  • s the later location of the first West Saxon bishopric, in the first half of the seventh century, s
  • ometime Bishop of Galloway who resigned that bishopric in Wemyss' favour; Robert Keith thought he m
  • at about the time Laud was translated to the bishopric in 1628; by 1633 he is recorded as pleading
  • e choir until his release from the presiding bishopric in 1938.
  • to the establishment of the Anglican-German Bishopric in Jerusalem.
  • The town became the seat of a bishopric in 1176 and a Pomeranian diocese.
  • y, it is clear that it is the most important bishopric in Scotland.
  • reated in 1911, and was the fourth suffragan bishopric in the diocese.
  • of Salisbury, seized the monastery under his bishopric in 1118, and held it for 20 years.
  • g to Symeon of Durham, he was elected to the Bishopric in 1107.
  • s of Patriarch Nikon, he was stripped of his bishopric in 1654.
  • ecrated the same year, assuming the diocesan bishopric in the following year upon Brown's retiremen
  • n 38, installing Stachys as bishop (the only bishopric in that neighbourhood before that time had b
  • With the secularization of the Halberstadt bishopric in 1648, Hornburg fell to the electors of Br
  • Meyer, P. (1914) "Jerusalem, Anglican-German Bishopric in", Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious
  • The bishopric is located conveniently close to the heartla
  • orporated into the Teutonic Order lands, the bishopric is subjected to the Order.
  • fter 17 November, though no successor to the bishopric is known until 18 November 1295, making Bish
  • The bishopric is named after Fulham, an area of south-west
  • The Bistum ( Bishopric) issued silver Thaler for the first time in
  • The bishopric itself appears to originate in the period 70
  • The bishopric itself certainly derives from an older Gaeli
  • 878x889-906x), the bishopric later based at St. Andrews.
  • The settled nature of the bishopric made Dorchester in a broad sense the de fact
  • the town of Hildesheim and the self-assured bishopric nobles (Stiftsadel).
  • back the castles and property pledged to the bishopric nobles.
  • Chur became the seat of the first Christian bishopric north to the Alps.
  • He was obliged to defend his bishopric not only against frequent inroads by the Nor
  • artpert as bishop of Chur in 958, giving the bishopric numerous privileges.
  • signed the headship in 1859 and accepted the bishopric of Rochester, but afterwards withdrew his ac
  • of Worcester until he was translated to the bishopric of Ely on 27 February and received possessio
  • hs later, he was provided by the Pope to the bishopric of Dunblane, incidentally voiding the resolu
  • fter the Restoration Douglas was offered the bishopric of Edinburgh if he would agree to the introd
  • ), Ursini served as the administrator of the Bishopric of Budva.
  • The Saxon bishopric of which the present diocese is the direct s
  • He was transferred to the bishopric of Ely in 1628, and died on the 23 May 1631.
  • The Bishopric of Verdun was also a state of the Holy Roman
  • lties in order to grant dispensations in the bishopric of Galloway.
  • tment of his brother as administrator of the bishopric of Merseburg; but Augustus was very extravag
  • He is the first man known to have held the bishopric of Lund, as well as Orkney.
  • He was an unsuccessful candidate for the bishopric of Salisbury in March 1288, losing out to La
  • rial crown-cardinal and Prince-Bishop of the Bishopric of Trento (involving the secular rule as wel
  • lan, entrusted him the administration of the Bishopric of Trento, where the Council of Trent had be
  • e military ordinariate of Great Britain, the Bishopric of the Forces.
  • In 1585 he was promoted to the bishopric of Kilmore, on the recommendation of Sir Joh
  • The Bishopric of Worms was secularized in 1801, with the c
  • he alienated nearly all the property of the bishopric of Dunblane to his relations.
  • or 15 December 1564 and was succeeded in the bishopric of Dunblane by his nephew, William Chisholm
  • Less probable traditions assign to him the bishopric of Duras, or of Iconium in Phrygia, or of Ca
  • ections to the Holy Roman Emperor and to the Bishopric of Worms.
  • On the day of the resignation of the bishopric of Dunblane by Robert Lauder at the papal cu
  • reference Achillius in its article about the bishopric of Larissa.
  • Links with Cuthbert and the bishopric of Durham are recognised in the dedication o
  • the Isles, in 1680 he was translated to the bishopric of Caithness.
  • mans Priory was effectively the seat for the bishopric of Cornwall.
  • documented, but when he was provided to the bishopric of Ross in 1398, he already possessed a Bach
  • othic cathedral was the episcopal see of the Bishopric of Meissen established by Emperor Otto I in
  • llowed before his elevation to the suffragan bishopric of Tewkesbury in 1960.
  • Bishop of Llandaff in 1595 and moved to the bishopric of St Asaph in 1601.
  • Wilbrand was moved by pope Gregory IX to the Bishopric of Utrecht because of his military experienc
  • rnburg in the west, where it bordered on the Bishopric of Hildesheim, to the Saale in the east, whe
  • votion to the college led him to decline the Bishopric of Oxford in 1799 (which was instead taken b
  • He was elected to the bishopric of Dunkeld in 1178 after the death of the pr
  • George Gordon was provided to the bishopric of Galloway on the resignation of his brothe
  • The Bishopric of Strassburg was an ecclesiastical principa
  • ishop Robert Gray of Cape Town to accept the Bishopric of Bloemfontein in the interior of South Afr
  • r was elected through royal influence to the bishopric of Ross, vacant at least three, possibly fiv
  • The deanery was annexed to the bishopric of Dunblane in 1621, and the Chapel Royal wa
  • On 31 March 1317, Cobham was provided to the bishopric of Worcester, and was consecrated on 22 May
  • The Bishopric of Halberstadt took over his principality an
  • After refusing the bishopric of Gloucester in 1734, Mawson was consecrate
1 2 3 次へ>