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Example sentences for "archdeaconry"

Lexicographically close words:
archbishopric; archbishoprics; archbishops; archchancellor; archdeaconries; archdeacons; archdiocese; archducal; archduchesses; archdukes
  1. It was in his time that the archdeaconry of Coventry was taken from the diocese and added to Worcester.

  2. About this time the archdeaconry of Stafford was occupied by Thomas de Cantilupe, afterwards Bishop of Hereford.

  3. Bedfordshire forms an archdeaconry in the diocese of Ely, with 125 ecclesiastical parishes and parts of 6 others.

  4. In 1878 the county was placed in the newly created diocese of St Albans, and formed the archdeaconry of St Albans, the deaneries being unchanged.

  5. In 1846 the whole county was placed within the diocese of Rochester and archdeaconry of St Albans, and in the next year the deaneries of Welwyn, Bennington, Buntingford, Bishop Stortford and Ware were created, and that of Braughing abolished.

  6. In 1864 the archdeaconries of Rochester and St Albans were united under the name of the archdeaconry of Rochester and St Albans.

  7. The Archdeaconry of Bedford was worth L57 2s.

  8. The dignity of the Archdeaconry of Chichester was worth L38 3s.

  9. The Archdeaconry of Stow was worth L24 2s.

  10. The Archdeaconry of Huntingdon was worth L57 4s.

  11. All these parishes were formerly in the Archdeaconry of Coventry, as part of the diocese of Lichfield and Coventry, and are now in the same Archdeaconry as part of the diocese of Worcester.

  12. Archdeaconry of Coventry was taken away from the diocese of Lichfield and Coventry, and annexed to that of Worcester, and the former diocese became the diocese of Lichfield only.

  13. In the northern province the custom of choosing two proctors for each archdeaconry appears to have obtained somewhat earlier.

  14. The archdeaconry was held from your Majesty by Don Alonso Garcia de Leon; and at his death the governor gave it to Juan Mre to serve it ad interim.

  15. He is the secular ecclesiastic who resigned the said archdeaconry to the governor, as I have said above, for the reasons mentioned.

  16. Mr. Feilden was a Commissioner under the Pluralities Act, for the Archdeaconry of Norfolk, and for nine years was a member of the Board of Management of the Norfolk and Norwich Hospital.

  17. He was succeeded in the archdeaconry by the Rev.

  18. Prospero Colonna, to the Archdeaconry of Canterbury, a delay probably fostered by Gloucester, as a hold over the man who could make his marriage undeniably legal.

  19. The district west of the Severn, with the exception of a few parishes in the deaneries of Ross and Staunton, constituted the deanery of the forest within the archdeaconry and diocese of Hereford.

  20. In 1882 the archdeaconry of Cirencester was constituted to include the deaneries of Campden, Stow, Northleach north and south, Fairford and Cirencester.

  21. Horsley, who, first in a Charge to the Clergy of the Archdeaconry of St. Albans, and then in a series of letters addressed to Priestley himself, maintained with conspicuous ability the Catholic doctrine of the Trinity.

  22. In 1873 East and West Bridge deaneries were created in the archdeaconry of Canterbury, and Croydon in the archdeaconry of Maidstone.

  23. In 1889 Tunbridge deanery was created in the archdeaconry of Maidstone.

  24. The office of Archdeacon is proverbially puzzling to the lay mind, and it may be that the Archdeaconry of Westminster creates some wonder in the minds even of other Archdeacons.

  25. The archdeaconry of Canterbury was worth 100 pounds of silver a-year.

  26. I held the archdeaconry of Canterbury, the provostship of Beverley, a great many churches, and several prebends.

  27. Becket had been compelled to give up the rich archdeaconry of Canterbury, which he seemed disposed to hold with the archbishopric.

  28. Wood adds, that about the time of the Cardinal's fall, he gave up all or most of his dignities, keeping only the archdeaconry of York, which he resigned also in 1540.

  29. The king retorted by forcing Thomas to resign his archdeaconry with its rich fees; and at his landing in January 1163 he received the archbishop, who came to meet him, "with averted face.

  30. In my own Archdeaconry there are several ladies who have been elected Churchwardens, and they do their duty right well.

  31. Augustus Charles Veley, Registrar of the Archdeaconry of Essex, Essex Archæological Society's Magazine, vol.

  32. Mr. Veley collects a few particulars regarding them from the unregistered wills of the Archdeaconry of Essex.

  33. He resigned the archdeaconry of Middlesex in 1686, but retained the canonries of Christ Church and S.

  34. Paul's Cathedral and the archdeaconry of Middlesex.

  35. He was presented in 1797 to the Archdeaconry of Norfolk, and was soon after nominated to the rectory of Redenhall-with-Harleston.

  36. As each Province is divided into Dioceses, and each Diocese into Archdeaconries, so each Archdeaconry is divided into Rural Deaneries, consisting of a certain number of Parishes.

  37. Over each archdeaconry one of the clergy, a priest, sometimes a bishop, is appointed to preside in subordination to the Bishop of the diocese.

  38. An Archdeacon does the same for his Archdeaconry once a year.

  39. Divided the archdeaconry of Suffolk into two, founded the hospital and church of St. Paul in Norwich.

  40. The clergy of the archdeaconry of Norwich agreed to petition in favour of the claims of the Catholics to have the same political rights and privileges as other people.

  41. Proctor for the Archdeaconry of Suffolk, Rev.

  42. Up to 1541 the district north of the Ribble belonged to the archdeaconry of Richmond in the diocese of York, and was subdivided into the rural deaneries of Amounderness, Lonsdale and Coupland.


  43. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "archdeaconry" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.
    Other words:
    archbishopric; bishopric; curacy; deanery; episcopacy; pastorate; presbytery; primacy