archiepiscopate उदाहरण वाक्य
उदाहरण वाक्य
- Cardinal William of Sabina came as papal legate to Sweden during the archiepiscopate of Jarler, a Saint Bridget ( d . 1373 ), laboured zealously for the enforcement of the same law.
- His archiepiscopate ( as bishop of the diocese ) began on May 21, 1975, when he succeeded Archbishop Leo Binz and ended with the acceptance of his retirement on September 8, 1995.
- Archbishop William Laud, in his account of his archiepiscopate addressed to Charles I for 1637, complained that Bowle had been ill for three years before his death, and had neglected his diocese.
- Ceolnoth faced two problems as archbishop raids and invasions by the Vikings and a new political situation resulting from a change in overlordship from one kingdom to another during the early part of his archiepiscopate.
- Much of the middle period of Runcie's archiepiscopate was taken up with the tribulations of two men who had been close to him : the suicide of Gareth Bennett and the kidnapping of Terry Waite.
- Wulfred had devoted his archiepiscopate to fighting against secular power over Kentish monasteries, but Ceolnoth now surrendered effective control to �thelwulf, whose offer of freedom from control after his death was unlikely to be honoured by his successors.
- He was a member of both Socialist societies at Oxford, and through that he had his first dealings with the young Margaret Thatcher ( then Margaret Roberts ), a relationship which was to prove pivotal during his archiepiscopate.
- The main crisis Ioann faced during his archiepiscopate was the drawn-out dispute between Novgorod and Metropolitan Aleksei ( d . 1378 ) but when he tried to gain recognition from Novgorod as the rightful successor in 1376, he was rebuffed.
- Despite this, the Sobor of 1504 condemned the Novgorod-Moscow heresy of the Sect of Skhariya the Jew, which repudiated some of the dogmas and rites of the Russian Orthodox Church, thus confirming Gennady's major activity during his archiepiscopate.
- Politically the archbishop of Novgorod grew in power during Novgorod's period of independence, traditionally 1136 to 1478, until just before the Mongol Invasion ( 1237 1240 ) and then fell into decline until about the archiepiscopate of Vasilii Kalika ( 1330 1352 ).