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Ealdred and Bishop
Ealdred ( or Aldred ; died 11 September 1069 ) was Abbot of Tavistock, Bishop of Worcester, and Archbishop of York in Anglo-Saxon England.
Edward sent Ealdred after the death in battle of Bishop Leofgar of Hereford, who had attacked Gruffydd ap Llywelyn after encouragement from the king.
* Ealdred, Bishop of Worcester, leads troops from England on an unsuccessful punitive raid against Welsh leaders Gruffydd ap Rhydderch, Rhys ap Rhydderch and Gruffydd ap Llywelyn.
Ealdred, Bishop of Worcester, is unsuccessful in driving them off.
He had been taken as a young child to Hungary, and in 1054 Bishop Ealdred of Worcester visited the Holy Roman Emperor, Henry III to secure his return, probably with a view to becoming Edward's heir.
Although Ealdred, the Bishop of Worcester actually went to the Continent in search of Edward, Ian Walker, the biographer of King Harold Godwinson, feels that Stigand was behind the effort.
Wulfstan was consecrated Bishop of Worcester on 8 September 1062, by Ealdred.
As is usual with charters of this period, the authenticity of some of these documents is open to question ( though Della Hooke has established high reliability for the Cornish material ), but that of others ( e. g. Edgar's grant of estates at Tywarnhaile and Bosowsa to his thane Eanulf in 960, Edward the Confessor's grant of estates at Traboe, Trevallack, Grugwith and Trethewey to Bishop Ealdred in 1059 ) is not in any doubt.
In the same year, a diploma granting rights to the diocese of Cornwall and Bishop Ealdred of Cornwall stated that it was written by Sigeric, but it is unlikely that the document was actually written by the archbishop.
Some say it was his father Earl Godwin who pleaded his case to the King, others that is was Aldred, or Ealdred, Bishop of Worcester who had met him in Flanders returning from his pilgrimage.
In 757 Eanberht, Uhtred, and Ealdred, granted land to Bishop Milred,
In 757 Eanberht, Uhtred, and Ealdred, granted land to Bishop Milred
In 757 Eanberht, Uhtred, and Ealdred, granted land to Bishop Milred, and in 759 to Abbot Headda.
Ealdred, also called Brihtwine, was a monk and provost at Abingdon before becoming abbot in 1066 ; he was later implicated in the conspiracy of Bishop Æthelwine of Durham, and was deposed in 1071.

Ealdred and century
* Ealdred ( archbishop ), 11th century English ecclesiastic
* Ealdred of Northumbria, 10th century king of Northumbria
* Ealdred of Hwicce, 8th century king of Hwicce
* Ealdred of Bamburgh ( 11th century )

Bishop and Lincoln
The Bishop of London — the most senior cleric of the church with the exception of the two archbishops — serves as Canterbury's provincial dean, the Bishop of Winchester as chancellor, the Bishop of Lincoln as vice-chancellor, the Bishop of Salisbury as precentor, the Bishop of Worcester as chaplain and the Bishop of Rochester as cross-bearer.
The Act had no effect on illegal practices: five clergy were imprisoned for contempt of court and after the trial of the much loved Bishop Edward King of Lincoln, it became clear that some revision of the liturgy had to be embarked upon.
The Popish Plot of 1678 sparked renewed interest in the Gunpowder Plot, resulting in a book by Thomas Barlow, Bishop of Lincoln, which refuted " a bold and groundless surmise that all this was a contrivance of Secretary Cecil ".
Thomas Barlow, Bishop of Lincoln wrote Execreitationes aliquot metaphysicae de Deo ( 1637 ) and spoke often of natural theology during the reign of Charles II.
The royal administration under Henry I had been headed by Roger, the Bishop of Salisbury, supported by Roger's nephews, Alexander and Nigel, the Bishops of Lincoln and Ely respectively, and Roger's son, Roger le Poer, who was the Lord Chancellor.
The following chronological ordering was proposed by John Kaye, Bishop of Lincoln in the 19th C .:
* J. Kaye, Bishop of Lincoln ( 1845, third edition ) The Ecclesiastical History of the Second and Third Centuries, illustrated from the writings of Tertullian.
For his services in defence of the faith, with the publication of the Evidences, the Bishop of London gave him a stall in St Paul's ; the Bishop of Lincoln made him subdean of that cathedral, and the Bishop of Durham conferred upon him the rectory of Bishopwearmouth.
* November 13 – Oliver Sutton, Bishop of Lincoln
* December – John Taylor, Bishop of Lincoln ( b. 1503 )
** Thomas Barlow, Bishop of Lincoln ( d. 1691 )
This bill was supported by some of the most able and learned men in England, including the Earl of Northumberland, the Bishop of Lincoln, the Chief Justice of the Court of Common Pleas, the Attorney General for England and Wales, the Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer, and the Chief Justice of the King's Bench.
* January 12 – John Dalderby, Bishop of Lincoln
* June 19 – Brasenose College, University of Oxford, is founded by a lawyer, Sir Richard Sutton, of Prestbury, Cheshire, and the Bishop of Lincoln, William Smyth.
* February 2 – Thomas Bek, Bishop of Lincoln, was the bishop of Lincoln ( b. 1282 )
* May 7 – Remigius de Fécamp, first Bishop of Lincoln
The Old Library was built in 1624, largely with funds donated by John Williams, Bishop of Lincoln.

Bishop and 9th
Saint Swithun was Bishop of Winchester in the mid 9th century.
In the 9th century, the Bishop of Angers gave the Counts of Anjou permission to build a castle in Angers.
An employer or customer's preference for an individual of a particular religion is not sufficient to establish a Bona Fide Occupational Qualification ( Equal Employment Opportunity Commission v. Kamehameha School — Bishop Estate, 990 F. 2d 458 ( 9th Cir.
This church was destroyed by the Normans in the 9th century during one of their many raids on Utrecht, but was reconstructed by Bishop Balderik in the 10th century.
Augustine of Hippo ( 5th century ), Hincmar ( early French theologian, archbishop of Rheims, 9th century ), Michael Psellus ( 11th century ), William of Auvergne, Bishop of Paris ( 13th century ), Johannes Tauler ( 14th century ), and Ludovico Maria Sinistrari ( 17th century ), among others, supported the idea that demons were lustful and lascivious beings.
A church had been at Jedburgh since the 9th century, founded by Bishop Ecgred of Lindisfarne, and king David I of Scotland made it a priory between 1118 and 1138, housing Augustinian monks from Beauvais in France.
* Rt Revd Sir John Hotham, 9th Baronet ( 1734 – 1795 ), Bishop of Clogher 1782 – 1795
* Bishop Eadbald of Lindsey, middle 9th century
* Sir Francis Heathcote, 9th Baronet ( 1868 – 1961 ), Bishop of New Westminster ( 1940 – 1951 )
The current bishop is the Right Reverend Malcolm McMahon, O. P., the 9th Bishop of Nottingham.
* Joscelin, Bishop of Paris, 9th century French cleric
* Æthelhard 8th / 9th century Bishop of Winchester and Archbishop of Canterbury
The village church of St Mary's, Gainford, stands on the site of an Anglo-Saxon monastery built by Bishop Ecgred of Lindisfarne in the early 9th century.
In March 2001 Bishop Declan Lang was ordained as 9th Bishop of Clifton.
The current bishop is the Right Reverend Christopher John Hill, the 9th Bishop of Guildford, who signs + Christopher Guildford.
The current Bishop is the Right Reverend Dominic Walker, the 9th Bishop of Monmouth, who was previously Area Bishop of Reading in the Church of England.
Bishop was elected as a Republican from Michigan's 9th congressional district to the United States House of Representatives for the 54th Congress and to the five succeeding Congresses, serving from March 4, 1895 until March 3, 1907.
The current bishop is the Right Reverend Declan Ronan Lang, who was appointed the 9th Bishop of Clifton on 27 February 2001 and consecrated on 28 March 2001.
Reverend Gene Robinson, 9th Bishop of the Diocese of New Hampshire and first openly gay bishop in the Episcopal Church
* Ailill, Bishop of Clogher of the 9th century AD
* Robert R. Brown, 9th Bishop of Arkansas, author of " And One Was a Soldier ": The Spiritual Prilgrimage of Robert E. Lee ( 1998 ).
The appointment of his son-in-law, the Reverend Canon Dr Christopher Cocksworth, as the 9th Bishop of Coventry and youngest serving diocesan bishop in the Church of England, was announced in March 2008.

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