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Archdeacon and married
He was twice married, first to Anna Barton, a sister of John Sterling's wife, secondly to a half-sister of his friend Archdeacon Hare.
Another daughter, Isabella, in 1841 married the clergyman Benjamin Harrison who became a Canon of Canterbury and Archdeacon of Maidstone.
His surviving sons included Canon Richmond of Carlisle and Sir William Blake Richmond, K. C. B., R. A. Of his daughters, three married respectively Mr. F. W. Farrer, Archdeacon Buchanan, canon of Salisbury, and Mr. Justice Kennedy.

Archdeacon and clergyman
The latter event occurred, at least tacitly, when an Archdeacon from the group was exempted from World War I conscription in 1917 due to his status as a clergyman, which would not have been permitted had the group not been considered a lawfully constituted denomination.
* William Bruère Otter ( 1805-1876 ), Anglican clergyman and Archdeacon of Lewes
While in the Azores, he was taught by his uncle, Dom Frei Alexandre da Sagrada Família ( Faial, Horta, May 22, 1737 – Terceira, Angra do Heroísmo, April 22, 1818 ), also a freemason, then the 25th Bishop of Angra ( 1816 – 1818 ) and former Bishop of Malaca and Timor ; his two other uncles were Manuel Inácio da Silva Garrett, Archdeacon of Angra, and Inácio da Silva Garrett, also a clergyman of Angra.
* Herbert Jones ( bishop of Lewes ) ( 1861 – 1920 ), English clergyman, the second Suffragan Bishop of Lewes and Archdeacon of Chichester
The son of Maxwell Woosnam, a clergyman who served as canon of Chester and Archdeacon of Macclesfield, Woosnam spent most of his childhood in Aberhafesp, Mid Wales.

Archdeacon and for
Although he received support from the Church — he became Archdeacon of Pamplona in 1143 — Robert's preference was for translating scientific rather than theological works.
The cost of upkeep fell upon the town, although in 1596 and at irregular intervals later the Archdeacon was allowed to collect money for repairs by Brief in the diocese.
Archdeacon William Strong, a regular visitor to the prison, notes in his diary of 23 October 1801 that he provided a piece of mahogany and paid a prisoner £ 1 15s 6d to build a model of the Block House and £ 2 2s for a straw picture of Peterborough Cathedral.
The 1950s saw the appointment of the Reverend Carl Witton-Davies as dean ; appointed in his 30s, his driving vision and energy was short-lived, as he was offered what some was believed as a preferment as Archdeacon of Oxford, but did not leave that position for the rest of his service in the Church.
Indeed, he suggested that Voisin should stop working for Archdeacon and enter into partnership with him.
A truce was declared for the next day, a Sunday, during which the Protestant Missionary Archdeacon Brown entered the camp of Heke and performed a service for him and his people.
She would prefer that her son instead choose the coldly beautiful Griselda Grantly, daughter of Archdeacon Grantly, and fears that Lucy is too " insignificant " for such a high honour.
* The former Church of Ireland Archdeacon of Dublin, was rector of St Pauls, Glenageary for twenty-four years and a local resident.
Around 1182 he was appointed Archdeacon of Bath, a position he held for 26 years, followed by appointment as Archdeacon of London ( 1202 – 1212 ).
Archdeacon Thomas, desperate for a new ecclesiastical leader to free his people from the Padroado, travelled to Cochin and demanded to meet Ahatallah and examine his credentials.
In October 1504 he was enthroned Bishop of Bath and Wells as proxy for Adriano ; and in 1508 he himself was installed as Archdeacon of Wells.
Together with fellow Canadian, Frank Pickersgill, Ken Macalister was parachuted into occupied France on June 20, 1943 to work as wireless operator for the " Archdeacon " network in the Ardennes area.
Associated with King were William Bright, Regius Professor of Ecclesiastical History and a great scholar ; Edward Stuart Talbot, Warden of Keble College and subsequently Bishop of Winchester ; Edwin James Palmer, Professor of Latin, Archdeacon of Oxford and later Bishop of Bombay ; Edward Woolcoombe, a Fellow of Balliol with a great interest in and support for the missionary movement ; and John Wordsworth, Chaplain of Brasenose College.
He comes from a family of gypsies, like in the novel, but in a dramatic change, his mother does not abandon him, but she is rather killed by Judge Claude Frollo, who leaves Quasimodo alive in the belltower when the Archdeacon of Notre Dame condemns him for chasing Quasimodo's mother to her death on the steps of Notre Dame, warning of the consequences if he kills the infant under the " eyes of Notre Dame ".
Until the 11th century, the Archdeacon of the Roman Church was responsible for the administration of the property of the Church ( i. e., the Diocese of Rome ), but its numerous ancient privileges and rights had come to make it a frequent hindrance to independent action on the part of the Pope ; as a result, when the last Archdeacon Hildebrand was elected to the papacy as Gregory VII in 1073, he suppressed the Archdiaconate and the cardinal entrusted with the supervision of the Apostolic Camera ( Camera Apostolica ), i. e., the temporalities of the Holy See, became known as the Camerarius, or Chamberlain.
He was the son of William John Hamilton ( Member of Parliament for Newport, Isle of Wight ), son of William Richard Hamilton ( Permanent Under-Secretary at the Foreign Office ), son of the Venerable Anthony Hamilton ( Archdeacon of Colchester ), son of Alexander Hamilton, younger son of the aforementioned William Hamilton, 3rd of Wishaw.
And finally Fearon for Archdeacon Henry Fearon who in 1870 financed the oldest edifice in Market Square, the drinking fountain, allowing Loughborough to gain its first piped water supply.
In 1893 the Archdeacon with responsibility for the area had Llandrindod old church and Cefnllys church unroofed in order to persuade the congregations to attend the new church in the centre of the town.
Longchamp was one of Barre's patrons, and secured the post of Archdeacon of Ely for him as well as judicial posts.
" He claims that he was given a source for this period by Archdeacon Walter of Oxford, who presented him with a " certain very ancient book written in the British language " from which he has translated his history.
Its immediate occasion was the disputation at Heidelberg ( 1568 ) for the doctorate of theology by George Withers, an English Puritan ( subsequently Archdeacon of Colchester ), silenced ( 1565 ) at Bury St Edmunds by Archbishop Parker.

Archdeacon and whom
Geoffrey was a patron of scholarship, and employed a number of scholars throughout his life, one of whom, Honorius of Kent, Geoffrey appointed Archdeacon of Richmond.
In 1522 he was living at Rose Castle, Cumberland when he was visited by Dr William Burbank, Archdeacon of Carlisle Cathedral, of whom he wrote to Cardinal Wolsey.

Archdeacon and has
", " Blessed Peter has chosen Hildebrand the Archdeacon!
At Cockerton near the southern end of Newton Lane and to the southeast of the hamlet is its namesake, the Archdeacon pub ; Michael Perry, Archdeacon of Durham, posed for the sign in 1980, although the sign has since been replaced.
Brackla has five primary schools ; Brackla primary, Tremains Infants & Juniors ; Archdeacon John Lewis Church in Wales School & Ysgol cymraeg
He has also worked in a number of roles in the Anglican Church in Tasmania and Victoria: with the Diocese of Tasmania as diocesan field officer for the Anglican Boys ’ Society, the diocesan youth and education officer ; deputy warden at Christ College in the University of Tasmania ( 1980 to 1984 ); director of parish education at St Stephen ’ s Church, Mount Waverley, in the Diocese of Melbourne ( 1985 ); assistant curate, assistant priest and parish priest in various locations in Tasmania including Claremont ; and director of Anglicare Tasmania ( 1994 – 1998 ) including two years as Archdeacon for Church and Society.

Archdeacon and long
According to Archdeacon Stuck Hope was from a " well-known house long connected with the sea ".
After disappearing in the early nineteenth century, the manuscript was unexpectedly rediscovered in 1910 in a cupboard in a disused bedroom of the mansion of Hendregadredd near Portmadoc: a note found inside, written by the Archdeacon of Merioneth Richard Newcome ( 1779-1857 ), stated " I have long been in possession of this Welsh MS. but forget where or how I obtained it ".

Archdeacon and is
* Claude Frollo, the novel's main antagonist, is the Archdeacon of Notre Dame.
* Jacques Charmolue is a friend of the Archdeacon, in charge of torturing prisoners.
There is also a Saxo to be found on a list of clergy at Lund, where there was a Sven recorded as Archdeacon.
The Venerable Jonathan Smith is Archdeacon of St Albans, installed in October 2008.
* A deacon is often styled as The Reverend Deacon ( or Hierodeacon, Archdeacon, Protodeacon, according to ecclesiastical elevation ), while in spoken use the title Father is used ( sometimes Father Deacon ).
The Archdeacon was more of a secular ruler, having sanction of local Hindu rulers and he is said to have carried around a small army of few hundred Syrian Christian soldiers.
Summoned by Archdeacon Grantly to assist in the war against the Proudies and Mr Slope is the brilliant Reverend Francis Arabin.
* Archdeacon Grantly, Dr Theophilus Grantly, is the son of the former Bishop of Barchester, Dr Grantly senior, who passes away at the start of the novel.
* Newcastle, County Dublin: this is a prebend since at least 1227, and was held by the Archdeacon of Glendalough from 1467 to 1872, when that Archdeacon ceased to be a member of the Chapter.
Prebendary of Kilmactalway at September 2011 is Archdeacon G. L.
Archdeacon Hastings is a well-known Irish traditional flute player, and author of With Fife and Drum, a study of the Orange Lambeg and fifing traditions of Ulster.
For non-doctrinal cases, the lowest level of the court is the Archdeaconry Court, which is presided over by the local Archdeacon.
It is recorded that in 1605, the custom that " on that day our parson giveth unto the parishoners bread, cheese, cakes and divers barrels of beer, brought in there and drawn " was suspended on account of a visit from Charles Fotherby, the Archdeacon of Canterbury, owing to previous ceremonies having caused " much disorder by reason of some unruly ones, which at such time we cannot restrain with any ease ".
He is found abandoned in Notre Dame ( on the foundlings ' bed, where orphans and unwanted children are left to public charity ) on Quasimodo Sunday, the first Sunday after Easter, by Claude Frollo, the Archdeacon of Notre Dame, who adopts the baby, names him after the day the baby was found, and brings him up to be the bell-ringer of the Cathedral.
It is narrated by Neville Aysgarth, a young and ambitious Archdeacon of Starbridge from a working class background in the north of England.
An early reference to the rock is made by Sir Donald Monro, Archdeacon of the Isles who referred to the rock as " Elsay " in the 16th century.
In 1851, Archdeacon Cochrane of the Anglican Church, John McLean, as well as other ambitious settlers, were among the first to purchase the first land in the area from the local Aboriginals, around what is now Crescent Lake ( formerly known as " The Slough ").
Thomas Dealty, rector of St. Mary's Church, Swillington 1872-1878, is credited with having introduced the habit of throwing confetti at weddings, from his observation of rice thrown at Hindu weddings in his previous position as Archdeacon of Madras.
The north window is filled with stained glass by Hardman as a memorial of Archdeacon Lane-Freer, who died in 1863.

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