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Bishop and 1330
* Roger Martival, Bishop of Salisbury ( 1315 to 1330 )
Corruption in the finances of the Newark Hospital set in and worsened until reforms were put in place formally in 1330 by the Bishop of Rochester Hamo de Hethe.
The town of Bordesholm developed around 1330, when the abbey of Neumünster ( founded in 1127 by Bishop Vizelin ) was moved to an island in the Bordesholm lake.
The village of Chesalles-sur-Oron was first mentioned in 1330 when the surrounding land was acquired by the Bishop of Lausanne.
After the 8th of April 1330 we have no more knowledge of Bishop Jordanus I.

Bishop and
* 1329 The Roman Catholic Diocese of Quilon, the first Indian Christian Diocese, is erected by Pope John XXII ; the French-born Jordanus is appointed the first Bishop.
* 1132 St. Hugues, Bishop of Grenoble ( b. 1053 )
* 1031 Olaf II of Norway is canonized as Saint Olaf by Grimketel, the English Bishop of Selsey.
# Siegfried ( died 24 October 1184 ), Bishop of Brandenburg from 1173 1180, Prince-Archbishop of Bremen, the first ranked prince, from 1180 1184
Absalon or Axel ( 21 March 1201 ) was a Danish archbishop and statesman, who was the Bishop of Roskilde from 1158 to 1192 and Archbishop of Lund from 1178 until his death.
Saint Adalbert, Czech: ;, ( c. 956 April 23, 997 ), Czech Roman Catholic saint, a Bishop of Prague and a missionary, was martyred in his efforts to convert the Baltic Prussians.
Ælfheah (, " elf-high "; 954 19 April 1012 ), officially remembered by the name Alphege within some churches, and also called Elphege, Alfege, or Godwine, was an Anglo-Saxon Bishop of Winchester, later Archbishop of Canterbury.
Probably due to the influence of Dunstan, the Archbishop of Canterbury ( 959 988 ), Ælfheah was elected Bishop of Winchester in 984, and was consecrated on 19 October that year.
* 1079 Bishop Stanislaus of Kraków is executed by order of Bolesław II of Poland.
* 1854 William Stang, German prelate and Bishop ( d. 1907 )
* Jürgen Klötgen, Prieuré d ' Abergavenny Tribulations mancelles en Pays de Galles au temps du Pape Jean XXII ( d ' après des documents français et anglais du XIV ° siècle collationnés avec une source d ' histoire retrouvée aux Archives Secrètes du Vatican ), in Revue Historique et Archéologique du Maine, Le Mans, 1989, p. 65 88 ( 1319: cf John of Hastings, Lord of Abergavenny ; Adam de Orleton, Bishop of Hereford, John of Monmouth, Bishop of Llandaff ).
It was from St. Alexander of Alexandria, Bishop of Alexandria, 312 328, himself an Origenist, that St Athanasius received his main instruction.
Berlin's best preserved medieval Church of St. Mary's is the 1 < sup > st </ sup > preaching venue Memorial Church being the 2 < sup > nd </ sup > of the Bishop of the Evangelical Church of Berlin-Brandenburg-Silesian Upper Lusatia ( EKBO ), a Protestant regional church body.
The spelling and names in both the 1609 1610 Douay Old Testament ( and in the 1582 Rheims New Testament ) and the 1749 revision by Bishop Challoner ( the edition currently in print used by many Catholics, and the source of traditional Catholic spellings in English ) and in the Septuagint ( an ancient translation of the Old Testament in to Greek, which is widely used by the Eastern Orthodox instead of the Masoretic text ) differ from those spellings and names used in modern editions which are derived from the Hebrew Masoretic text.
Bishop Wigers ( 1138 60 ) was the first of a series of bishops of the Premonstratensian Order, which chose the occupants of the see until 1447 ; in that year a bull of Nicholas V gave the right of nomination to the elector of Brandenburg, with whom the bishops stood in a close feudal relation.
* 1415 1420: Johann von Waldow, Bishop of Lebus
* 1507 1520: Hieronymus Schulz ( or Scultetus ), later Bishop of Havelberg
In the 18th century there were increasing numbers of such collections, including Thomas D ' Urfey's Wit and Mirth: or, Pills to Purge Melancholy ( 1719 20 ) and Bishop Thomas Percy's Reliques of Ancient English Poetry ( 1765 ).
Since the donation of the Abbey Moutier-Grandvalto and all its possessions to Bishop Adalbero II in 999 till the Reformation, Basel was ruled by prince-bishops ( see Bishop of Basel, whose memory is preserved in the crosier shown on the Basel coat-of-arms see above ).

Bishop and 1375
Simon Sudbury, also called Simon Theobald of Sudbury and Simon of Sudbury ( born circa 1316 ; killed in the Peasants ' Revolt 14 June 1381 ) was Bishop of London from 1361 to 1375, Archbishop of Canterbury from 1375 until his death, and in the last year of his life Lord Chancellor of England.
* John Gilbert ( bishop of St David's ) ( died 1397 ), Bishop of Hereford, 1375 1389
* 1375: Bishop Stephen de Valle, Collector of the Customs of the Port.

Bishop and was
In spite of the armistice negotiated by Amadee two years earlier, the war between Bishop Guillaume of Lausanne and Louis of Savoy was still going on, and although little is known about it, that little proves that it was yet another phase of the struggle against French expansion and was closely interwoven with the larger conflict.
there was much to grok, loose ends to puzzle over and fit into his growing -- all that he had seen and heard and been at the Archangel Foster Tabernacle ( not just cusp when he and Digby had come face to face alone ) why Bishop Senator Boone made him warily uneasy, how Miss Dawn Ardent tasted like a water brother when she was not, the smell of goodness he had incompletely grokked in the jumping up and down and wailing --
Errett Bishop argued that the axiom of choice was constructively acceptable, saying
Ambrose was the Governor of Aemilia-Liguria in northern Italy until 374 when he became the Bishop of Milan.
Ambrose was Bishop of Milan at the time of Augustine's conversion, and is mentioned in Augustine's Confessions.
Constance was a missionary bishopric in newly converted lands, and did not look back on late Roman church history ( unlike the Raetian bishopric of Chur, established 451 ) and Basel, which was an episcopal seat from 740, and which continued the line of Bishops of Augusta Raurica, see Bishop of Basel.
In 1899 he was made Cardinal Bishop of Albano.
Ealdred ( or Aldred ; died 11 September 1069 ) was Abbot of Tavistock, Bishop of Worcester, and Archbishop of York in Anglo-Saxon England.
His mother's chaplain and hagiographer Thurgot was named Bishop of Saint Andrews ( or Cell Rígmonaid ) in 1107, presumably by Alexander's order.
The translation was undertaken at Alfred's command by Werferth, Bishop of Worcester, with the king merely furnishing a preface.
Andrew also went on conspiring with some prelates against his brother, but King Emeric was informed as to Andrew's plans and he personally arrested Bishop Boleszlo of Vác, one of Andrew's main supporters, and he also deprived his brother's followers ( e. g., Palatine Mog ) of their privileges.
By a unique Papal dispensation, Absalon was allowed to simultaneously maintain his post as Bishop of Roskilde.
In 1192, Absalon made his nephew Peder Sunesen his successor as Bishop of Roskilde, while his other nephew Anders Sunesen was named the chancellor of Canute VI.
Immediately prior to his appointment to Canterbury he was the Bishop of Monmouth in Wales.
The Bishop of Maidstone was previously a second actual suffragan bishop working in the diocese, until it was decided at the diocesan synod of November 2010 that a new bishop will not be appointed.

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