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archbishop and New
As part of his diplomatic duties, Peckham wrote to Llywelyn, and in those letters the archbishop continued his criticisms of the Welsh people, this time condemning their laws as contrary to both the Old and New Testament.
He arranged and travelled with the archbishop on the first-ever visit of an archbishop of Canterbury to China and had responsibility for travels to Australia, New Zealand, Burma, the United States, Canada, the Caribbean, and South Africa.
In part this was because he used it to criticize the Irish-born Catholic archbishop of New York, John Hughes.
During his tenure as archbishop, he founded nine nursing homes ; Birthright, which offers women alternatives to abortion ; the Inner-City Scholarship Fund, which provides financial aid for inner-city Catholic schools ; an Archdiocesan Housing Development Program, providing housing to New York's disadvantaged ; and the Catholic New York, the archdiocesan newspaper.
It is the seat of the archbishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New York, and a parish church, located on the east side of Fifth Avenue between 50th and 51st Streets in midtown Manhattan, New York City, New York, directly across the street from Rockefeller Center and specifically facing the Atlas statue.
Michael Augustine Corrigan ( August 13, 1839 – May 5, 1902 ) was an American prelate of the Roman Catholic Church, who served as the third archbishop of New York from 1885 to 1902.
Corrigan was appointed Coadjutor Archbishop of New York on October 1, 1880, with the titular see of Petra, and succeeded to the archbishopric on October 10, 1885, serving as archbishop until his death.
He succeeded to the bishopric of the diocese of New York on December 20, 1842 and became an archbishop on July 19, 1850, when the diocese was elevated to the status of archdiocese.
# REDIRECT John Hughes ( archbishop of New York )
# REDIRECT John Hughes ( archbishop of New York )
Fordham University was originally founded as St. John's College in 1841 by the Irish-born coadjutor bishop ( later archbishop ) of the Diocese of New York, the Most Reverend John Joseph Hughes.
After his elevation, he wrote his Letter to the Monks of Eynsham, an abridgment for his own monks of Æthelwold's De consuetudine monachorum, adapted to their rudimentary ideas of monastic life ; a letter to Wulfgeat of Ylmandun ; an introduction to the study of the Old and New Testaments ( about 1008, edited by William L ' Isle in 1623 ); a Latin life of his master Æthelwold ; two pastoral letters for Wulfstan, archbishop of York and bishop of Worcester, in Latin and English ; and an English version of Bede's De Temporibus.
For example, John of Montecorvino, archbishop of Peking founded Roman Catholic missions in India and China and also translated the New Testament into the Mongolian language.
* John McCloskey, first American Cardinal, archbishop of New York 1864-1885, first president of Fordham University 1841-43 ; university and seminary graduate
* Philip Hannan, archbishop of the Archdiocese of New Orleans ( 1965 – 1988 ).
Since the first creation of another province within Australia in 1905, the archbishop has also been ex officio metropolitan of the Province of New South Wales.
( William Laud had become archbishop of the Church of England in 1633 and begun a crackdown on Nonconformist religious practices ( such as those practiced by the more Calvinist Puritans ) that prompted a wave of migration to the New World.
* Other notable Manhattan graduates include: James W. Cooley, mathematician, co-author of the FFT ( Fast Fourier Transform ) algorithm used in digital processing ; Austin Dowling, archbishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis ; Patrick Joseph Hayes, Cardinal Archbishop of New York ; George Mundelein, Cardinal Archbishop of Chicago ; Olympic track gold medalists Lindy Remigino and Lou Jones.
However, since Whakahuihui Vercoe stepped down at the end of his two-year term as archbishop in 2006, the church has decided that three bishops shall share the position and style of archbishop, each representing one of the three tikanga, or cultural streams of the church: Te Pihopatanga o Aotearoa ( the Bishopric of Aotearoa, serving Māori ), the Dioceses in New Zealand ( serving Pakeha ) and the Diocese of Polynesia.
Currently, Archbishop Brown Turei, who is Bishop of Aotearoa, is recognised as leader of the church, but he shares the style archbishop and the title Co-Presiding Bishop with David Moxon ( Bishop of Waikato, representing the Dioceses in New Zealand ) and Winston Halapua ( Bishop of Polynesia ).

archbishop and York
Cynesige, the archbishop of York, died on 22 December 1060, and Ealdred was elected Archbishop of York on Christmas Day, 1060.
Holding Worcester along with York allowed the archbishop sufficient revenue to support himself.
* 992 – Oswald of Worcester, archbishop of York ( b. c. 925 )
* 2005 – John Sentamu becomes the first black archbishop in the Church of England with his enthronement as the 97th Archbishop of York.
He settled a controversy with King William I of Scotland concerning the choice of the archbishop of St. Andrews, and on 13 March 1188 removed the Scottish church from the legatine jurisdiction of the Archbishop of York, thus making it independent of all save Rome.
An argument then broke out between a group of reformers based in York and backed by Bernard of Clairvaux, the head of the Cistercian order, who preferred William of Rievaulx as the new archbishop, and Stephen and his brother Henry of Blois, who preferred various Blois family relatives.
English sources claim that Ealdred, the Archbishop of York, performed the ceremony, but Norman sources state that the coronation was performed by Stigand, who was considered a non-canonical archbishop by the papacy.
** Tobias Matthew, archbishop of York ( d. 1628 )
** Nicholas Heath, archbishop of York and Lord Chancellor ( d. 1578 )
Colonial churchmen such as Sydney's first Catholic archbishop, John Bede Polding strongly advocated for Aboriginal rights and dignity and prominent Aboriginal activist Noel Pearson ( born 1965 ), who was raised at a Lutheran mission in Cape York, has written that Christian missions throughout Australia's colonial history " provided a haven from the hell of life on the Australian frontier while at the same time facilitating colonisation ".
* January 22 – Ælfric Puttoc, archbishop of York
* Aldred, archbishop of York
Thus a retired archbishop can only be considered a bishop ( though it is possible to refer to ' Bishop John Smith, the former Archbishop of York '), a canon or archdeacon is a priest on retirement and does not hold any additional honorifics.
* Ealdred ( archbishop of York ) ( 1061 – 1069 )
Matilda was crowned queen on May 11, 1068 in Westminster during the feast of Pentecost, in a ceremony presided over by the archbishop of York.
He had an illegitimate daughter Emma, who was the mother of William of York, archbishop of York.
Boniface first sent the letter to Ecgberht, the archbishop of York, asking him to correct any inaccuracies and reinforce whatever was right ; and he requested Herefrith, a priest whom Æthelbald had listened to in the past, to read and explain it to the king in person.
* Geoffrey ( archbishop of York ) ( 1151 – 1212 ), Archbishop of York, illegitimate son of Henry II
His first difficulties were with Thomas of Bayeux, archbishop elect of York, ( another former pupil ) who asserted that his see was independent of Canterbury and claimed jurisdiction over the greater part of midland England.
The diocese of York took advantage of Stigand's difficulties with the papacy and encroached on the suffragans, or bishops owing obedience to an archbishop, normally subject to Canterbury.
* Ecgbert, archbishop of York ( died 766 )
The archbishop held ecclesiastical councils, including one at York in 1195 that legislated that the clergy should collect their tithes in full, "... without any reduction.

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