Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Church of Ireland Theological Institute (formerly the Church of Ireland Theological College) is responsible for ministerial formation and lay training within the Church of Ireland. It is located in Churchtown in Dublin. [2] The Church of Ireland, Representative Church Body (RCB) Library and archives, are also housed on the CITI Campus.
The Red Book of Ossory (Latin Liber Rubrum Ossoriensis) is a medieval manuscript produced in Kilkenny, Ireland, and usually kept in the Representative Church Body Library [1] in Dublin. [2] On 82 folios, [3] the manuscript contains a number of texts in Latin, Middle English [a] and in Anglo-Norman.
The Birth, Marriage and Death records are held in the Representative Church Body Library in Churchtown, Dublin. [citation needed] There is a commemorative plaque to members of the parish who died or were missing in the first and second world wars, also listing members of the 7th company of the boys brigade who died.
The local Roman Catholic church is the Good Shepherd Church. [11] It was the site of the state funeral of former Taoiseach Seán Lemass , who lived on Hillside Drive. The Church of Ireland Theological Institute (the theological seminary of the Church of Ireland ) [ 12 ] and the Representative Church Body Library (the central library of the ...
Church of Ireland records from 1702 to 1892 at the Representative Church Body; burial records are at the Genealogical Office, Manuscript No. 577. The proceedings of the church are recorded in minute books which survive intact back to the year 1698.
The representative body of the Church of Ireland, often called the "Representative Church Body" (RCB), is the corporate trustee of the church, as established by law, and much of the church's property is vested in it. The members of the RCB are the bishops plus diocesan delegates and twelve co-opted members, and it meets at least four times a year.
A full archive of back copies is held at the Church of Ireland's Library at Braemor Park, Dublin. Its website is hosted on the Irish Anglican website, and much of the archive is available online. On the April 2nd, 2017 it was announced further funding to digitise all issues from 1856 managed by the Representative Church Body Library.
J. B. Leslie, 'Fasti of Christ Church cathedral, Dublin' (Representative Church Body Library, Mississippi 61/2/2 [n.d., c.1939]), 56-71. G. J. Hand, 'The two cathedrals of Dublin: internal organisation and mutual relations, to the middle of the fourteenth century' (M.A. and Travelling Studentship in History thesis, National University of ...