Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The bishop's residence is Bishop's Lodging, The Palace, Peterborough. The office has been in existence since the foundation of the diocese on 4 September 1541 under King Henry VIII. The current Bishop of Peterborough is Debbie Sellin, since the confirmation, on 13 December 2023 at Lambeth Palace Chapel, of her election. [2]
Church of England bishops of the Diocese of Peterborough, with its seat at Peterborough Cathedral. Pages in category "Bishops of Peterborough" The following 40 pages are in this category, out of 40 total.
The last abbot, John Chambers, was consecrated in his former abbey church on 23 October 1541 as the first Bishop of Peterborough. A link with the Anglican Church of Kenya Diocese of Bungoma was formed by the two bishops following the Lambeth Conference in 1998. In 1851 the diocese comprised the following rural deaneries: [2]
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Donate
As there are 42 dioceses of the Church of England, there are 42 bishops diocesan (including vacancies).Of the 42: both archbishops and the Bishops of London, of Durham and of Winchester, sit in the House of Lords as Lords Spiritual ex officio; a further 21 sit there by seniority (of whom five had their seniority accelerated); the Bishop of Sodor and Man sits ex officio in the Legislative ...
This article lists Diocesan Bishops and Archbishops in the Church of England, the Church in Wales, the Scottish Episcopal Church and the Church of Ireland. In the Church of England [ edit ]
Lord Bishop of Newcastle: Helen-Ann Hartley: 21 September 2023 [g] 2023 Lord Bishop of Norwich: Graham Usher: 17 October 2023 2014 Lord Bishop of Oxford: Steven Croft: 15 July 2013 [h] 2009 Lord Bishop of Peterborough Debbie Sellin: 18 October 2024 2023 Lord Bishop of Sheffield: Pete Wilcox: 17 January 2023 2017 Lord Bishop of Southwark ...
These lists include bishops and archbishops who before the English Reformation were in communion with the See of Rome. (It does not include bishops and archbishops of the restored Roman Catholic hierarchy established by the Holy See from 1850 or their predecessors, the vicar apostolics, all titular bishops, who were appointed from 1688.)