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Clergy

Index Clergy

Clergy are some of the main and important formal leaders within certain religions. [1]

2981 relations: A Haunting, A Night in the Lonesome October, A Secular Age, A. B. Masilamani, A. C. Solomon Raj, A. E. Inbanathan, A. Monem Mahjoub, Abbas al-Musawi, Abbas Ka'bi, Abbasid invasion of Asia Minor (806), Abbé Faria, Abbey of Echternach, Abbots of Shrewsbury, Abd Al Aziz Awda, Abdul Aziz (Pakistani cleric), Abdul Rahman (convert), Abdul Sattar Edhi, Abdul-Satar al-Bahadli, Abdullah ibn Shaykh al-Aydarus, Abhinavabharati, Abiel Foster, Abraham Bennet, Abraham Dawson, Abraham Hume (cricketer), Abraham Isaac, Absalom Jones, Absolution, Abu Hamza al-Masri, Abu Sayyaf, Abyzov, Académie française, Academic ranks in the United States, Accolade, Acidity (novelette), Act Concerning Peter's Pence and Dispensations, Acton, Massachusetts, Ad Universalis Ecclesiae, Adam Buddle, Adam de Stratton, Adam Houghton, Adam lay ybounden, Adam Orleton, Adam Philippe, Comte de Custine, Adams County, Pennsylvania, Add The Words, Idaho, Addai II Giwargis, Adil Abdul-Mahdi, Adnan al-Aroor, Adolph Ernst Kroeger, Adskaya Pochta, ..., Adverse Childhood Experiences Study, Affective Meditation, Aga Syed Mohammad Baqir Kirmani, Aga Syed Mohammad Fazlullah, Aga Syed Mustafa Moosavi, Aga Syed Yusuf Al-Moosavi Al-Safavi, Agapetae, Aggiornamento, Ahmad Alamolhoda, Ahmad Iravani, Ahmad Kasravi, Ahmad Khatami, Ahmad Tejan Sillah, Ahmed al-Assir, Ahmed Bedier, Ahmed Subhy Mansour, Ahmed Yassin, Aiken, South Carolina, Ailbhe of Ceann Mhara, Aimeric de Belenoi, Airas Nunes, Akhmad Kadyrov, Akkari-Laban dossier, Akvilev, Al-Nabi Shayth, Alan de St Edmund, Alb, Albanian Orthodox Diocese of America, Albemarle County, Virginia, Albert Baillie, Albert Geyser, Albert II, Duke of Brunswick-Grubenhagen, Alcoholics Anonymous, Aldrich, Devourer of Gods, Alec Garden Fraser, Alexander Carmichael Bruce, Alexander Dunbar Winchester, Alexander Duncan (bishop), Alexander Hamilton (bishop), Alexander Hepburn, Alexander Hotovitzky, Alexander Hyde, Alexander Rzewuski, Alexander Salazar, Alexander Worthy Clerk, Alexei Petrovich, Tsarevich of Russia, Alfonso Litta, Alfred Christopher, Alfred du Cane, Alfred Edwin Eaton, Alfred Merle Norman, Alfred Northey, Alfred Perry, Alfred Potter, Alfred Rowe, Alfred Young, Alger of Liège, Ali Akbar Ghoreishi, Ali al-Sistani, Ali Malakouti, Alissa Thomas-Newborn, All Saints' Church, Babworth, All Saints' Church, West Markham, All Souls' Church, Cameron Highlands, Allahshukur Pashazadeh, Allama Hassan Turabi, Allan Boesak, Aloisio Gardellini, Alonso de Montúfar, Aloys Karl Ohler, Aloysius College, The Hague, Altar, Altar server, Alvise Giovanni Mocenigo, Amarillo, Texas, Amawalk Friends Meeting House, Ambrose, Ambrose De Paoli, American Alliance for Medical Cannabis, American Baptist College, American Humanist Association, American Religious Townhall, American University of Science and Technology, Amhlaoibh Mór mac Fir Bhisigh, Anam Cara, Anantapur, Anastasius II of Jerusalem, Ancient Germanic law, Ancient higher-learning institutions, Andover Newton Theological School, Andover, Massachusetts, András Pándy, Andreas Karlstadt, Andreas Riis, Andrej Hlinka, Andrew Boardman, Andrew Bruce (bishop), Andrew Cant (educator), Andrew de Rait, Andrew Killian, Andrew Macdonald (poet), Andrew Pakula, Andronik (Nikolsky), Anglican Church of Papua New Guinea, Anglican Consultative Council, Anglican Diocese of Makurdi, Anglican Diocese of Riverina, Anglican doctrine, Anglican ministry, Anglican religious order, Anne Sophie Reventlow, Annual conferences of the United Methodist Church, Anointing of the sick, Ansbach, Anson Phelps Stokes (philanthropist), Anssi Joutsenlahti, Anthony Crockett, Anthony D'Andrea, Anthony George, Anthony J. 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Prescott, Arthur Thomas (Cambridge University cricketer), Arthur Tomblin, Arthur Wagner, Arthur Willink, Arthur Young (divine), Arts de seconde rhétorique, Asghar Dirbaz, Ashbourne, Derbyshire, Ashutosh (spiritual leader), Askeri, Aslim Taslam, Assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., Assembly of the French clergy, Assize of Clarendon, Assize of mort d'ancestor, Association of Catholic Clergy Pacem in Terris, Astley Cooper, At Home: A Short History of Private Life, Attitude (art), Attleboro, Massachusetts, Atto of Vercelli, August 19, August Wilhelm Iffland, Augusta County, Virginia, Augustinians, Aurel Onciul, Austin Farrer, Austrian Civil War, Autauga County, Alabama, Autograph, Ayatollah, Ár nDraíocht Féin, Çalıkuşu (TV series), Église Notre-Dame de Toute Grâce du Plateau d'Assy, Émile Duployé, Émile Littré, Ó Maoilciaran an Fili, Óengus of Tallaght, İhsan Özkes, Bahá'í administration, Bahá'í laws, Bai Bureh, Baka people (Cameroon and Gabon), Baldassare Castiglione, Baltazar Dvorničić Napuly, Bands (neckwear), Bani Jamra, Baptismal clothing, Barbara Blaine, Barchester Towers, Barnsley F.C., Bartella, Bartholomäus Ziegenbalg, Bartolomé Carranza, Basil Rebera, Basilica and National Shrine of Our Lady of Consolation, Bastille Day, Bathkump, Batley, Battle of Coronate, Battle of Guadalacete, Battle of Pfeddersheim, Bayeux Tapestry, Beale Poste, Beating the bounds, Beauchamp–Sharp Tragedy, Becket controversy, Behaving Badly (TV serial), Belief, Bellevue Mosque, Belmond Hotel Monasterio, Ben Greet, Ben M. 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Fuller, Charles E. Raven, Charles F. Wishart, Charles Frederick Lyttelton, Charles Godfrey (cricketer), Charles Goldie (cricketer), Charles Grierson, Charles H. Vail, Charles Hutton, Charles King Irwin, Charles King Irwin (father), Charles Luxton, Charles Maurice de Talleyrand-Périgord, Charles Orlando Bridgeman, Charles Payne (cricketer, born 1827), Charles Reynolds (cleric), Charles Reynolds Brown, Charles Robert Hager, Charles Rufus Brown, Charles Stubbs, Charles Trick Currelly, Charles V of France, Charles Walder Grinstead, Charles Warren (cricketer, born 1843), Charles Webb (cricketer), Charles Webb Le Bas, Charles Wesley, Charles Wilkinson (cricketer), Charles William Eliot, Charles Woodmason, Chase family, Chasuble, Chavasse family, Cheka, Chet Trail, Children's literature, Choir (architecture), Choir dress, Chris Goldsmith, Christ Church Bangkok, Christ the King College, Isle of Wight, Christ the Saviour Seminary, Christendom, Christian Brothers University, Christian clothing, Christian College of Georgia, Christian cross variants, Christian feminism, Christian liturgy, Christian theology, Christian views on alcohol, Christianity and Paganism, Christianity in Cyprus, Christianity in the 15th century, Christianity in the Ottoman Empire, Christianization of Iberia, Christine Ondoa, Christophe de Beaumont, Christopher Lonsdale, Chronique romane, Chuanyin, Church (congregation), Church and state in medieval Europe, Church etiquette, Church grim, Church of God in Christ, Church of Ireland Theological Institute, Church of Nuestra Señora del Manzano, Castrojeriz, Church of Saint James the Great (Estômbar), Church of South India Synod, Church of St John the Baptist, Frome, Church of the Most Holy Trinity, Alcamo, Church of the Nazarene, Church of Universal Triumph, Dominion of God, Church reform of Peter the Great, Church service, Churches of Christ, Churches of Göreme, Churchman, Churchmanship, Cisalpine Club, Civil religion, Clarence Barbour, Clark Bentom, Claude Castonguay, Claude Magnay, Claudius Smith, Clement Price Thomas, Clergy Letter Project, Clergy of the Church of England database, Clergy of the United Church of Canada, Clergy reserve, Cleric (disambiguation), Clerical, Clerical celibacy, Clerical clothing, Clerical collaboration with communist secret services, Clerical Discipline, Clerical High School of Saint Arsenije, Clerical marriage, Clericalism, Clerici vagantes, Clerk, Clermont County, Ohio, Clifford's Inn, Clinical pastoral education, Cochineal, Cody's Books, Colm O'Gorman, Colman nepos Cracavist, Columba, Columbia, Kentucky, Combe Miller, Committee for State Security, Common Ground Collective, Common Worship, Commoner, Communities Helping All Neighbors Gain Empowerment, Communities Without Boundaries International, Company of the Blessed Sacrament, Compendium Competorum, Composition for Tithes (Ireland) Act 1823, Conaing Ua Beigléighinn, Conceptions of God, Conciliarity, Concordat of 1851, Concordia Theological Seminary, Conference for Progressive Labor Action, Confessing Movement, Confessional state, Congregation of Marian Fathers of the Immaculate Conception, Congregation of Mary Immaculate Queen, Congregationalist polity, Congrua portio, Conrad III of Dhaun, Conscription in the United Kingdom, Consecrated life, Consecrated virgin, Conseil du Roi, Conservation and restoration of fur objects, Conservatism in North America, Conservative Party of Quebec (historical), Constitutionalization attempts in Iran, Consultor, Continuing Anglican movement, Controlling Vice: Regulating Brothel Prostitution in St. Paul, 1865-1883, Convent pornography, Cooper Willyams, Cormac mac Ceithearnach, Cornelis Tiele, Cornelius Jakobs, Coronation of the Danish monarch, Coronation of the Holy Roman Emperor, Coslett Herbert Waddell, Cosmas the Priest, Council of Laodicea, Council of Orange (441), Count Gustav Kálnoky, Courir de Mardi Gras, Courland, Court of Auditors (France), Court of First Fruits and Tenths, Court of Session, Courtier, Couston Castle, Creation, Man and the Messiah, Creation–evolution controversy, Crispus, Crispinianus, and Benedicta, Cristo Rey Jesuit College Preparatory of Houston, Cristoforo Vidman, Criticism of the Catholic Church, Croatian Catholic movement, Crosby Field, Crosier Monastery, Maastricht, Crossroads (1955 TV series), Croxton Play of the Sacrament, Crusade in Jeans (film), Crusoe (TV series), Cucuteni–Trypillia culture, Cultural depictions of the dog, Culture of ancient Rus, Culture of Vatican City, Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society, Curates' Augmentation Fund, Cursor Mundi, Custos (under-sacristan), Cyranides, Cyrus West Field, D'Ewes Coke, D. L. Dykes Jr., Dafydd Emlyn, Dagnall, Dally Messenger III, Dandy Dick (play), Daniel (Nushiro), Daniel A. Poling, Daniel E. Sheehan, Daniel Edward Thomas, Daniel Faunce, Daniel Hay du Chastelet de Chambon, Daniel of Winchester, Daniel Waldo, Daniel Willis, Darbazi (State Council), Darcy Lever (author), Darkstars, Dasein ohne Leben, Dating agency, David Asante, David Ffrangcon-Davies, David Frederick Schaeffer, David H. Greer, David Jenkins (bishop), David Lloyd (priest), David O. Dykes, David Railton, David Sheppard, David Simpson (priest), David Swing, David Zeisberger, David Zubik, Década moderada, Décolletage, Džemaludin Čaušević, De Pippini regis Victoria Avarica, Deacon, Deaconess, Dean (Christianity), Dean Drayton, Dean of Birmingham, Dean of York, Deanery, Deceit (1923 film), Deerfield, New York, Defensor pacis, Defrocking, Degradation, Delaware Constitution of 1776, Delta Phi, Democracy in America, Denis J. Madden, Denis-Simon de Marquemont, Denominational education in the Republic of Ireland, Department of Divinities, Derek Nimmo, Deutscher Filmpreis, Development of Jehovah's Witnesses doctrine, Devotions upon Emergent Occasions, Dhiyaa Al-Musawi, Dia Abdul Zahra Kadim, Die Young (Kesha song), Diet of Finland, Diet of Porvoo, Diezmo, Dikļi Parish, Dikirion and trikirion, Dinkha IV, Dio (band), Diocesan Synod Nivariense, Diocese of Madhya Kerala of the Church of South India, Diocese of Medak of the Church of South India, Directorium, District Superintendent (Methodism), Divljana Monastery, Doctor (title), Doe v. Holy See, Dominic Cazenove, Dominical letter, Don gratuit, Donald Campbell (abbot), Donald M. Weller, Donnchad Clereach Ó Maol Braonáin, Dorchester Missionary College, Doug Moseley, Douglas Davies, Douglas Sheffield, Baroness Sheffield, Douglas Wood (engineer), Douglas, Isle of Man, Drogo of Metz, Drown (surname), Dugald Macfadyen, Dundee Law School, Dunstan, Dutch Golden Age, Dutch West India Company, Early Irish law, Easter parade, Eastern Nazarene College, Eastern Orthodox Church, Eastern Orthodox theology, Ebenezer Fitch, Eberhard I, Count of Württemberg, Eberhard Spiecker, Ebrahim Amini, Ecclesiastes (disambiguation), Ecclesiastical award, Ecclesiastical Commissioners of Ireland, Ecclesiastical court, Ecclesiastical heraldry, Ecclesiastical polity, Ecclesiastical privileges, Ecclesiastical titles and styles, Ecclesiology, Eclectic Society (Christian), Economy of the Cucuteni–Trypillia culture, Ed Ware, Edgar Stogdon, Edinburgh Theological College, Edmund Ffoulkes, Edmund Gennings, Edmund H. Oliver, Edmund Turnor (antiquarian), Ednam Church, Eduard Herzog, Education in Alberta, Education in Portugal, Edward Allworthy Armstrong, Edward Daniel Clarke, Edward Davies (Celtic), Edward Dowell, Edward Eddrup, Edward Edwards (priest), Edward Fitzgerald (barrister), Edward Francis Wilson, Edward Horne, Edward Hyde (priest), Edward King (priest), Edward Kirwan, Edward Kozłowski, Edward Michael Wigglesworth (c. 1693–1765), Edward Paquette, Edward Rainbowe, Edward Ramsay, Edward Reynolds (cricketer), Edward Waller (bishop), Edward Wilkins (cricketer), Edward Woolsey Bacon, Edwin Dyke, Edwin O. Ware Sr., Eelco Alta, Effects of the 1928 Okeechobee hurricane in Florida, Efraín Ríos Montt, Egerton Hall, Manchester, Ekrem Akurgal, Elazar Abuhatzeira, Elder (Christianity), Elder (Methodist), Elder Roma Wilson, Elections in Thailand, Elias Owen (priest), Elias Wen, Eliza Ann Gardner, Elizabeth Crocker Bowers, Elizaphan Ntakirutimana, Ellis Griffith (priest), Elmalı, Ely Theological College, Emerging church, Empire and Communications, Empire of Brazil, Enemy of the people, Engagement, Engelbrekt rebellion, English Americans, English coffeehouses in the 17th and 18th centuries, English honorifics, Entrance (liturgical), Eochaid ua Flannacáin, Ephraim Kingsbury Avery, Episcopal Diocese of Maryland, Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts, Episcopal polity, Episcopal sandals, Epistle to the Easterners, Erasmus Stourton, Eric Corbett, Eric III, Duke of Saxe-Lauenburg, Erik Bredal, Erik Gnupsson, Erkelenz, Ernest Blamires, Ernest Fox Nichols, Ernest Norman, Escors, Estates General (France), Estates of Béarn, Estates of Navarre, Estates of the realm, Estonia–India relations, Ethical movement, Eugene Augustus Hoffman, Euphrates College, European Americans, European science in the Middle Ages, Evan Thomas (priest), Evangelical Baptist Union of Ukraine, Evangelical Christian Church in Canada, Evelyn College for Women, Evelyn Hodges, Everett L. Fullam, Exorcism in Christianity, External cardinal, Eyo Edet Okon, Eze, F. J. Prettyman, Fabliau, Factory Acts, FakhrAfagh Parsa, Farhad Ahmed Dockrat, Farmerville, Louisiana, Fascia (sash), Fatemeh Karroubi, Father (disambiguation), Feast of Fools, Federico Baldissera Bartolomeo Cornaro, Federico Visconti, Felix Ennodius, Felix of Nicosia, Feminist effects on society, Feminist movement, Feminist theology, Ferdinand Hope-Grant, Ferdinand of Portugal, Lord of Eça, Ferghal Dubh Ó Gadhra, Ferraiolo, Feudalism, Feudalism in the Holy Roman Empire, Fiars Prices, Ficuzza, Field hockey, Fielding Lucas Jr., Fifth Estate, Finghin Ó Caiside, Finland under Swedish rule, Finnish name, Finnish nobility, First Council of Lyon, First Synod of Asunción, Five Eyes, Flag of France, Flüchtlingspolitik (German Refugee Policies), Folk religion, Food for the Poor, Fordell Castle, Forest Hills, Boston, France (name), France in the Middle Ages, France–Vietnam relations, Frances Ridley Havergal, Francesco Angelo Rapaccioli, Francis Gouldman, Francis Kelley, Francis Marbury, Francis Potter, Francis Roberts, Francis Ward Monck, Francis X. DiLorenzo, Franciszek Nogalski, Frank Chikane, Frank Crosse, Frank Hugh Foster, Frank Sandford, Franz Friedrich Fronius, Fraser Macintosh Rose, Frédéric Bintsamou, Fred Kingston, Fred L. Lowery, Frederic John Poynton, Frederic Price (cricketer, born 1852), Frederic Tobin, Frederick Byron, 10th Baron Byron, Frederick Christian Schaeffer, Frederick David Schaeffer, Frederick Gell, Frederick Hervey, 4th Earl of Bristol, Frederick IV of Oettingen, Frederick Jellicoe, Frederick Keppel, Frederick Long, Frederick Poland, Frederick Temple, Frederick Wedge, Frederick William Faber, Frederick William II of Prussia, Frederick Williams (priest), Free Judges, Free Protestant Episcopal Church, Freeborn Garrettson, Frei Galvão, French Revolution, French theatre of the late 18th century, Frock, Fundamentalist–Modernist Controversy, Fyresdal, G. E. Lowman, G. Earl Guinn, Gabriel Biel, Gabriel Wilensky, Gabriel-Jacques de Salignac de La Motte, marquis de Fénelon, Gabriele Falloppio, Galeote Pereira, Gallus Anonymus, Gangsta rap, Garden roses, Gary McCauley, Gautier le Leu, Gedewon, General Conference (United Methodist Church), General Convention of the Episcopal Church in the United States of America, General Synod of the Anglican Church of Canada, General Synod of the Church of England, Genesis Group, Genseric, Gentry, Geoffrey de Turville, Geoffrey Greig, Georg Christoph Lichtenberg, George Aaron Barton, George B. Bacon, George Barker Stevens, George Browne, 8th Viscount Montagu, George C. Pidgeon, George Clinton (musician), George D. 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Expand index (2931 more) »

A Haunting

A Haunting is an American paranormal anthology television program that depicts eyewitness accounts of possession, exorcism, and ghostly encounters.

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A Night in the Lonesome October

A Night in the Lonesome October is a novel by American writer Roger Zelazny published in 1993, near the end of his life.

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A Secular Age

A Secular Age is a book written by the philosopher Charles Taylor which was published in 2007 by Harvard University Press on the basis of Taylor's earlier Gifford Lectures (Edinburgh 1998–1999).

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A. B. Masilamani

Acharya A. B. Masilamani or Abel Boanerges Masilamani (1914–1990A. B. Masilamani, Nadipinchu Na Nava, PDF version of song sheet at Evangelical Church of Kurhessen Waldeck, Germany.) was a Golden Jubilee Baptist pastor and evangelist on whom parallels had been drawn comparing his ecclesiastical ministry with that of Saint Paul.

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A. C. Solomon Raj

The Right Reverend Doctor A. C. Solomon Raj (born 18 March 1961) is the seventh successor of Frank Whittaker and eighth Bishop in Medak of the Protestant Church of South India Society and shepherds the Diocese from the Cathedra of the Bishop housed in the CSI-Medak Cathedral in Medak Town, Telangana, India.

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A. E. Inbanathan

A.

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A. Monem Mahjoub

A.

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Abbas al-Musawi

Abbas al Moussawi عباس الموسوي; 26 October 1952 – 16 February 1992) was an influential Lebanese Shia cleric, co-founder and Secretary General of Hezbollah. He was killed by the Israel Defense Forces in 1992.

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Abbas Ka'bi

Ayatollah Abbas Ka'bi Nasab (Persian: آیت الله عباس کعبی) is an Iranian Twelver Shi'a cleric who was born in Ahwaz in 1962 in a religious family.

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Abbasid invasion of Asia Minor (806)

The Abbasid invasion of Asia Minor in 806 was the largest operation ever launched by the Abbasid Caliphate against the Byzantine Empire.

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Abbé Faria

Abbé Faria, or Abbé (Abbot) José Custódio de Faria, (31 May 1756 – 20 September 1819), was a Luso-Goan Catholic monk who was one of the pioneers of the scientific study of hypnotism, following on from the work of Franz Mesmer.

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Abbey of Echternach

The Abbey of Echternach is a Benedictine monastery in the town of Echternach, in eastern Luxembourg.

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Abbots of Shrewsbury

The recorded abbots of Shrewsbury run from c 1087, a scant four years after Shrewsbury Abbey's foundation, to 1540, its dissolution under Thomas Cromwell.

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Abd Al Aziz Awda

Abd Al Aziz Awda, also known as Abd al-Aziz Uda or Sheik Odeh (born 20 December 1950) is a Palestinian and one of the founders of the Islamic Jihad Movement in Palestine, also known as Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ), which is deemed by the United States to be an international terrorist organization.

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Abdul Aziz (Pakistani cleric)

Abdul Aziz (محمد عبد العزيز) is a Pakistani cleric and khateeb (sermon giver) in the central mosque of Islamabad known as Lal Masjid, which was the site of a siege in 2007 with the Pakistani army.

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Abdul Rahman (convert)

Abdul Rahman (Persian: عبدالرحمن; born 1965) is an Afghan citizen who was arrested in February 2006 and threatened with the death penalty for converting to Christianity.

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Abdul Sattar Edhi

Abdul Sattar Edhi (عبدالستار ایدھی; 28 February 1928 – 8 July 2016) was a Pakistani philanthropist, ascetic, and humanitarian who founded the Edhi Foundation, which runs the world's largest volunteer ambulance network, along with homeless shelters, animal shelter, rehab centres, and orphanages across Pakistan.

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Abdul-Satar al-Bahadli

Sheikh Abdul-Satar al-Bahadli is a senior Iraqi Shia cleric and confederate of Muqtada al-Sadr.

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Abdullah ibn Shaykh al-Aydarus

(عبد الله بن شيج العيدروس, died 1609) was a Hadhrami religious leader who lived in the 16th century and a descendent of Abu Bakr al-ʿAydarūs, a prominent saint who started the al-ʿAydarūs branch of the Bā ʿAlawiyyah clan.

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Abhinavabharati

Abhinavabharati is a commentary on ancient Indian author Bharata Muni's work of dramatic theory, the Natyasastra.

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Abiel Foster

Abiel Foster (August 8, 1735 – February 6, 1806) was an American clergyman and politician from Canterbury, Province of New Hampshire.

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Abraham Bennet

Abraham Bennet FRS (baptised 20 December 1749 - buried 9 May 1799) was an English clergyman and physicist, the inventor of the gold-leaf electroscope and developer of an improved magnetometer.

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Abraham Dawson

Abraham Dawson was an Irish-Canadian Anglican cleric.

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Abraham Hume (cricketer)

Abraham Hume (28 June 1819 – 1 July 1888) was an English clergyman and cricketer who played first-class cricket for Cambridge University and the Marylebone Cricket Club.

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Abraham Isaac

Abraham Isaac (1828 1906) was a clergyman in the Church of Ireland in the second half of the nineteenth century and the first decade of the twentieth.

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Absalom Jones

Absalom Jones (November 7, 1746 – February 13, 1818) was an African-American abolitionist and clergyman.

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Absolution

Absolution is a traditional theological term for the forgiveness experienced in the Sacrament of Penance.

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Abu Hamza al-Masri

Mustafa Kamel Mustafa (مصطفى كامل مصطفى; born 15 April 1958), also known as Abu Hamza al-Masri (أبو حمزة المصري, – literally, the Egyptian father of Hamza), the Hook Hand or simply Abu Hamza, is an Egyptian cleric who was the imam of Finsbury Park Mosque in London, England, where he preached Islamic fundamentalism and militant Islamism.

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Abu Sayyaf

Abu Sayyaf (جماعة أبو سياف;, ASG; Grupong Abu Sayyaf), unofficially known as the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant – Philippines Province, is a Jihadist militant and pirate group that follows the Wahhabi doctrine of Sunni Islam based in and around Jolo and Basilan islands in the southwestern part of the Philippines, where for more than four decades, Moro groups have been engaged in an insurgency for an independent province in the country.

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Abyzov

Abyzov (Абы́зов; masculine) or Abyzova (Абызова́; feminine) is a Russian surname.

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Académie française

The Académie française is the pre-eminent French council for matters pertaining to the French language.

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Academic ranks in the United States

Academic ranks in the United States are the titles, relative importance and power of professors, researchers, and administrative personnel held in academia.

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Accolade

The accolade (also known as dubbing or adoubement) (benedictio militis) was the central act in the rite of passage ceremonies conferring knighthood in the Middle Ages.

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Acidity (novelette)

Acidity is a dystopian, cyber novelette written by Pakistani journalist and writer, Nadeem F. Paracha.

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Act Concerning Peter's Pence and Dispensations

The Ecclesiastical Licences Act 1533 (25 Hen 8 c 21), also known as the Act Concerning Peter's Pence and Dispensations, is an Act of the Parliament of England.

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Acton, Massachusetts

Acton is a suburban town in Middlesex County, Massachusetts, United States, approximately twenty-one miles west-northwest of Boston along Route 2 west of Concord and about southwest of Lowell.

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Ad Universalis Ecclesiae

Ad universalis Ecclesiae is a papal constitution dealing with the conditions for admission to Catholic religious orders of men in which solemn vows were prescribed.

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Adam Buddle

Adam Buddle (1662–1715) was an English cleric and botanist.

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Adam de Stratton

Adam de Stratton (died 1292–94) was a royal moneylender, administrator and clergyman under Edward I of England.

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Adam Houghton

Adam Houghton (died 13 February 1389), also known as Adam de Houghton, was Bishop of St David's from 1361 until his death and Lord Chancellor of England from 1377 to 1378.

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Adam lay ybounden

"Adam lay ybounden", originally titled Adam lay i-bowndyn, is a 15th-century macaronic English text of unknown authorship.

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Adam Orleton

Adam Orleton (died 1345) was an English churchman and royal administrator.

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Adam Philippe, Comte de Custine

Adam Philippe, Comte de Custine (4 February 174028 August 1793) was a French general.

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Adams County, Pennsylvania

Adams County is a county in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania.

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Add The Words, Idaho

Add The Words, Idaho is an LGBT activist group and political action committee (PAC) in the United States, extant since 2010, which advocates adding the words "sexual orientation" and "gender identity" to the state's human rights act; this group grew out of several others which had been advocating the same.

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Addai II Giwargis

Mar Addai II, Catholicos-Patriarch of the Ancient Church of the East (Syriac: ܡܪܝ ܐܕܝ), born Shlemun Giwargis, (born in Iraq on 1 August 1946, although some sources cite 1948) is the incumbent Catholicos Patriarch of the Ancient Church of the East and resides in the Apostolic See of Seleucia-Ctesiphon in Baghdad, Iraq.

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Adil Abdul-Mahdi

Adil Abdul-Mahdi al-Muntafiki (عادل عبد المهدي المنتفكي) is an Iraqi Shi'a politician, economist, and was one of the Vice Presidents of Iraq from 2005 to 2011.

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Adnan al-Aroor

Adnan Mohammed al-Aroor (الشيخ عدنان محمد العرعور, born 1948) is a Salafi cleric from Hama, Syria.

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Adolph Ernst Kroeger

Adolph Ernst Kroeger (28 December 1837 in Schwabstedt, Duchy of Schleswig – 8 March 1882 in St. Louis, Missouri) was a translator and author who contributed significantly to the understanding of German literature in the United States.

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Adskaya Pochta

Adskaya Pochta (which may be translated as Infernal Post) was a Russian monthly magazine, established by Fyodor Emin in Saint Petersburg in 1769.

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Adverse Childhood Experiences Study

The Adverse Childhood Experiences Study (ACE Study) is a research study conducted by the American health maintenance organization Kaiser Permanente and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

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Affective Meditation

Affective Meditation is a Christian spiritual practice originating in Medieval Europe by which a pilgrim, worshipper, or other follower of Christ seeks to imagine the sights, sounds, tastes, smells, movement, and tactility of specific scenes from canonical Gospels and their characters, with particular emphasis on empathising with the compassion and suffering of Jesus and the joys and sorrows of the Virgin Mary, leading to the authentic and spontaneous expression of emotion.

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Aga Syed Mohammad Baqir Kirmani

Aga Syed Mohammad Baqir Kirmani r.a. (Urduآغا سید محمد باقر کرمانی) was a religious cleric who came from Kirman, Iran in Kashmir to spread the message of Islam.

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Aga Syed Mohammad Fazlullah

Aga Syed Mohammad Fazlullah Al-Moosavi Al-Safavi (1947-2018) was a Kashmiri Shia Scholar and cleric.

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Aga Syed Mustafa Moosavi

Ayatullah Aga Syed Mustafa Al-Moosavi Al-Safvi (2 February 1924 – 21 August 2002) widely known as Aga Sahab (آغا صاحب) was a Kashmiri Shia Muslim cleric, Islamic Jurist, Islamic scholar, philanthropist and former President of Anjuman-e-Sharie Shiyaan Jammu and Kashmir.

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Aga Syed Yusuf Al-Moosavi Al-Safavi

Ayatullah Aga Syed Yousuf Al-Moosavi Al- safvi (1904 – 29 August 1982) (آغا سید یوسف الموسوی الصفوی)was a Kashmiri religious scholar and leader of Shia Muslims.

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Agapetae

In the first century of the Christian era, the Agapetae (from the Greek word agapetai, meaning 'beloved') were virgins who consecrated themselves to God with a vow of chastity and associated with laymen.

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Aggiornamento

Aggiornamento, "bringing up to date", was one of the key words used during the Second Vatican Council both by bishops and the clergy attending the sessions, and by the media and Vaticanologists covering it.

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Ahmad Alamolhoda

Sayyid Ahmad Alamolhoda (also Alam Olhoda or Alam al-Hoda; احمد علم‌الهدی) is an Iranian Shia Islamic cleric who has been described as "senior" and "conservative" and "hardline." His rank has been given both as Hojjatoleslam and Ayatollah.

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Ahmad Iravani

Ahmad Iravani is an Iranian philosopher, scholar and clergyman from the Northern region of Iran, along the Caspian Sea.

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Ahmad Kasravi

Ahmad Kasravi (29 September 1890 – 11 March 1946; احمد کسروی) was a notable Iranian linguist, historian, nationalist and reformer.

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Ahmad Khatami

Sayyid Ahmad Khatami (احمد خاتمی, born 8 May 1960) is a senior Iranian cleric, as well as a senior member of the Assembly of Experts.

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Ahmad Tejan Sillah

Ahmad Tejan Sillah is a Sierra Leonean Shia Muslim scholar and Islamic preacher.

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Ahmed al-Assir

Ahmad Al-Assir (born 5 May 1968) is the former Imam of the Bilal Bin Rabah Mosque in Sidon, South Lebanon.

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Ahmed Bedier

Ahmed Bedier is a Florida-based community organizer, speaker and media commentator, who is widely recognized as an expert on Islamic issues.

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Ahmed Subhy Mansour

Ahmed Subhy Mansour (أحمد صبحي منصور; born March 1, 1949) is an Egyptian American activist, whose website describes him as an Islamic scholar with expertise in Islamic history, culture, theology, and politics.

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Ahmed Yassin

Sheikh Ahmed Ismail Hassan Yassin (1937 – 22 March 2004) (الشيخ أحمد إسماعيل حسن ياسين) was a Palestinian imam and politician.

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Aiken, South Carolina

Aiken is the largest city and county seat of Aiken County, in the western portion of the state of South Carolina, United States.

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Ailbhe of Ceann Mhara

Ailbhe of Ceann Mhara (died 814) was an Irish cleric.

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Aimeric de Belenoi

Aimeric de Belenoi (fl. 1215–1242 22.) was a Gascon troubadour.

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Airas Nunes

Airas Nunes (c. 1230 – 1289) was a Galician cleric and troubador of the 13th century.

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Akhmad Kadyrov

Akhmad Abdulkhamidovich Kadyrov (Ахмат Абдулхамидович Кадыров; Къадири lабдулхьамидан кlант Ахьмад-Хьажи; 23 August 1951 – 9 May 2004), also spelled Akhmat, was the Chief Mufti of the Chechen Republic of Ichkeria in the 1990s during and after the First Chechen War.

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Akkari-Laban dossier

The Akkari-Laban dossier (ملف عكّاري لبن) is a 43-page document which was created by a group of Danish Muslim clerics from multiple organizations set out to present their case and ask for support in the Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons controversy.

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Akvilev

Akvilev (А́квилев; masculine) or Akvileva (А́квилева; feminine) is a Russian last name.

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Al-Nabi Shayth

Al-Nabi Sheeth (also spelled Nabi Chit; Arabic: النبي شيت) is a village in the Bekaa Valley of Lebanon.

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Alan de St Edmund

Alan de St Edmund was a 13th-century English cleric and administrator of the Roman Catholic Church.

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Alb

The alb (from the Latin Albus, meaning white), one of the liturgical vestments of the Roman Catholic, Anglican, Lutheran, and Methodist churches, is an ample white garment coming down to the ankles and is usually girdled with a cincture (a type of belt, sometimes of rope similar to the type used with monk garments).

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Albanian Orthodox Diocese of America

The Albanian Orthodox Diocese of America (Dioqeza ortodokse shqiptare në Amerikë) is a jurisdiction of the Ecumenical Patriarchate in the United States.

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Albemarle County, Virginia

Albemarle County is a county located in the Piedmont region of the Commonwealth of Virginia.

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Albert Baillie

The Very Rev.

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Albert Geyser

Albertus (Albert) Stephanus Geyser (10 February 1918 – 13 June 1985) was a South African cleric, scholar and anti-apartheid theologian.

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Albert II, Duke of Brunswick-Grubenhagen

Albert II, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg (Albrecht II., Herzog zu Braunschweig-Lüneburg; 1 November 1419 – 15 August 1485), was a Prince of Grubenhagen; he reigned from 1440 until his death in 1485.

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Alcoholics Anonymous

Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) is an international mutual aid fellowship whose stated purpose is to enable its members to "stay sober and help other alcoholics achieve sobriety." It was founded in 1935 by Bill Wilson and Dr. Bob Smith in Akron, Ohio.

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Aldrich, Devourer of Gods

Aldrich, Devourer of Gods (also known as Aldrich, Saint of the Deep) is a fictional character and boss in the action role-playing game Dark Souls III.

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Alec Garden Fraser

Reverend Alexander Garden Fraser (1873-1962), MA, CBE, was one of the founders of Achimota School and the first Principal of the School (1924–1935).

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Alexander Carmichael Bruce

Sir Alexander Carmichael Bruce (26 October 1926) was the second Assistant Commissioner "A" of the London Metropolitan Police, from 1888 to 1914.

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Alexander Dunbar Winchester

Alexander Dunbar Winchester (also known as Alexander Winster) (1625–1708) was a Roman Catholic clergyman who served as the Prefect of Scotland.

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Alexander Duncan (bishop)

Alexander Duncan (c.1655–1733) was a non-jurant Scottish Episcopal clergyman, college bishop (from 1724), and Bishop of Glasgow from 1731.

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Alexander Hamilton (bishop)

Alexander Kenneth Hamilton (11 May 191522 December 2001) was an eminent Anglican clergyman during the second half of the 20th century.

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Alexander Hepburn

Alexander Hepburn (died 1578) was a 16th-century Scottish cleric.

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Alexander Hotovitzky

Saint Alexander Hotovitzky (or Hotovitsky), hieromartyr of the Bolshevik yoke, Missionary of America, was a Ukrainian who came to the United States in the 1890s as a lay missionary and was ordained to the priesthood while there.

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Alexander Hyde

Alexander Hyde (1598–1667) was an English royalist clergyman, Bishop of Salisbury from 1665 to 1667.

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Alexander Rzewuski

Alexander Rzewuski (1893-1983) was a Catholic clergyman of Polish-Russian aristocratic background, with a Russian Orthodox background.

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Alexander Salazar

Alexander Salazar (born November 28, 1949) is a Costa Rican-American prelate of the Roman Catholic Church.

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Alexander Worthy Clerk

Alexander Worthy Clerk (1820 – 1906) was a Jamaican Moravian pioneer missionary, teacher and clergyman who arrived in 1843 in the Danish Protectorate of Christiansborg, now Osu in Accra, Ghana, then known as the Gold Coast.

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Alexei Petrovich, Tsarevich of Russia

Alexei Petrovich Romanov (28 February 1690 – 7 July 1718) was a Russian Tsarevich.

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Alfonso Litta

Alfonso Michele Litta (19 September 1608 – 28 August 1679) was an Italian cardinal and the archbishop of Milan from 1652 to 1679.

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Alfred Christopher

Alfred Millard William Christopher (20 August 1820 – 10 March 1913) was an English clergyman who, as a young man, was a cricketer who played in three matches for Cambridge University in 1843 that have been designated as first-class.

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Alfred du Cane

Alfred Richard du Cane (2 April 1835 – 19 October 1882) was an English clergyman and a cricketer who played first-class cricket for Cambridge University Cricket Club and other amateur sides in 1854 and 1855.

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Alfred Edwin Eaton

Alfred Edwin Eaton (1845 - 1929) was an English clergyman and entomologist.

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Alfred Merle Norman

Alfred Merle Norman (29 August 1831 – 26 October 1918) was an English clergyman and naturalist.

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Alfred Northey

Alfred Edward Northey (2 August 1838 – 24 January 1911) was an English clergyman and a cricketer who played first-class cricket for Cambridge University and for another amateur side between 1857 and 1860.

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Alfred Perry

Alfred Perry was a prominent Montrealer and fire marshal who, with a group of Protestant clergy and Montréal citizens, founded the Douglas Hospital (originally named the "Protestant Hospital for the Insane.") in Montreal, Quebec, Canada on July 19, 1881.

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Alfred Potter

Alfred Potter (15 December 1827 – 21 September 1878) was an English clergyman and a cricketer who played first-class cricket for Cambridge University in 1849.

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Alfred Rowe

Alfred William Rowe (1 July 1837 – 12 March 1921) was an English clergyman and educationalist by career, and also a cricketer who played first-class cricket in two matches in the 1859 season.

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Alfred Young

Alfred Young, FRS (16 April 1873 – 15 December 1940) was a British mathematician.

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Alger of Liège

Alger of Liège (1055–1131), known also as Alger of Cluny and Algerus Magister, was a learned clergyman from Liège author of several notable works.

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Ali Akbar Ghoreishi

Ayatollah Seyed Ali Akbar Ghoreishi (علی اکبر قریشی, was born 1928 in Bonab, East Azerbaijan) is an Iranian Shiite cleric, author and politician.

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Ali al-Sistani

Al-Sayyid Ali al-Husseini al-Sistani (السيد علي الحسيني السيستاني), or Sayyed Ali Hosseini Sistani (سید علی حسینی سیستانی), commonly known as Ayatollah Sistani in the Western world (born August 4, 1930 in Mashhad), is an Iranian Shia marja in Iraq and the head of many of the seminaries (Hawzahs) in Najaf.

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Ali Malakouti

Ali Malakouti (علی ملکوتی, born in Qom from Azerbaijanis family Moslem Malakouti) is an Iranian Shiite cleric and politician.

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Alissa Thomas-Newborn

Alissa Thomas-Newborn is an Orthodox Jewish woman who became the first Orthodox female clergy member to preside in the Los Angeles, California areaThe Jewish Journal, May 5, 2015 when she assumed her post as a spiritual leader at B’nai David-Judea Congregation (BDJ) in August 2015.

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All Saints' Church, Babworth

All Saints' Church, Babworth, is a Grade I listed parish church in the Church of England in Babworth.

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All Saints' Church, West Markham

All Saints' Church, West Markham is a Grade I listed parish church in the Church of England serving the parish of Markham Clinton in West Markham.

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All Souls' Church, Cameron Highlands

All Souls’ Church is located in Tanah Rata, Cameron Highlands, Pahang, Malaysia.

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Allahshukur Pashazadeh

Haji Allahshükür Hummat Pashazade (Allahşükür Hümmət Paşazadə) Sheikh ul-Islam and Grand Mufti of the Caucasus which includes his native Republic of Azerbaijan, Republic of Georgia, and Dagestan, Kabardino-Balkaria, Ingushetia, Chechnya, Karachay–Cherkessia, and Adygea in the Russian Federation.

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Allama Hassan Turabi

Allama Hassan Turabi (Urdu: علامہ حسن ترابی) was a Pakistani and prominent Shia Muslim cleric, chief of the main Shiite political party, Tehrik-e-Jafaria Pakistan.

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Allan Boesak

Allan Aubrey Boesak (born 23 February 1946) is a South African Dutch Reformed Church cleric and politician and anti-apartheid activist.

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Aloisio Gardellini

Aloisio Gardellini (August 4, 1759 in Rome – October 8, 1829) was an Italian editor and compiler of religious documents.

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Alonso de Montúfar

Alonso de Montúfar y Bravo de Lagunas, O.P., was a Spanish Dominican friar and prelate of the Catholic Church, who ruled as the second Archbishop of Mexico from 1551 to his death in 1572.

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Aloys Karl Ohler

Aloys Karl Ohler was a German Catholic cleric and educationist.

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Aloysius College, The Hague

Aloysius College, The Hague, is a high school in The Hague, founded by the Jesuits in 1917 and expanding to include secondary school, grammar school, high school, and "gifted education." The last Jesuits left the school in the 1970s and in 2016 the school was closed due to financial difficulties.

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Altar

An altar is any structure upon which offerings such as sacrifices are made for religious purposes, and by extension the 'Holy table' of post-reformation Anglican churches.

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Altar server

An altar server is a lay assistant to a member of the clergy during a Christian liturgy.

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Alvise Giovanni Mocenigo

Alvise Giovanni Mocenigo (1701–1778) was doge of Venice from 1763 until his death.

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Amarillo, Texas

Amarillo is the 14th-most populous city in the state of Texas, United States.

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Amawalk Friends Meeting House

Amawalk Friends Meeting House is located on Quaker Church Road in Yorktown Heights, New York, United States.

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Ambrose

Aurelius Ambrosius (– 397), better known in English as Ambrose, was a bishop of Milan who became one of the most influential ecclesiastical figures of the 4th century.

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Ambrose De Paoli

Ambrose Battista De Paoli (August 19, 1934 – October 10, 2007) was a Roman Catholic cleric and nuncio (Holy See ambassador).

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American Alliance for Medical Cannabis

The American Alliance for Medical Cannabis (AAMC) is an organization that promotes the legal access to medical cannabis, with the help of health professionals, members of the community, educators, patients, clergy and caregivers.

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American Baptist College

American Baptist College (also known as American Baptist Theological Seminary or ABTS) is a small, predominantly African American liberal arts college located in Nashville, Tennessee.

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American Humanist Association

The American Humanist Association (AHA) is an educational organization in the United States that advances secular humanism, a philosophy of life that, without theism or other supernatural beliefs, affirms the ability and responsibility of human beings to lead personal lives of ethical fulfillment that aspire to the greater good of humanity.

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American Religious Townhall

The American Religious Townhall is a syndicated weekly television program in which clergy from various religious denominations debate various religious, political, and social issues.

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American University of Science and Technology

The American University of Science and Technology (AUST), (Université américaine de sciences et technologie or الجامعة الأميركية للعلوم والتكنولوجيا), is a private, non-sectarian and co-educational American university in Lebanon.

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Amhlaoibh Mór mac Fir Bhisigh

Amhlaoibh Mór mac Fir Bhisigh, Irish poet, cleric and historian, died 1138.

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Anam Cara

Anam Cara or anamchara is an old Gaelic term for "soul friend"; anam meaning "soul" and cara meaning "friend".

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Anantapur

Anantapur (officially:Anantapuramu) is a city in Anantapur district of the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh.

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Anastasius II of Jerusalem

Anastasius II of Jerusalem was patriarch of the Church of Jerusalem from an unknown date until 706 as the see of Jerusalem came under control of their Muslim conquerors and church life was disrupted by the Monothelite controversy.

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Ancient Germanic law

Several Latin law codes of the Germanic peoples written in the Early Middle Ages (also known as leges barbarorum "laws of the barbarians") survive, dating to between the 5th and 9th centuries.

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Ancient higher-learning institutions

A variety of ancient higher-learning institutions were developed in many cultures to provide institutional frameworks for scholarly activities.

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Andover Newton Theological School

Andover Newton Theological School (ANTS) is an American graduate school and seminary located in Newton, Massachusetts, United States.

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Andover, Massachusetts

Andover is a town in Essex County, Massachusetts, United States.

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András Pándy

András Pándy (1 June 1927 – 23 December 2013) was a Belgian-Hungarian serial killer, convicted for the murder of six family members in Brussels between 1986 and 1990.

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Andreas Karlstadt

Andreas Rudolph Bodenstein von Karlstadt (1486 in Karlstadt, Bishopric of Würzburg in the Holy Roman Empire24 December 1541 in Basel, Canton of Basel in the Old Swiss Confederacy), better known as Andreas Karlstadt or Andreas Carlstadt or Karolostadt, or simply as Andreas Bodenstein, was a German Protestant theologian, University of Wittenberg chancellor, a contemporary of Martin Luther and a reformer of the early Reformation.

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Andreas Riis

Andreas Riis (12 January 1804 – October 1854) was a German-born Danish minister and pioneer missionary who is widely regarded by historians as the founder of the Gold Coast branch of the Basel Evangelical Missionary Society.

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Andrej Hlinka

Andrej Hlinka (September 27, 1864 – August 16, 1938) was a Slovak Catholic priest, journalist, banker and politician, one of the most important Slovak public activists in Czechoslovakia before Second World War.

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Andrew Boardman

Andrew Boardman (c. 1550–1639) was an English clergyman who was a minister at St. Mary's Church, Bury St. Edmunds as well as a vicar at Collegiate Church of St Mary, Warwick.

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Andrew Bruce (bishop)

Dr.

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Andrew Cant (educator)

Andrew Cant (date of birth unknown, died 1728 This page refers mostly to his father, but contains a reference to this Andrew Cant as well) was a Scottish clergyman and scholar, and Principal of the University of Edinburgh from 1675 to 1685.

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Andrew de Rait

Sir Andrew de Rait of Rait (born c.1280) was a 13th-14th century Scottish noble.

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Andrew Killian

Andrew Killian (26 October 1872 – 28 June 1939) was an Australian clergyman and the fourth Archbishop of Adelaide.

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Andrew Macdonald (poet)

Andrew Macdonald (1757–1790), pen name Matthew Bramble, was a Scottish clergyman, poet and playwright.

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Andrew Pakula

Rev.

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Andronik (Nikolsky)

Archbishop Andronik (also spelled Andronic; Архиепископ Андроник, secular name Vladimir Alexandrovich Nikolsky, Владимир Александрович Никольский; August 1, 1870 – July 7, 1918), was a bishop in the Russian Orthodox Church and a saint, glorified as Hieromartyr Andronik, Archbishop Of Perm in 2000.

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Anglican Church of Papua New Guinea

The Anglican Church of Papua New Guinea is a province of the Anglican Communion.

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Anglican Consultative Council

The Anglican Consultative Council or ACC is one of the four "Instruments of Communion" of the Anglican Communion.

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Anglican Diocese of Makurdi

The Diocese of Makurdi is a diocese of the Anglican Church of Nigeria, in the Abuja Province, that is roughly contiguous with Benue State.

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Anglican Diocese of Riverina

The Diocese of Riverina is one of 23 dioceses of the Anglican Church of Australia.

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Anglican doctrine

Anglican doctrine (also called Episcopal doctrine in some countries) is the body of Christian teachings used to guide the religious and moral practices of Anglicans.

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Anglican ministry

The Anglican ministry is both the leadership and agency of Christian service in the Anglican Communion.

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Anglican religious order

Anglican religious orders are communities of men or women (or in some cases mixed communities of both sexes) in the Anglican Communion who live under a common rule of life.

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Anne Sophie Reventlow

Anne Sophie Reventlow (Anna Sophie; 16 April 1693 – 7 January 1743) was Queen of Denmark and Norway from 1721 to 1730 as the second wife of Frederick IV of Denmark and Norway.

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Annual conferences of the United Methodist Church

An annual conference in the United Methodist Church is a regional body that governs much of the life of the "connectional church".

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Anointing of the sick

Anointing of the sick, known also by other names, is a form of religious anointing or "unction" (an older term with the same meaning) for the benefit of a sick person.

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Ansbach

Ansbach is a city in the German state of Bavaria.

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Anson Phelps Stokes (philanthropist)

Anson Phelps Stokes (13 April 1874 – 13 August 1958) was an American educator, historian, clergyman, author, philanthropist and civil rights activist.

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Anssi Joutsenlahti

Anssi Joutsenlahti is a retired clergyman of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Finland and a member of the parliament of Finland.

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Anthony Crockett

Phillip Anthony "Tony" Crockett (23 August 1945 – 30 June 2008) was a Welsh Anglican bishop.

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Anthony D'Andrea

Anthony D'Andrea (June 7, 1872 – May 12, 1921) was the Mafia boss of Chicago in the late 1910s to early 1920s.

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Anthony George

Anthony George (born Ottavio Gabriel George, January 29, 1921 – March 16, 2005) was an American actor mostly seen on television.

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Anthony J. Carr

The Right Revd.

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Antipope Benedict XIII

Pedro Martínez de Luna y Pérez de Gotor (25 November 1328 – 23 May 1423), known as el Papa Luna in Spanish and Pope Luna in English, was an Aragonese nobleman, who as Benedict XIII, is considered an antipope (see Western Schism) by the Catholic Church.

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Antoine Sabarthès

Canon or abbot Antoine Sabarthès, full name Antoine Auguste Sabarthès, (27 May 1854 – 19 February 1944) was a French ecclesiastic, writer and historian, a specialist of the Aude department.

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Anton Ausserdorfer

Anton Ausserdorfer (11 March 1836, Anras – 16 September 1885, Hall, Tirol) was an Austrian clergyman and botanical collector.

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Anton Niklas Sundberg

Anton Niklas Sundberg (27 May 1818, Uddevalla – 2 February 1900) was a Lutheran clergyman, and the Church of Sweden archbishop of Uppsala 1870–1900.

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Antoni Melchior Fijałkowski

Antoni Melchior Fijałkowski (Pszczew, near Poznań, January 3, 1778 – October 5, 1861, Warsaw) was the Archbishop Metropolitan of Warsaw and spiritual leader of the nation during the Partitions of Poland.

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Antonio Bettini

Antonio Bettini (13 June 1396 – 22 October 1487) was an Italian clergyman and writer.

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Antonio Francesco Orioli

Antonio Francesco Orioli O.F.M.Conv. (10 December 1778 in Bagnacavallo, Faenza in Italy – 20 February 1852 in Rome) was a cardinal of the Catholic Church.

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Antonio José Cavanilles

Antonio José Cavanilles (16 January 1745 – 5 May 1804) was a leading Spanish taxonomic botanist of the 18th century.

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Antonio Vivaldi

Antonio Lucio Vivaldi (4 March 1678 – 28 July 1741) was an Italian Baroque musical composer, virtuoso violinist, teacher and cleric.

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Antony, Cornwall

Antony (Trevanta) is a coastal civil parish and a village in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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Antoun Khouri

Antoun (Khouri) of Miami and the Southeast was a diocesan bishop of the Antiochian Orthodox Christian Archdiocese of North America.

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Aphrahat

Aphrahat (c. 280–c. 345; ܐܦܪܗܛ — Ap̄rahaṭ,, Greek Ἀφραάτης, and Latin Aphraates) was a Syriac-Christian author of the third century from the Adiabene region of Assyria (then Sassanid ruled Assuristan), which was within the Persian Empire, who composed a series of twenty-three expositions or homilies on points of Christian doctrine and practice.

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Apocrisiarius

An apocrisiarius, the Latinized form of apokrisiarios (ἀποκρισιάριος), sometimes Anglicized as apocrisiary, was a high diplomatic representative during Late Antiquity and the early Middle Ages.

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Apostasy

Apostasy (ἀποστασία apostasia, "a defection or revolt") is the formal disaffiliation from, or abandonment or renunciation of a religion by a person.

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Apostolic executor

An apostolic executor is a cleric who is charged with putting into practice a Papal rescript.

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Apostolic poverty

Apostolic poverty is a Christian doctrine professed in the thirteenth century by the newly formed religious orders, known as the mendicant orders, in direct response to calls for reform in the Roman Catholic Church.

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Apostolicae Servitutis

Apostolicae Servitutis was a papal bull issued by Pope Benedict XIV, 23 February 1741, against secular pursuits on the part of the clergy.

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Apostolici Ministerii

Apostolici Ministerii was a papal bull issued 23 May 1724, by Pope Innocent XIII, for the revival of ecclesiastical discipline in Spain.

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Aqeeq

Akik or aqiq means quartz, however usually refers to the chalcedony variant of quartz.

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Arab diaspora

Arab diaspora refers to descendants of the Arab immigrants who, voluntarily or as refugees, emigrated from their native lands to non-Arab countries, primarily in South America, Europe, North America, and parts of South Asia, Southeast Asia, the Caribbean, and West Africa.

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Arba'een Pilgrimage

The Arba'een Pilgrimage is the world's largest public gathering that is held every year in Iraq.

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Archaeology

Archaeology, or archeology, is the study of humanactivity through the recovery and analysis of material culture.

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Archbishop of Uppsala

The archbishop of Uppsala (spelled Upsala until the early 20th century) has been the primate in Sweden in an unbroken succession since 1164, first during the Catholic era, and from the 1530s and onward under the Lutheran church.

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Archbishops' Council

The Archbishops' Council is a part of the governance structures of the Church of England.

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Archchaplain

An Archchaplain is a cleric with a senior position in a royal court.

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Archdeacon

An archdeacon is a senior clergy position in the Syriac Orthodox Church, Church of the East, Chaldean Catholic Church, Anglican Communion, St Thomas Christians, Eastern Orthodox churches and some other Christian denominations, above that of most clergy and below a bishop.

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Archdeacon of Malmesbury

The Archdeacon of Malmesbury is a senior ecclesiastical officer within the Diocese of Bristol.

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Archibald Fargus

Rev. Archibald Hugh Conway Fargus MA (15 December 1878 – 6 October 1963) was an English cricketer who was a right-handed batsman who bowled right-arm fast.

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Architecture of cathedrals and great churches

The architecture of cathedrals, basilicas and abbey churches is characterised by the buildings' large scale and follows one of several branching traditions of form, function and style that all ultimately derive from the Early Christian architectural traditions established in the Constantinian period.

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Archpoet

The Archpoet (1130 – c. 1165), or Archipoeta (in Latin and German),Jeep 2001: 21.

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Argile Smith

Argile Asa Smith Jr. (born July 9, 1955), is a clergyman and scholar who served as the ninth and interim president of the Southern Baptist-affiliated Louisiana College in Pineville, Louisiana, from August 2014 to April 2015.

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Arialdo

Saint Arialdo (c. 1010 – June 27, 1066) is a Christian saint of the eleventh century.

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Ariel Serena Hedges Bowen

Ariel Serena Hedges Bowen (c. 1862–1904) was an African-American writer, temperance activist, and professor of music at Clark University (Atlanta) in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.

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Aristocracy of Norway

Aristocracy of Norway refers to modern and medieval aristocracy in Norway.

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Arnaud de Salette

Arnaud de Saleta was a cleric and Béarnese poet who served during the establishment of a Protestant state in the Kingdom of Navarra in the 16th century.

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Arnold Powell

Arnold Cecil Powell (18 September 1882 – 15 November 1963) was an English schoolmaster, educationalist and clergyman who was head master of several schools successively, ending his career as Custos of St Mary’s Hospital, Chichester.

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Arnulf of Chocques

Arnulf of Chocques (died 1118) was a leading member of the clergy during the First Crusade, being made Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem in 1099 and again from 1112 to 1118.

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Arseny of Winnipeg

Arseny of Winnipeg, known to be the most reverend archbishop (secular name Andrew Lvovich Chagovstov, Андрей Львович Чаговцов; 10 March 1866 - 4 October 1945) was a bishop of Russian Orthodox Greek Catholic Church in America.

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Arthur B. B. Moore

Arthur Bruce Barbour Moore (February 4, 1906 – September 9, 2004) was a Canadian Moderator of the United Church of Canada (1971–1972) and President and Vice-Chancellor of Victoria University in the University of Toronto (1950–1970).

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Arthur Barton (bishop)

Arthur William Barton DD (1 June 1881 – 22 September 1962) was a Church of Ireland clergyman, from 1939 Archbishop of Dublin.

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Arthur Cushman McGiffert

Arthur Cushman McGiffert (March 4, 18611933), American theologian, was born in Sauquoit, New York, the son of a Presbyterian clergyman of Scots-Irish descent.

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Arthur Herman Gilkes

Arthur Herman Gilkes MA, (1849 – 13 September 1922) was a noted educationalist, author, and clergyman, and was Master of Dulwich College from 1885 to 1914.

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Arthur Irwin (priest)

Arthur Irwin (1797-1861) was a clergyman in the Church of Ireland during the nineteenth century.

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Arthur James Mason

Arthur James Mason DD (4 May 1851 – 24 April 1928) was an English clergyman, theologian and classical scholar.

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Arthur Ross (bishop)

The Right Rev.

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Arthur Savile

Arthur Savile (20 December 1819 – 23 April 1870) was an English clergyman and a cricketer who played first-class cricket for Cambridge University and other amateur teams between 1839 and 1841.

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Arthur T. Prescott

Arthur Taylor Prescott, Sr. (11 June 1863 – 16 May 1942) was a political scientist and educator who was the founding president of Louisiana Tech University in Ruston, Louisiana.

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Arthur Thomas (Cambridge University cricketer)

Arthur Thomas (14 February 1816 – 1 December 1895) was an English clergyman and a cricketer who played in four first-class cricket matches for Cambridge University in 1837 and 1838.

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Arthur Tomblin

Arthur Charles Tomblin (May 1836 – 15 April 1911) was an English clergyman and a cricketer who played in four first-class matches for Cambridge University and the Gentlemen of the North team in 1857 and 1862.

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Arthur Wagner

Arthur Douglas Wagner (13 June 1824 – 14 January 1902) was a Church of England clergyman in Brighton, East Sussex, England.

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Arthur Willink

Arthur Willink (1850-1913) was a nineteenth-century British theologian and clergyman.

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Arthur Young (divine)

Arthur Young (1693–1759) was an English clergyman of the Church of England and religious writer.

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Arts de seconde rhétorique

The term la seconde rhétorique (French for "second rhetoric") came into use in the fifteenth century as a description of secular, vernacular verse in France.

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Asghar Dirbaz

Hujjat al-IslamAsghar Dirbaz (عسگر دیرباز, born 1959 in Mianeh, East Azerbaijan) is an Iranian Shiite cleric, author and politician.

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Ashbourne, Derbyshire

Ashbourne is a market town in the Derbyshire Dales, England.

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Ashutosh (spiritual leader)

Ashutosh, born as Mahesh Kumar Jha and also known as Ashutosh Maharaj (1946–2014), was an Indian spiritual leader, preacher, satguru, and founder head of Divya Jyoti Jagriti Sansthan (DJJS), a non-profit spiritual organisation.

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Askeri

Under the Ottoman Empire, an askeri (Ottoman Turkish: عسكري) was a member of a class of imperial administrators.

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Aslim Taslam

Aslim Taslam (أسلم تسلم) is a phrase meaning "submit (to God i.e. by accepting Islam) and you will get salvation", taken from the letters sent by the Islamic prophet Muhammad to various kings and rulers in which he urged them to convert to Islam.

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Assassination of Martin Luther King Jr.

Martin Luther King Jr., an American clergyman and civil rights leader, was shot at the Lorraine Motel in Memphis, Tennessee, on April 4, 1968.

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Assembly of the French clergy

The assembly of the French clergy (assemblée du clergé de France) was in its origins a representative meeting of the Catholic clergy of France, held every five years, for the purpose of apportioning the financial burdens laid upon the clergy of the French Catholic Church by the kings of France.

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Assize of Clarendon

The Assize of Clarendon was an 1166 act of Henry II of England that began the transformation of English law from such systems for deciding the prevailing party in a case, especially felonies, as trial by ordeal or trial by battle or trial by compurgation to an evidentiary model, in which evidence, inspection, and inquiry was made by laymen, knights or ordinary freemen, under oath.

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Assize of mort d'ancestor

In English law, the assize of mort d'ancestor ("death of ancestor") was an action brought where a plaintiff claimed the defendant had entered upon a freehold belonging to the plaintiff following the death of one of his relatives.

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Association of Catholic Clergy Pacem in Terris

Association of Catholic Clergy Pacem in Terris (Czech: Sdružení katolických duchovních Pacem in terris, Slovak: Združenie katolíckych duchovných Pacem in terris), abbreviated SKD PiT or simply PiT, was a regime-sponsored organisation of Catholic clergy in the communist Czechoslovakia between 1971 and 1989.

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Astley Cooper

Sir Astley Paston Cooper, 1st Baronet (23 August 176812 February 1841) was a British surgeon and anatomist, who made historical contributions to otology, vascular surgery, the anatomy and pathology of the mammary glands and testicles, and the pathology and surgery of hernia.

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At Home: A Short History of Private Life

At Home: A Short History of Private Life is a history of domestic life written by Bill Bryson.

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Attitude (art)

Attitude as a term of fine art refers to the posture or gesture given to a figure by a painter or sculptor.

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Attleboro, Massachusetts

Attleboro is a city in Bristol County, Massachusetts, United States.

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Atto of Vercelli

Atto of Vercelli or Atto II (885-961) was a Lombard who became bishop of Vercelli in 924.

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August 19

No description.

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August Wilhelm Iffland

August Wilhelm Iffland (19 April 175922 September 1814) was a German actor and dramatic author.

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Augusta County, Virginia

Augusta County is a county located in the Shenandoah Valley on the western edge of the U.S. commonwealth of Virginia.

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Augustinians

The term Augustinians, named after Augustine of Hippo (354–430), applies to two distinct types of Catholic religious orders, dating back to the first millennium but formally created in the 13th century, and some Anglican religious orders, created in the 19th century, though technically there is no "Order of St.

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Aurel Onciul

Aurel Onciul (1864-1921) was a Romanian moderate political leader in the Austrian Bukovina, prior to its union with the Kingdom of Romania.

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Austin Farrer

Austin Marsden Farrer, FBA (1 October 1904 – 29 December 1968) was an English theologian and philosopher.

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Austrian Civil War

The Austrian Civil War (Österreichischer Bürgerkrieg), also known as the February Uprising (Februarkämpfe), is a term sometimes used for four days of skirmishes between socialists and the Austrian Army, between 12 February and 16 February 1934, in Austria.

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Autauga County, Alabama

Autauga County is a county in the U.S. state of Alabama.

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Autograph

Autograph is a famous person's artistic signature.

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Ayatollah

Ayatullah (or; āyatullāh from llāh "Sign of God") is a high-ranking title given to Usuli Twelver Shī‘ah clerics.

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Ár nDraíocht Féin

Ár nDraíocht Féin: A Druid Fellowship, Inc. (otherwise known simply as ADF) is a non-profit religious organization dedicated to the study and further development of modern Neodruidism.

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Çalıkuşu (TV series)

Çalıkuşu (English: The Wren) is a 2013 Turkish romantic drama television series aired on Kanal D that is based on the novel of the same name for the fourth time.

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Église Notre-Dame de Toute Grâce du Plateau d'Assy

The church of Notre-Dame de Toute Grâce du Plateau d'Assy (Our Lady Full of Grace of the Plateau d'Assy) is a Roman Catholic church in France, constructed on the plateau d'Assy between 1937 and 1946.

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Émile Duployé

Émile Duployé was a French clergyman, born in 1833 in Liesse-Notre-Dame (Aisne) and died in 1912 in Saint-Maur-des-Fosses (current Val-de-Marne).

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Émile Littré

Émile Maximilien Paul Littré (1 February 1801 – 2 June 1881) was a French lexicographer, freemason and philosopher, best known for his Dictionnaire de la langue française, commonly called "The Littré".

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Ó Maoilciaran an Fili

Ó Maoilchiaráin an Fili, Irish poet, fl.

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Óengus of Tallaght

Óengus mac Óengobann, better known as Saint Óengus of Tallaght or Óengus the Culdee, was an Irish bishop, reformer and writer, who flourished in the first quarter of the 9th century and is held to be the author of the Félire Óengusso ("Martyrology of Óengus") and possibly the Martyrology of Tallaght.

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İhsan Özkes

İhsan Özkes (born 1 August 1957, Çorum), Turkish politician, and cleric.

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Bahá'í administration

The Bahá'í administration or Bahá'í administrative order is the administrative system of the Bahá'í Faith.

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Bahá'í laws

Bahá'í laws are laws and ordinances used in the Bahá'í Faith and are a fundamental part of Bahá'í practice.

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Bai Bureh

Bai Bureh (February 15, 1840 – August 24, 1908) was a Sierra Leonean ruler, military strategist, and Muslim cleric, who led the Temne and Loko uprising against British rule in 1898 in Northern Sierra Leone.

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Baka people (Cameroon and Gabon)

The Baka people, known in the Congo as Bayaka (Bebayaka, Bebayaga, Bibaya), are an ethnic group inhabiting the southeastern rain forests of Cameroon, northern Republic of Congo, northern Gabon, and southwestern Central African Republic.

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Baldassare Castiglione

Baldassare Castiglione (December 6, 1478 – February 2, 1529),Dates of birth and death, and cause of the latter, from, Italica, Rai International online.

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Baltazar Dvorničić Napuly

Baltazar Dvorničić Napuly (1560–1634) was a Croatian Catholic cleric and lawyer.

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Bands (neckwear)

Bands are a form of formal neckwear, worn by some clergy and lawyers, and with some forms of academic dress.

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Bani Jamra

Bani Jamra (بني جمرة) is a village in the north-west of Bahrain.

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Baptismal clothing

Baptismal clothing is apparel worn by Christian proselytes (and in some cases, by clergy members also) during the ceremony of baptism.

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Barbara Blaine

Barbara Ann Blaine (July 6, 1956 – September 24, 2017) was the founder and president of Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP), a national advocacy group for survivors of clerical sexual abuse.

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Barchester Towers

Barchester Towers, published in 1857 by Anthony Trollope, is the second novel in his series known as the "Chronicles of Barsetshire".

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Barnsley F.C.

Barnsley Football Club is a professional association football club based in the town of Barnsley, South Yorkshire, England.

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Bartella

Bartella or Bard Allah (برطلّة) is an Assyrianhttp://www.latimes.com/world/la-fg-iraq-bartella-20161022-snap-story.html town that is located in northern Iraq about east of Mosul.

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Bartholomäus Ziegenbalg

Bartholomäus Ziegenbalg (10 July 1682 – 23 February 1719) was a member of the Lutheran clergy and the first Pietist missionary to India.

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Bartolomé Carranza

Bartolomé Carranza (15032 May 1576, sometimes called de Miranda or de Carranza y Miranda) was a priest of the Dominican Order, theologian and Archbishop of Toledo.

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Basil Rebera

Basil A. Rebera is an Old Testament Scholar and a Translation Consultant with the United Bible Societies focusing on translations of the Bible the world over.

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Basilica and National Shrine of Our Lady of Consolation

The Basilica and National Shrine of Our Lady of Consolation is a minor basilica of the Roman Catholic Church and a shrine to the Virgin Mary, operated by the Conventual Franciscan Friars.

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Bastille Day

Bastille Day is the common name given in English-speaking countries/lands to the French National Day, which is celebrated on the 14th of July each year.

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Bathkump

Bathkump is a village in the Rural District in the Western Area of Sierra Leone.

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Batley

Batley is a town in the Metropolitan Borough of Kirklees, West Yorkshire, England.

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Battle of Coronate

The Battle of Coronate took place in 689, after King Cunicpert returned from exile and ousted Alahis, Usurper King and Duke of Trent, from the capital Pavia.

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Battle of Guadalacete

The Battle of Guadalacete was fought in 852 between a coalition of troops from the Kingdom of Asturias and the Kingdom of Navarre, and a force of troops from the Muslim Emirate of Córdoba under the command of Muhammad I of Córdoba.

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Battle of Pfeddersheim

The Battle of Pfeddersheim (Schlacht bei Pfeddersheim) was a battle during the German Peasants' War that took place in June 1525 near Pfeddersheim.

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Bayeux Tapestry

The Bayeux Tapestry (Tapisserie de Bayeux or La telle du conquest; Tapete Baiocense) is an embroidered cloth nearly long and tall, which depicts the events leading up to the Norman conquest of England concerning William, Duke of Normandy, and Harold, Earl of Wessex, later King of England, and culminating in the Battle of Hastings.

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Beale Poste

Beale Poste (1793 – April 15, 1871) was an English antiquary and Anglican cleric.

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Beating the bounds

Beating the bounds is an ancient custom still observed in some English and Welsh parishes.

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Beauchamp–Sharp Tragedy

The Beauchamp–Sharp Tragedy (sometimes called the Kentucky Tragedy) was the murder of Kentucky legislator Solomon P. Sharp by Jereboam O. Beauchamp (bee-chum).

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Becket controversy

The Becket controversy or Becket dispute was the quarrel between Thomas Becket, the Archbishop of Canterbury, and King Henry II of England, from 1163 to 1170.

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Behaving Badly (TV serial)

Behaving Badly is a 1989 British television serial directed by David Tucker.

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Belief

Belief is the state of mind in which a person thinks something to be the case with or without there being empirical evidence to prove that something is the case with factual certainty.

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Bellevue Mosque

The Bellevue Mosque (Bellevuemoskén) is a mosque in Gothenburg, Sweden.

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Belmond Hotel Monasterio

The Belmond Hotel Monasterio is a five-star hotel in Cusco, Peru.

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Ben Greet

Sir Philip Barling "Ben" Greet (24 September 1857 – 17 May 1936) was a Shakespearean actor, director, and impresario.

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Ben M. Bogard

Benjamin Marcus "Ben" Bogard (March 9, 1868 – May 29, 1951) was an American Baptist clergyman, author, editor, educator, radio broadcaster, and champion debater in primarily the U.S. state of Arkansas.

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Benedetto Erba Odescalchi

Benedetto II Erba Odescalchi (1679–1740) was an Italian Cardinal and Archbishop of Milan from 1712 to 1736.

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Benedetto Stay

Benedetto Stay (1714–1801) was a Ragusan Roman Catholic clergyman, educated by Jesuits, he attended the academic assemblies of Marin Sorgo, beginning the composition of a poem on Alexander Farnese.

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Benedicta Ebbesdotter of Hvide

Benedicta Ebbesdotter of Hvide (c. 1165 or 1170 – c. 1199 or 1200) was a Swedish queen consort, first consort of king Sverker II of Sweden.

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Benefield

Benefield is a civil parish in East Northamptonshire, England, along the A427 road and about east of Corby and west of Oundle.

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Benefit of clergy

In English law, the benefit of clergy (Law Latin: privilegium clericale) was originally a provision by which clergymen could claim that they were outside the jurisdiction of the secular courts and be tried instead in an ecclesiastical court under canon law.

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Benemerenti medal

The Benemerenti Medal is an honour awarded by the Pope to members of the clergy and laity for service to the Catholic Church.

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Benevolent Empire

The Benevolent Empire was part of a 19th-century religious movement in the United States.

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Benhuan

Benhuan (21 September 1907 – 2 April 2012) was a Buddhist monk, Chan master and religious leader in China.

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Benjamin Franklin Mudge

Benjamin Franklin Mudge (August 11, 1817 – November 21, 1879) was an American lawyer, geologist and teacher.

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Bennet family

The Bennet family are a fictional family of dwindling Hertfordshire landed gentry, created by English novelist Jane Austen.

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Bergregal

The Bergregal was the historic right of ownership of untapped mineral resources in parts of German-speaking Europe; ownership of the Bergregal meant entitlement to the rights and royalties from mining.

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Berkhamsted

Berkhamsted is a historic market town close to the western boundary of Hertfordshire, England, in the small Bulbourne valley in the Chiltern Hills, northwest of London.

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Bernard Patrick Devlin

Bernard Patrick Devlin, KC*HS, CMG, GMH (10 March 1921, Youghal — 15 December 2010, Gibraltar) was an Irish clergyman of the Roman Catholic Church.

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Bernard Vaughan

Bernard Vaughan (1847–1922) was an English Roman Catholic clergyman, brother of Herbert and John Stephen Vaughan.

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Bernhard of Prambach

Bistumswappen of Passau.Bernard von Prambach, also known as Wernhard (around 1220 - 27 July 1313) was the 42nd Bishop of Passau from 1285 to 1313.

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Bernhard Schwentner

Bernhard Schwentner (28 September 1891 in Schwerin – 30 October 1944 near Brandenburg-Görden) was a German Catholic clergyman.

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Bertrand de Bar-sur-Aube

Bertrand de Bar-sur-Aube (i.e. Bertrand from Bar-sur-Aube) (end of the 12th century – early 13th centuryHasenohr, 170.) was an Old French poet from the Champagne region of France who wrote a number of chansons de geste.

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Betty Mary Goetting

Betty Mary Goetting (neé Smith 1897-1980) was an American librarian, civic leader and women's rights activist.

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Beyers Naudé

Christiaan Frederick Beyers Naudé (10 May 1915 – 7 September 2004) was a South African cleric, theologian and the leading Afrikaner anti-apartheid activist.

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Bhadase Maraj

Bhadase Sagan Maraj MP was a Trinidadian politician, Hindu leader, wrestler, businessman, and author.

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Bible Presbyterian Church

The Bible Presbyterian Church is an American Protestant denomination in the Reformed tradition.

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Bible Society of India

The Bible Society of India is a Christian body that is authorized to translate, produce, distribute and market the Bible and is a member of the United Bible Societies.

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Bignon Commission (French Revolution)

The Bignon Commission (commission Bignon; 1793–1794) was a French military tribunal that terrorized Nantes during the French Revolution.

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Bill Blaikie

William Alexander "Bill" Blaikie, (born June 19, 1951) is a retired Canadian politician.

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Billy McCormack (Louisiana pastor)

Billy Ervin McCormack (August 4, 1928 – May 31, 2012) was a Southern Baptist clergyman from Shreveport, Louisiana, active for more than sixty years in the ministry.

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Biloxi, Mississippi

Biloxi is a city in Harrison County, Mississippi, United States.

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Biquardus

Biquardus (also Wiquardus, Giquardus and Guiquardus) (fl. c. 1440 – 1450) was a composer, most likely from the Picardy province of France.

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Biretta Peak

Biretta Peak is a small peak, high, on the east side of Pain Mesa in the Mesa Range, Victoria Land.

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Bishop

A bishop (English derivation from the New Testament of the Christian Bible Greek επίσκοπος, epískopos, "overseer", "guardian") is an ordained, consecrated, or appointed member of the Christian clergy who is generally entrusted with a position of authority and oversight.

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Bishop's messenger

The term bishop's messenger was used for women appointed as lay readers by the Church of England during the First World War due to the shortage of male clergy.

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Bishops in Foreign Countries Act 1841

The Bishops in Foreign Countries Act 1841 (5 Vict., c. 6) is an Act of Parliament passed by the Parliament of the United Kingdom to enable the Church of England to create bishops overseas.

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Bishops' College, Cheshunt

Bishops' College, Cheshunt an Anglican theological College set up to train clergy to serve in the Church of England.

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Bishops' Selection Conference

In the Church of Ireland, the Bishops' Selection Conference is an annual panel of church members, representing both clergy and laity, who assess candidates offering themselves for consideration for training for the ordained ministry.

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Biso

Biso (9th century–9 September 909) was a Bishop of Paderborn.

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Black Hundreds

The Black Hundred (Чёрная сотня in Russian; Chornaya sotnya), also known as the black-hundredists (Черносотенцы in Russian; chernosotentsy), was an ultra-nationalist movement in Russia in the early 20th century.

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Blackpool Aspire Academy

Blackpool Aspire Academy is a secondary school located in the Layton area of Blackpool, Lancashire, England.

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Bleiddud

Bleiddud was Bishop of St David's (then known as Menevia) in Wales from 1061 to 1071.

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Blue moon

A blue moon is an additional full moon that appears in a subdivision of a year: either the third of four full moons in a season, or a second full moon in a month of the common calendar.

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Blue Star Wicca

Blue Star Wicca is one of a number of Wiccan traditions, and was created in the United States in the 1970s based loosely on the Gardnerian and Alexandrian traditions.

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Boak Jobbins

Boak Jobbins OAM (29 April 19471 September 2012) was an Australian cleric of the Anglican Diocese of Sydney and a former Dean of Sydney.

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Board of Trustees of Catholic University of America

The Board of Trustees of the Catholic University of America have the ultimate responsibility for governance and sole responsibility for fiscal affairs of the University.

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Bog turtle

The bog turtle (Glyptemys muhlenbergii) is a critically endangered species of semiaquatic turtle endemic to the eastern United States.

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Bogo de Clare

Bogo de Clare (21 July 1248 - October 1294) was the third son of Richard de Clare (1222–1262), 5th Earl of Hertford, 6th Earl of Gloucester.

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Bohemian Reformation

The Bohemian Reformation (also known as the Czech Reformation or Hussite Reformation), preceding the Protestant Reformation of the 16th century, was a Christian movement in the late medieval and early modern Kingdom and Crown of Bohemia (present-day Czech Republic) striving for a reform of the Roman Catholic Church.

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Bon Secours Sisters

The Congregation of the Sisters of Bon Secours is a Roman Catholic religious congregation for nursing (gardes malades), whose stated object is to care for patients from all socio-economic groups.

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Bonifacia Rodríguez y Castro

Saint Bonifacia Rodríguez y Castro, S.S.J., (6 June 1837 – 8 August 1905) was the co-foundress of the Religious Congregation of the Servants of St. Joseph, who developed the "Nazareth workshop" as both a new format for consecrated life and to help poor and unemployed women.

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Bonifazio Graziani

Bonifazio Graziani (1604/05 in Marino near Rome – 15 June 1664, Rome) was an Italian organist, composer and clergyman in the Baroque period.

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Book

A book is a series of pages assembled for easy portability and reading, as well as the composition contained in it.

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Book of Chivalry

The Book of Chivalry (French: Livre de chevalerie) was written by the knight Geoffroi de Charny (c.1306-1356) sometime around the early 1350s.

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Bosque County, Texas

Bosque County is a county located on the Edwards Plateau in the U.S. state of Texas.

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Bouncer (doorman)

A bouncer (also known as a doorman, door supervisor or cooler) is a type of security guard, employed at venues such as bars, nightclubs, stripclubs, casinos, restaurants or concerts.

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Bourchier Wrey Savile

Bourchier Wrey Savile (11 March 1817–14 April 1888) was a Church of England clergyman and theological writer.

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Bourne, Lincolnshire

Bourne is an English market town and civil parish in the South Kesteven district of Lincolnshire.

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Bouvier's Law Dictionary

Bouvier's Law Dictionary is a set consisting of two or three books with a long tradition in the United States legal community.

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Bowling Green, Kentucky

Bowling Green is a home rule-class city in and the county seat of Warren County, Kentucky, United States.

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Bransby Blake Cooper

Bransby Blake Cooper FRS, (2 September 1792, Great Yarmouth-18 August 1853, London) was an English Surgeon.

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Brantingham family

The Brantinghams (or, formerly, the de Brantinghams or de Brantynghams) are a once-noble family from North East England, originally from Brantingham in Yorkshire.

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Brawling (legal definition)

Brawling (probably connected with German language brüllen, to roar, shout), in law, was the offence of quarrelling, or creating a disturbance in a church or churchyard.

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Breac Maodhóg

The Breac Maodhóg is a house-shaped Irish reliquary, today in the National Museum of Ireland.

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Brent Hawkes

Brent Hawkes, (born June 2, 1950) is a Canadian clergyman and gay rights activist.

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Brethren of the Common Life

The Brethren of the Common Life (Latin: Fratres Vitae Communis, FVC) was a Roman Catholic pietist religious community founded in the Netherlands in the 14th century by Gerard Groote, formerly a successful and worldly educator who had had a religious experience and preached a life of simple devotion to Jesus Christ.

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Bridge-Building Brotherhood

The Bridge-Building Brotherhood (Fratres Pontifices in Latin, Frères Pontifes in French), is said to have been a religious association active during the 12th and 13th centuries and whose purpose was building bridges.

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Bridgettines

The Order of the Most Holy Savior, abbreviated as O.Ss.S., and informally known as the Brigittine or Bridgettine Order is a monastic religious order of Augustinian nuns, Religious Sisters, and monks founded by Saint Bridget of Sweden (Birgitta) in 1344, and approved by Pope Urban V in 1370.

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Brigham Young

Brigham Young (June 1, 1801August 29, 1877) was an American religious leader, politician, and settler.

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Bromley & Sheppard’s Colleges

Bromley & Sheppard’s Colleges are located in Bromley and today provide accommodation for retired clergy and their dependents.

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Brother (Christian)

A religious brother is a member of a Christian religious institute or religious order who commits himself to following Christ in consecrated life of the Church, usually by the vows of poverty, chastity and obedience.

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Brothers of the Sacred Heart

The Brothers of the Sacred Heart is a Catholic religious congregation founded in 1821 by the Reverend André Coindre (1787-1826).

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Bryan Ward (priest)

Born Walter Bryan Ward Retrieved 20 June 2012 (7 August 1906 – 27 August 1989), Bryan Ward was an Australian clergyman active in the mid-20th century with the Anglican Church of Australia.

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Bryan, Texas

Bryan is a city in Brazos County, Texas, United States.

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Bua Xou Mua

Bua Xou Mua (1915–2013) was a Hmong spiritual leader, village chief, and musician.

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Buffalo Gap Historic Village

Buffalo Gap Historic Village is a large museum of fifteen outdoor structures and West Texas artifacts that reach back to the late 19th century and the early 20th century located in the small town of Buffalo Gap south of Abilene, Texas.

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Buhl Altarpiece

The Buhl Altarpiece (Retable de Buhl) is a late 15th-century, Gothic altarpiece of colossal dimensions now kept in the parish church Église Saint-Jean-Baptiste of Buhl in the Haut-Rhin département of France.

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Bunmi Olusona

Festus Bunmi Olusona (born 2 June 1965) is a Nigerian human rights activist and politician.

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Burgh le Marsh

Burgh-le-Marsh is a town and electoral ward to the west of Skegness in the East Lindsey district of Lincolnshire, England.

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Burgundian Netherlands

In the history of the Low Countries, the Burgundian Netherlands (Pays-Bas Bourguignons., Bourgondische Nederlanden, Burgundeschen Nidderlanden, Bas Payis borguignons) were a number of Imperial and French fiefs ruled in personal union by the House of Valois-Burgundy and their Habsburg heirs in the period from 1384 to 1482.

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Burned-over district

The burned-over district is the western and central regions of New York in the early 19th century, where religious revivals and the formation of new religious movements of the Second Great Awakening took place.

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Burstow

Burstow is a village and civil parish in the Tandridge district of Surrey, England.

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Bydgoszcz Cathedral

St.

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C. G. Lane

Charlton George "CG" Lane (11 June 1836, Kennington, London – 2 November 1892, Little Gaddesden, Hertfordshire) was an English amateur cricketer who played first-class cricket from 1854 to 1867.

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C. S. Wallis

Charles Steel Wallis (1874–1959) was a British Church of England priest, British Army chaplain, and academic.

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C.L. Bryant

Cleon Lewis Bryant, known as C. L. Bryant (born March 28, 1956), is an African-American Baptist minister and former radio and television host based in his native Shreveport, Louisiana.

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Calculation of Zakāt

Zakāt (زكاة. zakāt, "that which purifies", also Zakat al-mal زكاة ألمال, "zakat on wealth") is a form of alms-giving treated as a religious tax and/or religious obligation in IslamMuḥammad ibn al-Ḥasan Ṭūsī (2010), Concise Description of Islamic Law and Legal Opinions,, pp.

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Callistus I of Constantinople

Kallistos I (? – August 1363) was the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople for two periods from June 1350 to 1353 and from 1354 to 1363.

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Camauro

A camauro (from the Latin camelaucum and from the Greek kamelauchion, meaning "camel skin hat") is a cap traditionally worn by the Pope of the Catholic Church.

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Cambridge Camden Society

The Cambridge Camden Society, known from 1845 (when it moved to London) as the Ecclesiological Society,,. was a learned architectural society founded in 1839 by undergraduate students at Cambridge University to promote "the study of Gothic Architecture, and of Ecclesiastical Antiques." Its activities would come to include publishing a monthly journal, The Ecclesiologist, advising church builders on their blueprints, and advocating a return to a medieval style of church architecture in England.

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Cambuslang clergy

The sequence of the Cambuslang clergy reflects pretty accurately the development of the Christian Church in Cambuslang, Scotland.

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Camerlengo

Camerlengo (plural: camerlenghi, Italian for "Chamberlain") is an Italian title of medieval origin.

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Camille Desmoulins

Lucie-Simplice-Camille-Benoît Desmoulins (2 March 17605 April 1794) was a journalist and politician who played an important role in the French Revolution.

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Camille le Tellier de Louvois

Camille Le Tellier de Louvois (11 April 1675 – 5 November 1718) was a French clergyman and member of several royal academies in the reign of Louis XIV of France.

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Canon (priest)

A canon (from the Latin canonicus, itself derived from the Greek κανονικός, kanonikós, "relating to a rule", "regular") is a member of certain bodies subject to an ecclesiastical rule.

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Canonical admonitions

Canonical admonitions are a preliminary means used by the Roman Catholic Church towards a suspected person, as a preventive of harm or a remedy of evil.

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Canons of the Apostles

The Apostolic Canons or Ecclesiastical Canons of the Same Holy Apostles is a 4th century Syrian Christian text.

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Canons regular

Canons regular are priests in the Western Church living in community under a rule ("regula" in Latin), and sharing their property in common.

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Canons Regular of San Giorgio in Alga

The Canons Regular of San Giorgio in Alga were a congregation of canons regular which was influential in the reform movement of monastic life in northern Italy during the 15th and 16th centuries.

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Canons Regular of the Lateran

The Canons Regular of the Lateran (abbreviated as C.R.L.), formally titled Canons Regular of St.

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Canterbury cap

The Canterbury cap is a square cloth hat with sharp corners found in the Anglican Communion.

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Cape

A cape is a sleeveless outer garment, which drapes the wearer's back, arms and chest, and fastens at the neck.

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Carascon

Carascon is an Italian family name of hidalgo or noble Spanish origin.

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Cardinal (Catholic Church)

A cardinal (Sanctae Romanae Ecclesiae cardinalis, literally Cardinal of the Holy Roman Church) is a senior ecclesiastical leader, considered a Prince of the Church, and usually an ordained bishop of the Roman Catholic Church.

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Cardinal Mazarin

Cardinal Jules Raymond Mazarin, 1st Duke of Rethel, Mayenne and Nevers (14 July 1602 – 9 March 1661), born Giulio Raimondo Mazzarino or Mazarino, was an Italian cardinal, diplomat, and politician, who served as the Chief Minister to the kings of France Louis XIII and Louis XIV from 1642 until his death.

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Cardinal Richelieu

Cardinal Armand Jean du Plessis, 1st Duke of Richelieu and Fronsac (9 September 15854 December 1642), commonly referred to as Cardinal Richelieu (Cardinal de Richelieu), was a French clergyman, nobleman, and statesman.

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Carey Dillon, 5th Earl of Roscommon

Carey or Cary Dillon, 5th Earl of Roscommon (1627–1689) was an Irish nobleman and professional soldier of the seventeenth century.

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Carl Gustaf von Essen

Carl Gustaf von Essen (20 March 1815 – 22 July 1895) was a Finnish Pietistic priest.

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Carl Henry Clerk

Carl Henry Clerk (4 January 1895 – 28 May 1982) was a Ghanaian agricultural educationist, administrator, journalist, editor and church minister who was elected the fourth Synod Clerk of the Presbyterian Church of the Gold Coast from 1950 to 1954.

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Carlo Cremonesi

Carlo Cremonesi (4 November 1866 – 25 November 1943) was an Italian Cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church who served as Territorial Prelate of Pompei from 1926 to 1928, and was elevated to the cardinalate in 1935.

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Carlo Gaetano Stampa

Carlo III Gaetano Stampa (1667–1742) was an Italian Cardinal and Archbishop of Milan from 1737 to 1742.

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Carlo Odescalchi

Carlo Odescalchi, (5 March 1785 – 17 August 1841) was an Italian prince and priest, archbishop of Ferrara, cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church and Vicar of the Diocese of Rome.

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Caroline County, Virginia

Caroline County is a United States county located on the eastern part of the Commonwealth of Virginia.

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Carolingian Renaissance

The Carolingian Renaissance was the first of three medieval renaissances, a period of cultural activity in the Carolingian Empire.

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Carucage

Carucage was a medieval English land tax introduced by King Richard I in 1194, based on the size—variously calculated—of the estate owned by the taxpayer.

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Cary Elwes

Ivan Simon Cary Elwes (born 26 October 1962) is an English actor, voice actor and writer.

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Caspar Neumann

Caspar (or Kaspar) Neumann (14 September 1648 – 27 January 1715) was a German professor and clergyman from Breslau with a special interest in mortality rates.

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Cassock

The white or black cassock, or soutane, is an item of Christian clerical clothing used by the clergy of Catholic, Eastern Orthodox, Anglican, Lutheran, and Reformed churches, among others.

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Castruccio Castracane degli Antelminelli

Castruccio Castracane degli Antelminelli (Urbino, 21 September 1779 – 22 February 1852) was an Italian clergyman, who was made a cardinal by pope Gregory XVI in the consistory of 15 April 1833.

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Catacomb Church

The Russian True Orthodox Church (Russkaya istinno-pravoslavnaya tserkov), commonly known as the Catacomb Church (Katakombnaya tserkov), is a denomination that separated from the Russian Orthodox Church during the early years of Communist rule in the Soviet Union.

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Catalan Courts

The Catalan Courts or General Court of Catalonia (Corts Catalanes or Cort General de Catalunya) was the policymaking and parliamentary body of the Principality of Catalonia from the 13th to the 18th century.

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Catastro of Ensenada

In 1749 a large-scale census and statistical investigation was conducted in the Crown of Castile (15.000 places including Galicia and Andalusia, but not including the Basque provinces, Navarre or the Crown of Aragon).

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Cathedral close

A cathedral close is the area immediately around a cathedral, sometimes extending for a hundred metres or more from the main cathedral building.

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Cathedral of All Saints (Albany, New York)

The Cathedral of All Saints, Albany, New York, is located on Elk Street in central Albany, New York, United States.

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Catherine of Siena

Saint Catherine of Siena (25 March 1347 in Siena – 29 April 1380 in Rome), was a tertiary of the Dominican Order and a Scholastic philosopher and theologian who had a great influence on the Catholic Church.

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Catholic Church

The Catholic Church, also known as the Roman Catholic Church, is the largest Christian church, with more than 1.299 billion members worldwide.

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Catholic Church and science

The relationship between the Roman Catholic Church and science is a widely debated subject.

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Catholic Church in Guatemala

The Catholic Church in Guatemala is part of the worldwide Roman Catholic Church, under spiritual leadership of the Pope, Curia in Rome and the Episcopal Conference of Guatemala.

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Catholic Church sexual abuse cases

Cases of child sexual abuse by Catholic priests, nuns and members of religious orders, and subsequent cover-ups, in the 20th and 21st centuries have led to numerous allegations, investigations, trials and convictions.

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Catholic laity

Catholic laity are the ordinary members of the Catholic Church whom are neither clergy nor recipients of Holy Orders or vowed to life in a religious order or congregation.

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Catholic Mariavite Church

The Catholic Mariavite Church is an autonomous religious organization in Poland resulting from a schism in 1935 within the Old Catholic Mariavite Church.

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Catholic Renewal

Catholic Renewal describes changes in the Roman Catholic Church in the 20th century, which can be classified in three major areas: (1) the approach towards the Bible (from Latin Vulgate to comprehensive translations of critical editions of texts in original languages), (2) liturgical practices (from the liturgy in Latin to Mass in the contemporary language with the active engagement of lay faithful) and (3) the role of faith in Christian life (from an at times very formal and legal approach towards the church to emphasis on the catechumenate and acknowledging individual need for the experience of Divinity).

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Causes of the French Revolution

The causes of the French Revolution can be attributed to several intertwining factors.

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César Guillaume de La Luzerne

César-Guillaume La Luzerne (7 July 1738 - 21 June 1821) was a Roman Catholic clergyman.

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CBM Serango Christian Hospital

CBM-Serango Christian Hospital located in Serango,Kenneth Knight, Shirley Knight, The Seed Holds the Tree: A Story of India and the Kingdom of God, 2009.

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Cealia Pompeius Pulchellus

Cealia Pompeius Pulchellus was, according to the notoriously unreliable ''Historia Augusta'', a clergy member in the Temple of Venus from 185-88.

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CeCe McDonald

CeCe McDonald (born 1989) is an African American bi trans woman and LGBTQ activist.

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Cecil Pugh

Herbert Cecil Pugh, GC, MA (2 November 1898 – 5 July 1941), usually called Cecil Pugh, was a Congregational Church minister and is the only clergyman to have received the George Cross.

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Cecil Rhodes

Cecil John Rhodes PC (5 July 1853 – 26 March 1902) was a British businessman, mining magnate and politician in southern Africa who served as Prime Minister of the Cape Colony from 1890 to 1896.

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Cecil Rolt

Cecil Henry Rolt, MA (Oxon) was an eminent Anglican clergyman in the first half of the 20th century.

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Celebrancy

Celebrancy is a movement to provide agents to officiate at ceremonies often reserved in law to clergy or officers of the courts.

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Celtic polytheism

Celtic polytheism, commonly known as Celtic paganism, comprises the religious beliefs and practices adhered to by the Iron Age people of Western Europe now known as the Celts, roughly between 500 BCE and 500 CE, spanning the La Tène period and the Roman era, and in the case of the Insular Celts the British and Irish Iron Age.

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Censorship in Portugal

Censorship was a fundamental element of Portuguese national culture throughout the country's history up until the Carnation Revolution in 1974.

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Censure

A censure is an expression of strong disapproval or harsh criticism.

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Central Asia

Central Asia stretches from the Caspian Sea in the west to China in the east and from Afghanistan in the south to Russia in the north.

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Centre for Christian Studies

The Centre for Christian Studies is an ecumenical Canadian theological school in Winnipeg, Manitoba and is affiliated with the Anglican and United Churches of Canada.

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Ceremonial mace

A ceremonial mace is a highly ornamented staff of metal or wood, carried before a sovereign or other high official in civic ceremonies by a mace-bearer, intended to represent the official's authority.

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Chaim Madar

Chief Rabbi Chaim Madar was the chief rabbi of Tunisia's Jewish community, a community dating back to 586 BCE.

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Chamberlain (office)

A chamberlain (Medieval Latin: cambellanus or cambrerius, with charge of treasury camerarius) is a senior royal official in charge of managing a royal household.

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Chambre introuvable

The Chambre introuvable (French: Unobtainable Chamber) was the first Chamber of Deputies elected after the Second Bourbon Restoration in 1815.

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Chancel

In church architecture, the chancel is the space around the altar, including the choir and the sanctuary (sometimes called the presbytery), at the liturgical east end of a traditional Christian church building.

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Chancellor

Chancellor (cancellarius) is a title of various official positions in the governments of many nations.

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Chancellor of Germany

The title Chancellor has designated different offices in the history of Germany.

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Chancellor of Norway

The Chancellor of Norway (modern Norwegian: Norges rikes kansler, "Chancellor of Norway's Realm") was the most important aide of the King of Norway during the Middle Ages.

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Chanson de geste

The chanson de geste, Old French for "song of heroic deeds" (from gesta: Latin: "deeds, actions accomplished"), is a medieval narrative, a type of epic poem that appears at the dawn of French literature.

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Chaplain

A chaplain is a cleric (such as a minister, priest, pastor, rabbi, or imam), or a lay representative of a religious tradition, attached to a secular institution such as a hospital, prison, military unit, school, business, police department, fire department, university, or private chapel.

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Chaplain Corps (United States Army)

The Chaplain Corps of the United States Army consists of ordained clergy of multiple faiths who are commissioned Army officers serving as military chaplains as well as enlisted soldiers who serve as assistants.

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Chaplain of the United States Coast Guard

The Chaplain of the United States Coast Guard (CHCG) is the senior chaplain of the United States Coast Guard (USCG) and is attached to USCG headquarters in Washington, D.C. as a United States Navy Chaplain Corps officer who reports directly to the Commandant of the Coast Guard.

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Charles Abdy Marcon

Charles Abdy Marcon (22 September 1853 – c. 1949) was an English clergyman, Master of Marcon's Hall, Oxford, from 1891 to 1918, then from 1918 Vicar of Kennington.

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Charles Albert Keeley

Charles Albert Keeley (1 December 1821 – 11 August 1889) was a British inventor, amateur scientist, entertainer and pioneering colour expert.

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Charles August, Crown Prince of Sweden

Charles August or Carl August (9 July 1768 – 28 May 1810) was a Danish prince.

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Charles Augustus Aiken

Charles Augustus Aiken (1827–1892) was a clergyman and academic.

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Charles Carpenter (bishop)

Charles Colcock Jones Carpenter (September 2, 1899 – June 28, 1969)Who's Who in the South and Southwest, Chicago: The A. N. Marquis Company, 1952, p. 127.

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Charles Carr (bishop of Killaloe)

Charles Carr (1672 - 1739) was an Irish Anglican clergyman: he was Bishop of Killaloe from 1716to 1739.

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Charles Cavendish-Bentinck (priest)

Charles William Frederick Cavendish-Bentinck (8 November 1817 – 17 August 1865) was a clergyman of the Church of England, holding livings in Bedfordshire, and a great-grandfather of Queen Elizabeth II.

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Charles Church, Plymouth

Charles Church is the second most ancient parish church in Plymouth, Devon in England.

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Charles Darwin

Charles Robert Darwin, (12 February 1809 – 19 April 1882) was an English naturalist, geologist and biologist, best known for his contributions to the science of evolution.

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Charles Douglas Carpendale

Vice-Admiral Sir Charles Douglas Carpendale CB (18 October 1874 – 21 March 1968) was a Royal Navy officer who saw active service in the First World War and later served as Controller of the BBC.

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Charles E. Fuller

Charles Edward Fuller (April 25, 1887 – March 18, 1968) was an American Christian clergyman and a radio evangelist.

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Charles E. Raven

Charles Earle Raven (4 July 1885 – 8 July 1964) was an English theologian, Regius Professor of Divinity at Cambridge, and Master of Christ's College, Cambridge.

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Charles F. Wishart

Charles Frederick Wishart (1870–1960) was a United States Presbyterian churchman who was President of the College of Wooster from 1919 to 1944.

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Charles Frederick Lyttelton

Charles Frederick Lyttelton (26 January 1887 – 3 October 1931) was a priest from the Lyttelton family.

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Charles Godfrey (cricketer)

Charles John Melville Godfrey (24 November 1862 — 28 September 1941) was an English cricketer.

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Charles Goldie (cricketer)

Charles Dashwood Goldie (26 March 1825 – 11 January 1886) was an English clergyman who played first-class cricket for Cambridge University fleetingly in 1846.

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Charles Grierson

Charles Thornton Primrose Grierson was an eminent Irish clergyman in the first third of the 20th century.

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Charles H. Vail

Charles Henry Vail (1866–1924) was an American Universalist clergyman and Christian socialist political activist and writer.

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Charles Hutton

Charles Hutton FRS FRSE LLD (14 August 1737 – 27 January 1823) was a British mathematician and surveyor.

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Charles King Irwin

Charles King Irwin (also Irvine; 30 March 1874 – 15 January 1960) was an eminent Irish clergyman in the middle third of the 20th century.

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Charles King Irwin (father)

Charles King Irwin, D.D. (18 July 1837–3 January 1915) was an eminent Irish clergyman Irwin was educated at Trinity College, Oxford and ordained in 1861 After a curacy at Derrynoose he held incumbencies at Kilmore, Brantry, KeadyClonfeacle and Armagh.

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Charles Luxton

Charles Henry Luxton (19 January 1861 – 17 October 1918) was an English clergyman and a cricketer who played in two first-class cricket matches for Cambridge University in 1881 and 1882.

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Charles Maurice de Talleyrand-Périgord

Charles Maurice de Talleyrand-Périgord (2 February 1754 – 17 May 1838), 1st Prince of Benevento, then 1st Prince of Talleyrand, was a laicized French bishop, politician, and diplomat.

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Charles Orlando Bridgeman

Vice-Admiral the Hon. Charles Orlando Bridgeman (5 February 1791 – 13 April 1860) was a Royal Navy officer who saw active service in the Napoleonic Wars and the Greek War of Independence.

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Charles Payne (cricketer, born 1827)

Charles Richard Payne (20 December 1827 – 31 January 1859) was an English clergyman and a cricketer who played in one first-class cricket match for Cambridge University in 1848.

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Charles Reynolds (cleric)

Charles Reynolds (c. 1496July 1535) was an Irish-born Catholic cleric.

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Charles Reynolds Brown

Charles Reynolds Brown (October 1, 1862 – November 28, 1950) was an American Congregational clergyman and educator, born in Bethany, W. Va. He graduated at the University of Iowa in 1883 and studied theology in Boston University.

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Charles Robert Hager

Rev.

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Charles Rufus Brown

Charles Rufus Brown (1849 – 1914) was an American Baptist clergyman and Biblical scholar.

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Charles Stubbs

Charles William Stubbs DD (3 September 18454 May 1912) was an English clergyman.

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Charles Trick Currelly

Charles Trick Currelly (January 11, 1876 – April 10, 1957) was a Canadian clergyman and archeologist, and the first director of the Royal Ontario Museum from 1914 to 1946.

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Charles V of France

Charles V (21 January 1338 – 16 September 1380), called "the Wise" (le Sage; Sapiens), was a monarch of the House of Valois who ruled as King of France from 1364 to his death.

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Charles Walder Grinstead

Charles Walder Grinstead (1 December 1860 – 16 March 1930) was an English champion tennis player.

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Charles Warren (cricketer, born 1843)

Charles Warren (20 December 1843 – 29 April 1919) was an English clergyman and a cricketer who played in first-class cricket matches for Cambridgeshire County Cricket Club during its fleeting first-class period, for Cambridge University and for other amateur teams between 1865 and 1874.

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Charles Webb (cricketer)

The Rev.

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Charles Webb Le Bas

Charles Webb Le Bas (26 April 1779 – 25 January 1861 in Brighton) was an English clergyman, fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge and principal of the East India Company College.

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Charles Wesley

Charles Wesley (18 December 1707 – 29 March 1788) was an English leader of the Methodist movement, most widely known for writing more than 6,000 hymns.

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Charles Wilkinson (cricketer)

Charles Allix Wilkinson (9 August 1813 – 18 April 1889) was an English clergyman and a cricketer who played in eight first-class cricket matches for Cambridge University, Norfolk and the Gentlemen between 1833 and 1835.

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Charles William Eliot

Charles William Eliot (March 20, 1834 – August 22, 1926) was an American academic who was selected as Harvard's president in 1869.

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Charles Woodmason

Charles Woodmason (c. 1720 – March 1789) was an author, poet, Anglican clergyman, American loyalist, and west gallery psalmodist.

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Chase family

The Chase family is an American family whose members included early American pioneers and those involved in politics, the clergy, business and the military.

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Chasuble

The chasuble is the outermost liturgical vestment worn by clergy for the celebration of the Eucharist in Western-tradition Christian churches that use full vestments, primarily in Roman Catholic, Anglican, and Lutheran churches.

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Chavasse family

The Chavasse family in the West Midlands is a British family of Huguenot origin.

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Cheka

All-Russian Extraordinary Commission (Всероссийская Чрезвычайная Комиссия), abbreviated as VChK (ВЧК, Ve-Che-Ka) and commonly known as Cheka, (from the initialism ChK) was the first of a succession of Soviet secret police organizations.

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Chet Trail

Chester Borner Trail (born January 19, 1944) is an American former professional baseball infielder and clergyman.

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Children's literature

Children's literature or juvenile literature includes stories, books, magazines, and poems that are enjoyed by children.

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Choir (architecture)

A choir, also sometimes called quire, is the area of a church or cathedral that provides seating for the clergy and church choir.

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Choir dress

Choir dress is the traditional vesture of the clerics, seminarians and religious of Christian churches worn for public prayer and the administration of the sacraments except when celebrating or concelebrating the Eucharist.

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Chris Goldsmith

Christopher David 'Chris' Goldsmith (born 1954) is a British Anglican bishop.

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Christ Church Bangkok

Christ Church is a parish of the Anglican Church in Thailand within the Diocese of Singapore.

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Christ the King College, Isle of Wight

Christ the King College is a joint Church of England and Catholic secondary school and sixth form college located in Newport on the Isle of Wight.

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Christ the Saviour Seminary

Christ the Saviour Seminary is the seminary for the American Carpatho-Russian Orthodox Diocese (ACROD), a self-governing diocese within the jurisdiction of the Ecumenical Patriarchate.

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Christendom

Christendom has several meanings.

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Christian Brothers University

Christian Brothers University is the oldest collegiate degree-granting institution in the city of Memphis.

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Christian clothing

Many Christians have followed certain dress codes during attendance at church.

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Christian College of Georgia

The Christian College of Georgia was chartered in Atlanta in 1947, and is registered with the Secretary of State of Georgia.

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Christian cross variants

This is a list of Christian cross variants.

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Christian feminism

Christian feminism is an aspect of feminist theology which seeks to advance and understand the equality of men and women morally, socially, spiritually, and in leadership from a Christian perspective.

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Christian liturgy

Christian liturgy is a pattern for worship used (whether recommended or prescribed) by a Christian congregation or denomination on a regular basis.

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Christian theology

Christian theology is the theology of Christian belief and practice.

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Christian views on alcohol

Christian views on alcohol are varied.

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Christianity and Paganism

Paganism is commonly used to refer to various, largely unconnected religions from the time period, such as the Greco-Roman religions of the Roman Empire, including the Roman imperial cult, the various mystery religions, monotheistic religions such as Neoplatonism and Gnosticism, and more localized ethnic religions practiced both inside and outside the Empire.

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Christianity in Cyprus

Christianity in Cyprus is the largest religion making up 78% of the island's population.

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Christianity in the 15th century

Bibliothèque Nationale de France --> The 15th century in Christianity is part of the High Middle Ages, the period from the coronation of Charlemagne in 800 to the close of the 15th century, which saw the fall of Constantinople (1453), the end of the Hundred Years War (1453), the discovery of the New World (1492), and thereafter the Protestant Reformation (1515).

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Christianity in the Ottoman Empire

Under the Ottoman Empire's millet system, Christians and Jews were considered Dhimmi (meaning "protected") under Ottoman law.

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Christianization of Iberia

The Christianization of Iberia (ქართლის გაქრისტიანება kartlis gakrist'ianeba) refers to the spread of Christianity in an early 4th century by the sermon of Saint Nino in an ancient Georgian kingdom of Kartli, known as Iberia in Classical antiquity, which resulted in declaring it as a state religion by then-pagan King Mirian III of Iberia.

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Christine Ondoa

Christine Joyce Dradidi Ondoa is a physician and medical administrator who as regarded as one of Uganda's finest leaders especially in ensuring that the quality of health service delivery in Uganda is improved, and discipline and ethical code of conduct among health workers is observed.She is a Ugandan paediatrician and Christian Leader.

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Christophe de Beaumont

Christophe de Beaumont du Repaire (1703–1781) was a French cleric who belonged to a cadet branch of the Les Adrets and Saint-Quentin branches of the illustrious Dauphin family of Beaumont.

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Christopher Lonsdale

Christopher Windley Lonsdale (1886 in Thornthwaite, Cumberland, England – 1952 at Parksville, British Columbia, on Canada's Vancouver Island), was the founder and first headmaster of Shawnigan Lake School in Shawnigan Lake, British Columbia on Vancouver Island.

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Chronique romane

The Chronique romane ("romance chronicle") or Chronicle of Montpellier (Chronique de Montpellier) is an Old Occitan and Middle French chronicle of the city of Montpellier.

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Chuanyin

Chuanyin (born January 30, 1927) is a Chinese Buddhist monk, Chan master and religious leader.

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Church (congregation)

A church is a Christian religious organization or congregation or community that meets in a particular location.

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Church and state in medieval Europe

Church and state in medieval Europe includes the relationship between the Christian church and the various monarchies and other states in Europe, between the end of Roman authority in the West in the fifth century and the beginnings of the Reformation in the early sixteenth century.

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Church etiquette

Church etiquette varies greatly between the different nations and cultural groups among whom the Christian Church is found.

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Church grim

The church grim is a guardian spirit in English and Scandinavian folklore that oversees the welfare of a particular Christian church and protects the churchyard from those who would profane and commit sacrilege against it.

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Church of God in Christ

The Church Of God in Christ (COGIC) is a Pentecostal-Holiness Christian denomination with a predominantly African-American membership.

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Church of Ireland Theological Institute

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.

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Church of Nuestra Señora del Manzano, Castrojeriz

The Church of Nuestra Señora del Manzano ("Our Lady of Manzano") or Iglesia de Santa María del Manzano is a Catholic church in the town of Castrojeriz, in the province of Burgos.

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Church of Saint James the Great (Estômbar)

The Church of Saint James the Great (Igreja de São Tiago Maior) is the principal church, in the civil parish of Estômbar in the municipality of Lagoa in the Algarve.

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Church of South India Synod

Church of South India Synod (CSI Synod) is the highest administrative body of the Church of South India.

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Church of St John the Baptist, Frome

The Church of St John the Baptist, Frome is a parish church in the Church of England located at Frome within the English county of Somerset.

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Church of the Most Holy Trinity, Alcamo

The Church of the Most Holy Trinity is a Catholic Church in Alcamo, in the province of Trapani.

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Church of the Nazarene

The Church of the Nazarene is an evangelical Christian denomination that emerged from the 19th-century Holiness movement in North America.

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Church of Universal Triumph, Dominion of God

No description.

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Church reform of Peter the Great

The Church reform of Peter I introduced what some believe was a period of Caesaropapism in the history of the Russian Orthodox Church, when the church apparatus effectively became a department of state.

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Church service

A church service (also called a service of worship, or simply a service) is a formalized period of communal worship in Christian tradition.

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Churches of Christ

Churches of Christ are autonomous Christian congregations associated with one another through distinct beliefs and practices.

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Churches of Göreme

Göreme is a district of the Nevşehir Province in Turkey.

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Churchman

Churchman typically refers to a member of the clergy.

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Churchmanship

Churchmanship (or churchpersonship; or tradition in most official contexts) is a way of talking about and labelling different tendencies, parties, or schools of thought within the Church of England and the sister churches of the Anglican Communion.

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Cisalpine Club

The Cisalpine Club was an association of Roman Catholic laymen formed in England in the 1790s to promote Cisalpinism, and played a role in the public debate surrounding the progress of Catholic Emancipation.

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Civil religion

Civil religion is a concept that originated in French political thought and became a major topic for American sociologists since its use by Robert Bellah in 1960.

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Clarence Barbour

Clarence Augustus Barbour (April 21, 1867 – January 16, 1937) was an American Baptist clergyman and educator most notable for having served as the president of Brown University.

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Clark Bentom

Clark Bentom was an English missionary and surgeon, who was a missionary in Canada at Quebec City, Quebec, from 1800 to 1805.

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Claude Castonguay

Claude Castonguay, (born May 8, 1929) is a Canadian politician, educator and businessman.

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Claude Magnay

Claudius Stephen Magnay (8 May 1819 – 17 December 1870), known as Claude, was an English clergyman, a writer, and a cricketer who played first-class cricket in a single match for Cambridge University in 1841.

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Claudius Smith

Claudius Smith (1736 – January 22, 1779) was a Loyalist guerrilla leader during the American Revolution.

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Clement Price Thomas

Sir Clement Price Thomas Honour For The King's Doctor.

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Clergy Letter Project

The Clergy Letter Project is a project that maintains statements in support of the teaching of evolution and collects signatures in support of letters from American Christian, Jewish, Unitarian Universalist, and Buddhist clergy.

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Clergy of the Church of England database

The Clergy of the Church of England database (CCEd) is an online database of clergy of the Church of England between 1540 and 1835.

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Clergy of the United Church of Canada

The clergy of the United Church of Canada are called "ministers".

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Clergy reserve

Clergy Reserves were tracts of land in Upper Canada and Lower Canada reserved for the support of "Protestant clergy" by the Constitutional Act of 1791.

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Cleric (disambiguation)

Cleric may refer to.

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Clerical

Clerical may refer to.

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Clerical celibacy

Clerical celibacy is the requirement in certain religions that some or all members of the clergy be unmarried.

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Clerical clothing

Clerical clothing is non-liturgical clothing worn exclusively by clergy.

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Clerical collaboration with communist secret services

Clerical collaboration with communist secret services occurred in some Eastern European countries during the Cold War.

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Clerical Discipline

Clerical Discipline was an incentive by church authorities to regulate the behaviour of local clergy in early modern England.

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Clerical High School of Saint Arsenije

Clerical Grande école of Saint Arsenije (Богословија Свети Арсеније Сремац / Bogoslovija Sveti Arsenije Sremac), founded in 1794, is the first Serbian Clerical Grande école, founded three years after the Gymnasium of Karlovci by Mitropolitan Stefan Stratimirović.

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Clerical marriage

Clerical marriage is the practice of allowing clergy (those who have already been ordained) to marry.

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Clericalism

Clericalism is the application of the formal, church-based, leadership or opinion of ordained clergy in matters of either the church or broader political and sociocultural import.

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Clerici vagantes

Clerici vagantes or vagabundi (singular clericus vagans or vagabundus) is a medieval Latin term meaning "wandering clergy" applied in early canon law to those clergy who led a wandering life either because they had no benefice or because they had deserted the church to which they had been attached.

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Clerk

A clerk is a white-collar worker who conducts general office tasks, or a worker who performs similar sales-related tasks in a retail environment (a retail clerk).

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Clermont County, Ohio

Clermont County, popularly called Clermont, is a county in the U.S. state of Ohio.

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Clifford's Inn

Clifford's Inn is a former Inn of Chancery in London.

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Clinical pastoral education

Clinical pastoral education (CPE) is education to teach pastoral care to clergy and others.

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Cochineal

The cochineal (Dactylopius coccus) is a scale insect in the suborder Sternorrhyncha, from which the natural dye carmine is derived.

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Cody's Books

Cody's Books (19562008) was an independent bookstore based in Berkeley, California.

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Colm O'Gorman

Colm O'Gorman (born 15 July 1966) is the Executive Director of Amnesty International Ireland.

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Colman nepos Cracavist

Colman (floruit c.800),M.

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Columba

Saint Columba (Colm Cille, 'church dove'; Columbkille; 7 December 521 – 9 June 597) was an Irish abbot and missionary credited with spreading Christianity in what is today Scotland at the start of the Hiberno-Scottish mission.

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Columbia, Kentucky

Columbia is a home rule-class city just above Russell Creek in Adair County, Kentucky, in the United States.

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Combe Miller

Combe Miller (1745–1814) was a Church of England clergyman.

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Committee for State Security

The Committee for State Security (Комитет за държавна сигурност, Komitet za dǎržavna sigurnost; abbreviated КДС, CSS, DS), popularly known as State Security (Държавна сигурност, Darzhavna sigurnost; abbrievated ДС) was the name of the Bulgarian secret service during the Communist rule of Bulgaria and the Cold War, until 1989.

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Common Ground Collective

The Common Ground Collective is a decentralized network of non-profit organizations offering support to the residents of New Orleans.

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Common Worship

Common Worship is the name given to the series of services authorised by the General Synod of the Church of England and launched on the first Sunday of Advent in 2000.

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Commoner

The common people, also known as the common man, commoners, or the masses, are the ordinary people in a community or nation who lack any significant social status, especially those who are members of neither royalty, nobility, the clergy, nor any member of the aristocracy.

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Communities Helping All Neighbors Gain Empowerment

Communities Helping All Neighbors Gain Empowerment, or CHANGE, is a Winston-Salem, North Carolina based non-profit organization founded in 2002 that encourages civic participation among local residents.

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Communities Without Boundaries International

Communities Without Boundaries International (CWBI) is an international non-governmental tax exempt organization carrying out peacebuilding and sustainable development projects in the US and around the globe, and founded on the philosophy and principles of nonviolence as espoused by Martin Luther King, Jr. and Mohandas K. Gandhi.

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Company of the Blessed Sacrament

The Company of the Blessed Sacrament (Compagnie du Saint-Sacrement) (also sometimes referred to as the Company of the Most Blessed Sacrament) was a French Catholic secret society which included among its members many Catholic notables of the 17th century.

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Compendium Competorum

The Compendium Competorum was a document listing clerical abuses by the Roman Catholic Church in England and Wales.

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Composition for Tithes (Ireland) Act 1823

The Composition for Tithes Act of 1823, also known as the Tithe Composition Act, was an act of the British Parliament requiring all citizens of Ireland to pay monetary tithes to support the Anglican Church in Ireland, instead of a percentage of agricultural yield.

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Conaing Ua Beigléighinn

Conaing Ua Beigléighinn, Irish cleric, died 1128.

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Conceptions of God

Conceptions of God in monotheist, pantheist, and panentheist religions – or of the supreme deity in henotheistic religions – can extend to various levels of abstraction.

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Conciliarity

Conciliarity is the adherence of various Christian communities to the authority of ecumenical councils and to synodal church government.

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Concordat of 1851

The Concordat of 1851 was an concordat between the Spanish government of Queen Isabella II and the Vatican.

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Concordia Theological Seminary

The Concordia Theological Seminary is an institution of theological higher education of the Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod (LCMS), located in Fort Wayne, Indiana, and dedicated primarily to the preparation of pastors for the congregations and missions of the LCMS and its partner churches.

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Conference for Progressive Labor Action

The Conference for Progressive Labor Action (CPLA) was a left-wing American political organization established in May 1929 by A. J. Muste, the director of Brookwood Labor College.

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Confessing Movement

The Confessing Movement is a lay-led conservative Christian movement that opposes the influence of liberalism and progressivism within several mainline Protestant denominations and seeks to return them to its view of orthodox doctrine.

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Confessional state

A confessional state is a state which officially practices a particular religion, and at least encourages its citizens to do likewise.

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Congregation of Marian Fathers of the Immaculate Conception

The Congregation of Marian Fathers of the Immaculate Conception of the Most Blessed Virgin Mary (Latin: Congregatio Clericorum Marianorum ab Immaculata Conceptionis Beatissimae Virginis Mariae; abbreviation: M.I.C.) is a Roman Catholic male clerical religious congregation founded, 1670, in Poland.

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Congregation of Mary Immaculate Queen

The Congregation of Mary Immaculate Queen (CMRI) (Latin: Congregatio Mariae Reginae Immaculatae) is a Sedevacantist Traditionalist Catholic religious congregation that rejects the authority of the recent Popes, including Benedict XVI and Francis, and is dedicated to promoting the message of Our Lady of Fátima and devotion to the Virgin Mary according to the teachings of St. Louis-Marie Grignion de Montfort (1673-1716), whom they regard as their spiritual founder.

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Congregationalist polity

Congregationalist polity, or congregational polity, often known as congregationalism, is a system of ecclesiastical polity in which every local church congregation is independent, ecclesiastically sovereign, or "autonomous".

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Congrua portio

Congrua (in full, Congrua Portio) is a canonical term to designate the lowest sum proper for the yearly income of a cleric.

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Conrad III of Dhaun

Conrad of Dhaun (1434) was a German nobleman.

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Conscription in the United Kingdom

Conscription in the United Kingdom has existed for two periods in modern times.

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Consecrated life

Consecrated life, in the canon law of the Catholic Church, is a stable form of Christian living by those faithful who are called to follow Jesus Christ in a more exacting way recognized by the Church.

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Consecrated virgin

In the Catholic Church, a consecrated virgin is a woman who has been consecrated by the church to a life of perpetual virginity in the service of God.

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Conseil du Roi

The Conseil du Roi (French for "The King's Council"), also known as the is a general term for the administrative and governmental apparatus around the king of France during the Ancien Régime designed to prepare his decisions and give him advice.

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Conservation and restoration of fur objects

The conservation and restoration of fur objects is the preservation and protection of objects made from or containing fur.

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Conservatism in North America

Conservatism in North America is a political philosophy that varies in form, depending on the country and the region, but that has similar themes and goals.

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Conservative Party of Quebec (historical)

The Conservative Party of Quebec (French: Parti conservateur du Québec) was a political party in Quebec, Canada, from 1867 until 1936, when it merged with members of the Action libérale nationale to form the Union Nationale.

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Constitutionalization attempts in Iran

The Persian Constitutional Revolution was a short-lived push for democratic rule in the form of a constitutional monarchy within a highly elitist yet decentralized society under the Qajars.

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Consultor

A consultor is one who gives counsel, i.e., a counselor.

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Continuing Anglican movement

The Continuing Anglican movement, also known as the Anglican Continuum, encompasses a number of Christian churches that are from the Anglican tradition but that are not part of the Anglican Communion.

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Controlling Vice: Regulating Brothel Prostitution in St. Paul, 1865-1883

Controlling Vice is a book by Minnesotan author Joel Best, published in 1998.

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Convent pornography

Convent pornography, convent erotica, friar erotica, priest erotica, monk erotica, or clergy erotica includes paintings, sculpture, photographs, dramatic arts, music and writings that show scenes of erotic or sexual nature involving clergy.

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Cooper Willyams

The Rev.

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Cormac mac Ceithearnach

Cormac mac Ceithearnach, ruler and cleric, died 881.

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Cornelis Tiele

Cornelis Petrus Tiele, (16 December 1830–11 January 1902) was a Dutch theologian and scholar.

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Cornelius Jakobs

Metropolitan Cornelius (Митрополит Корнилий, Metropoliit Kornelius or secular name Vjatšeslav Vassiljevitš Jakobs, or Vyacheslav Vasilyevich Yakobs, Вячеслав Васильевич Якобс; 19 June 1924, Tallinn – 19 April 2018, Tallinn) was an Estonian metropolitan bishop of Tallinn and All Estonia, the head of the Estonian Orthodox Church of Moscow Patriarchate.

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Coronation of the Danish monarch

The coronation of the Danish monarch was a religious ceremony in which the accession of the Danish monarch was marked by a coronation ceremony.

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Coronation of the Holy Roman Emperor

The Coronation of the Holy Roman Emperor was a ceremony in which the ruler of Europe's then-largest political entity received the Imperial Regalia at the hands of the Pope, symbolizing both the pope's alleged right to crown Christian sovereigns and also the emperor's role as protector of the Roman Catholic Church.

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Coslett Herbert Waddell

Coslett Herbert Waddell (Rev.) (March 6, 1858 at Drumcro, County Antrim – June 8, 1919) was an Irish priest, (Church of Ireland), and botanist.

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Cosmas the Priest

Cosmas the Priest (Презвитер Козма, Prezviter Kozma), also known as Cosmas the Presbyter or Presbyter Cosmas, was a medieval Bulgarian priest and writer.

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Council of Laodicea

The Council of Laodicea was a regional synod of approximately thirty clerics from Asia Minor that assembled about 363–364 AD in Laodicea, Phrygia Pacatiana.

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Council of Orange (441)

The First Council of Orange (or First Synod of Orange) was held in the diocese of Orange, then part of the Western Roman Empire, in 441.

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Count Gustav Kálnoky

Count Gustav Siegmund Kálnoky (Hungarian: gróf Kálnoky Gusztáv Zsigmond) (December 29, 1832February 13, 1898), was an Austro-Hungarian diplomat, statesman.

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Courir de Mardi Gras

The Courir de Mardi Gras is a traditional Mardi Gras event held in many Cajun communities of south Louisiana on the Tuesday before Ash Wednesday.

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Courland

Courland, or Kurzeme (in Latvian; Kurāmō; German and Kurland; Curonia/Couronia; Курляндия; Kuršas; Kurlandia), is one of the historical and cultural regions in western Latvia.

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Court of Auditors (France)

Under the French monarchy, the Courts of Accounts (in French Chambres des comptes) were sovereign courts specialising in financial affairs.

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Court of First Fruits and Tenths

First Fruits and Tenths was a form of tax on clergy taking up a benefice or ecclesiastical position in Great Britain.

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Court of Session

The Court of Session (Cùirt an t-Seisein; Coort o Session) is the supreme civil court of Scotland, and constitutes part of the College of Justice; the supreme criminal court of Scotland is the High Court of Justiciary.

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Courtier

A courtier is a person who is often in attendance at the court of a monarch or other royal personage.

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Couston Castle

Couston Castle, is an L-plan tower house dating from the late sixteenth or early seventeenth centuries, just north east of Dalgety Bay, at the edge of Otterston Loch in Fife, Scotland.

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Creation, Man and the Messiah

Creation, Man and the Messiah (Norwegian: Skabelsen, mennesket og Messias - et digt) is the title of an epic poem written by the Norwegian poet Henrik Wergeland in 1829.

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Creation–evolution controversy

The creation–evolution controversy (also termed the creation vs. evolution debate or the origins debate) involves an ongoing, recurring cultural, political, and theological dispute about the origins of the Earth, of humanity, and of other life.

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Crispus, Crispinianus, and Benedicta

Crispus (or Crispinus), Crispinianus and Benedicta were Roman Christian martyrs, venerated after their death as saints.

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Cristo Rey Jesuit College Preparatory of Houston

Cristo Rey Jesuit College Preparatory of Houston is a Roman Catholic secondary school located on 6700 Mount Carmel Street in Houston, Texas, United States.

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Cristoforo Vidman

Cristoforo Vidman (1617 - 30 September 1660) was an Italian Catholic cardinal of German descent and cardinal-priest of the titular Church of S. Marco in Rome.

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Criticism of the Catholic Church

Criticism of the Catholic Church includes the observations made about the current or historical Catholic Church, in its actions, teachings, omissions, structure, or nature.

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Croatian Catholic movement

Croatian Catholic movement (HKP) is a form of political Catholicism which was active in the first half of the 20th century in Croatia.

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Crosby Field

Crosby Field (March 12, 1889 – September 20, 1972) was an American mechanical and electrical engineer, manufacturer, vice president of the Brillo Manufacturing Company,"Crosby Field, 83, Inventor is Dead," New York Times, Sept.

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Crosier Monastery, Maastricht

The Crosier Monastery or Monastery of the Crutched Friars (Kruisherenklooster) is a former monastery of the Order of the Holy Cross in Maastricht, Netherlands.

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Crossroads (1955 TV series)

Crossroads was an American television anthology series based on the activities of clergy from different denominations.

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Croxton Play of the Sacrament

The Croxton Play of the Sacrament is the only surviving English Host miracle play.

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Crusade in Jeans (film)

Crusade in Jeans (Kruistocht in spijkerbroek) is a 2006 Dutch film, an adaptation of the first half of the book Crusade in Jeans by Thea Beckman.

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Crusoe (TV series)

Crusoe is a television adventure-Drama (with comedic elements) series, based loosely on the novel Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe.

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Cucuteni–Trypillia culture

The Cucuteni–Trypillia culture (and), also known as the Tripolye culture, is a Neolithic–Eneolithic archaeological culture (5200 to 3500 BC) in Eastern Europe.

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Cultural depictions of the dog

Cultural depictions of dogs extend back thousands of years to when dogs were portrayed on the walls of caves.

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Culture of ancient Rus

The culture of ancient Rus can be divided into different historical periods of the Middle Ages.

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Culture of Vatican City

Vatican City is itself of great cultural significance.

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Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society

The Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society, founded in 1866, is a local historical, antiquarian, archaeological and text publication society and registered charity covering the modern county of Cumbria.

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Curates' Augmentation Fund

The Curates' Augmentation Fund is an ecclesiastical charity set up in 1866 to provide extra income for those clergy in long term curacies, often in slum parishes or difficult terrain overseas.

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Cursor Mundi

Cursor Mundi (Latin for "Runner of the World") is an anonymous Middle-English historical and religious poem of nearly 30,000 lines written around 1300 A.D. The poem summarizes the history of the world as described in the Christian Bible and other sources, with additional material drawn primarily from the Historia Scholastica.

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Custos (under-sacristan)

The under-sacristan or custos was a Roman Catholic office.

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Cyranides

The Cyranides (also Kyranides or Kiranides) is a compilation of magico-medical works in Greek first put together in the 4th century.

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Cyrus West Field

Cyrus West Field (November 30, 1819July 12, 1892) was an American businessman and financier who, along with other entrepreneurs, created the Atlantic Telegraph Company and laid the first telegraph cable across the Atlantic Ocean in 1858.

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D'Ewes Coke

The Reverend D'Ewes Coke (1747 - 12 April 1811) was rector of Pinxton and South Normanton in Derbyshire, a colliery owner and philanthropist.

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D. L. Dykes Jr.

For the Southern Baptist clergyman from Tyler, Texas, see David O. Dykes.

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Dafydd Emlyn

Dafydd Emlyn was a 17th century Welsh poet and cleric.

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Dagnall

Dagnall is a village in the parish of Edlesborough, in Buckinghamshire, England.

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Dally Messenger III

Dally Messenger III (born 1938) is a civil celebrant, author, publisher, commentator, and a founder and chronicler of the civil celebrant movement which originated in Australia.

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Dandy Dick (play)

Dandy Dick is an 1887 comedy by British writer Arthur Wing Pinero.

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Daniel (Nushiro)

Metropolitan is a Japanese clergyman and monk of the Japanese Orthodox Church.

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Daniel A. Poling

Daniel Alfred Poling (November 30, 1884 - February 7, 1968) was an American clergyman.

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Daniel E. Sheehan

Daniel Eugene Sheehan (May 14, 1917 – October 24, 2000) was an American prelate of the Roman Catholic Church.

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Daniel Edward Thomas

Daniel Edward Thomas (born June 11, 1959) is an American prelate of the Catholic Church.

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Daniel Faunce

Daniel Worcester Faunce (January 3, 1829 – January 3, 1911) was an American clergyman and the father of William Faunce, born at Plymouth, Massachusetts to Peleg and Olive (Finney) Faunce.

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Daniel Hay du Chastelet de Chambon

Daniel Hay du Chastelet (23 October 1596, Laval – 20 April 1671) was a Frenchclergyman and mathematician.

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Daniel of Winchester

Daniel (Danihel) of Winchester (died 745) was Bishop of the West Saxons, and Bishop of Winchester from c. 705 to 744.

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Daniel Waldo

Daniel Waldo (September 10, 1762 – July 30, 1864) was an American clergyman.

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Daniel Willis

Daniel Willis born 8 April 1954, (Herberton) is an Australian clergyman, having spent most of his adult life in the Anglican Diocese of Sydney.

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Darbazi (State Council)

Darbazi was medieval Georgian council of state, introduced by king David IV of Georgia (1073-1125) after the important government reforms.

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Darcy Lever (author)

Darcy Lever (c. 1759 – 1839) was a nineteenth-century British author and expert in seamanship, most well known for his work The Young Sea Officer's Sheet Anchor: Or a Key to the Leading of Rigging and to Practical Seamanship.

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Darkstars

The first Darkstars were a group of fictional intergalactic policemen that appeared in comic books published by DC Comics.

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Dasein ohne Leben

Dasein ohne Leben – Psychiatrie und Menschlichkeit (Existence Without Life – Psychiatry and Humanity) is a 1942 Nazi propaganda film about the physically and mentally disabled.

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Dating agency

A dating agency is a business which acts as a service for matchmaking between potential couples, with a view toward romance and/or marriage between them.

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David Asante

David Asante (23 December 1834 – 13 October 1892) was a philologist, linguist, translator and the first Akan native missionary of the Basel Evangelical Missionary Society.

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David Ffrangcon-Davies

David Ffrangcon-Davies, M.A. (Oxon) (11 December 1855 – 13 April 1918) was a Welsh operatic baritone.

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David Frederick Schaeffer

David Frederick Schaeffer (born in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, 22 July 1787; died in Frederick, Maryland, 5 May 1837) was a Lutheran clergyman of the United States.

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David H. Greer

David Hummell Greer (March 20, 1844 – May 19, 1919) was an American Protestant Episcopal bishop.

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David Jenkins (bishop)

David Edward Jenkins (26 January 19254 September 2016) was a Church of England cleric and theologian.

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David Lloyd (priest)

David Lloyd (or Lloyde) (c.1688 – 1747?) was a Welsh translator and cleric.

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David O. Dykes

David O. Dykes (born January 16, 1953) is the Senior Pastor at Green Acres Baptist Church in Tyler, Texas and the author of several Christian books.

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David Railton

Reverend David Railton MC MA, (13 November 188413 June 1955) was a Church of England clergyman, a Military chaplain and the originator of the idea of the Tomb of The Unknown Warrior in Britain.

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David Sheppard

David Stuart Sheppard, Baron Sheppard of Liverpool (6 March 1929 – 5 March 2005) was the high-profile Bishop of Liverpool in the Church of England who played cricket for Sussex and England in his youth.

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David Simpson (priest)

Rev David Simpson, M.A. (12 October 1745 – 24 March 1799) was an Anglican priest who spent most of his career in Macclesfield, Cheshire, England.

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David Swing

David Swing (August 23, 1830October 3, 1894) was a United States teacher and clergyman who was the most popular Chicago preacher of his time.

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David Zeisberger

David Zeisberger (April 11, 1721 – November 17, 1808) was a Moravian clergyman and missionary among the Native Americans in the Thirteen Colonies.

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David Zubik

David Allen Zubik (born September 4, 1949) is an American prelate of the Roman Catholic Church who serves as the twelfth and current bishop of the Diocese of Pittsburgh.

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Década moderada

In the history of Spain, the década moderada ("moderate decade") was the period from May 1844 to July 1854, during which the Moderate Party continuously held power.

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Décolletage

Décolletage (or décolleté, its adjectival form, in current French) is a term used in woman's fashion referring to the upper part of a woman's torso, comprising her neck, shoulders, back and upper chest, that is exposed by the neckline of her clothing.

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Džemaludin Čaušević

Mehmed Džemaludin ef. Čaušević (Arebica: مُحَمَّدٌ جَمَالُ‌الدِّينِ أف. چاۆشه‌وٖىݘ, Cyrillic: Мехмед Џемалудин еф. Чаушевић; 28 December 1870 – 28 March 1938) was a Bosnian Muslim reformer and imam.

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De Pippini regis Victoria Avarica

Rythmus (or Carmen) de Pippini regis Victoria Avarica ("Poem of king Pippin's Avar victory"), also known by its incipit as Omnes gentes qui fecisti ("All peoples whom you created"), is a medieval Latin encomium celebrating the victory of King Pepin of Italy over the Avars in the summer of 796.

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Deacon

A deacon is a member of the diaconate, an office in Christian churches that is generally associated with service of some kind, but which varies among theological and denominational traditions.

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Deaconess

The ministry of a deaconess is, in modern times, a non-ordained ministry for women in some Protestant churches to provide pastoral care, especially for other women.

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Dean (Christianity)

A dean, in a church context, is a cleric holding certain positions of authority within a religious hierarchy.

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Dean Drayton

Rodney Dean Drayton (born 1941, National Library of Australia catalogue, accessed 26 January 2010) is a minister of the Uniting Church in Australia (UCA) and was President of the UCA Assembly from July 2003 to July 2006.

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Dean of Birmingham

The Dean of Birmingham is the senior member of clergy responsible for St. Philip's Cathedral in Birmingham, England.

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Dean of York

The Dean of York is the member of the clergy who is responsible for the running of the York Minster cathedral.

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Deanery

A deanery (or decanate) is an ecclesiastical entity in the Roman Catholic Church, the Anglican Communion, the Evangelical Church in Germany, and the Church of Norway.

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Deceit (1923 film)

Deceit (sometimes referred to as The Deceit) is a 1923 American silent black-and-white film.

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Deerfield, New York

Deerfield is a town in Oneida County, New York, United States.

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Defensor pacis

The tract Defensor pacis (The Defender of Peace) laid the foundations of modern doctrines of sovereignty.

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Defrocking

Defrocking, unfrocking, or laicization of clergy is the removal of their rights to exercise the functions of the ordained ministry.

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Degradation

Degradation may refer to.

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Delaware Constitution of 1776

The Delaware Constitution of 1776 was the first governing document for Delaware state government and was in effect from its adoption in September 1776 until its replacement by the 1792 constitution.

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Delta Phi

Delta Phi (ΔΦ) is a fraternity founded in 1827 at Union College in Schenectady, New York.

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Democracy in America

De La Démocratie en Amérique (published in two volumes, the first in 1835 and the second in 1840) is a classic French text by Alexis de Tocqueville.

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Denis J. Madden

Denis James Madden (born March 8, 1940) is an American prelate of the Roman Catholic Church, who served as an auxiliary bishop of the Archdiocese of Baltimore, Maryland.

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Denis-Simon de Marquemont

Denis-Simon de Marquemont (30 September 1572 – 16 September 1626) was a French cleric who became Archbishop of Lyon in 1612.

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Denominational education in the Republic of Ireland

Education in the Republic of Ireland is mostly denominational at primary and secondary level.

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Department of Divinities

The, also known as the Department of Shinto Affairs, was a Japanese Imperial bureaucracy established in the 8th century, as part of the ritsuryō reforms.

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Derek Nimmo

Derek Robert Nimmo (19 September 193024 February 1999) was an English character actor, producer and author.

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Deutscher Filmpreis

The Deutscher Filmpreis (German Film Awards, also called Lola Awards) is an annual German awards ceremony honouring cinematic achievements in the German film business.

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Development of Jehovah's Witnesses doctrine

The doctrines of Jehovah's Witnesses have developed since publication of The Watchtower magazine began in 1879.

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Devotions upon Emergent Occasions

Devotions upon Emergent Occasions, or in full Devotions Upon Emergent Occasions, and severall steps in my Sicknes, is a prose work by the English metaphysical poet and cleric in the Church of England John Donne, published in 1624.

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Dhiyaa Al-Musawi

Sayed Dheya Yahya Ali Maki al-Musawi, (Arabic: ضياء السيد يحيى علي مكي الموسوي), born in Bahrain 1970, is a politician, author, writer and former cleric.

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Dia Abdul Zahra Kadim

Dia Abdul Zahra Kadim is a deceased Iraqi detainee, (Arabic: ضياء عبدالزهراء كاظم); c. 1970 – January 29, 2007), also known as al-Ali bin Ali bin Abi Talib (Arabic: العلي بن علي بن أبي طالب), claimed to be from Hilla, Iraq, was the leader of an armed extremist Shia Islam cult named Jund al-Samaa ("Soldiers of Heaven" in Arabic, a well-armed Shia cult regarding the religious leadership in Najaf as illegitimate) based in Iraq. He claimed to be the Hidden Imam and Mahdi. He was detained twice in recent years. He was also known to have connections to the former regime of Saddam Hussein since 1993. He was possibly Ahmad al-Hassan who claims to be the son of the Mahdi. After Saddam Hussein was toppled in the U.S.-led 2003 invasion of Iraq, Abdul-Zahra's group appeared to be a legitimate political movement. Soon Abdul-Zahra, who was in his mid-30s, began telling followers that he was the reincarnation of the Ali ibn Abu Talib, the first Shia Imam as well as the last of the Rightly Guided Caliphs.

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Die Young (Kesha song)

"Die Young" is a song by American recording artist Kesha.

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Diet of Finland

The Diet of Finland (Finnish Suomen maapäivät, later valtiopäivät; Swedish Finlands Lantdagar), was the legislative assembly of the Grand Duchy of Finland from 1809 to 1906 and the recipient of the powers of the Swedish Riksdag of the Estates.

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Diet of Porvoo

The Diet of Porvoo (Finnish Porvoon maapäivät, or unhistorically Porvoon valtiopäivät; Swedish Borgå landtdag), was the summoned legislative assembly to establish the Grand Principality of Finland in 1809 and the heir of the powers of the Swedish Riksdag of the Estates.

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Diezmo

The diezmo was a compulsory ecclesiastical tithe collected in Spain and its empire from the Middle Ages until the reign of Isabella II in the mid-19th century.

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Dikļi Parish

Dikļi parish (Dikļu pagasts) is an administrative unit of the, Latvia.

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Dikirion and trikirion

Dikirion (δικήριον or δίκηρον) and trikirion (τρικήριον or τρίκηρον) are liturgical candlesticks, used by a bishop of the Eastern Orthodox and the Eastern Catholic Churches to bless the clergy and faithful.

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Dinkha IV

Mar Dinkha IV (Classical Syriac: and مار دنخا الرابع), born Dinkha Khanania (15 September 1935 – 26 March 2015), was the Catholicos-Patriarch of the Assyrian Church of the East.

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Dio (band)

Dio was an American heavy metal band formed in 1982 and led by vocalist Ronnie James Dio, after he left Black Sabbath with intentions to form a new band with fellow former Black Sabbath member Vinny Appice, the band's drummer.

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Diocesan Synod Nivariense

Diocesan Synod Nivariense (in Spanish: Sínodo Diocesano Nivariense, in Latin: Synodus Dioecesani Nivariensis) was an important meeting of the clergy and laity of the Roman Catholic Diocese of San Cristóbal de La Laguna (Canary Islands, Spain).

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Diocese of Madhya Kerala of the Church of South India

The Madhya Kerala Diocese is one of the twenty-four dioceses of the Church of South India (commonly referred as CSI) (successor of the Church of England) covering the central part of Kerala.

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Diocese of Medak of the Church of South India

The Diocese of Medak is one of the prominent Dioceses in the Church of South India, a Protestant Uniting Church with its headquarters in Medak comprising nearly 200Church of South India Synod - Medak Ministerial Details.

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Directorium

"Directorium" is a Latin word denoting a guide.

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District Superintendent (Methodism)

A district superintendent, often abbreviated D.S., also known as a presiding elder, in many Methodist denominations, is a minister (specifically an elder) who serves in a supervisory position over a geographic "district" of churches (varying in size) providing spiritual and administrative leadership to those churches and their pastors.

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Divljana Monastery

Divljana Monastery, also known as the Monastery of St. Demetrius, is a Serbian Orthodox monastery located near the village of Divljana and Divljana Lake,, Language: Serbian, accessed 17.

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Doctor (title)

Doctor is an academic title that originates from the Latin word of the same spelling and meaning.

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Doe v. Holy See

John V. Doe v. Holy See is a lawsuit involving the sovereign immunity status of the Holy See in relation to the Catholic sexual abuse scandal in the United States.

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Dominic Cazenove

Dominic Cazenove (born 8 January 1975) is an English film, television and stage actor.

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Dominical letter

Dominical letters or Sunday letters are a method used to determine the day of the week for particular dates.

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Don gratuit

The don graduit or "free gift" in English, was a voluntary contribution to royal finances paid by the First Estate (the clergy) under France's ancien regime.

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Donald Campbell (abbot)

Donald Campbell (Dòmhnall Caimbeul) (died 1562) was a 16th-century Scottish noble and churchman.

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Donald M. Weller

Donald McPherrin Weller (May 1, 1908 - March 8, 1985) was a decorated officer of the United States Marine Corps with the rank of Major General.

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Donnchad Clereach Ó Maol Braonáin

Donnchad Clereach Ó Maol Braonáin, Irish cleric and musician, died 1343.

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Dorchester Missionary College

Dorchester Missionary College was founded as a Theological College to train Anglican clergy to serve in the Church of England overseas.

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Doug Moseley

Douglas Dewayne Moseley, known as Doug Moseley (March 24, 1928November 8, 2017), was a United Methodist minister and author who later served as a Republican member of the Kentucky State Senate from 1974 to 1986.

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Douglas Davies

Douglas James Davies, FBA (born Bedlinog, 1947) is a Welsh Professor in the Study of Religion in the Department of Theology and Religion at the University of Durham.

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Douglas Sheffield, Baroness Sheffield

Douglas Sheffield (also spelt Douglass), Baroness Sheffield, maiden name Douglas Howard (1542/1543 – 1608), was an English noblewoman and the mother of the explorer and cartographer Sir Robert Dudley, illegitimate son of Robert Dudley, 1st Earl of Leicester.

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Douglas Wood (engineer)

Douglas Wood (born 30 June 1941), is an Australian construction engineer who had worked with the American military, and was held hostage in Iraq for six weeks between May and June 2005, before being rescued.

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Douglas, Isle of Man

Douglas (Doolish) is the capital and largest town of the Isle of Man, with a population of 27,938 (2011).

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Drogo of Metz

Drogo (17 June 801 – 8 December 855), also known as Dreux or Drogon, was an illegitimate son of Frankish emperor Charlemagne by the concubine Regina.

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Drown (surname)

Drown is a surname which originated in Yorkshire, England.

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Dugald Macfadyen

Reverend Dugald Macfadyen MA, FRHistS, (25 December 1867 – 23 July 1936), was a British Clergyman, Liberal Party candidate and writer.

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Dundee Law School

The Dundee Law School at the University of Dundee, Scotland provides undergraduate and postgraduate teaching in Scots and English law.

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Dunstan

Dunstan (909 – 19 May 988 AD)Lapidge, "Dunstan (d. 988)" was successively Abbot of Glastonbury Abbey, Bishop of Worcester, Bishop of London, and Archbishop of Canterbury, later canonised as a saint.

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Dutch Golden Age

The Dutch Golden Age (Gouden Eeuw) was a period in the history of the Netherlands, roughly spanning the 17th century, in which Dutch trade, science, military, and art were among the most acclaimed in the world.

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Dutch West India Company

Dutch West India Company (Geoctroyeerde Westindische Compagnie, or GWIC; Chartered West India Company) was a chartered company (known as the "WIC") of Dutch merchants as well as foreign investors.

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Early Irish law

Early Irish law, also called Brehon law, comprised the statutes which governed everyday life in Early Medieval Ireland.

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Easter parade

The Easter parade is an American cultural event consisting of a festive strolling procession on Easter Sunday.

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Eastern Nazarene College

The Eastern Nazarene College (ENC) is a private, coeducational college of the liberal arts and sciences in Quincy, Massachusetts, near Boston, in the New England region of the United States.

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Eastern Orthodox Church

The Eastern Orthodox Church, also known as the Orthodox Church, or officially as the Orthodox Catholic Church, is the second-largest Christian Church, with over 250 million members.

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Eastern Orthodox theology

Eastern Orthodox theology is the theology particular to the Eastern Orthodox Church (officially the Orthodox Catholic Church).

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Ebenezer Fitch

Ebenezer Fitch (September 26, 1756 – March 21, 1833) was an American Calvinist clergyman and educator.

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Eberhard I, Count of Württemberg

Eberhard I (13 March 1265, Stuttgart - 5 June 1325, Stuttgart) was Count of Württemberg from 1279 until his death.

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Eberhard Spiecker

Eberhard Spiecker (2 August 1931 - 13 May 2017) was a German Lutheran clergyman who played a key and unreported role in the Northern Ireland peace process.

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Ebrahim Amini

Ebrahim Amini (born 30 June 1925 in Najaf Abad, Isfahan Province, Iran) is an Iranian politician in the Assembly of Experts.

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Ecclesiastes (disambiguation)

Ecclesiastes is a book of the Hebrew Bible.

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Ecclesiastical award

An Ecclesiastial award is an official award, honor or privilege presented by ecclesiastical authority.

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Ecclesiastical Commissioners of Ireland

The Board of Ecclesiastical Commissioners was an agency of the Dublin Castle administration which oversaw the funding, building and repairs to churches and glebe houses of the Church of Ireland.

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Ecclesiastical court

An ecclesiastical court, also called court Christian or court spiritual, is any of certain courts having jurisdiction mainly in spiritual or religious matters.

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Ecclesiastical heraldry

Ecclesiastical heraldry refers to the use of heraldry within the Christian Church for dioceses and Christian clergy.

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Ecclesiastical polity

Ecclesiastical polity is the operational and governance structure of a church or of a Christian denomination.

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Ecclesiastical privileges

In the canon law of the Catholic Church, ecclesiastical privileges are the privileges enjoyed by the clergy.

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Ecclesiastical titles and styles

Ecclesiastical addresses are the formal styles of address used for members of the clergy.

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Ecclesiology

In Christian theology, ecclesiology is the study of the Christian Church, the origins of Christianity, its relationship to Jesus, its role in salvation, its polity, its discipline, its destiny, and its leadership.

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Eclectic Society (Christian)

The Eclectic Society was founded in 1783 by a number of Anglican clergymen and laymen as a discussion group, and was instrumental in the founding of the Church Missionary Society in 1799.

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Economy of the Cucuteni–Trypillia culture

Throughout most of its existence, the Cucuteni-Trypillia culture was fairly stable.

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Ed Ware

Edwin Oswald "Ed" Ware, III (September 10, 1927 – July 10, 2016) was an American lawyer from Alexandria, Louisiana.

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Edgar Stogdon

Edgar Stogdon (30 July 1870 – 30 June 1951) was an English academic, clergyman, athlete and a cricketer who played in two first-class cricket matches for Cambridge University in 1893.

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Edinburgh Theological College

Edinburgh Theological College was founded in 1810 to train Anglican clergy to serve in the Scottish Episcopal Church.

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Edmund Ffoulkes

Edmund Salisbury Ffoulkes (1819 or 1820 – 19 April 1894) was a British clergyman who converted from Anglicanism to Catholicism and back again in the 19th century.

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Edmund Gennings

Saint Edmund Gennings (1567 – 10 December 1591) was an English martyr, who was executed during the English Reformation for being a Catholic priest.

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Edmund H. Oliver

Edmund H. Oliver (1882–1935) was a Canadian Presbyterian and United Church of Canada minister, chaplain and educator.

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Edmund Turnor (antiquarian)

Edmund Turnor (born 1755 or 1756; died 1829), FRS, FSA, JP, was an English antiquarian, author, landowner and a British politician.

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Ednam Church

Ednam Church is a member church (kirk) of the Church of Scotland and is co–joined with Kelso North Church in Kelso.

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Eduard Herzog

Eduard Herzog (August 1, 1841 – March 26, 1924) was a Swiss Catholic theologian and cleric who was a native of Schongau, Canton Lucerne.

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Education in Alberta

Education in Alberta is provided through funding from the provincial government.

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Education in Portugal

Education in Portugal is free and compulsory until the age of 18, when students complete the 12th grade.

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Edward Allworthy Armstrong

Edward Allworthy Armstrong (8 October 1900 – 19 December 1978) was a British ornithologist and Church of England clergyman.

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Edward Daniel Clarke

Edward Daniel Clarke (5 June 1769 – 9 March 1822) was an English clergyman, naturalist, mineralogist, and traveller.

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Edward Davies (Celtic)

Edward "Celtic" Davies (7 June 1756 – 7 January 1831) was a Welsh writer and Anglican clergyman whose most influential work examined the origins of Celtic languages and the meaning of Celtic mythology.

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Edward Dowell

Edward William Dowell (1822 – 14 February 1896) was an English cricketer who played in five matches for Cambridge University in 1844 and 1845 which are judged to have been first-class.

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Edward Eddrup

Canon Edward Paroissien Eddrup (1823 – 13 November 1905) was a Church of England clergyman who spent most of his career in Wiltshire, England.

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Edward Edwards (priest)

Edward Edwards (c. 1726 – 2 September 1783) was a Welsh scholar and clergyman.

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Edward Fitzgerald (barrister)

Edward Hamilton Fitzgerald CBE QC is an English barrister who specialises in criminal law, public law, and international human rights law.

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Edward Francis Wilson

The Rev Edward Francis Wilson (7 December 1844 – 11 May 1915) was a prominent Canadian Anglican missionary and clergyman in the second half of the 19th century.

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Edward Horne

Edward Larkin Horne (22 April 1835 – 5 February 1908) was an English clergyman and cricketer who played first-class cricket for Cambridge University and Cambridge Town Club aka Cambridgeshire.

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Edward Hyde (priest)

Edward Hyde (1607–1659) was an English royalist cleric, nominally Dean of Windsor at the end of his life.

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Edward King (priest)

Edward Laurie King was an eminent Anglican clergyman in the 20th century.

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Edward Kirwan

Edward Dominick Geoffrey Martin Kirwan (5 August 1814 – 27 June 1890) was an English clergyman, author and cricketer who played in first-class cricket matches for Cambridge University between 1834 and 1837.

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Edward Kozłowski

Edward Kozlowski (November 21, 1860 – August 7, 1915) was a Polish-American prelate of the Roman Catholic Church who served as an auxiliary bishop for the Archdiocese of Milwaukee, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

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Edward Michael Wigglesworth (c. 1693–1765)

Edward Wigglesworth (1765) was a clergyman, teacher and theologian in Colonial America.

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Edward Paquette

Edward O. Paquette, Jr. (born 1928) is an American former Roman Catholic priest who was defrocked for the numerous clerical child sexual abuse affairs he was involved in within several dioceses of the United States.

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Edward Rainbowe

Edward Rainbowe or Rainbow (1608–1684) was an English academic, Church of England clergyman and a noted preacher.

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Edward Ramsay

Rev Dr Edward Bannerman Ramsay FRSE LLD (17 January 1793– 27 December1872), usually referred to as Dean Ramsay, was a clergyman of the Scottish Episcopal Church, and Dean of Edinburgh in that communion from 1841, has a place in literature through his Reminiscences of Scottish Life and Character, which had gone through 22 editions at his death.

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Edward Reynolds (cricketer)

Edward Morris Reynolds (30 August 1830 – 3 April 1908) was an English schoolmaster, clergyman and all-round sportsman who played first-class cricket for Cambridge University.

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Edward Waller (bishop)

Edward Harry Mansfield Waller (8 December 1871 – 16 May 1942) was an eminent Anglican clergyman in the first half of the 20th century.

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Edward Wilkins (cricketer)

Edward John Paul Wilkins (29 September 1835 – 23 April 1921), known in later life by the surname "Wilkins-Leir", was an English clergyman and a cricketer who played in four first-class cricket matches in 1858 and 1859.

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Edward Woolsey Bacon

Edward Woolsey Bacon (May 5, 1843 – June 7, 1887) was an American Congregational clergyman, as well as a sailor and a soldier.

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Edwin Dyke

Edwin Francis Dyke (27 September 1842 – 26 August 1919) was an English clergyman and cricketer who played first-class cricket for Cambridge University in 1864 and 1865 and for Marylebone Cricket Club in 1866.

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Edwin O. Ware Sr.

Edwin Oswald Ware Sr. (October 29, 1853 – December 6, 1933), was a Southern Baptist clergyman and educator who was the principal founder of Louisiana College in Pineville, Louisiana in Rapides Parish in Central Louisiana.

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Eelco Alta

Eelco Alta (Makkum, Súdwest-Fryslân, 23 June 1723 - Bozum, 17 August 1798) was a Frisian clergyman, theologian, and veterinarian.

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Effects of the 1928 Okeechobee hurricane in Florida

The effects of the 1928 Okeechobee hurricane in Florida included at least 2,500 fatalities in the state of Florida, making this the second deadliest tropical cyclone in the history of the United States, behind only the 1900 Galveston hurricane.

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Efraín Ríos Montt

José Efraín Ríos Montt (June 16, 1926 – April 1, 2018) was a Guatemalan general and politician who was born in Huehuetenango.

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Egerton Hall, Manchester

Egerton Hall, Manchester was founded as a Theological College in 1908 to train Anglican clergy to serve in the Church of England.It was located in Oxford Place and closed in 1944.

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Ekrem Akurgal

Ekrem Akurgal (March 30, 1911 – November 1, 2002) was a Turkish archaeologist.

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Elazar Abuhatzeira

Elazar Abuhatzeira (9 August 1948 – 29 July 2011) was an Orthodox Sefardi rabbi and kabbalist, known among his followers as the "Baba Elazar." He was born in Rissani, Morocco to Rabbi Meir and Simcha Abuhatzeira, was the grandson of the Baba Sali, Rabbi Yisrael Abuhatzeira, and the brother of Rabbi David Chai Abuhatzeira of Nahariya.

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Elder (Christianity)

An elder in Christianity is a person who is valued for wisdom and holds a position of responsibility and/or authority in a Christian group.

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Elder (Methodist)

An Elder, in many Methodist Churches, is ordained minister that has the responsibilities to preach and teach, preside at the celebration of the sacraments, administer the Church through pastoral guidance, and lead the congregations under their care in service ministry to the world.

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Elder Roma Wilson

Elder Roma Wilson (born December 22, 1910) is an American gospel harmonica player and singer.

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Elections in Thailand

Elections in Thailand (การเลือกตั้งในประเทศไทย) refers to the democratic process in which some parts of the Government of Thailand is selected. These include the House of Representatives of Thailand, the Senate of Thailand (combined to create National Assembly of Thailand), local Administrations, Governorship of Bangkok and national referendums. Thailand has so far had 25 general elections since 1933; the last election was in 2014. Voting in elections in Thailand is compulsory. All elections in Thailand are regulated by the Election Commission of Thailand.

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Elias Owen (priest)

Rev.

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Elias Wen

Fr.

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Eliza Ann Gardner

Eliza Ann Gardner (May 28, 1831 – January 4, 1922) was an African-American abolitionist and religious leader from Boston, Massachusetts.

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Elizabeth Crocker Bowers

Elizabeth Crocker Bowers (March 12, 1830 – November 6, 1895) was an American stage actress and theatrical manager.

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Elizaphan Ntakirutimana

Elizaphan Ntakirutimana (1924, in Kibuye, Rwanda – January 22, 2007 in Arusha, Tanzania) was a pastor of the Seventh-day Adventist Church in Rwanda and was the first clergyman to be convicted for a role in the 1994 Rwandan Genocide.

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Ellis Griffith (priest)

Ellis Hughes Griffith, MBE was a Welsh clergyman, most notably Archdeacon of Montgomery from 1925 until his death on 6 February 1938.

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Elmalı

Elmalı is a town and district in Antalya Province, the Mediterranean region of Turkey.

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Ely Theological College

Ely Theological College was a school in Ely, Cambridgeshire, for training clergy in the Church of England.

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Emerging church

The emerging church is a Christian movement of the late 20th and early 21st centuries that crosses a number of theological boundaries: participants are variously described as Protestant, post-Protestant, evangelical, post-evangelical, liberal, post-liberal, conservative, post-conservative, anabaptist, reformed, charismatic, neocharismatic, and post-charismatic.

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Empire and Communications

Empire and Communications is a book published in 1950 by University of Toronto professor Harold Innis.

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Empire of Brazil

The Empire of Brazil was a 19th-century state that broadly comprised the territories which form modern Brazil and (until 1828) Uruguay.

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Enemy of the people

The term enemy of the people is a designation for the political or class opponents of the subgroup in power within a larger group.

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Engagement

An engagement, betrothal, or fiancer is a promise to wed, and also the period of time between a marriage proposal and a marriage.

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Engelbrekt rebellion

The Engelbrekt rebellion was a rebellion in 1434–1436 led by Swedish nobleman Engelbrekt Engelbrektsson against Eric of Pomerania, the king of the Kalmar Union.

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English Americans

English Americans, also referred to as Anglo-Americans, are Americans whose ancestry originates wholly or partly in England, a country that is part of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.

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English coffeehouses in the 17th and 18th centuries

English coffeehouses in the 17th and 18th centuries were public social places where men would meet for conversation and commerce.

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English honorifics

In the English language, an English honorific is a form of address indicating respect.

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Entrance (liturgical)

In Eastern Orthodox and Byzantine Catholic churches, an entrance is a procession during which the clergy enter into the sanctuary through the Holy Doors.

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Eochaid ua Flannacáin

Eochaid ua Flannacáin (935–1004) was an Irish cleric and poet.

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Ephraim Kingsbury Avery

Ephraim Kingsbury Avery (December 18, 1799 – October 23, 1869) was a Methodist minister who was among the first clergymen tried for murder in the United States.

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Episcopal Diocese of Maryland

The Episcopal Diocese of Maryland forms part of Province 3 of the Episcopal Church in the United States of America.

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Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts

The Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts is one of the nine original dioceses of the Episcopal Church in the United States of America.

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Episcopal polity

An episcopal polity is a hierarchical form of church governance ("ecclesiastical polity") in which the chief local authorities are called bishops.

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Episcopal sandals

The episcopal sandals, also known as the pontifical sandals, are a Roman Catholic pontifical vestment worn by bishops when celebrating liturgical functions according to the pre-Vatican II rubrics, for example a Tridentine Solemn Pontifical Mass.

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Epistle to the Easterners

The Epistle to the Easterners is an apostolic letter sent by Pope Pius IX in 1848 to the bishops and clergy of the Orthodox Churches not in full communion with the Pope, urging them to resume communion.

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Erasmus Stourton

Erasmus Stourton (1603, Narborough, Leicestershire, England – November 1658, Walesby, Lincolnshire, England) was a clergyman and early settler to the Colony of Avalon, Newfoundland in 1627.

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Eric Corbett

Charles Eric Corbett (6 October 1917 – 6 April 2002) was a clergyman in the Church of England, who was Archdeacon of Liverpool from 1970 to 1979.

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Eric III, Duke of Saxe-Lauenburg

Eric III of Saxe-Bergedorf (mid 1330s – 1401) was the youngest son of Duke Albert IV of Saxe-Lauenburg and Beata of Schwerin (*?–before 1341*), daughter of Gunzelin VI, Count of Schwerin.

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Erik Bredal

Erik Bredal (1608 – 18 May 1672) was a Danish-born, Norwegian Lutheran Bishop.

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Erik Gnupsson

Erik Gnupsson or Eiríkr Gnúpsson, also known as Henricus (late 11th to early 12th centuries), was born in Iceland.

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Erkelenz

Erkelenz is a town in the Rhineland in western Germany that lies southwest of Mönchengladbach on the northern edge of the Cologne Lowland, halfway between the Lower Rhine region and the Lower Meuse.

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Ernest Blamires

Ernest Oswald Blamires (11 June 1881 – 6 June 1963) was a New Zealand first-class cricketer and clergyman.

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Ernest Fox Nichols

Ernest Fox Nichols (June 1, 1869 – April 29, 1924) was an American educator and physicist.

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Ernest Norman

Ernest Leland Norman (November 11, 1904 – December 6, 1971) was an American electrical engineer,Bishop, Greg, et.

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Escors

Escors or de Cors,Le grand dictionnaire historique,...

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Estates General (France)

In France under the Old Regime, the Estates General (French: États généraux) or States-General was a legislative and consultative assembly (see The Estates) of the different classes (or estates) of French subjects.

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Estates of Béarn

The Estates of Béarn are the former Provincial Estates of Béarn.

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Estates of Navarre

The Estates of Navarre (French: États de Navarre, États généraux de Navarre, Cortes de Navarre)Orpustan (n.d.), p. 9 were created in 1317 under Philip II.

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Estates of the realm

The estates of the realm, or three estates, were the broad orders of social hierarchy used in Christendom (Christian Europe) from the medieval period to early modern Europe.

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Estonia–India relations

Estonia–India relations refers to the bilateral diplomatic relations between Estonia and India.

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Ethical movement

The Ethical movement, also referred to as the Ethical Culture movement, Ethical Humanism or simply Ethical Culture, is an ethical, educational, and religious movement that is usually traced back to Felix Adler (1851–1933).

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Eugene Augustus Hoffman

Eugene Augustus Hoffman (1829 New York City - 1902) was a United States clergyman.

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Euphrates College

Euphrates College (Turkish: Fırat Koleji, Armenian: Եփրատ Գոլէճ) was a coeducational high school in the Harput region (Harput is today part of the city of Elazığ in eastern Turkey), founded and directed by American missionaries and attended mostly by the Armenian community in the region.

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European Americans

European Americans (also referred to as Euro-Americans) are Americans of European ancestry.

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European science in the Middle Ages

European science in the Middle Ages comprised the study of nature, mathematics and natural philosophy in medieval Europe.

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Evan Thomas (priest)

Evan Lorimer Thomas (21 February 1872 – 9 April 1953) was a Welsh clergyman and Professor of Welsh at St David's College, Lampeter (which later became the University of Wales, Lampeter) from 1903 to 1915.

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Evangelical Baptist Union of Ukraine

Evangelical Baptist Union of Ukraine or All-Ukrainian Union of Churches of Evangelical Christian Baptists (AUC ECB); (Всеукраїнський союз церков євангельських християн-баптистів (ВСЦ ЕХБ); Всеукраинский союз церквей евангельских христиан-баптистов (ВСЦ ЕХБ)) is a union of Baptists in Ukraine.

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Evangelical Christian Church in Canada

The Evangelical Christian Church (Christian Disciples) as an evangelical Protestant Canadian church bodyhttp://www.cmp-cpm.forces.gc.ca/pub/rc/rel/eccc-ecec-eng.asp Religions in Canada (2009) Retrieved on 17/10/09 in North America (2004) can be traced to the formal organization of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) in 1804, in Bourbon County, Kentucky under the leadership of Barton Warren Stone (1772–1844).

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Evelyn College for Women

Evelyn College for Women, often shortened to Evelyn College, was the coordinate women's college of Princeton University in Princeton, New Jersey between 1887 and 1897.

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Evelyn Hodges

Evelyn Charles Hodges (8 August 1887 – 18 March 1980) was an eminent Irish clergyman during the mid-20th century.

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Everett L. Fullam

Everett Leslie "Terry" Fullam (July 1, 1930 – March 15, 2014) was a priest, biblical scholar, and teacher who gained prominence in the Episcopal Church in the United States, and in the Anglican, Roman Catholic, and Evangelical communities worldwide for his renewal ministries from 1972 to 1998.

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Exorcism in Christianity

Exorcism in Christianity is the practice of casting out demons from a person they are believed to have possessed.

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External cardinal

In the category of the members of the College of Cardinals in the central Middle Ages (11th to 13th century), an external cardinal (as opposed to a "curial cardinal") was a Cardinal of the Holy Roman Church who did not reside in the Roman Curia, because of simultaneously being a bishop of the episcopal see other than suburbicarian, or abbot of an abbey situated outside Rome.

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Eyo Edet Okon

Eyo Edet Okon (10 June 1914–28 September 2010) fondly called Akamba Ete (Great Papa) was a Nigerian Christian clergyman and minister.

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Eze

Eze (pronounced) is an Igbo word which means king.

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F. J. Prettyman

Forrest Johnston Prettyman (April 7, 1860 - October 12, 1945) was a Methodist clergyman who served as Chaplain of the Senate from 1903 to 1904 and 1913 to 1921.

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Fabliau

A fabliau (plural fabliaux) is a comic, often anonymous tale written by jongleurs in northeast France between ca.

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Factory Acts

The Factory Acts were a series of UK labour law Acts passed by the Parliament of the United Kingdom to regulate the conditions of industrial employment.

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FakhrAfagh Parsa

FakhrAfagh Parsa (فخرآفاق پارسا),(Tehran 1898- ?), was a journalist during the Iranian Constitutional Revolution and a member of the Women's Movement in Iran.

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Farhad Ahmed Dockrat

Farhad Ahmed Dockrat is a South African cleric and businessman who has recently been listed by the UN Security Council as a terror suspect along with his cousin Junaid Ismail Dockrat for alleged links with the terrorist organization Al-Qaeda.

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Farmerville, Louisiana

Farmerville is a town in and the parish seat of Union Parish, Louisiana, United States.

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Fascia (sash)

The fascia is a sash worn by clerics and seminarians with the cassock in the Roman Catholic Church and in the Anglican Church.

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Fatemeh Karroubi

Fatemeh Karroubi (فاطمه کروبی; born 1949) is an Iranian politician and activist.

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Father (disambiguation)

Father is the male parent of a child.

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Feast of Fools

The Feast of Fools (festum fatuorum, festum stultorum) is the name given to a specific feast day celebrated by the clergy in Europe, initially in Northern France, but later more widely.

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Federico Baldissera Bartolomeo Cornaro

Painting of Cardinal Cornaro by Bernardo Strozzi (c. 1640) Federico Baldissera Bartolomeo Cornaro (16 November 1579 – 5 June 1653) was an Italian Catholic Cardinal and Patriarch of Venice.

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Federico Visconti

Federico Visconti (1617–1693) was an Italian Cardinal and Archbishop of Milan from 1681 to 1693.

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Felix Ennodius

Felix Ennodius (400 – before 461) was a Proconsul of Africa in ca 420 or 423.

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Felix of Nicosia

Saint Felix of Nicosia, O.F.M. Cap. (Felice di Nicosia; November 5, 1715 – May 31, 1787) was a Capuchin friar, and is honored as a saint in the Roman Catholic Church.

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Feminist effects on society

The feminist movement has effected change in Western society, including women's suffrage; greater access to education; more equitable pay with men; the right to initiate divorce proceedings; the right of women to make individual decisions regarding pregnancy (including access to contraceptives and abortion); and the right to own property.

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Feminist movement

The feminist movement (also known as the women's movement, or simply feminism) refers to a series of political campaigns for reforms on issues such as reproductive rights, domestic violence, maternity leave, equal pay, women's suffrage, sexual harassment, and sexual violence, all of which fall under the label of feminism and the feminist movement.

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Feminist theology

Feminist theology is a movement found in several religions, including Buddhism, Christianity, Judaism, and New Thought, to reconsider the traditions, practices, scriptures, and theologies of those religions from a feminist perspective.

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Ferdinand Hope-Grant

Ferdinand Cecil Hope-Grant (10 December 1839 – 7 May 1875) was an English clergyman and cricketer who played first-class cricket for Cambridge University and the Marylebone Cricket Club.

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Ferdinand of Portugal, Lord of Eça

Ferdinand of Portugal, later de Eza or de Eça (Ferdinand) (1378 – Eza?) was the son of Portuguese Infant João, Duke of Valencia de Campos.

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Ferghal Dubh Ó Gadhra

Ferghal Dubh Ó Gadhra, aka Father Nicholas Ó Gadhra O.S.A., Irish cleric and scribe, fl.

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Ferraiolo

The ferraiolo (also ferraiuolo, ferraiolone) is a type of cape traditionally worn by clergy in the Roman Catholic Church on formal, non-liturgical occasions.

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Feudalism

Feudalism was a combination of legal and military customs in medieval Europe that flourished between the 9th and 15th centuries.

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Feudalism in the Holy Roman Empire

Feudalism in the Holy Roman Empire was a politico-economic system of relationships between liege lords and enfeoffed vassals (or feudatories) that formed the basis of the social structure within the Holy Roman Empire during the High Middle Ages.

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Fiars Prices

Fiars Prices is an expression in old Scots law given to the average prices of each of the different sorts of grain grown in each county, as fixed annually by the sheriff, usually after the verdict of a jury.

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Ficuzza

Ficuzza is a southern Italian village and hamlet (frazione) of Corleone, a municipality in the Metropolitan City of Palermo, Sicily.

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Field hockey

Field hockey is a team game of the hockey family.

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Fielding Lucas Jr.

Fielding Lucas Jr. (1781–1854) was a cartographer, an artist and a publisher of prominence during the early 19th century.

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Fifth Estate

The Fifth Estate is a socio-cultural reference to groupings of outlier viewpoints in contemporary society, and is most associated with bloggers, journalists publishing in non-mainstream media outlets, and the social media or "social license".

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Finghin Ó Caiside

Finghin Ó Caiside, Gaelic-Irish physician, died 1322.

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Finland under Swedish rule

Finland under Swedish rule refers to the period in the history of Finland when it was a part of Sweden.

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Finnish name

In Finland, a person must have a surname and can have up to three given names.

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Finnish nobility

The Finnish nobility (Fi. Aateli, Sw. Adel) was historically a privileged class in Finland, deriving from its period as part of Sweden and the Russian Empire.

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First Council of Lyon

The First Council of Lyon (Lyon I) was the thirteenth ecumenical council, as numbered by the Catholic Church, taking place in 1245.

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First Synod of Asunción

The First Synod of Asunción was a council of the Roman Catholic Church of the Diocese of Paraguay, in 1603.

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Five Eyes

The Five Eyes, often abbreviated as FVEY, is an intelligence alliance comprising Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom and the United States.

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Flag of France

The flag of France (Drapeau français) is a tricolour flag featuring three vertical bands coloured blue (hoist side), white, and red.

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Flüchtlingspolitik (German Refugee Policies)

The term Flüchtlingspolitik, refers to the legal provisions and the handling of refugees and asylum seekers wanting to enter a country, and/or subsequently staying there for a long period of time.

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Folk religion

In religious studies and folkloristics, folk religion, popular religion, or vernacular religion comprises various forms and expressions of religion that are distinct from the official doctrines and practices of organized religion.

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Food for the Poor

Food For The Poor, Inc. (FFP) is an ecumenical Christian nonprofit organization based in Coconut Creek, Florida, United States that provides food, medicine, and shelter, among other services, to the poor in Latin America and the Caribbean.

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Fordell Castle

Fordell Castle is a restored 16th-century tower house, located north-west of Dalgety Bay and east of Dunfermline, in Fife, Scotland.

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Forest Hills, Boston

Forest Hills is a part of the Jamaica Plain neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts, United States.

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France (name)

France is both a given name and a French, Czech or Slovene surname.

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France in the Middle Ages

The Kingdom of France in the Middle Ages (roughly, from the 9th century to the middle of the 15th century) was marked by the fragmentation of the Carolingian Empire and West Francia (843–987); the expansion of royal control by the House of Capet (987–1328), including their struggles with the virtually independent principalities (duchies and counties, such as the Norman and Angevin regions) that had developed following the Viking invasions and through the piecemeal dismantling of the Carolingian Empire and the creation and extension of administrative/state control (notably under Philip II Augustus and Louis IX) in the 13th century; and the rise of the House of Valois (1328–1589), including the protracted dynastic crisis of the Hundred Years' War with the Kingdom of England (1337–1453) compounded by the catastrophic Black Death epidemic (1348), which laid the seeds for a more centralized and expanded state in the early modern period and the creation of a sense of French identity.

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France–Vietnam relations

French–Vietnamese relations started as early as the 17th century with the mission of the Jesuit father Alexandre de Rhodes.

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Frances Ridley Havergal

Frances Ridley Havergal (14 December 1836 – 3 June 1879) was an English religious poet and hymnwriter.

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Francesco Angelo Rapaccioli

Painting of Cardinal RappaccioliIdentity of subject not confirmed; may be Paolo Emilio Rondinini by Giovanni Battista Salvi da Sassoferrato. Francesco Angelo Rappaccioli (1608 – 15 May 1657) was an Italian Catholic Cardinal.

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Francis Gouldman

Francis Gouldman (c. 1607–1688/89) was a Church of England clergyman and lexicographer whose Latin-English dictionary (1664) went through several editions.

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Francis Kelley

Francis Clement Kelley (October 23, 1870 – February 1, 1948) was the second Roman Catholic Bishop of Oklahoma City, as well as an author and diplomat.

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Francis Marbury

Francis Marbury (sometimes spelled Merbury) (1555–1611) was a Cambridge-educated English cleric, schoolmaster and playwright.

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Francis Potter

Francis Potter (1594–1678) was an English painter, clergyman, Biblical commentator, and experimentalist, an early Fellow of the Royal Society.

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Francis Roberts

Francis Roberts (1609–1675) was an English puritan clergyman, author and librarian.

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Francis Ward Monck

Francis Ward Monck (born 1842) was a British clergyman and spiritualist medium who was exposed as a fraud.

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Francis X. DiLorenzo

Francis Xavier DiLorenzo (April 15, 1942 – August 17, 2017) was an American prelate of the Roman Catholic Church.

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Franciszek Nogalski

Franciszek Nogalski (16 January 1911 – 24 October 1939) was a Polish Roman Catholic priest and parochial vicar in Raciąż.

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Frank Chikane

Frank Chikane (born 3 January 1951 in Bushbuckridge, Transvaal) is a South African civil servant, writer and cleric.

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Frank Crosse

Frank Parker Crosse MC (24 October 1897 – 15 March 1979) was a British soldier and Church of England clergyman who became Dean of Grahamstown in South Africa, and was styled Frank Crosse.

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Frank Hugh Foster

Frank Hugh Foster, Ph.

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Frank Sandford

Frank Weston Sandford (October 2, 1862 – March 4, 1948)Shirley Nelson, Fair Clear and Terrible: The Story of Shiloh, Maine (Latham, New York: British American Publishing, 1989), 27.

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Franz Friedrich Fronius

Franz Friedrich Fronius (1829–1886) was a Transylvanian-Saxon botanist, ethnologist, and Lutheran cleric from Schäßburg.

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Fraser Macintosh Rose

Fraser Macintosh Rose, (3 February 1897 – 2 October 1972), known as Fraser Rose, was a physician who worked as a general practitioner (GP), and is best known for co-founding the Royal College of General Practitioners (RCGP).

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Frédéric Bintsamou

Frédéric Bintsamou (born 29 August 1964, Brazzaville) also known as Pastor Ntumi, is a Protestant clergyman and was the leader of the "semi-religious" rebel group The Ninjas which led a civil war in Congo-Brazzaville.

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Fred Kingston

Frederick William Kingston (24 December 1855 – 30 January 1933) was an English clergyman, schoolmaster and cricketer who played a few first-class cricket matches for Cambridge University and amateur sides in 1878 and 1886.

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Fred L. Lowery

Fred Lynn Lowery (born March 16, 1943) is the retired former senior pastor of the First Baptist Church of Bossier City in northwestern Louisiana, whose Sunday sermons under the title The First Word were broadcast between 1983 and 2013 on KTBS-TV, the ABC affiliate in Shreveport, and on several cable television outlets.

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Frederic John Poynton

Dr.

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Frederic Price (cricketer, born 1852)

Frederic William Stephen Price (26 February 1852 – 22 December 1937) was an English clergyman and schoolmaster, and a cricketer who played first-class cricket for Cambridge University and an England XI.

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Frederic Tobin

Frederic Tobin (5 July 1849 – 28 September 1914) was an English clergyman and cricketer who played first-class cricket for Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) and Cambridge University between 1870 and 1872.

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Frederick Byron, 10th Baron Byron

Reverend Frederick Ernest Charles Byron, 10th Baron Byron (26 March 1861 – 6 June 1949) was an Anglican clergyman, nobleman, peer, politician, and the tenth Baron Byron, as a grandson of Admiral George Anson Byron, 7th Baron Byron, who was the cousin of Romantic poet and writer George Gordon Byron, 6th Baron Byron.

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Frederick Christian Schaeffer

Frederick Christian Schaeffer (born in Germantown, Pennsylvania, 12 November 1792; died in New York City, 26 March 1832) was a Lutheran clergyman of the United States.

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Frederick David Schaeffer

Frederick David Schaeffer (15 November 1760 – 27 January 1836) was a German-American Lutheran clergyman.

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Frederick Gell

Frederick Gell (24 September 1820 – 25 March 1902) was an eminent Anglican clergyman and Bishop of Madras 1861-1899.

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Frederick Hervey, 4th Earl of Bristol

Frederick Augustus Hervey, 4th Earl of Bristol PC DD FRS (1 August 1730 – 8 July 1803), was an 18th-century Anglican prelate.

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Frederick IV of Oettingen

Count Frederick IV of Oettingen (d. 19 September 1415 in Eichstätt) was archbishop of Eichstätt from 1383 until his death.

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Frederick Jellicoe

Frederick Gilbert Gardiner Jellicoe (24 February 1858 – 29 July 1927) was an English first-class cricketer who played as a right-handed batsman and bowled left-arm roundarm slow-medium.

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Frederick Keppel

Frederick Keppel (19 January 1728 – 27 December 1777) was a Church of England clergyman, Bishop of Exeter.

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Frederick Long

Frederick Edward Long (14 August 1815 – 8 April 1903) was an English clergyman and a cricketer who played first-class cricket for Cambridge University and Cambridge Town Club between 1836 and 1841.

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Frederick Poland

Frederick William Poland (10 October 1858 – ?1940) was an English clergyman and a cricketer who played in one first-class cricket match for Cambridge University in 1881.

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Frederick Temple

Frederick Temple (30 November 1821 – 23 December 1902) was an English academic, teacher, churchman, and Archbishop of Canterbury, from 1896 until his death.

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Frederick Wedge

Frederick Rhinaldo Wedge (July 31, 1880 – March 3, 1953) was an American boxer who fought over 70 professional bouts as "Kid" Wedge; an ordained clergyman, who pastored churches in Nebraska, Wisconsin, and California for the Presbyterian, Baptist, and Congregational denominations; a Chautauqua lecturer; an author of several books, including The Fighting Parson of Barbary Coast; and an educator, who taught at Pasadena College, and high schools in Arizona and California, whose admission into the Graduate School of Education of Harvard University in January 1922, and his January 1929 second marriage were both a national cause célèbre in the USA.

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Frederick William Faber

Frederick William Faber C.O. (28 June 1814 – 26 September 1863) was a noted English hymn writer and theologian, who converted from Anglicanism to the Catholic priesthood.

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Frederick William II of Prussia

Frederick William II (Friedrich Wilhelm II.; 25 September 1744 – 16 November 1797) was King of Prussia from 1786 until his death.

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Frederick Williams (priest)

Frederick Henry Williams (1826 – 22 August 1885) was a 19th Century Anglican clergyman, considered at the time to be a controversial figure.

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Free Judges

The Free Judges were a class of land owners in the County of Kladsko (Glatz, Kłodzko) who belonged to the Third Estate.

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Free Protestant Episcopal Church

The Free Protestant Episcopal Church - FPEC, now called The Anglican Free Communion, was formed in England, on November 2, 1897, from the merger of three smaller churches.

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Freeborn Garrettson

Freeborn Garrettson (1752 in Maryland – September 26, 1827 in New York City) was an American clergyman.

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Frei Galvão

Anthony of St.

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French Revolution

The French Revolution (Révolution française) was a period of far-reaching social and political upheaval in France and its colonies that lasted from 1789 until 1799.

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French theatre of the late 18th century

The French theatre of the late 18th century functioned as a forum for political expression and debate; during this period, society and art became highly politicised.

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Frock

Frock has been used since Middle English as the name for an article of clothing for men and women.

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Fundamentalist–Modernist Controversy

The Fundamentalist–Modernist Controversy was a major schism that originated in the 1920s and '30s within the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America.

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Fyresdal

Fyresdal is a municipality in Telemark county, Norway.

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G. E. Lowman

Guerdon Elmer Lowman, more familiarly G. E. Lowman (November 16, 1897 – January 18, 1965) was an American Christian clergyman and a pioneering international radio evangelist beginning in 1930, following a successful business career.

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G. Earl Guinn

George Earl Guinn, known as G. Earl Guinn (August 21, 1912 – June 7, 2004), was from 1951 to 1975 the fifth president of Southern Baptist-affiliated Louisiana College in Pineville, Louisiana.

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Gabriel Biel

Gabriel Biel, C.R.S.A. (1420 to 1425 – 7 December 1495), was a German scholastic philosopher and member of the Canons Regular of the Congregation of Windesheim, who were the clerical counterpart to the Brethren of the Common Life.

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Gabriel Wilensky

Gabriel Wilensky (born April 23, 1964) is an American author, software developer and entrepreneur.

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Gabriel-Jacques de Salignac de La Motte, marquis de Fénelon

Gabriel-Jacques de Salignac de La Motte (25 July 1688 – 2 October 1746) styled vicomte de Saint-Julien later marquis de Fénelon, was an 18th-century French military commander and diplomat.

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Gabriele Falloppio

Gabriele Falloppio (1523 – October 9, 1562), often known by his Latin name Fallopius, was one of the most important anatomists and physicians of the sixteenth century.

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Galeote Pereira

Galeote Pereira (sometimes also Galiote Pereira) was a 16th-century Portuguese soldier of fortune.

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Gallus Anonymus

Gallus Anonymus (Polonized variant: Gall Anonim) is the name traditionally given to the anonymous author of Gesta principum Polonorum (Deeds of the Princes of the Poles), composed in Latin about 1115.

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Gangsta rap

Gangsta rap or Gangster rap is a style of hip hop characterized by themes and lyrics that generally emphasize the "gangsta" lifestyle.

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Garden roses

Garden roses are predominantly hybrid roses that are grown as ornamental plants in private or public gardens.

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Gary McCauley

Gary Francis McCauley (born 1 April 1940 in Cochrane, Ontario; died 13 May 2018 in Ottawa) was a Liberal party member of the House of Commons of Canada.

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Gautier le Leu

Gautier le Leu (born 1210?), sometimes referred to as Gautier le Long, was a French minstrel who wrote in the middle of the 13th century.

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Gedewon

Gedewon Makonnen, called Gedewon (1939–1995), was an Ethiopian artist.

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General Conference (United Methodist Church)

The General Conference of the United Methodist Church is the denomination's top legislative body for all matters affecting the United Methodist connection.

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General Convention of the Episcopal Church in the United States of America

The General Convention is the primary governing and legislative body of the Episcopal Church in the United States of America.

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General Synod of the Anglican Church of Canada

The General Synod of the Anglican Church of Canada is the chief governing and legislative body of the Anglican Church of Canada (ACC), the sole Canadian representative of the Anglican Communion.

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General Synod of the Church of England

The General Synod is the deliberative and legislative body of the Church of England.

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Genesis Group

The Genesis Group is an auxiliary organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS church) for African-American members and their families.

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Genseric

Genseric (c. 400 – 25 January 477), also known as Gaiseric or Geiseric (Gaisericus; reconstructed Vandalic: *Gaisarīks), was King of the Vandals and Alans (428–477) who established the Vandal Kingdom and was one of the key players in the troubles of the Western Roman Empire in the 5th century.

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Gentry

The gentry (genterie; Old French gentil: "high-born") are the "well-born, genteel, and well-bred people" of the social class below the nobility of a society.

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Geoffrey de Turville

Geoffrey de Turville (died 1250) was an English-born judge and cleric in thirteenth century Ireland, who held office as Bishop of Ossory and Lord Chancellor of Ireland.

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Geoffrey Greig

Geoffrey George Fenner Greig (15 August 1897 – 24 October 1960) was an English first-class cricketer.

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Georg Christoph Lichtenberg

Georg Christoph Lichtenberg (1 July 1742 – 24 February 1799) was a German physicist, satirist, and Anglophile.

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George Aaron Barton

Reverend George Aaron Barton, Ph.D. (12 November 1859 – 28 June 1942) was a Canadian author, Episcopal clergyman, and professor of Semitic languages and the history of religion.

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George B. Bacon

George Blagden Bacon (May 22, 1836 in New Haven, Connecticut – September 15, 1876) was a United States clergyman and author of texts on religious issues.

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George Barker Stevens

George Barker Stevens (July 13, 1854 - June 22, 1906) was an American Congregational and Presbyterian clergyman, theologian, author, educator, and Yale Divinity School professor.

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George Browne, 8th Viscount Montagu

George Samuel Browne, 8th Viscount Montagu (26 June 1769 – October 1793) was an English nobleman.

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George C. Pidgeon

George Campbell Pidgeon (March 2, 1872 – June 15, 1971) was a Christian minister, first in the Presbyterian Church in Canada and then in the United Church of Canada, as well as the last Moderator of the Presbyterian Church before amalgamation and the first Moderator of the newly formed United Church of Canada.

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George Clinton (musician)

George Edward Clinton (born July 22, 1941) is an American singer, songwriter, bandleader, and record producer.

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George D. Herron

George Davis Herron (1862–1925) was an American clergyman, lecturer, writer, and Christian socialist activist.

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George Douglas, 2nd Earl of Dumbarton

George Douglas, 2nd Earl of Dumbarton (1687–1749) was a Scottish nobleman and soldier.

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George Dupuis (cricketer, born 1835)

George Richard Dupuis (23 March 1835 – 30 January 1912) was an English schoolmaster and clergyman and a cricketer who played in eight first-class cricket matches, all but one for Cambridge University between 1854 and 1857.

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George Edmands Merrill

George Edmands Merrill (1846–1908) was an American Baptist clergyman and educator, born at Charlestown, Mass. After graduating at Harvard University in 1869 and at Newton Theological Institution in 1872, he was pastor of Baptist churches in Massachusetts at Springfield (1872–77), Salem (1877–85), and Newton (1890–99).

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George Fisher Linfield

The Rev.

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George Francis Houck

George Francis Houck (&ndash) was Chancellor of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Cleveland.

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George Frederick Nott

George Frederick Nott (1767–1841) was an English author and a Church of England clergyman.

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George Garrett (inventor)

George William Littler Garrett (4 July 1852 – 26 February 1902) was a British clergyman and inventor who pioneered submarine design.

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George Gutteres

George Gilbert Gutteres (11 October 1859 – 2 March 1898) was an English first-class cricketer.

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George Haliburton (bishop of Aberdeen)

George Haliburton (b. c. 1635 – 1715, Halton, Angus) was a Scottish cleric and Jacobite.

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George Hendric Houghton

George Hendric Houghton (February 1, 1820 – November 17, 1897) was an American Protestant Episcopal clergyman.

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George Ingram, 8th Viscount of Irvine

George Ingram, 8th Viscount Irvine (or Irwin) (1694-1763) was an English clergyman and peer in the Peerage of Scotland.

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George IV of Georgia

George IV, also known as Lasha Giorgi (ლაშა გიორგი) (1191–1223), of the Bagrationi Dynasty, was a king of Georgia from 1213 to 1223.

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George Kerr (American football, born 1919)

George Kerr (February 14, 1919 – January 23, 1983) was an American football player and later a member of the catholic clergy of Boston.

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George L. Leech

George Leo Leech (May 21, 1890 – March 12, 1985) was an American prelate of the Roman Catholic Church.

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George Lauder of the Bass

Sir George Lauder of the Bass, Knight (died 27 June 1611, on the Bass Rock), was a cleric, Privy Counsellor, and Member of the Scottish Parliament.

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George Ottey

George Philip Ottey (9 October 1824 – 17 December 1891) was an English clergyman and educationalist and a cricketer who played first-class cricket for Cambridge University from 1844 to 1847.

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George Peake

Not to be confused with Cleveland, Ohio's first permanent African-American settler, George Peake George Eden Frederick Peake (6 March 1846 – 24 June 1901) was an English clergyman and cricketer who played first-class cricket for Somerset in 1885.

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George Peter Thompson

George Peter Thompson (1819 – 1889) was a Liberian-born educator, clergyman and pioneer missionary of the Basel Evangelical Missionary Society of Switzerland. He was also the first African to be educated in Europe by the mission and subsequently, the first African to be consecrated and ordained a Basel missionary.

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George Pretyman Tomline

Sir George Pretyman Tomline, 5th Baronet (born George Pretyman; 9 October 1750 – 14 November 1827) was an English clergyman, theologian, Bishop of Lincoln and then Bishop of Winchester, and confidant of William Pitt the Younger.

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George Raynor (cricketer)

George Sydney Raynor (9 October 1852 – 1 September 1887) was an English clergyman, a schoolmaster and a cricketer who played in first-class cricket matches for Cambridge University in 1872 and 1873.

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George Stanhope

George Stanhope (5 March 1660 – 18 March 1728) was a clergyman of the Church of England, rising to be Dean of Canterbury and a Royal Chaplain.

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George Washington Truett

George Washington Truett, also known as George W. Truett (May 6, 1867 – July 7, 1944), was an American clergyman who was the pastor of the First Baptist Church of Dallas, Texas, from 1897 until 1944, and the president of the Southern Baptist Convention from 1927 to 1929.

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George Willes (cricketer)

George Edward Willes (16 August 1844 – 8 September 1901) was an English clergyman and a cricketer who played in five first-class cricket matches for Cambridge University in 1865 and 1866.

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Georgian scripts

The Georgian scripts are the three writing systems used to write the Georgian language: Asomtavruli, Nuskhuri and Mkhedruli.

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Gerard Walschap

Jacob Lodewijk Gerard, Baron Walschap (Londerzeel-St. Jozef, 9 July 1898 – Antwerp, 25 October 1989), was a Belgian writer.

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Gerhard Brandt Naeseth

Gerhard Brandt Naeseth (April 14, 1913 – June 10, 1994) was an American librarian and genealogist who specialized in the field of Norwegian-American immigration.

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German Church, Liverpool

The German Church (Deutsche Kirche) in Liverpool is in Bedford Street South/ Canning Street and is part of the.

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German Opačić

German Opačić (Герман Опачић; August 8, 1857 – January 18, 1899) was the Serbian Orthodox cleric and the last Bishop of Bačka in the 19th-century.

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German Peasants' War

The German Peasants' War, Great Peasants' War or Great Peasants' Revolt (Deutscher Bauernkrieg) was a widespread popular revolt in some German-speaking areas in Central Europe from 1524 to 1525.

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Germanic peoples

The Germanic peoples (also called Teutonic, Suebian, or Gothic in older literature) are an Indo-European ethno-linguistic group of Northern European origin.

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Germanus (patricius)

Germanus, called "patricius" (Greek: πατρίκιος), was a leading member of the Byzantine Senate during the reign of Maurice.

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Gewargis III

Mar Gewargis III, Catholicos-Patriarch of the Assyrian Church of the East (Classical Syriac:; born Warda Daniel Sliwa on 23 November 1941) is the current Catholicos-Patriarch of the Assyrian Church of the East.

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Ghorbanali Dorri-Najafabadi

Ghorbanali Dorri-Najafabadi (قربانعلی دری نجف‌آبادی.; born 1950) is an Iranian politician and cleric, previously the Minister of Intelligence of Islamic Republic of Iran.

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Ghost hunting

Ghost hunting is the process of investigating locations that are reported to be haunted by ghosts.

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Gideon Blackburn

Gideon Blackburn (August 27, 1772 – August 23, 1838) was an American Presbyterian clergyman, educator and missionary to Cherokee and Creek nations, and college president.

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Gil Vicente

Gil Vicente (c.1465 – c. 1536), called the Trobadour, was a Portuguese playwright and poet who acted in and directed his own plays.

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Gilbert de Biham

Gilbert de Biham was an English medieval churchman, singer, and university chancellor.

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Gilbert Holmes

Gilbert Holmes (1772-1846) was a clergyman in the Church of Ireland during the late 18th century and the first four decades of the nineteenth.

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Gilbert Poor

Gilbert H. Poor (October 18, 1866 - ?) was a homesteader, newspaper publisher and machinist who served as a Socialist member of the Common Council and of the Wisconsin State Assembly.

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Gilgamesh

Gilgamesh was a historical king of the Sumerian city-state of Uruk, a major hero in ancient Mesopotamian mythology, and the protagonist of the Epic of Gilgamesh, an epic poem written in Akkadian during the late second millennium BC.

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Gilla an Choimded Ó Duillénnáin

Gilla an Choimded Ó Duillénnáin, Irish cleric, died 1229/30.

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Gilla na Naemh Ua Duinn

Gilla na Naemh Ua Duinn (1102 – 17 December 1160) was an Irish poet, historian, and cleric.

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Gioacchino Muccin

Gioacchino Muccin (25 November 1899 – 27 August 1991) was an Italian Roman Catholic clergyman who became the bishop of the Diocese of Belluno-Feltre.

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Giovanni Battista Canaveri

Giovanni Battista Canaveri (1753-1811) was an Italian nobleman, Bishop of Biella and Vercelli, first Aumônier of Madame Letizia.

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Giovanni Battista Gallizioli

Giovanni Battista Gallizioli or Gallicciolli (17 May 1733 – 12 May 1806) was an Italian philosopher, hebraist, orientalist, historian, archaeologist and philologist, catholic priest and citizen of the Republic of Venice.

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Giovanni Poggio

Giovanni Poggio (also written Poggi) (26 January 1493 – 12 February 1556) was an Italian Roman Catholic bishop and cardinal.

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Girolamo Rusticucci

Girolamo Rusticucci (1537 – 14 June 1603) was an Italian Roman Catholic cardinal and bishop.

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Girolamo Zanchi

Girolamo Zanchi (Latin "Hieronymus Zanchius," thus Anglicized to "Jerome Zanchi/Zanchius"; February 2, 1516 – November 19, 1590) was an Italian Protestant Reformation clergyman and educator who influenced the development of Reformed theology during the years following John Calvin's death.

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Giuseppe Gioachino Belli

Giuseppe Francesco Antonio Maria Gioachino Raimondo Belli (7 September 1791 – 21 December 1863) was an Italian poet, famous for his sonnets in Romanesco, the dialect of Rome.

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Gloriosam Reginam

Gloriosam Reginam (December 8, 1955) is an Apostolic Letter of Pope Pius XII to the Polish episcopate, to protest against the persecution of the Church in Poland, and, to commemorate the 300th anniversary of Jasna Góra, the Polish sanctuary of the Virgin Mary.

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God

In monotheistic thought, God is conceived of as the Supreme Being and the principal object of faith.

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God in Islam

In Islam, God (Allāh, contraction of الْإِلٰه al-ilāh, lit. "the god") is indivisible, the God, the absolute one, the all-powerful and all-knowing ruler of the universe, and the creator of everything in existence within the universe.

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God Spede the Plough

"God Spede the Plough" (original: "God spede ƿe plouȝ: & sende us kǫꝛne Inolk") is the name of an early 16th-century manuscript poem which borrows twelve stanzas from Geoffrey Chaucer's Monk's Tale.

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Godfridius Dellius

Godefridus Dellius (baptized 28 October 1654, Cothen – 1738) was a clergyman of the Dutch Reformed Church active in and around Albany, New York during the late 17th century and up to 1699.

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Godless: The Church of Liberalism

Godless: The Church of Liberalism is a book by best-selling author and conservative columnist Ann Coulter, published in 2006.

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Gods of Time

Gods of Time was a free real-time 2D browser based MMORPG (Massively multiplayer online role-playing game) with the goal of emulating downloadable MMORPGs, but with simpler graphics and a guest friendly system where players could play without creating an account until after they had finished playing.

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Golden Isles of Georgia

The Golden Isles of Georgia are a group of four barrier islands and the mainland port city of Brunswick on the 100-mile-long coast of the U.S. state of Georgia on the Atlantic Ocean.

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Golden Rose

The Golden Rose is a gold ornament, which popes of the Catholic Church have traditionally blessed annually.

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Goliard

The goliards were a group of generally young clergy in Europe who wrote satirical Latin poetry in the 12th and 13th centuries of the Middle Ages.

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Gormgal of Ardoileán

Gormgal of Ardoileán, Irish cleric, died 1017.

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Gottfried Wilhelm Fink

Gottfried Wilhelm Fink (8 March 1783 – 27 August 1846) was a German composer, music theorist, poet, and a Protestant clergyman.

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Gottfried, Bishop of Passau

Bistumswappen of Passau.Gottfried von Passau also Gottfried I (- 16 April 1285 in Nuremberg) was the 41st bishop of Passau from 1283 to 1285.

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Gottlieb Ababio Adom

Gottlieb Ababio Adom (17 November 1904 – 20 June 1979) was a Ghanaian educator, journalist, editor and Presbyterian clergyman who was the Editor of the Christian Messenger from 1966 to 1970.

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Grady C. Cothen

Grady C. Cothen, Sr. (2 August 1920 – 19 May 2017), was a pastor, state convention executive secretary-director for the Southern Baptist Convention, author, university president, and seminary president.

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Grand Duchy of Baden

The Grand Duchy of Baden (Großherzogtum Baden) was a state in the southwest German Empire on the east bank of the Rhine.

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Gravedigger

A gravedigger is a cemetery worker who is responsible for digging a grave prior to a funeral service.

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Great chain of being

The Great Chain of Being is a strict hierarchical structure of all matter and life, thought in medieval Christianity to have been decreed by God.

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Great Hospital

The Great Hospital is a medieval hospital that has been serving the people of Norwich, Norfolk, England, since the 13th century.

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Great Plague of London

The Great Plague, lasting from 1665 to 1666, was the last major epidemic of the bubonic plague to occur in England.

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Greek Old Calendarists

Greek Old Calendarists (Greek: Παλαιοημερολογίτες, Paleoimerologites), sometimes abbreviated as GOC ("Genuine Orthodox Christians"), are groups of Old Calendarist Orthodox Christians that remained committed to the traditional Orthodox practice and are not in communion with many other Orthodox churches such as the Orthodox Church of Greece, the Patriarchate of Constantinople, or the Church of Cyprus.

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Greek Orthodox Patriarchate of Alexandria and all Africa

The Greek Orthodox Patriarchate of Alexandria and all Africa (Greek: Πατριαρχεῖον Ἀλεξανδρείας καὶ πάσης Ἀφρικῆς, Patriarcheîon Alexandreías kaì pásēs Aphrikês) is an autocephalous Byzantine Rite jurisdiction of the Eastern Orthodox Church, having the African continent as its canonical territory.

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Greenways School

Greenways School, also known as Greenways Preparatory School, was an English prep school, founded at Bognor Regis, Sussex, before the Second World War.

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Gregorio Aglipay

Gregorio Aglipay Cruz y Labayan (Gregorius Aglipay; Filipino: Gregorio Labayan Aglipay Cruz; 5 May 1860 – 1 September 1940) was a former Catholic priest who became the first head of the Iglesia Filipina Independiente, an independent Catholic Church in the form of a national church in the Philippines.

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Gregory Yong

Gregory Yong Sooi Ngean D.D., J.C.D. (20 May 1925 – 28 June 2008) was the second, and the first local, Roman Catholic Archbishop of Singapore.

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Gregory's Chronicle

Gregory's Chronicle, the Chronicle of London, or MS Edgerton 1995, is the name given to a fifteenth-century English chronicle.

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Grenoble

Grenoble is a city in southeastern France, at the foot of the French Alps where the river Drac joins the Isère.

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Gresham's School

Gresham’s School is an independent coeducational boarding school in Holt in Norfolk, England.

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Gresham, Norfolk

Gresham is a village and civil parish in North Norfolk, England, five miles (8 km) south-west of Cromer.

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Grigore Moisil

Grigore Constantin Moisil (10 January 1906 – 21 May 1973) was a Romanian mathematician, computer pioneer, and member of the Romanian Academy.

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Grigori Rasputin

Grigori Yefimovich Rasputin (Григо́рий Ефи́мович Распу́тин; –) was a Russian mystic and self-proclaimed holy man who befriended the family of Tsar Nicholas II, the last monarch of Russia, and gained considerable influence in late imperial Russia.

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Grotesque body

The grotesque body is a concept, or literary trope, put forward by Russian literary critic Mikhail Bakhtin in his study of François Rabelais' work.

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Grover Cleveland presidential campaign, 1884

The 1884 election was the first Presidential campaign in which Grover Cleveland participated and the first of two nonconsecutive terms that he won.

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Guillaume Dubois

Guillaume Dubois (6 September 1656 – 10 August 1723) was a French cardinal and statesman.

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Gunpowder Plot

The Gunpowder Plot of 1605, in earlier centuries often called the Gunpowder Treason Plot or the Jesuit Treason, was a failed assassination attempt against King James I of England and VI of Scotland by a group of provincial English Catholics led by Robert Catesby.

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Gustav Dietrichson

Gustav Johan Fredrik Dietrichson (8 April 1855 – 19 March 1922) was a Norwegian theologian and priest.

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Gustav von Rohden

Gustav von Rohden (22 April 1855, Barmen – 9 May 1942, Ballenstedt) was a German clergyman and the author of books on various social issues (the welfare of former prisoners, sexual ethics, etc.). From 1882 he served as a pastor in Helsingfors, Finland.

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Gyosei International School

The is a school located in Yana, Kisarazu City, Chiba Prefecture, Japan.

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H. Daudi Mokinyo

Haron Daudi Mokinyo ole Loolpisia (1912 - 19 July 1982) is the first Maasai clergy of the Anglican Church of Kenya, ordained in 1951 in All Saints Cathedral Nairobi.

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Habitants

Habitants were French settlers and the inhabitants of French origin who farmed the land along the two shores of the St. Lawrence River and Gulf in what is the present-day Province of Quebec in Canada.

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Hacı Halil Efendi

Haci Halil Efendi was the 137th Ottoman Sheikh ul-Islam from 1819 until 1821.

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Hadi Khamenei

Hojatoleslam Hadi Khamenei (born 1947) is an Iranian reformist politician, mojtahed and linguist.

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Hairdresser

A hairdresser is a person whose occupation is to cut or style hair in order to change or maintain a person's image.

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Hajar Khatoon Mosque

Hajar Khatoon Mosque (in Kurdish: مزگت هاجه رخاتوون, in Persian: مسجد هاجرخاتون) is architecturally a unique and ancient Muslim mosque (now a tourist destination) in the city of Sanandaj in Kurdistan Province, Iran.

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Haji-Mirza Hassan Roshdieh

Haji Mirza Hassan Tabrizi (میرزا حسن تبریزی; July 4, 1851, Tabriz – December 12, 1944, Qom), famously known as Hassan Roshdieh (حسن رشدیه), was an Iranian cleric, teacher, politician, and journalist.

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Hallowed Ground (film)

Hallowed Ground is a 2007 American horror film directed by David Benullo.

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Hamble James Leacock

Hamble James Leacock (1795–1856) was an African missionary.

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Hamoud al Aqla al Shuebi

Hamoud al-Aqla al-Shuebi (حمود العقلاء الشعيبي see below for different transliterations) (died late 2001) was a Saudi-born Islamic cleric.

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Hamzah Haz

Hamzah Haz (born 15 February 1940 in Ketapang, West Kalimantan) is an Indonesian politician.

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Han Dingxiang

Han Dingxiang (May 17, 1937 – September 9, 2007) was an underground Roman Catholic bishop of Yongnian, a division of Hebei province, in China.

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Hank Mason

Henry Mason (born June 19, 1931) is an American former professional baseball player.

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Hans Bohm

Hans Böhm, often known as the Drummer of Niklashausen (died 1476), was born in the small village of Helmstadt in the south-central region of Germany known as Franconia was a religious revolutionary.

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Hans Jensen Blom

Hans Jensen Blom (19 May 1812 – 13 April 1875) was a Norwegian politician and clergyman.

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Hans Olufsson

Hans Olufsson (probably born ca. 1495–1500, died 18 September 1570 in Oslo) was a Norwegian high-ranking cleric and nobleman during the 16th century.

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Hans Schack

Hans Schack, (28 October 1608 – 27 February 1676), was a member of the north German noble family Schack, who after many years in French service, entered the Danish service, made major contributions during the war with Sweden, and loyally supported Frederick III when he overthrew the Danish constitution.

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Happy Science

, formerly known as The Institute for Research in Human Happiness, is a controversial new religious and spiritual movement, founded in Japan on 6 October 1986 by Ryuho Okawa, that is widely criticized as a cult.

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Harcourt Lees

Sir Harcourt Lees (29 November 1776 – 7 March 1852 in Blackrock, near Dublin) was an Irish clergyman and political pamphleteer on behalf of Protestant Ascendancy in Ireland.

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Harold Bradfield

Harold William Bradfield, (20 September 1898 - 1 May 1960) was an Anglican clergyman who served as Bishop of Bath and Wells from 1946 to 1960.

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Harold Monaghan

Harold Wyatt Monaghan (7 October 1886 – 15 October 1958) was a New Zealand first-class cricketer and a clergyman in the Anglican Church.

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Harold Williams (linguist)

Harold Whitmore Williams (6 April 1876 – 18 November 1928) was a New Zealand journalist, foreign editor of The Times and polyglot who is considered to have been one of the most accomplished polyglots in history.

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Harry Heath

Henry Francis Trafford ("Harry") Heath (19 December 1885 – 9 September 1967) was an Australian cricketer and clergyman.

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Harry Stedman

Harry Charles Plumer Stedman, sometimes called Henry, (11 October 1848 – 30 July 1904) was an English clergyman and cricketer who played in four first-class cricket matches for Cambridge University and the Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) in 1871.

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Hartford, Arkansas

Hartford is a city in Sebastian County, Arkansas, United States.

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Harthacnut I of Denmark

Harthacnut or Cnut I (Hardeknud) (born c. 880) was a semi-legendary King of Denmark.

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Hartley Victoria College

Hartley Victoria College was founded in Manchester as a Theological College for training clergy for the Primitive Methodist Ministry in 1881.

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Hasan Čengić

Hasan Čengić (born 30 August 1957) is the former Deputy Prime Minister and Defense Minister of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

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Hashem Hashemzadeh Herisi

Ayatollah Hashem Hashemzadeh Herisi (هاشم هاشم‌زاده هریسی, was born 1938 in Heris, East Azerbaijan) is an Iranian Shiite cleric and politician.

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Hassan Ameli

Hujjat al-Islam Seyed Hassan Ameli Kalkhoran (سید حسن عاملی, born 1962 in Ardabil) is an Iranian Shiite cleric, author and politician.

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Hassan Namazi

Hassan Namazi (حسن نمازی, born in Qum from Azeri parents) is an Iranian Shiite cleric and politician.

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Hassan Raza Ghadeeri

Ayatollah Hassan Raza Ghadeeri (born 1952) is one of the famous ayatollahs of Pakistan.

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Hatfield College, Durham

Hatfield College is a college of Durham University in England.

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Hawza

A Hawza (Arabic/Persian: حوزة) or ḥawza ʻilmiyya (Arabic/Persian: حوزة علمیة) is a seminary where Shi'a Muslim clerics are trained.

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Hayes Mission School

Hayes Mission School is a co-educational Protestant school located in the Bomi County section of Zohn and Gowein Township in Liberia.

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Headgear

Headgear, headwear or headdress is the name given to any element of clothing which is worn on one's head.

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Health and Morals of Apprentices Act 1802

The Health and Morals of Apprentices Act 1802 (42 Geo III c.73), sometimes known as the Factory Act 1802, was an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom designed to improve conditions for apprentices working in cotton mills.

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Helmet (heraldry)

In heraldic achievements, the helmet or helm is situated above the shield and bears the torse and crest.

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Henderson County, Kentucky

Henderson County is a county located in the U.S. state of Kentucky.

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Henning Stockfleth

Henning Stockfleth (c.1610 – 5 February 1664) was a Norwegian cleric and Bishop of Oslo.

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Henri Alain Liogier

Henri Alain Liogier, also known as Brother Alain (January 31, 1916 – November 9, 2009) was a French botanist, educator, and member of the clergy based out of Texas, United States.

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Henri d'Angoulême

Henri de Valois, duc d'Angoulême (1551 in Aix-la-Chapelle – 1586 in Aix-en-Provence), sometimes called "Henri, bâtard de Valois" or "Henri de France", was a Légitimé de France, cleric, and military commander during the Wars of Religion.

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Henri de Bernières

Henri de Bernières (c. 1635 – 1700) was a French Catholic priest who served as the first resident pastor of Quebec in France's American colony of New France.

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Henri de Lubac

Henri-Marie Joseph Sonier de Lubac (20 February 1896 – 4 September 1991), known as Henri de Lubac, was a French Jesuit priest who became a cardinal of the Catholic Church and is considered one of the most influential theologians of the 20th century.

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Henri Grégoire

Henri Jean-Baptiste Grégoire (4 December 1750 – 28 May 1831), often referred to as Abbé Grégoire, was a French Roman Catholic priest, constitutional bishop of Blois and a revolutionary leader.

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Henri Pinault

Henri-Marie-Ernest-Désiré Pinault (September 7, 1904 – February 24, 1987) was the Roman Catholic bishop of Chengdu from 1949 until 1983, four years before his death.

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Henry (bishop of Finland)

Henry (Henrik; Henrik; Henricus; died 20 January 1156.) was a medieval English clergyman.

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Henry Alington

The Reverend Henry Giles Alington (25 July 1837 – 2 December 1928) was an English cricketer and clergyman.

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Henry Bernard Carpenter

Henry Bernard Carpenter (April 22, 1840 – July 17, 1890), was an Irish Unitarian clergyman, orator, author, and poet.

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Henry Biron

Henry Brydges Biron (13 June 1835 – 7 April 1915) was an English clergyman and amateur cricketer.

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Henry Blamires

Henry Lawrence Blamires (17 April 1871 – 18 August 1965) was a New Zealand first-class cricketer and clergyman.

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Henry Cadwallader Adams

Reverend Henry Cadwallader Adams (4 November 1817 – 17 October 1899) was a 19th-century English cleric, schoolmaster and writer of children's novels.

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Henry Davis (cleric)

Henry Davis was a Christian cleric born in East Hampton, New York, on September 15, 1771.

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Henry de Maunsfeld

Henry de Maunsfeld DD (also Henry Mansfield, Maunsfeild, Maunsfield, Maunnesfeld, Mammesfeld, or Maymysfeld; died 1328) was an English medieval theologian, philosopher, churchman, college fellow, and university chancellor.

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Henry de Stanton

Henry de Stanton (also Staunton) was an English medieval Canon law jurist, judge, churchman, and university chancellor.

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Henry Fulton

Henry Fulton (1761 – 17 November 1840) was an Irish-Australian clergyman and schoolmaster.

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Henry Guthrie

Henry Guthrie (c. 1600 – 1676) was a 17th-century Scottish historian and cleric.

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Henry Harpur-Crewe

Henry Harpur-Crewe (1828–1883) was an English clergyman and naturalist.

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Henry Honywood Dombrain

Henry Honywood Dombrain (1818–1905) was a British botanist, mycologist and cleric who specialised in the study of ornamental flowering plants.

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Henry Hunnings

Henry Hunnings (25 July 1842 – 4 May 1886) was a British clergyman and inventor.

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Henry IV of Sayn

Henry IV of Sayn (Heinrich IV.), Lord of Homburg, Montclair and Meinsberg (1539 – 17 January 1606) was the last Count of Sayn-Sayn and the last male heir of the Sayn-Sponheim family.

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Henry J. Mansell

Henry Joseph Mansell (born October 10, 1937) is an American prelate of the Roman Catholic Church.

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Henry Moore (biographer)

Henry Moore (1751–1844) was an English Wesleyan minister and biographer.

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Henry Morton Dexter

Henry Morton Dexter (1846–1910) was an American clergyman, historian, and editor.

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Henry of Latvia

Henry of Latvia (Henricus de Lettis, Heinrich von Lettland, Latviešu Indriķis, Läti Henrik; before 1188, Magdeburg, Landgraviate of Thuringia – after 1259 in Papendorf, Livonia (currently Rubene, Kocēni parish, Kocēni Municipality, Latvia)), also known in the English speaking world as Henry of Livonia, was a priest, missionary and historian.

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Henry Parker (cricketer)

Henry Parker (3 August 1819 – 20 October 1901) was an English clergyman and a cricketer who played first-class cricket for Cambridge University, the Cambridge Town Club, Kent and other amateur teams between 1839 and 1854.

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Henry Phillpotts

Henry Phillpotts (6 May 177818 September 1869), often called "Henry of Exeter", was the Anglican Bishop of Exeter from 1830 to 1869.

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Henry Robinson (bishop)

Henry Robinson (c. 1553 – 19 June 1616) was an English cleric who served as Bishop of Carlisle from 1598 to 1616.

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Henry Sweetser Burrage

Henry Sweetser Burrage (7 January 1837, Fitchburg, Massachusetts - 9 March 1926) was a United States clergyman, editor and author.

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Henry V (1989 film)

Henry V is a 1989 British historical drama film adapted for the screen and directed by Kenneth Branagh, based on William Shakespeare's play of the same name about King Henry V of England.

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Henry VI, Part 2

Henry VI, Part 2 (often written as 2 Henry VI) is a history play by William Shakespeare believed to have been written in 1591 and set during the lifetime of King Henry VI of England.

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Henry, Count of Württemberg

Henry of Württemberg (7 September 1448 – 15 April 1519) was, from 1473 to 1482, count of Montbéliard.

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Henryk Kietlicz

Henryk Kietlicz (1150 – March 22, 1219) was Archbishop of Gniezno from 1199 to 1219 was the main architect of the changes that allowed the Polish church to gain independence from the secular authorities.

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Herbert Edward Douglas Blakiston

Herbert Edward Douglas Blakiston (5 September 1862 – 29 July 1942) was an English academic and clergyman who served as President of Trinity College, Oxford, and as Vice-Chancellor of the University of Oxford.

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Herbert White (cricketer)

Herbert Southey White (August 1830 – 17 May 1863) was an English clergyman and a cricketer who played in six first-class cricket matches for Cambridge University in 1851 and 1852.

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Herman Rupp

Herman Montague Rucker Rupp (27 December 1872 – 2 September 1956) was an Australian clergyman and botanist who specialised in orchids.

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Hermann Cohen (Carmelite)

Hermann Cohen (also known as Augustine Mary of the Blessed Sacrament, O.C.D., Augustin-Marie du Très Saint-Sacrement, better known as Father Hermann; 10 November 1821 – 20 January 1871) was a noted German Jewish pianist, who converted to the Catholic Church.

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Hezekiah Holland (minister)

Hezekiah Holland (c. 1617 – after 1660) was an Anglo-Irish Anglican clergyman, tending towards Puritanism.

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High Church Lutheranism

High Church Lutheranism is a movement which began in 20th-century Europe that emphasizes worship practices and doctrines that are similar to those found within both Roman Catholicism and the Anglo-Catholic wing of Anglicanism.

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High Street, Bristol

High Street, together with Wine Street, Broad Street and Corn Street, is one of the four cross streets which met at the Bristol High Cross, the heart of Bristol, England when it was a walled mediaeval town.

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Higher education in the United States

Higher education in the United States is an optional final stage of formal learning following secondary education.

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Highfield Church

Highfield Church is a parish church in the Highfield district of Southampton, England.

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Highgate House

Highgate House was an important Northamptonshire coaching inn and Royal Mail posting station at the village of Creaton, on the Northampton to Leicester road, dating from 1663.

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His Holiness

His Holiness is a style and form of address (in the variant form Your Holiness) for some supreme religious leaders.

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Historical revision of the Inquisition

The Historical revision of the Inquisition is a historiographical process that started to emerge in the 1970s, with the opening of formerly closed archives, the development of new historical methodologies, and, in Spain, the death of the ruling dictator Francisco Franco in 1975.

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History of Ahmadiyya Muslim Community

Ahmadiyya Community is a sect of Islam which originated from India and spread all across the world.

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History of ancient Egypt

The history of ancient Egypt spans the period from the early prehistoric settlements of the northern Nile valley to the Roman conquest, in 30 BC.

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History of antisemitism

The history of antisemitism – defined as hostile actions or discrimination against Jews as a religious or ethnic group – goes back many centuries; antisemitism has been called "the longest hatred".

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History of archaeology

Archaeology is the study of human activity in the past, primarily through the recovery and analysis of the material culture and environmental data that they have left behind, which includes artifacts, architecture, biofacts (also known as eco-facts) and cultural landscapes (the archaeological record).

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History of Bucharest

The history of Bucharest covers the time from the early settlements on the locality's territory (and that of the surrounding area in Ilfov County) until its modern existence as a city, capital of Wallachia, and present-day capital of Romania.

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History of Cambridgeshire

The English county of Cambridgeshire has a long history.

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History of Czechoslovakia (1948–89)

From the Communist coup d'état in February 1948 to the Velvet Revolution in 1989, Czechoslovakia was ruled by the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia (Czech: Komunistická strana Československa, KSČ).

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History of Eastern Christianity

Christianity has been, historically a Middle Eastern religion with its origin in Judaism.

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History of France

The first written records for the history of France appeared in the Iron Age.

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History of Germany

The concept of Germany as a distinct region in central Europe can be traced to Roman commander Julius Caesar, who referred to the unconquered area east of the Rhine as Germania, thus distinguishing it from Gaul (France), which he had conquered.

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History of Penkridge

Penkridge is a market town and parish in Staffordshire with a history stretching back to the Anglo-Saxon period.

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History of Portugal

The history of Portugal can be traced from circa 400,000 years ago, when the region of present-day Portugal was inhabited by Homo heidelbergensis.

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History of Protestantism

Protestantism originated from work of several theologians starting in the 12th century, although there could have been earlier cases of which there is no surviving evidence.

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History of religion

The history of religion refers to the written record of human religious experiences and ideas.

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History of the Constitution of the United Kingdom

The Constitution of the United Kingdom has evolved over a long period of time beginning in the predecessor states to the United Kingdom and continuing to the present day.

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History of the creation–evolution controversy

The creation–evolution controversy has a long history.

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History of the Eastern Orthodox Church

The history of the Eastern Orthodox Church is traced back to Jesus Christ and the Apostles.

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History of the Jews in Iran

The beginnings of Jewish history in Iran date back to late biblical times.

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History of the Jews in Lithuania

The history of the Jews in Lithuania spans the period from the 8th century to the present day.

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History of the Jews in Poland before the 18th century

The history of the Jews in Poland before the 18th century covers the period of Jewish-Polish history from its origins, roughly until the political and socio-economic circumstances leading to the dismemberment of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth in the second half of the 18th century by the neighbouring empires (see also: Partitions of Poland).

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History of the Puritans under King Charles I

Under Charles I, the Puritans became a political force as well as a religious tendency in the country.

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History of the Quakers

The Religious Society of Friends began as a movement in England in the mid-17th century in Lancashire.

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History of the Ruhr

The actual boundaries of the Ruhr vary slightly depending on the source, but a good working definition is to define the Lippe and Ruhr as its northern and southern boundaries respectively, the Rhine as its western boundary, and the town of Hamm as the eastern limit.

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History of the University of St Andrews

The history of the University of St Andrews began with its foundation in 1410 when a charter of incorporation was bestowed upon the Augustinian priory of St Andrews Cathedral.

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History of Transylvania

Transylvania is a historical region in central and northwestern Romania.

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History of Western civilization

Western civilization traces its roots back to Europe and the Mediterranean.

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Hitcham, Suffolk

Hitcham is a village and civil parish in Suffolk, England.

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Hjálmar Jónsson (priest)

Hjálmar Jónsson (born 17 April 1950) is a clergyman of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Iceland.

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Holland Codes

The Holland Codes or the Holland Occupational Themes (RIASEC) refers to a theory of careers and vocational choice (based upon personality types) that was initially developed by American psychologist John L. Holland.

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Holocaust victims

Holocaust victims were people who were targeted by the government of Nazi Germany for various discriminatory practices due to their ethnicity, religion, political beliefs, or sexual orientation. These institutionalized practices came to be called The Holocaust, and they began with legalized social discrimination against specific groups, and involuntary hospitalization, euthanasia, and forced sterilization of those considered physically or mentally unfit for society. These practices escalated during World War II to include non-judicial incarceration, confiscation of property, forced labor, sexual slavery, medical experimentation, and death through overwork, undernourishment, and execution through a variety of methods, with the genocide of different groups as the primary goal. According to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (USHMM), the country's official memorial to the Holocaust, "The Holocaust was the murder of six million Jews and millions of others by the Nazis and their collaborators during World War II." Of those murdered for being Jewish, more than half were Ashkenazi Polish Jews.

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Holy Cross Orthodox Monastery (Castro Valley, California)

Holy Cross Orthodox Monastery (also known as Holy Cross Monastery) is a monastic institution of the Orthodox Church in America (OCA), located in Castro Valley, California.

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Holy Saturday

Holy Saturday (Sabbatum Sanctum), the Saturday of Holy Week, also known as Holy and Great Saturday, the Great Sabbath, Black Saturday, Joyous Saturday, or Easter Eve, and called "Joyous Saturday" or "the Saturday of Light" among Coptic Christians, is the day after Good Friday.

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Holy Synod

In several of the autocephalous Eastern Orthodox churches and Eastern Catholic Churches, the patriarch or head bishop is elected by a group of bishops called the Holy Synod.

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Holy Trinity Brompton

Holy Trinity Brompton with St Paul's, Onslow Square and St Augustine's, South Kensington, often referred to simply as HTB, is an Anglican church in London, England.

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Holy Trinity Cathedral, Auckland

Holy Trinity Cathedral is an Anglican place of worship situated in Parnell, a residential suburb of Auckland, New Zealand.

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Holy water

Holy water is water that has been blessed by a member of the clergy or a religious figure.

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Homer, Louisiana

Homer is a town in and the parish seat of Claiborne Parish in northern Louisiana, United States.

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Homosexuality and Methodism

Methodist viewpoints concerning homosexuality are diverse because there is no one denomination which represents all Methodists.

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Homosexuality and the Anglican Communion

Since the 1990s, the Anglican Communion has struggled with controversy regarding homosexuality in the church.

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Honorary Chaplain to the Queen

An Honorary Chaplain to the Queen (QHC) is a member of the clergy within the United Kingdom who, through long and distinguished service, is appointed to minister to the monarch of the United Kingdom.

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Honorific

An honorific is a title that conveys esteem or respect for position or rank when used in addressing or referring to a person.

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Honourable Corps of Gentlemen at Arms

Her Majesty's Body Guard of the Honourable Corps of Gentlemen at Arms is a bodyguard to the British Monarch.

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Hopkins School

Hopkins School is a private, college-preparatory, coeducational, day school located in New Haven, Connecticut.

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House of Carafa

The House of Carafa is a noble Neapolitan family of Italian nobles, clergy, and men of arts, known from the 12th century.

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House of Commons (Removal of Clergy Disqualification) Act 2001

The House of Commons (Removal of Clergy Disqualification) Act 2001 (c.13) is an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom.

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House of Commons of England

The House of Commons of England was the lower house of the Parliament of England (which incorporated Wales) from its development in the 14th century to the union of England and Scotland in 1707, when it was replaced by the House of Commons of Great Britain.

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House of Deputies

The House of Deputies is one of the legislative houses of the bicameral General Convention of the Episcopal Church in the United States of America.

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House of Pignatelli

The House of Pignatelli was a Neapolitan family of Italian nobles, clergy, and men of arts and sciences.

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House of Representatives (Thailand)

The House of Representatives (สภาผู้แทนราษฎร) was the lower house of the National Assembly of Thailand, the legislative branch of the Thai government.

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How the Irish Saved Civilization

How The Irish Saved Civilization: The Untold Story of Ireland's Heroic Role from the Fall of Rome to the Rise of Medieval Europe is a non-fiction historical book written by Thomas Cahill.

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Howard Gaunt

Howard Charles Adie Gaunt (13 November 1902 – 1 February 1983) was an English schoolmaster and clergyman who also played first-class cricket for Warwickshire in 11 matches between 1919 and 1922.

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Howard Williams (humanitarian)

Howard Williams (1837–1931) was an English humanitarian and vegetarian, and author of the book The Ethics of Diet, an anthology of vegetarian thought.

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Hubert Thomas Delany

Hubert Thomas Delany (May 11, 1901 - December 28, 1990) was an American civil rights pioneer, a lawyer, politician, Assistant U.S. Attorney, the first African American Tax Commissioner of New York and one of the first appointed African American judges in New York City.

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Hudd

A Hudd was a sentry box shaped shelter used by Anglican clergymen in the past during the final part of a funeral.

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Hugh Ashdown

Hugh Edward Ashdown (5 July 1904 – 26 December 1977) was an eminent Anglican clergyman in the mid 20th Century.

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Hugh Conway

Hugh Conway, the pen name of Frederick John Fargus (26 December 1847 – 15 May 1885), was an English novelist born in Bristol, the son of an auctioneer.

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Hugh de Giffard

The first Hugh de Giffard (or Jiffard) was an influential feudal baron in Scotland, and one of the hostages for the release of King William the Lion in 1174.

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Hugh Lloyd (bishop)

Hugh Lloyd (born between 1586 and 1589 – 7 June 1667) was a Welsh cleric who was the Anglican bishop of Llandaff from 1660 until his death in 1667.

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Hugh of Evesham

Hugh of Evesham (died 1287) was a 13th-century English churchman, physician and alchemist.

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Hugh Stiff

Hugh Vernon Stiff (1916–1995) was a Canadian Anglican bishop in the 20th century.

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Hugh the Dull, Lord of Douglas

Hugh the Dull (1294 – between 1342 and 1346) was Lord of Douglas, a Scottish nobleman and cleric.

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Hulsean Lectures

The Hulsean Lectures were established from an endowment made by John Hulse to Cambridge University in 1790.

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Human rights in Cuba

Human rights in Cuba are under the scrutiny of human rights organizations, who accuse the Cuban government of systematic human rights abuses, including arbitrary imprisonment and unfair trials.

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Human rights in the United Kingdom

Human rights in the United Kingdom are set out in common law, with its strongest roots being in the English Bill of Rights 1689 and Scottish Claim of Right Act 1689, as well as legislation of European institutions: the EU and the European Court of Human Rights.

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Humberto Lay

Pastor Humberto Lay Sun (born 25 September 1934 in Lima) is a Peruvian evangelical minister of the Iglesia Biblica Emmanuel, an architect, and a politician (National Restoration Party).

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Humphrey de Bohun, 3rd Earl of Hereford

Humphrey (VI) de Bohun (c. 1249He was reported to be 18 ½ years old in the 51st year of the reign of Henry III, and 24 or 26 after the death of his grandfather in 1275. Cokayne (1910–59), pp. 463–6. – 31 December 1298), 3rd Earl of Hereford and 2nd Earl of Essex, was an English nobleman known primarily for his opposition to King Edward I over the Confirmatio Cartarum.Fritze and Robison, (2002).

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Humphrey de Cherlton

Humphrey de Cherlton (or Humphrey de Charlton) was an English medieval churchman and university chancellor.

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Hungary between the World Wars

This article is about the history of Hungary from October 1918 to November 1940.

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Hunting

Hunting is the practice of killing or trapping animals, or pursuing or tracking them with the intent of doing so.

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Hurricane of 1928 African-American Mass Burial Site

The Hurricane of 1928 African-American Mass Burial Site (also known as Pauper's Cemetery) is a pauper's cemetery and mass grave in West Palm Beach, Florida.

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Hussites

The Hussites (Husité or Kališníci; "Chalice People") were a pre-Protestant Christian movement that followed the teachings of Czech reformer Jan Hus, who became the best known representative of the Bohemian Reformation.

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Huyshe Yeatman-Biggs

Huyshe Wolcott Yeatman-Biggs (2 February 1845 – 14 April 1922), until 1898 known as Huyshe Wolcott Yeatman, was an influential Church of England clergyman who served as the only Bishop of Southwark to be a suffragan bishop (in the Diocese of Rochester), the 105th Bishop of Worcester and, latterly, as the inaugural bishop of the restored see of Coventry in the modern era.

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Hydatius

Hydatius, also spelled Idacius (c. 400 – c. 469), bishop of Aquae Flaviae in the Roman province of Gallaecia (almost certainly the modern Chaves, Portugal, in the modern district of Vila Real) was the author of a chronicle of his own times that provides us with our best evidence for the history of Hispania (that is, the Iberian Peninsula in Roman times) in the 5th century.

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Hymn Society in the United States and Canada

The Hymn Society in the United States and Canada, founded in 1922 as The Hymn Society of America and renamed in 1991, is a not-for-profit organization for those people who.

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I'm Not Jesus

"I'm Not Jesus" is a song by the Finnish cello metal band Apocalyptica, featuring Corey Taylor from Slipknot and Stone Sour.

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Ian White-Thomson

Ian Hugh White-Thomson (18 December 1904 – 11 January 1997) was an eminent Anglican clergyman, the Dean of Canterbury from 1963 to 1976.

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ID eNTITY

iD_ᴇNTITY or Yureka (유레카) is a Korean style manhwa series created by Son Hee-joon in collaboration with Kim Youn-kyung and distributed by Tokyopop in North America.

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Ignace Bourget

Ignace Bourget (October 30, 1799 – June 8, 1885) was a French-Canadian Roman Catholic priest who held the title of Bishop of Montreal from 1840 to 1876.

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Igwe Iwuchukwu Ezeifekaibeya

Igwe Iwuchukwu (Ezeifekaibeya,1855-1904) was the 17thDr.

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Ilarion Ohienko

Metropolitan Ilarion (secular name Ivan Ivanovitch Ohienko; Іван Іванович Огієнко; 2 January (14 January), 1882 in Brusilov, Kiev Governorate – 29 March 1972 in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada) was a Ukrainian Orthodox cleric, linguist, church historian, and historian of Ukrainian culture.

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Ille-et-Vilaine

Ille-et-Vilaine (Il-ha-Gwilen) is a department of France, located in the region of Brittany in the northwest of the country.

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Immaculate Conception Church (Palmer Road)

The Immaculate Conception Church, known colloquially as Palmer Road Church is a 19th-century Roman Catholic church located in Palmer Road, Prince Edward Island, Canada.

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Immaculate Heart of Mary Seminary

The Immaculate Heart of Mary Seminary or IHMS, located at Pacifico Cabalit St., Taloto, Tagbilaran City, Bohol, Philippines, is a diocesan college seminary established in 1950 by Julio Rosales, Bishop of Tagbilaran, in implementation of Canon 1354, no.

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Impalement (heraldry)

In heraldry, impalement is a form of heraldic combination or marshalling of two coats of arms side by side in one divided heraldic shield or escutcheon to denote a union, most often that of a husband and wife (and in certain cases, same-sex married couples), but also for unions of ecclesiastical, academic/civic and mystical natures.

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Imperial election, 1562

The imperial election of 1562 was an imperial election held to select the emperor of the Holy Roman Empire.

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In nomine Domini

In nomine Domini (In the name of the Lord) is a papal bull written by Pope Nicholas II and a canon of the Council of Rome.

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Incardination and excardination

In the Roman Catholic Church, incardination refers to the situation of a member of the clergy being placed under the jurisdiction of a particular bishop or other ecclesiastical superior.

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Independent Catholicism

Independent Catholicism is a movement comprising clergy and laity who self-identify as Catholic and who form "micro-churches claiming apostolic succession and valid sacraments," despite a lack of affiliation with the main Catholic Church itself.

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Index of religion-related articles

Many Wikipedia articles on religious topics are not yet listed on this page.

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Index of religious honorifics and titles

This is an index of religious honorifics from various religions.

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Indian Defence Force

The Indian Defence Force (IDF) was a part-time defence force established as part of the Indian Army in 1917 in order to release regular troops from garrison duties during the First World War.

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Industrial Cape Breton

Industrial Cape Breton is a geographic region in the Canadian province of Nova Scotia.

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Ingram de Ketenis

Ingram de Ketenis (died 1407 or 1408) was a medieval cleric from Angus in Scotland.

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Ingram Lindsay

Ingram Lindsay, Doctor in Canon Law, was a 15th-century Scottish cleric.

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Innocent (Giesel)

Innokenty Gizel (c. 1600 - November 18, 1683) was a Prussian-born historian, writer, political and ecclesiastic figure, who had adopted Orthodox Christianity and made a substantial contribution to Russian and Ukrainian culture.

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Inri Cristo

Inri Cristo (born Álvaro Theiss in Indaial, Santa Catarina state, Brazil, March 22, 1948) is a Brazilian educator who claims to be Jesus Christ reincarnated.

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Instituto María Rosa Mystica, Sacerdotes Carismáticos Misioneros

The Instituto María Rosa Mystica, Sacerdotes Misioneros Carismáticos (Institute of Mary Mystical Rose – Charismatic Missionary Priests) is a small independent Catholic association under the protection of the independent Catholic Brazilian Catholic Apostolic Church.

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Intelligence Protection Organization of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps

Intelligence Protection Organization of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (سازمان حفاظت اطلاعات سپاه پاسداران انقلاب اسلامی) is an Iranian intelligence agency within the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) and part of Council for Intelligence Coordination.

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Intelligent design and science

The relationship between intelligent design and science has been a contentious one.

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Interest

Interest is payment from a borrower or deposit-taking financial institution to a lender or depositor of an amount above repayment of the principal sum (i.e., the amount borrowed), at a particular rate.

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International Federation of Married Catholic Priests

The International Federation of Married Catholic Priests was an association of priests who sought to reform existing celibacy rules within the Catholic priesthood in order to allow clergy to engage in their own marriages.

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International Order of St. Luke the Physician

The International Order of Saint Luke is an inter-denominational religious order dedicated to the Christian healing ministry, begun in 1932 as the Fellowship of St.

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International reactions to the Qana airstrike

International reactions to the 2006 Qana airstrike, which saw the greatest loss of civilian life in the 2006 Israel-Lebanon conflict, twenty eight deaths with thirteen missing, largely involved the condemnation of Israel by many countries around the globe, bringing about a supposed 48 hours cessation of air operations by the Israeli Air Force.

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Interpreter's Bible series

The Interpreter's Bible series is a Biblical criticism series published by United Methodist Publishing (Abingdon/Cokesbury) beginning in the 1950s.

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Intihuatana, Urubamba

Intihuatana (possibly from in the Quechua spelling Inti Watana or Intiwatana)Teofilo Laime Ajacopa, Diccionario Bilingüe Iskay simipi yuyayk'ancha, La Paz, 2007 (Quechua-Spanish dictionary) at the archaeological site of Machu Picchu (Machu Pikchu) is a notable ritual stone associated with the astronomic clock or calendar of the Inca in South America.

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Iran

Iran (ایران), also known as Persia, officially the Islamic Republic of Iran (جمهوری اسلامی ایران), is a sovereign state in Western Asia. With over 81 million inhabitants, Iran is the world's 18th-most-populous country. Comprising a land area of, it is the second-largest country in the Middle East and the 17th-largest in the world. Iran is bordered to the northwest by Armenia and the Republic of Azerbaijan, to the north by the Caspian Sea, to the northeast by Turkmenistan, to the east by Afghanistan and Pakistan, to the south by the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman, and to the west by Turkey and Iraq. The country's central location in Eurasia and Western Asia, and its proximity to the Strait of Hormuz, give it geostrategic importance. Tehran is the country's capital and largest city, as well as its leading economic and cultural center. Iran is home to one of the world's oldest civilizations, beginning with the formation of the Elamite kingdoms in the fourth millennium BCE. It was first unified by the Iranian Medes in the seventh century BCE, reaching its greatest territorial size in the sixth century BCE, when Cyrus the Great founded the Achaemenid Empire, which stretched from Eastern Europe to the Indus Valley, becoming one of the largest empires in history. The Iranian realm fell to Alexander the Great in the fourth century BCE and was divided into several Hellenistic states. An Iranian rebellion culminated in the establishment of the Parthian Empire, which was succeeded in the third century CE by the Sasanian Empire, a leading world power for the next four centuries. Arab Muslims conquered the empire in the seventh century CE, displacing the indigenous faiths of Zoroastrianism and Manichaeism with Islam. Iran made major contributions to the Islamic Golden Age that followed, producing many influential figures in art and science. After two centuries, a period of various native Muslim dynasties began, which were later conquered by the Turks and the Mongols. The rise of the Safavids in the 15th century led to the reestablishment of a unified Iranian state and national identity, with the country's conversion to Shia Islam marking a turning point in Iranian and Muslim history. Under Nader Shah, Iran was one of the most powerful states in the 18th century, though by the 19th century, a series of conflicts with the Russian Empire led to significant territorial losses. Popular unrest led to the establishment of a constitutional monarchy and the country's first legislature. A 1953 coup instigated by the United Kingdom and the United States resulted in greater autocracy and growing anti-Western resentment. Subsequent unrest against foreign influence and political repression led to the 1979 Revolution and the establishment of an Islamic republic, a political system that includes elements of a parliamentary democracy vetted and supervised by a theocracy governed by an autocratic "Supreme Leader". During the 1980s, the country was engaged in a war with Iraq, which lasted for almost nine years and resulted in a high number of casualties and economic losses for both sides. According to international reports, Iran's human rights record is exceptionally poor. The regime in Iran is undemocratic, and has frequently persecuted and arrested critics of the government and its Supreme Leader. Women's rights in Iran are described as seriously inadequate, and children's rights have been severely violated, with more child offenders being executed in Iran than in any other country in the world. Since the 2000s, Iran's controversial nuclear program has raised concerns, which is part of the basis of the international sanctions against the country. The Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, an agreement reached between Iran and the P5+1, was created on 14 July 2015, aimed to loosen the nuclear sanctions in exchange for Iran's restriction in producing enriched uranium. Iran is a founding member of the UN, ECO, NAM, OIC, and OPEC. It is a major regional and middle power, and its large reserves of fossil fuels – which include the world's largest natural gas supply and the fourth-largest proven oil reserves – exert considerable influence in international energy security and the world economy. The country's rich cultural legacy is reflected in part by its 22 UNESCO World Heritage Sites, the third-largest number in Asia and eleventh-largest in the world. Iran is a multicultural country comprising numerous ethnic and linguistic groups, the largest being Persians (61%), Azeris (16%), Kurds (10%), and Lurs (6%).

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Iran and weapons of mass destruction

Iran, officially the Islamic Republic of Iran, is not known to currently possess weapons of mass destruction (WMD) and has signed treaties repudiating the possession of weapons of mass destruction including the Biological Weapons Convention, the Chemical Weapons Convention, and the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).

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Iran–Switzerland relations

Iranian-Swiss relations are foreign relations between the Islamic Republic of Iran and the Swiss Confederation.

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Iraqi insurgency (2003–11)

An insurgency began in Iraq after the 2003 US-led invasion, and lasted throughout the ensuing Iraq War (2003–2011).

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Iraqi National Congress

The Iraqi National Congress (INC; Arabic: المؤتمر الوطني العراقي Al-Moutammar Al-Watani Al-'Iraqi) is an Iraqi political party that was led by Ahmed Chalabi who died in 2015.

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Iraqi parliamentary election, December 2005

Following the ratification of the Constitution of Iraq on 15 October 2005, a general election was held on 15 December to elect a permanent 275-member Iraqi Council of Representatives.

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Irinej Bulović

Irinej Bulović, Th.D. (born Mirko Bulović on 9 February 1940, in Stanišić) is the Serbian Orthodox cleric and current Bishop of Bačka.

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Irmandiño revolts

The Irmandiño revolts (or Irmandiño Wars) were two revolts that took place in 15th-century Kingdom of Galicia against attempts by the regional nobility to maintain their rights over the peasantry and the bourgeoisie.

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Irreligion in Mexico

Irreligion in Mexico refers to atheism, deism, religious skepticism, secularism, and secular humanism in Mexican society, which was a confessional state after independence from Imperial Spain.

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Iryna Vilde

Iryna Vilde, a pen name of Daryna Dmytrivna Polotniuk (Дарина Дмитрівна Полотнюк, née Makohon Макогон), was a Ukrainian writer and Soviet correspondent.

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Isaac Oluwole

Isaac Oluwole (1852–1932) was a Nigerian bishop of Sierra Leonean and Egba heritage.

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Isaac P. Witter

Isaac P. Witter (May 11, 1873 – September 26, 1942) was a member of the Wisconsin State Senate.

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Isabella Gilmore

Isabella Gilmore (née Morris; 1842–1923) was an English churchwoman who oversaw the revival of the Deaconess Order in the Anglican Communion.

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Isidore of Kiev

Isidore of Kiev, also known as Isidore of Thessalonica (Ἰσίδωρος τοῦ Κιέβου; Исидор; Ісидор; b. Peloponnesus, 1385 – d.Rome, 27 April 1463) was a Greek Metropolitan of Kiev, cardinal, humanist, and theologian.

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Islam and Mormonism

Islam and Mormonism have been compared to one another ever since the earliest origins of the former in the nineteenth century, often by detractors of one religion or the other—or both.

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Islamic Azad University

The Islamic Azad University (IAU; دانشگاه آزاد اسلامی, Dāneshgāh-e Āzād-e Eslāmi) is a non-governmental private university system in Iran.

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Islamic Government: Governance of the Jurist

Velayat-e faqih (ولایت فقیه, velāyat-e faqīh), also known as Islamic Government (حکومت اسلامی, Hokumat-i Eslami), is a book by the Iranian Muslim cleric, faqīh, and revolutionary Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, first published in 1970, and probably the most influential document written in modern times in support of theocratic rule.

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Islamic Revolutionary Court

Islamic Revolutionary Court (also Revolutionary Tribunal, Dadgah-ha-e EnqelabBakhash, Shaul, Reign of the Ayatollahs, Basic Books, 1984, p.59-61) is a special system of courts in the Islamic Republic of Iran designed to try those suspected of crimes such as smuggling, blaspheming, inciting violence or trying to overthrow the Islamic government.

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Israel Oludotun Ransome-Kuti

Israel Oludotun Ransome-Kuti (April 30, 1891 – April 6, 1955) was a Nigerian clergyman and educationist.

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Istanbul pogrom

The Istanbul pogrom, also known as the Istanbul riots or September events (Septemvriana, "Events of September";, "Events of September 6–7"), were organized mob attacks directed primarily at Istanbul's Greek minority on 6–7 September 1955.

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István Tisza

Count István Tisza de Borosjenő et Szeged (archaically English: Stephen Tisza; 22 April 1861 – 31 October 1918) was a Hungarian politician, prime minister, political scientist and member of Hungarian Academy of Sciences.

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Italia turrita

Italia Turrita is the national personification or allegory of Italy, characterised by a mural crown (hence turrita or "with towers" in Italian) typical of Italian civic heraldry of Medieval communal origin.

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Italian general election, 1929

General elections were held in Italy on 24 March 1929.

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Italian general election, 1934

General elections were held in Italy on 26 March 1934.

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Ivan Gvozdev

Ivan Mikhailovich Gvozdev (Иоанн (Иван) Михайлович Гвоздев; May 12, 1859 in Vologda Governorate – 1932 in Vologda Oblast) was a priest (father), a deputy of the clergy in his governorate and a deputy of the Fourth Imperial Duma from the Vologda Governorate between 1912 and 1917.

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J. C. Winslow

Jack Copley Winslow (18 August 1882 – 1974), also known by names John Copley Winslow or J.C. Winslow or John C. Winslow or Jack C. Winslow, was an English Society for the Propagation of the Gospel (SPG) missionary to Konkan and Pune, then-Poona—both part of then-Bombay Presidency.

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J. D. Grey

J.

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J. Edwin Lloyd

Rev.

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J. W. B. Barns

John Wintour Baldwin Barns (12 May 1912 – 23 February 1974) was a British Egyptologist, papyrologist, Anglican priest, and academic.

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Jack o' Kent

Jack o' Kent or Jack-a-Kent is an English folkloric character based in the Welsh Marches.

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Jacob Aall

Jacob Aall (27 July 1773 – 4 August 1844) was a Norwegian politician, historian, landowner and government economist.

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Jacob Burckhardt

Carl Jacob Christoph Burckhardt (May 25, 1818 – August 8, 1897) was a Swiss historian of art and culture and an influential figure in the historiography of both fields.

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Jacob K. Javits Fellowship

The Jacob K. Javits Fellowship program formerly provided fellowships to students of superior academic ability—selected on the basis of demonstrated achievement, financial need, and exceptional promise—to undertake study at the doctoral and Master of Fine Arts level in selected fields of arts, humanities, and social sciences.

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Jacques Amyot

Jacques Amyot (30 October 15136 February 1593), French Renaissance writer and translator, was born of poor parents, at Melun.

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Jacques Le Gris

Sir Jacques Le Gris (c. 1330s – 27 December 1386) was a squire and knight in fourteenth century France who gained fame and infamy when he engaged in the last judicial duel permitted by the Parlement of Paris after he was accused of rape by the wife of his neighbour and rival Sir Jean de Carrouges.

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Jacques Talbot

Jacques Talbot (12 November 1678 (bap) – January 2, 1756) minor cleric, schoolmaster; b. at La Plaine (dept. of Maine-et-Loire), France, and baptized 12 Nov.

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Jacques-François Lefranc

Jacques-François Lefranc (30 March 1739 - 2 September 1792) was a French cleric and anti-Masonic author.

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Jakob Fugger

Jakob Fugger of the Lily (Jakob Fugger von der Lilie) (6 March 1459 – 30 December 1525), also known as Jakob Fugger the Rich or sometimes Jakob II, was a major German merchant, mining entrepreneur and banker.

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James Boyer

The Reverend James Boyer (1736–1814) was the tyrannical headmaster of Christ’s Hospital from the years 1778 to 1799.

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James Brown Craven

Archdeacon James Brown Craven (1850 – 17 April 1924) was author of the History of the Church in Orkney and several other works on ecclesiastical history.

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James Caldwell (clergyman)

James Caldwell (April 1734 – November 24, 1781) was a Presbyterian minister who played a prominent part in the American Revolution.

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James Carnahan

James Carnahan (November 15, 1775 – March 2, 1859) was an American clergyman and educator who served as the ninth President of Princeton University.

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James Cockburn (minister)

James Hutchison Cockburn (29 October 1882 – 20 June 1973) was a Scottish scholar and Church of Scotland clergyman.

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James Cornwallis, 4th Earl Cornwallis

James Cornwallis, 4th Earl Cornwallis (25 February 1743 – 20 January 1824) was a British clergyman, and peer.

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James Davenport (clergyman)

James Davenport (1716–1757) was an American clergyman and itinerant preacher noted for his often controversial actions during the First Great Awakening.

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James Douglas, 4th Earl of Morton

James Douglas, 4th Earl of Morton (c. 1516 – 2 June 1581, aged 65) was the last of the four regents of Scotland during the minority of King James VI.

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James Elvin Wagner

James Elvin Wagner (1873–1969) was a U.S. clergyman.

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James Freeman (clergyman)

James Freeman (April 22, 1759 – November 14, 1835) was the minister of King's Chapel in Boston for 43 years and the first clergyman in America to call himself a Unitarian.

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James Gleeson (bishop)

James William Gleeson (24 December 1920 – 21 March 2000) was an Australian clergyman and the sixth Archbishop of Adelaide.

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James Hackman

James Hackman (baptized 13 December 1752, hanged 19 April 1779), briefly Rector of Wiveton in Norfolk, was the murderer who killed Martha Ray, singer and mistress of John Montagu, 4th Earl of Sandwich.

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James Halman

James Halman (c. 1639 – 23 December 1702) was an academic of the University of Cambridge.

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James Hamilton (bishop of Galloway)

James Hamilton (1610–1674), bishop of Galloway, was the second son of Sir James Hamilton of Broomhill, by Margaret, daughter of William Hamilton of Udston and brother of John, first lord Belhaven.

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James Hebblethwaite

James Hebblethwaite (22 September 1857 – 13 September 1921) was an English-born Australian poet, teacher and clergyman.

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James Horrocks

James Horrocks (died 1772) was an Anglican clergyman, rector of Bruton Parish Church, and the sixth president of the College of William and Mary, from 1764 to 1771.

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James Hurdis

James Hurdis (1763–1801) was an English clergyman and poet.

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James Johnson (author and priest)

Rev.

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James Johnson (minister)

James "Holy" Johnson (c. 1836–1917) was a prominent clergyman and one of the first African members of Nigeria's Legislative Council.

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James Keating

Sir James Keating (died c.1492) was an Irish cleric and statesman of the fifteenth century.

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James Marshall (colonial judge)

Sir James Marshall (1829–1889) was a Scottish Anglican clergyman who converted to Roman Catholicism and became Chief Justice of the Gold Coast, now Ghana.

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James Meek

Very Rev James Meek DD FRSE (1742–1810) (or Meik) was Minister of Cambuslang from 1774 until his death.

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James Mudge

James Mudge (1844–1918) was an American Methodist Episcopal clergyman and writer, nephew of Zachariah Mudge.

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James Oswald Dykes

James Oswald Dykes (14 August 1835, Port Glasgow - 1 January 1912, Edinburgh) was a Scottish Presbyterian clergyman and educator.

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James Parker (cement maker)

James Parker was a British clergyman and cement manufacturer who invented one of the pioneering new cements of the late eighteenth century.

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James Parkes (priest)

James Parkes (22 December 1896 – 10 August 1981) was a clergyman, historian, and social activist from Guernsey.

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James Porter (Catholic priest)

James Porter (January 2, 1935 – February 11, 2005) was a Roman Catholic priest who was convicted of molesting 28 children; he admitted to sexually abusing at least 100 children of both sexes over a period of 30 years, starting in the 1960s.

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James Ramsay (abolitionist)

The Reverend James Ramsay (25 July 1733 – 1789) was a ship's surgeon, Anglican priest, and leading abolitionist.

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James Shields (politician, born 1806)

James Shields (May 10, 1806June 1, 1879) was an Irish American Democratic politician and United States Army officer, who is the only person in U.S. history to serve as a Senator for three different states.

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James Smedley Brown

James Smedley Brown was a nineteenth-century educator of the deaf who is credited with the publication of the first dictionary of American Sign Language.

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James Smith (priest)

James Smith (baptized 1605, died 1667) was a clergymsn who became Archdeacon of Barnstaple in 1660.

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James T. Draper Jr.

James Thomas "Jimmy" Draper Jr. (born October 10, 1935), is a prominent figure in the theologically conservative Southern Baptist Convention, the largest Protestant denomination in the United States.

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James Watson (radical)

James Watson (21 September 1799 – 29 November 1874) was an English radical publisher, activist and Chartist.

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Jamia Siddiqia

Jamia Darul-uloom Siddiqia (جامعہ دارالعلوم صدیقیہ) is an Islamic seminary located in the North Karachi area of Karachi, Pakistan.

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Jamia-e-Imania

Jamia-e-Imania or the Imania Arabic College (الجامعة الإيمانية) is a Madrasa in Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh, India.

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Jan Lam

Jan Lam (1838 - 1886) was a Polish journalist, writer and comic, as well as a teacher in numerous schools of Galicia.

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Jan Standonck

Jan Standonck (or Jean Standonk; 16 August 1453 – 5 February 1504) was a Flemish priest, Scholastic, and reformer.

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Jane Findlater

Jane Helen Findlater (4 November 1866, in Edinburgh – 20 May 1946, in Comrie) was a Scottish novelist whose first book, The Green Graves of Balgowrie, started a successful literary career: for her sister Mary as well as for herself.

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Janez Evangelist Krek

Janez Evangelist Krek (27 November 1865 – 8 October 1917) was a Slovene Christian Socialist politician, priest, journalist, and author.

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Jauch family

The Jauch family of Germany is a Hanseatic family which can be traced back till the Late Middle Ages.

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Java

Java (Indonesian: Jawa; Javanese: ꦗꦮ; Sundanese) is an island of Indonesia.

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Javad Mojtahed Shabestari

Javad Mojtahed Shabestari (جواد مجتهد شبستری) is an Iranian Shiite cleric and politician.

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Javier Bertucci

Javier Alejandro Bertucci Carrero (born November 16, 1969) is an evangelical pastor, philanthropist, and Venezuelan businessman.

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Jayshree Talwalkar

Dhanashree Talwalkar, also known as Didi, which literally translates as elder sister in Hindi, is an Indian philosopher, spiritual leader, social reformer.

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Je me souviens (2002 film)

Je me souviens is a 2002 documentary film about antisemitism and pro-Nazi sympathies in Quebec during the 1930s through post World War II made by Montreal filmmaker Eric Richard Scott.

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Jean Étienne Duby

Jean Étienne Duby (15 February 1798 in Geneva – 24 November 1885) was a Swiss clergyman and botanist.

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Jean Baptiste Félix Descuret

Jean Baptiste Félix Descuret (5 June 1795 – 27 November 1871) was a French physician and author who was a native of Chalon-sur-Saône.

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Jean de Bernieres-Louvigny

Jean de Bernieres-Louvigny (1602 – 3 May 1659) was a French mystic and an important lay spiritual writer.

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Jean de Carrouges

Sir Jean de Carrouges IV (c. 1330s – 25 September 1396) was a fourteenth-century French knight who governed estates in Normandy as a vassal of Count Pierre d'Alençon and served under Admiral Jean de Vienne in several campaigns against the English and the forces of the Ottoman Empire.

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Jean Origer

Jean Origer (25 May 1877 - 17 September 1942) was a Luxembourgish cleric and director of the newspaper Luxemburger Wort.

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Jean Testu de Mauroy

Jean Testu de Mauroy (1626, Paris – April 1706, Paris) was a French clergyman and academic.

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Jean-Baptiste Colbert

Jean-Baptiste Colbert (29 August 1619 – 6 September 1683) was a French politician who served as the Minister of Finances of France from 1665 to 1683 under the rule of King Louis XIV.

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Jean-Claude Schmitt

Jean-Claude Schmitt (born March 4, 1946 in Colmar) is a prominent French medievalist, the former student of Jacques Le Goff, associated with the work of the Annales School.

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Jean-Louis Gouttes

Jean-Louis de Gouttes (1739 - 7 March 1794) was a cleric and a French statesman of the Revolution.

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Jeannette Papin

Jeannette, sometimes Nanette, Papin, née Chodowiecka (1761–1835) was a German painter.

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Jehan de Grieviler

Jehan de Grieviler (fl. mid- to late 13th century) was an Artesian cleric and trouvère.

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Jens Schielderup Sneedorff

Jens Schielderup Sneedorff (22 August 1724 – 5 June 1764) was a Danish author, professor of political science and royal teacher and a central figure in Denmark in the Age of Enlightenment.

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Jeppe High School for Boys

Jeppe High School for Boys is a public secondary school is located in Kensington, a suburb of Johannesburg, Gauteng, South Africa, one of the 23 Milner Schools.

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Jerónimo Osório

Jerónimo Osório da Fonseca (1506 – 20 August 1580) was a Portuguese Roman Catholic humanist bishop, historian and polemicist.

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Jeremy Morris

Jeremy Nigel Morris (born 22 January 1960) is a British historian, Church of England priest and academic.

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Jeremy Taylor

Jeremy Taylor (1613–1667) was a cleric in the Church of England who achieved fame as an author during the Protectorate of Oliver Cromwell.

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Jesse Custer

Jesse Custer is a fictional character and the protagonist of the comic book series Preacher, created by writer Garth Ennis and artist Steve Dillon (with a large percentage of the original cover art painted by Glenn Fabry), published by the Vertigo imprint of DC Comics.

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Jesse Lee (Methodist)

Jesse Lee (March 12, 1758 – September 12, 1816) was an American Methodist Episcopal clergyman and pioneer, born in Prince George's County, Virginia.

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Jesse Lyman Hurlbut

Jesse Lyman Hurlbut (1843–1930) was an American clergyman of the Methodist Episcopal Church.

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Jesus

Jesus, also referred to as Jesus of Nazareth and Jesus Christ, was a first-century Jewish preacher and religious leader.

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Jesus (1979 film)

Jesus (alternatively called The Jesus Film) is a 1979 biblical drama film that depicts the life of Jesus Christ.

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Jewish deicide

Jewish deicide is a historic belief among some in Christianity that Jewish people as a whole were responsible for the death of Jesus.

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Jiřetín pod Jedlovou

Jiřetín pod Jedlovou (Sankt Georgenthal) is a village and municipality (obec) in Děčín District in the Ústí nad Labem Region of the Czech Republic.

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Jiddu Krishnamurti bibliography

Jiddu Krishnamurti or J. Krishnamurti, (12 May 189517 February 1986) was a writer and speaker on philosophical and spiritual issues including psychological revolution, the nature of the mind, meditation, human relationships, and bringing about positive social change.

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Jimmy Wales

Jimmy Donal Wales (born August 7, 1966), also known by the online moniker Jimbo, is an American Internet entrepreneur, best known as the co-founder of the online non-profit encyclopedia Wikipedia, and the for-profit web hosting company Wikia.

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Jo Carr

Bettye Jo Crisler Carr (September 29, 1926 – July 7, 2007) was a preacher, a teacher, an author, a missionary, a mother of five, and a leader of the Girl Scouts of the USA.

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Joan Larke

Joan Larke (c.1490 – 1532), was the mistress of the powerful English statesman and churchman in the Tudor period, Cardinal Thomas Wolsey, and mother of his two illegitimate children.

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Jocelin of Glasgow

Jocelin (or Jocelyn) (died 1199) was a twelfth-century Cistercian monk and cleric who became the fourth Abbot of Melrose before becoming Bishop of Glasgow, Scotland.

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Johan Heyns

Johan Adam Heyns (27 May 1928 – 5 November 1994), was an Afrikaner Calvinist theologian and moderator of the general synod of the Nederduits Gereformeerde Kerk (NGK) in South Africa.

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Johan Wingård

Johan Wingård (1738-1818) was a Swedish Lutheran bishop of the Diocese of Gothenburg of the Church of Sweden, as well as first holder of chair no. 6 of the Swedish Academy.

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Johann Adolf Schlegel

Johann Adolf Schlegel (17 September 1721 – 16 September 1793) was a German poet and clergyman.

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Johann Albrecht Bengel

Johann Albrecht Bengel (24 June 1687 – 2 November 1752), also known as Bengelius, was a Lutheran pietist clergyman and Greek-language scholar known for his edition of the Greek New Testament and his commentaries on it.

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Johann Christoph Röhling

Johann Christoph Röhling (27 April 1757 – 19 December 1813) was a German botanist and clergyman who was a native of Gundernhausen, a town near Darmstadt.

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Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi

Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi (January 12, 1746 – February 17, 1827) was a Swiss pedagogue and educational reformer who exemplified Romanticism in his approach.

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Johann Stumpf (writer)

Johann Stumpf (23 April 1500 – c. 1578) was an early writer on the history and topography of Switzerland.

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Johannes Baptista von Albertini

Johannes Baptista von Albertini (17 February 1769 – 6 December 1831) was a German botanist, mycologist and clergyman of the Moravian Church.

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Johannes Zimmermann

Johannes Zimmermann (2 March 1825 – 13 December 1876) was a missionary, clergyman, translator, philologist and ethnolinguist of the Basel Evangelical Missionary Society of Switzerland, who translated the entire Bible into the Ga language of the Ga-Dangme people of southeastern Ghana and wrote a Ga dictionary and grammar book.

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John and William Merfold

John and William Merfold were yeomen brothers in Sussex, England, in the mid 15th-century.

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John Bampton

John Bampton (16902 June 1751) was an English churchman, for some time canon of Salisbury.

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John Banister (naturalist)

John Baptist Banister (1654 – May 1692) was an English clergyman and one of the first university-trained naturalists in North America.

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John Baptist Scandella

John Baptist Scandella STD (Gibraltar, 19 September 1821 - id., 27 August 1880) was a Gibraltarian Roman Catholic priest of Genoese descent.

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John Baptist Walsh

John Baptist Walsh, Irish cleric and administrator, c.1750-1825.

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John Bargrave

John Bargrave (1610 – 11 May, 1680), was an English author and collector and a canon of Canterbury Cathedral.

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John Barton (theologian)

John Barton, (born 17 June 1948) is a British Anglican priest and Biblical scholar.

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John Black (privateer)

Captain John Black (1778–1802), the son of a clergyman, was a ship's officer who had many adventures in his short career.

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John Bon and Mast Parson

John Bon and Mast Parson is a literary work printed in 1547 or 1548 by John Day and William Seres as the work of "Lucas Shepeherd", possibly a pseudonym.

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John Brand (antiquarian)

John Brand (19 August 1744 – 11 September 1806) was an English antiquarian and Church of England clergyman.

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John Brendan McCormack

John Brendan McCormack (born August 12, 1935) is a retired American prelate of the Roman Catholic Church.

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John Burdett Wittenoom

John Burdett Wittenoom (24 October 1788 – 23 January 1855) was a colonial clergyman who was the second Anglican clergyman to perform religious services in the Swan River Colony, Australia, soon after its establishment in 1829.

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John Burrell (entomologist)

John Burrell (1762–1825) was an English entomologist and clergyman of the Church of England.

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John Butler, 12th Baron Dunboyne

John Butler, 12th Baron Dunboyne (1731 – 7 May 1800) was an Irish clergyman and aristocrat, Roman Catholic Bishop of Cork and Ross.

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John C. Bowen

John Campbell Bowen (October 3, 1872 – January 2, 1957) was a clergyman, insurance broker and long serving politician.

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John Chamber (academic)

John Chamber (May 1546 – August 1604) was a fellow of Merton College, Oxford, and later of Eton College, a clergyman of the Church of England and an author, especially on astronomy and astrology.

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John Cheyne (speaker)

Sir John Cheyne or Cheney (died 1414) was a Member of Parliament and briefly the initial Speaker of the House of Commons of England in the Parliament of October 1399, summoned by the newly acclaimed Henry IV.

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John Clarke (British army officer)

Sir John Clarke KCB (1787–1854) was an Anglo-Irish officer in the British Army who became a General in the Spanish Army.

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John Clinch

Rev.

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John Cotterell

John Cotterell DCL (died 1572) was an English clergyman and academic at the University of Oxford, who was one of the founding fellows of Jesus College, Oxford.

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John Cowper Granbery

John Cowper Granbery (1829–1907) was an American clergyman of the Southern Methodist Episcopal church.

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John Cranke

John Cranke (1746–1816) was an English scientific thinker and clergyman.

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John Darwall

John Darwall (1731–1789) was an English clergyman and hymnodist.

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John Day (priest)

John Godfrey Day (b Kiltallagh 1802- d Dublin 1879) was a clergyman in the Church of Ireland during the nineteenth century.

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John de Brantingham

John de Brantingham was an English Christian clergyman of the early fourteenth century AD and a member of the Brantingham family.

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John de Northwode

John de Northwode was an English medieval churchman and university chancellor.

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John de Vere, 14th Earl of Oxford

John de Vere, 14th Earl of Oxford (14 August 1499 – 14 July 1526) was an English peer and landowner.

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John Disney (priest)

John Disney (26 December 1677 - 3 February 1729/30) was an English clergyman.

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John Donne

John Donne (22 January 1572 – 31 March 1631) was an English poet and cleric in the Church of England.

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John Firth (cricketer)

John D'Ewes Evelyn Firth (21 February 1900 – 21 September 1957) was a schoolboy cricketer at Winchester College during the First World War.

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John Fountayne

John Fountayne, M.A. (Cantab.), DD, (1714–1802) was a Church of England clergyman and the longest serving Dean of York.

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John Frederick Blake

John Frederick Blake (3 April 1839 – 7 July 1906) was a British geologist and Anglican clergyman.

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John Gamble (priest)

John Gamble (1762–1811) was a British Anglican clergyman and military chaplain.

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John Gennings

John Gennings (c. 1570 – 12 November 1660 in Douai) was an Englishman who was converted to Catholicism through the martyrdom of his elder brother Saint Edmund Gennings during the English Reformation.

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John George Schmucker

John George Schmucker (August 18, 1771 - October 9, 1854) was a German-American Lutheran clergyman.

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John Glas

John Glas (5 October 1695 – 2 November 1773) was a Scottish clergyman who started the Glasite church movement.

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John Glennie

John David Glennie (18 April 1825 – 7 January 1903) was an English clergyman and educationalist who played a single first-class cricket match for Cambridge University in 1848.

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John Gostling

John Gostling (1644–1733) was a 17th-century Church of England clergyman and bass singer famed for his range and power.

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John Gregg (Archbishop of Armagh)

John Allen Fitzgerald Gregg CH (1873–1961) was a Church of Ireland clergyman, from 1915 Bishop of Ossory, Ferns and Leighlin, in 1920 translated to become Archbishop of Dublin, and finally from 1939 until 1959 Archbishop of Armagh.

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John Hall-Stevenson

John Hall-Stevenson (1718–1785), in his youth known as John Hall, was an English country gentleman and writer.

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John Hancock Jr.

Rev.

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John Hancock Sr.

Rev.

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John Haslet

John Haslet (c. 1727– January 3, 1777) was an American Presbyterian clergyman and soldier from Milford, in Kent County, Delaware.

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John Hawes

Right Reverend Monsignor John Cyril Hawes (7 September 1876–26 June 1956) was an architect and priest.

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John Henley (priest)

John Henley (3 August 1692 – 13 October 1756), English clergyman, commonly known as 'Orator Henley', was a preacher known for showmanship and eccentricity.

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John Henry Barrows

Rev.

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John Hensman

Revd Canon John Hensman (1780 – 1864) was a prominent nineteenth century Church of England clergyman, a Fellow of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, and a prolific church builder.

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John Higginson (minister)

John Higginson (born Claybrooke, Leicester, England, 6 August 1616; died Salem, Massachusetts, 9 December 1708) was a clergyman.

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John Holmes (schoolmaster)

John Holmes (1703 – 22 December 1760 in Holt, Norfolk) was an 18th-century schoolmaster and writer on education, Master of Gresham's School in Norfolk.

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John Hope College Prep

John Hope College Preparatory High School (known as John Hope or JHCP) is a public four–year high school located in the Englewood neighborhood on the south side of Chicago, Illinois, United States.

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John Hudson (mathematician)

John Hudson (1773 – 31 October 1843) was an English mathematician and clergyman.

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John Hulse

John Hulse (15 March 1708 – 14 December 1790) was an English clergyman.

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John Jebb (bishop)

John Jebb (7 September 1775 – 9 December 1833) was an Irish churchman and writer.

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John Jeremiah Bigsby

John Jeremiah Bigsby (14 August 1792 – 10 February 1881), M.D., F.R.S, F.G.S., F.R.G.S., was an English physician who became known for his work on geology, an interest developed while on military service in Lower and Upper Canada, 1818-1826.

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John Lee (cricketer)

John Morley Lee (12 October 1825 – 20 January 1903) was an English clergyman and cricketer who played in first-class cricket matches for Cambridge University, Surrey, Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) and various other amateur teams in the late 1840s.

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John Lettice

John Lettice (December 27, 1737 – October 18, 1832) was an English clergyman, translator, academic, and author.

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John Lloyd (Archdeacon of Montgomery)

John Walter Lloyd (11 March 1879 - 9 July 1951) was a Welsh clergyman, most notably Archdeacon of Montgomery from 1944 until his death on 9 July 1951 Lloyd was educated at Llandovery College and St David's College, Lampeter and ordained 1903.

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John M. Davenport

John Metcalf Davenport (1842–1913) was a Church of England clergyman and writer.

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John Marsh (priest)

Francis John Marsh (born 3 July 1947) is a British Anglican clergyman.

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John Marshall (cricketer, born 1837)

John Hannath Marshall (1 October 1837 – 2 February 1879) was an English clergyman and a cricketer who played first-class cricket for Cambridge Town Club and Cambridge University.

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John Maul

John Broughton Maul (28 November 1857 – 5 November 1931) was an English clergyman and a cricketer who played in one first-class cricket match for Cambridge University in 1878.

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John Napier (cricketer)

John Russell Napier (5 January 1859 – 12 March 1939) was an English clergyman and a cricketer who played first-class cricket for Cambridge University in 1881 and for Lancashire in 1888.

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John Neale Dalton

Canon John Neale Dalton (24 September 1839 – 28 July 1931) was a Church of England clergyman and author.

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John O'Reily

John O'Reily (born John O'Reilly, 19 November 1846 – 6 July 1915)French 1988.

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John of Brienne

John of Brienne (1170 – 27 March 1237), also known as John I, was King of Jerusalem from 1210 to 1225 and Latin Emperor of Constantinople from 1229 to 1237.

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John of Debar

John of Debar (Йоан Дебърски; fl. 1018-1037) was an 11th-century Bulgarian clergyman.

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John of God

John of God, O.H. (March 8, 1495 – March 8, 1550) (Juan de Dios, João de Deus and Joannis de Deo) was a Portuguese-born soldier turned health-care worker in Spain, whose followers later formed the Brothers Hospitallers of Saint John of God, a worldwide Catholic religious institute dedicated to the care of the poor, sick, and those suffering from mental disorders.

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John of Salisbury

John of Salisbury (c. 1120 – 25 October 1180), who described himself as Johannes Parvus ("John the Little"), was an English author, philosopher, educationalist, diplomat and bishop of Chartres, and was born at Salisbury.

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John Parker (cleric)

John Parker (3 October 1798 – 31 August 1860) was a Welsh cleric and artist.

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John Pediasimos

John Pediasimos (Ιωάννης Πεδιάσιμος; ca. 1250 – early 14th century), also known as John Pothos, was a Byzantine churchman, scholar, astronomer, mathematician, mythologist, syllogistic, musician, and physician active at Constantinople, Ohrid and Thessalonica.

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John Peel (gynaecologist)

Sir John Harold Peel (10 December 1904 – 31 December 2005) was a leading British obstetrician and gynecologist, who was Surgeon-Gynaecologist to Elizabeth II from 1961 to 1973, present at a number of royal births.

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John Pelling (artist)

John Pelling (born 1930) is a British artist and clergyman, and an Associate of the Royal College of Art, known for works on large canvases, abstract works, and paintings of religious imagery.

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John Ramsbotham

John Alexander Ramsbotham (25 February 1906 – 16 December 1989) was an eminent Anglican clergyman during the middle third of the 20th century.

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John Rudd (cartographer)

John Rudd (Yorkshire c. 1498 – Durham 1579) was a Tudor cartographer and clergyman.

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John Scotus Eriugena

John Scotus Eriugena or Johannes Scotus Erigena (c. 815 – c. 877) was an Irish theologian, neoplatonist philosopher, and poet.

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John the Deacon (Neapolitan historian)

John the Deacon (d. after 910) was a religious writer and deacon, or head of a diaconate at the church of Saint Januarius in Naples.

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John the Exarch

John the Exarch (also transcribed Joan Ekzarh) was a medieval Bulgarian scholar, writer and translator, one of the most important men of letters working at the Preslav Literary School at the end of the 9th and the beginning of the 10th century.

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John Thomlinson

John Thomlinson (1692–1761) was an English clergyman best known for his diary, covering 1715 to 1722.

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John Turner (cricketer, born 1816)

John Bowman Turner (6 July 1816 – 7 February 1892) was an English clergyman and a cricketer who played in two first-class cricket matches for Cambridge University in 1841.

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John Vaughan (canon)

Rev.

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John W. E. Bowen Sr.

John Wesley Edward Bowen (December 3, 1855 – July 20, 1933) was born into American slavery and became a Methodist clergyman, denominational official, college and university educator and one of the first African Americans to earn a Ph.D. degree in the United States.

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John Warner (physician)

John Warner (died 1565) was an English academic, cleric, and physician.

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John Wesley

John Wesley (2 March 1791) was an English cleric and theologian who, with his brother Charles and fellow cleric George Whitefield, founded Methodism.

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John White (priest)

John White (d 1478) was an Irish Roman Catholic priest: he was Archdeacon of Meath; and Clergy's Proctor in the 1450 Parliament.

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John William Kirwan

John William Kirwan (died 29 December 1849) was the first President of Queen's College, Galway.

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John Witherspoon

John Witherspoon (February 5, 1722 – November 15, 1794) was a Scottish-American Presbyterian minister and a Founding Father of the United States.

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Johnny Eck

John Eckhardt Jr, (August 27, 1911 – January 5, 1991) professionally billed as Johnny Eck was an American freak show performer in side shows and a film actor.

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Johnny Q. Public

Johnny Q. Public (sometimes stylized as johnny Q. public) was a Christian alternative rock band from Springfield, Missouri.

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Jonadob Nathaniel

D.

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Jonas Clarke

Jonas Clarke (December 25, 1730 – November 15, 1805), sometimes written Jonas Clark, was an American clergyman and political leader who had a role in the American Revolution and in shaping the 1780 Massachusetts and the United States Constitutions.

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Jonas Proast

Jonas Proast (c.1640−1710) was an English High Church Anglican clergyman and academic.

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Jonathan Draper

Jonathan Lee Draper (born 27 February 1952) is an American Anglican priest, theologian, and academic.

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Jonathan Parsons

Jonathan Parsons (November 30, 1705 – July 19, 1776) was a Christian New England clergyman during the late colonial period and a supporter of the American Revolution.

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José Bernardo Escobar

José Bernardo Escobar (20 October 1797 - 20 March 1849) was interim President of Guatemala from 28 November 1848 to 1 January 1849.

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José Domingo Duquesne

José Domingo Duquesne (Bogotá, 23 February 1748 - idem, 30 August 1822) was a Colombian clergyman, theologist, scientist and writer.

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Joseph Abbott (Canadian priest)

Joseph Abbott (baptized 10 June 1790 – 10 January 1862) was a Canadian clergyman in the Anglican Church of Canada, and the father of John Joseph Caldwell Abbott, the third Prime Minister of Canada.

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Joseph Basil Roper

Joseph Basil Roper was a Roman Catholic priest in Australia.

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Joseph Bentham

Joseph Bentham (1593/94 – 1671) was a Church of England minister.

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Joseph de Joannis

Joseph de Joannis (6 June 1864 La Meignanne, Maine-et-Loire, Pays de la Loire – 27 October 1932 Paris) was a French clergyman and amateur entomologist.

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Joseph H. Albers

Joseph H. Albers D.D. (March 18, 1891 – December 1, 1965) was an American Roman Catholic clergyman.

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Joseph Marshall (cricketer, born 1835)

Joseph William Marshall (5 December 1835 – 10 September 1915) was an English clergyman and a cricketer who played first-class cricket for Cambridge University and Cambridge Town Club (aka Cambridgeshire).

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Joseph Peacocke (archbishop of Dublin)

Joseph Ferguson Peacocke (5 November 1835 – 26 May 1916) was a Church of Ireland cleric.

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Joseph Priestley and education

Joseph Priestley (– 8 February 1804) was a British natural philosopher, Dissenting clergyman, political theorist, and theologian.

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Joseph Priestley House

The Joseph Priestley House was the American home of 18th-century British theologian, Dissenting clergyman, natural philosopher (and discoverer of oxygen), educator, and political theorist Joseph Priestley (1733–1804) from 1798 until his death.

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Joseph Raffaele

Joseph Raffaele was the founder of the American Orthodox Catholic Church - Western Rite Mission, Diocese of New York.

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Joseph Stalin

Joseph Vissarionovich Stalin (18 December 1878 – 5 March 1953) was a Soviet revolutionary and politician of Georgian nationality.

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Joseph W. Kirwan

Rev.

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Joseph Woodfall Ebsworth

Joseph Woodfall Ebsworth (1824–1908) was an English clergyman, known as an editor of ballads, poet and artist.

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Josiah Hort

Josiah Hort (c. 1674 – 14 December 1751), was an English clergyman of the Church of Ireland who ended his career as archbishop of Tuam (1742–1751).

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Josiah Ransome-Kuti

Josiah Jesse Ransome-Kuti (1 June 1855 – 4 September 1930) was a Nigerian clergyman and music composer.

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Jozef Tiso

Jozef Tiso (13 October 1887 –18 April 1947) was a Slovak politician and Roman Catholic priest who governed the Slovak Republic from 1939 to 1945, a satellite state of Nazi Germany during World War II.

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Juan Alberto Puiggari

Juan Alberto Puiggari (born 21 November 1949) is an Argentinian clergyman.

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Juan de Borja y Castro

Juan de Borja y Castro (1533, Bellpuig – 3 September 1606, El Escorial) was a Spanish noble of the House of Borja and the House of Castro.

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Juan de Espinosa Medrano

Juan de Espinosa Medrano (Calcauso?, 1630? - Cuzco, 1688), known in history as Lunarejo (or “The Spotty-Faced”), was a Criollo cleric, saced preacher, writer, playwright, theologian and polymath from the Viceroyalty of Peru. He is the most prominent figure of the Literary Baroque of Peru and one of the most important intellectuals from Colonial Spanish America (along with the New Spain writers Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz and Carlos de Sigüenza y Góngora). Juan de Espinosa Medrano is the author of the most famous literary apologetic discourse in the Americas in the XVII century: the Apologético en favor de Don Luis de Góngora (1662). He also wrote autos sacramentales in Quechua —El robo de Proserpina y sueño de Endimión (c. 1650) and El hijo pródigo (c. 1657)—; comedies in Spanish —out of which only the biblical play Amar su propia muerte (c. 1650) is preserved—; panegyric sermons —compiled after his death in a volume called La Novena Maravilla (1695)—; and a course in Latin of thomistic philosophy —Philosophia Thomistica (1688)—. He acquired fame in life for the stylistic distinction and conceptual depth of his oeuvre (which was praised for its first-rate accordance to the scholastic and baroque epistemological parameters of his time). His polymathy, erudition and poetic ingenuity in the composition of sermons and literary works gained him the epithets of Sublime Doctor and Indian Demosthenes, as well as the less frequent ones of Criollo Phoenix and Tertullian of the Americas (all used to refer to him while alive). Additionally, after the Peruvian independence from Spanish Imperial rule took place, Juan de Espinosa Medrano's memory begun to be used as an exemplary model of the intellectual and moral potential of the peoples from South America (criollo, mestizos and indigenous populations included). The circumstances of Juan de Espinosa Medrano's origin, and the details about his first years of life, are —almost in their entirety—unknown. The absence of significant biographical data put forward in the will written by the own author days before his decease has further led to speculation about his ethnicity (or race) and identification. Furthermore, it has also led to manipulation and tendentious interpretations of the data preserved about his existence; such distortive reading has been especially pronounced in the many works of biographers, critics or commentators, akin to the political agenda of Indigenismo in Peru. What is incontrovertible, however, is that Juan de Espinosa Medrano always regarded himself both as Criollo and Spanish (an ideological servant of the Empire); evidences for such self-identification are to be found in his oeuvre, in which Juan de Espinosa Medrano sides constantly with the Spaniards, and often describes Native American populations as 'enemies', 'barbarous' and 'idolatrous' (he does not link himself with Native American peoples' cultures and ethnicity, and it is also unthinkable that an indigenous person could have held the power and clergy positions he did during his lifetime). His vast baroque production, written in Spanish, Latin and Quechua —in an aesthetic register different to the dialects now extant— was published both in America and Europe, however, only at the end of his life in the Old World. It had impact exclusively in the Viceroyalty of Peru, nonetheless, particularly because of a sabotage plan carried out by Jesuit priests in Rome at the end of the XVII century, which succeeded in impeding the circulation of Juan de Espinosa Medrano's philosophic course in Latin across the Old World (the work is the aforementioned Philosophia Thomistica). It was in this period that the Jesuit University of Saint Ignatius of Loyola contended with the Seminary of Saint Anthony the Abbot in Cuzco —institution that Juan de Espinosa Medrano represented— for the maintenance of its right in exclusivity to grant the degree of doctor to those instructed in Theology (a situation that forced the Seminary students, of thomist instruction, to present themselves before a jury of Jesuit theologians —followers of the doctrine of Francisco Suárez— for the evaluation leading to the conferral of their degree). In the present, the fascinating mysteries of his biography and the intrinsic quality of his literary production notwithstanding, the study of the works and life of Juan de Espinosa Medrano has extensively fallen to relegation or oblivion. This way, even if a certain part of his biography still survives in the oral tradition of the region of Apurímac —where it has acquired unusual characteristics—, in Cusco as well as in the Peruvian Literary Canon, knowledge of his life and work circumscribes mostly to scholars of Literature in Colonial Spanish America.

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Juan de Moncada

Juan de Moncada (Catalan: Joan de Montcada i Gralla) (Valencia, ? – Barcelona, 1622) was a Roman Catholic clergyman in Spain in the 17th century.

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Juan Ruiz

Juan Ruiz, known as the Archpriest of Hita (Arcipreste de Hita), was a medieval Castilian poet.

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Judicial system of Iran

A nationwide judicial system in Iran was first implemented and established by Abdolhossein Teymourtash under Reza Shah, with further changes during the second Pahlavi era.

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Judicial system of the Russian Empire

The judicial system of the Russian Empire was established as part of the system of government reforms of Peter the Great.

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Judith Babirye

Judith Babirye is a Ugandan gospel musician.

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Julianus Pomerius

Julianus Pomerius was a Christian priest in fifth century Gaul.

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Juries Act 1974

The Juries Act 1974 (c. 23) is an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom.

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Justice for Janitors

Justice for Janitors (JfJ) is a social movement organization that fights for the rights of janitors (caretakers and cleaners) across the US and Canada.

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Justice Machine

The Justice Machine is a fictional team of superheroes originally created by Michael Gustovich and appearing in comic books from many small publishers in the 1980s and 1990s.

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Justiciar

In Medieval England and Scotland the Chief Justiciar (later known simply as the Justiciar) was roughly equivalent to a modern Prime Minister as the monarch's chief minister.

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Justinian I

Justinian I (Flavius Petrus Sabbatius Iustinianus Augustus; Flávios Pétros Sabbátios Ioustinianós; 482 14 November 565), traditionally known as Justinian the Great and also Saint Justinian the Great in the Eastern Orthodox Church, was the Eastern Roman emperor from 527 to 565.

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Justus Christian Henry Helmuth

Justus Christian Henry Helmuth (16 May 1745 in Helmstedt, Brunswick, Germany – 5 February 1825 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States) was a German-American Lutheran clergyman.

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Justus Hiddes Halbertsma

Justus Hiddes Halbertsma, West Frisian form: Joast Hiddes Halbertsma, pron.

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Kali Charan Banerjee

Kali Charan Banerjee (1847–1902), spelt also as Kalicharan Banerji or K.C. Banerjea or K.C. Banurji, a Bengali convert to Anglican Church, was the founder of Calcutta Christo Samaj, a Christian parallel to Brahmo Samaj.

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Kalimavkion

A Kalimavkion (καλυμμαύχιον), kalymmavchi (καλυμαύχι), or, by metathesis of the word's internal syllables, kamilavka (камилавка), is an item of clerical clothing worn by Orthodox Christian and Eastern Catholic monks (in which case it is black) or awarded to clergy (in which case it may be red or purple).

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Kambala School

Kambala is an independent, Anglican, day and boarding school for girls, located on one campus in Rose Bay, an eastern suburb of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.

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Karl Eduard von Napiersky

Karl Eduard von Napiersky (21 May 1793, Riga – 2 September 1864, Riga) was a Latvian clergyman and historian.

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Karl Hood

Ignatius Joachim Karl Hood, known as Karl Hood, is a politician from the island nation of Grenada.

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Karl Proske

Karl Proske (11 February 1794, Gröbnig (Upper Silesia) – 20 December 1861), was a German Catholic cleric, also known as Carolus Proske and Carl Proske.

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Karunai Prakasar

Karunai Prakasar (Tamil: கருணை பிரகாசர்) was a seventeenth century Saiva spiritual writer.

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Karunamayi

Amma Sri Karunamayi (born 1958) is a Hindu spiritual leader.

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Katharina von Bora

Katharina von Bora (January 20, 1499 – December 20, 1552), after her wedding Katharina Luther, also referred to as "die Lutherin" was the wife of Martin Luther, German reformer and a seminal figure of the Protestant Reformation.

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Katholikentag

Katholikentag (Catholics Day) is a festival-like gathering in German-speaking countries organized by the Roman Catholic laity.

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Kazan Theological Seminary

Kazan Theological Seminary (Казанская духовная семинария) is the principal Russian Orthodox seminary in the Diocese of Kazan and Tatarstan.

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Kazimierz Dembowski

Kazimierz Dembowski (3 August 1912 in Strzyżów – 10 August 1942 at Dachau) was a Polish Roman Catholic clergyman, member of the Society of Jesus involved in the religious publishing industry, who shortly after the German invasion of Poland was arrested by the Gestapo, imprisoned at several places of detention, and lastly deported to the Dachau concentration camp where he was murdered in a gas chamber.

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Kazimierz Wojciechowski

Kazimierz Wojciechowski (born 16 August 1904 in Jasło; d. 27 June 1941 at Auschwitz) was a Polish Roman Catholic clergyman, member of the religious institute of the Salesians of Don Bosco involved (in consonance with the charter of his society) in the education of the youth, who after the Nazi invasion of Poland was arrested by the Gestapo, imprisoned at Montelupich, and subsequently deported to the Auschwitz concentration camp where he was murdered by two prisoner functionaries the day after arrival.

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Károly Hornig

Károly Hornig (10 August 1840—9 February 1917) was an Austrian-Hungarian Cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church.

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Keith's Chapel

Keith's Chapel also known as Mr Keith's Chapel and the May Fair Chapel, was a private chapel in Curzon Street, Mayfair, London, operated by the 18th century Church of England clergyman Alexander Keith.

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Kejawèn

Kejawèn or Javanism, also called Kebatinan, Agama Jawa, and Kepercayaan, is a Javanese religious tradition, consisting of an amalgam of animistic, Buddhist, Hindu and Islamic, especially Sufi, beliefs and practices.

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Kelantanese Malay people

Kelantanese Malays (Malaysian: Orang Melayu Kelantan, Kelantanese: Oghe Kelate) are a sub-ethnic group of Malays native to the state of Kelantan, Malaysia as well as in northern Terengganu (in the districts of Besut and northern Setiu).

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Kenneth Oram

Kenneth Cyril Oram AKC (3 March 1919 – 7 January 2001) was an Anglican clergyman who served as Dean of Kimberley and of Grahamstown before his elevation to the episcopacy as Bishop of Grahamstown, 1974 to 1987.

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Kerry Olitzky

Rabbi Kerry M. Olitzky is an Associate at Mersky, Jaffe & Associates, a firm that specializes in financial resource development and executive search solutions for the nonprofit community.

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Kevin O'Brien (Texas pastor)

Kevin O'Brien, usually known as Brother Kevin (October 31, 1955 – February 27, 2008), was an Independent Baptist clergyman who served as the pastor of Bethany Baptist Church in Lubbock, Texas, from October 1996, until his death at the age of fifty-two from prostate cancer.

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Kevin Vann

Kevin William Vann (born May 10, 1951) is an American prelate of the Roman Catholic Church.

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Khalid Mehmood Soomro

Dr.

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Kielce pogrom

The Kielce Pogrom was an outbreak of violence toward the Jewish community centre's gathering of refugees in the city of Kielce, Poland on 4 July 1946 by Polish soldiers, police officers, and civilians during which 42 Jews were killed and more than 40 were wounded.

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Kim Hammer

Kim David Hammer (born August 11, 1958) is a Missionary Baptist pastor and hospice chaplain in Benton, Arkansas, who is a Republican member of the Arkansas House of Representatives for District 28 in Saline County near the capital city of Little Rock.

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Kinder House and Ewelme Cottage

Kinder House and Ewelme Cottage are two historic houses on Ayr Street, in the suburb of Parnell, Auckland, New Zealand.

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King's Ely

King's Ely, which was renamed from The King's School in March 2012,The School's Terms and Conditions and the Companies House registration would suggest that the School's legal name remains "The King's School, Ely" is a coeducational independent day and boarding school in the cathedral city of Ely, Cambridgeshire, England.

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Kingdom of Finland (1742)

The attempt to create a Kingdom of Finland in 1742 is a little-known chapter in the history of Finland.

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Kingdom of Galicia

The Kingdom of Galicia (Reino de Galicia, or Galiza; Reino de Galicia; Reino da Galiza; Galliciense Regnum) was a political entity located in southwestern Europe, which at its territorial zenith occupied the entire northwest of the Iberian Peninsula.

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Kings of Uí Díarmata

Kings of Uí Díarmata from c.971 onwards.

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Kitáb-i-Aqdas

The Kitáb-i-Aqdas or Aqdas is the central book of the Bahá'í Faith written by Bahá'u'lláh, the founder of the religion, in 1873.

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Knight

A knight is a person granted an honorary title of knighthood by a monarch, bishop or other political leader for service to the monarch or a Christian Church, especially in a military capacity.

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Kodiak, Alaska

Kodiak (Alutiiq: Sun'aq; Kadʹyak) is one of seven communities and the main city on Kodiak Island, Kodiak Island Borough, in the U.S. state of Alaska.

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Kondiaronk

Kondiaronk (c. 1649–1701) (Gaspar Soiaga, Souojas, Sastaretsi), known as Le Rat (The Muskrat) was Chief of the Hurons at Michilimackinac.

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Korbach

Korbach (pronunciation: ˈkoːɐˌbax), officially the Hanseatic City of Korbach (German: Hansestadt Korbach), is the district seat of Waldeck-Frankenberg in northern Hesse, Germany.

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Kotohira Jinsha v. McGrath

Kotohira Jinsha v. McGrath, Attorney General,.

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Kryvyi Rih Eparchy

Kryvyi Rih and Nikopol diocese - Eparchy of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate) centered in Krivoy Rog, Ukraine; includes the western districts of Dnepropetrovsk region.

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Kumara Swamy Desikar

Kumara Swamy Desikar (born Kumara Swamy, 1711–1810), was a Saiva spiritual writer.

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Kumaraswamy Pulavar

Chunnakam Kumaraswamy Pulavar (சுன்னாகம் குமாரசாமிப்புலவர்) was a well-known Sri Lankan Tamil scholar and poet from Maylani village in Chunnakam township in Jaffna peninsula in the British held Ceylon now known as Sri Lanka.

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Kuno Pajula

Kuno Pajula (before 1936 Kuno Preis; 11 March 1924 – 26 November 2012) was an Estonian clergyman.

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Kurt Polycarp Joachim Sprengel

Kurt Polycarp Joachim Sprengel (3 August 1766 – 15 March 1833) is a man that is known for his contributions and accomplishments as a botanist and physician.

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Kurt Scharf

Kurt Scharf (October 21, 1902 – March 28, 1990) was a German clergyman and bishop of the Evangelical Church in Berlin-Brandenburg.

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Kuzhivelil Mathew

Kuzhivelil Varkey Mathew (born 2 November 1931) is a biblical scholar and a memberFr. Max Gonsalves (Ed.), Society for Biblical Studies in India Directory 1998.

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Kyai

A kyai (kyaa-ee) is a (Javanese) expert in Islam.

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Kynaston Reeves

Philip Arthur Reeves (29 May 1893 in London, England – 5 December 1971 in London), known professionally as Kynaston Reeves, was an English character actor who appeared in numerous films and many television plays and series.

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L'Anse aux Meadows

L'Anse aux Meadows (from the French L'Anse-aux-Méduses or "Jellyfish Cove"), is an archaeological site on the northernmost tip of the island of Newfoundland in the Canadian province of Newfoundland and Labrador.

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La Ballade des Dalton

La Ballade des Dalton is a 1978 French animated film written and directed by René Goscinny, Morris, Henri Gruel and Pierre Watrin starring the comic book character Lucky Luke.

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La Conquête de Plassans

La Conquête de Plassans (1874) is the fourth novel in Émile Zola's twenty-volume series Les Rougon-Macquart.

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Laïcité

Laïcité, literally "secularity", is a French concept of secularism.

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Laban Ainsworth

Laban Ainsworth (July 19, 1757 – March 17, 1858) was an American clergyman and pastor.

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Labor camp

A labor camp (or labour, see spelling differences) or work camp is a simplified detention facility where inmates are forced to engage in penal labor as a form of punishment under the criminal code.

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Laity

A layperson (also layman or laywoman) is a person who is not qualified in a given profession and/or does not have specific knowledge of a certain subject.

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Lake Küçükçekmece

Lake Küçükçekmece (Küçükçekmece Gölü) is a lagoon located between the Küçükçekmece, Esenyurt and Avcılar districts of the European portion of Istanbul Province, northwestern Turkey.

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Lambert Ferri

Lambert Ferri (fl. c. 1250–1300) was a trouvère and cleric at the Benedictine monastery at Saint-Léonard, Pas-de-Calais.

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Lampadarius

A lampadarius, plural Lampadarii, from the Latin "lampada", from Ancient Greek "lampas" λαμπάς (candle), was a slave who carried torches before consuls, emperors and other officials of high dignity both during the later Roman Republic and under the Empire.

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Lamprecht

Lamprecht, surnamed Der Pfaffe (“The Priest”), was a German poet of the twelfth century.

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Land reform in the Philippines

Land reform in the Philippines has long been a contentious issue rooted in the Philippines's Spanish Colonial Period.

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Landed gentry

Landed gentry or gentry is a largely historical British social class consisting in theory of landowners who could live entirely from rental income, or at least had a country estate.

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Landesrabbiner

Landesrabbiner (Rav Medinah) are spiritual heads of the Jewish communities of a country, province, or district, particularly in Germany and Austria.

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Landstände

The Landstände (singular Landstand) or Landtage (singular Landtag) were the various territorial estates or diets in the Holy Roman Empire in the Middle Ages and the early modern period, as opposed to their respective territorial lords (the Landesherrn).

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Latin Church

The Latin Church, sometimes called the Western Church, is the largest particular church sui iuris in full communion with the Pope and the rest of the Catholic Church, tracing its history to the earliest days of Christianity.

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Laurence Parsons (priest)

Laurence Edmund Parsons was an eminent Anglican clergyman in the 20th century.

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Lavery

Lavery, also spelled Lowry, Lowrie, Lory, and Lowery, is an Irish surname derived from the Gaelic Ó Labhradha, meaning the "descendants of Labhradha".

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Law of Vatican City

The law of Vatican City State consists of many forms, the most important of which is the Fundamental Law of Vatican City State.

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Lawrence Dobkin

Lawrence "Larry" Dobkin (September 16, 1919 – October 28, 2002) was an American television director, character actor and screenwriter whose career spanned seven decades.

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Lawrence Khong

Lawrence Khong Kin Hoong (born 17 July 1952) is a Singaporean Christian religious leader and magician.

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Lay brother

In the past, the term lay brother was used within some Catholic religious institutes to distinguish members who were not ordained from those members who were clerics (priests and seminarians).

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Lay cardinal

In the Roman Catholic Church, a "lay cardinal" was a cardinal who had never been given major orders, i.e. who had never been ordained a deacon, priest, or bishop.

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Lay communion

Lay communion is a term applied in the Catholic Church, to describe the status of a cleric who is in communion with the Church, but only with the standing of a lay person.

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Lay leader

A lay leader is a member of the laity in any congregation who has been chosen as a leader either by their peers or the leadership of the congregation.

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Lay preacher

Lay preacher is a preacher or a religious proclaimer who is not a formally ordained cleric.

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Lay reader

A lay reader (in some jurisdictions simply reader) or licensed lay minister (LLM) is a layperson authorized by a bishop in the Anglican Communion to lead certain services of worship or lead certain parts of a service.

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Lay speaker

A lay speaker is a position in the United Methodist Church for the laity.

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Lazarus Muoka

Lazarus Muoka is a Nigerian pastor, minister and author.

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Løten

Løten is a municipality in Hedmark county, Norway.

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League of Polish Families

The League of Polish Families (Polish: Liga Polskich Rodzin, LPR) is a nationalist conservative political party in Poland, part of the Catholic-National Movement and with many elements of far-right ideology.

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Lebanese Front

The Lebanese Front (الجبهة اللبنانية| al-Jabha al-Lubnaniyya) or Front libanais in French, was a coalition of mainly Christian parties formed in 1976 during the Lebanese Civil War.

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Lebanese Palestinian Dialogue Committee

The Lebanese-Palestinian Dialogue Committee (LPDC), originally called the Lebanese Working Group on Palestinian Refugees, is an inter-ministerial government body formed in November 2005 by Lebanese Council of Ministers’ decision 89/2005.

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Legalism (theology)

Legalism (or nomism), in Christian theology, is the act of putting the Law of Moses above the gospel, which is 1 Corinthians 15:1-4, by establishing requirements for salvation beyond faith (trust) in Jesus Christ, specifically, trust in His finished work - the shedding of His blood for our sins, and reducing the broad, inclusive, and general precepts of the Bible to narrow and rigid moral codes.

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Legend of the Parson and Clerk

The legend of the Parson and Clerk is a tale focusing on a clergyman and the devil set near two stacks located near the towns of Teignmouth and Dawlish, Devon, England.

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Leighton Parks

Leighton Parks (10 February 1852-21 March 1938) was a liberal American Protestant Episcopal clergyman.

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Len Evans (footballer)

Sidney John Vivian Leonard Evans (20 May 1903 – 26 December 1977) was a Welsh professional footballer who played in the Football League for Aberdare Athletic, Merthyr Town, Cardiff City and Birmingham, and won four caps for the Wales national football team.

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Leonard Faulkner

Leonard Anthony Faulkner (5 December 1926 – 6 May 2018) was an Australian Roman Catholic clergyman and the seventh Archbishop of Adelaide.

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Leonard McNally

Leonard McNally (1752–1820), sometimes spelled MacNally or Macnally, was a Dublin barrister, playwright, lyricist, founding member of the United Irishmen and spy for the British Government within Irish republican circles.

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Leonard Woolley

Sir Charles Leonard Woolley (17 April 1880 – 20 February 1960) was a British archaeologist best known for his excavations at Ur in Mesopotamia.

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Leonard Woolsey Bacon

Leonard Woolsey Bacon (January 1, 1830 – May 12, 1907Obituary Record of Graduates of Yale University, Yale University, 1906-7, New Haven, pp. 687-9.) was an American clergyman, born in New Haven, Connecticut.

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Leonid Feodorov

Blessed Leonid Ivanovich Feodorov (Леонид Иванович Фёдоров; 4 November 1879 – 7 March 1935) was Exarch of the Russian Byzantine Catholic Church, in addition to being a survivor of the Gulag.

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Lepavina Monastery

The Lepavina Monastery (Манастир Лепавина) is a Serbian Orthodox monastery dedicated to the Presentation of Mary and located at the village of Sokolovac, near the town of Koprivnica in Croatia.

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Levett

Levett is an Anglo-Norman territorial surname deriving from the village of Livet-en-Ouche, now Jonquerets-de-Livet, in Eure, Normandy.

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LGBT history in Mexico

The study of homosexuality in Mexico can be divided into three separate periods, coinciding with the three main periods of Mexican history: pre-Columbian, colonial, and post-independence, in spite of the fact that the rejection of homosexuality forms a connecting thread that crosses the three periods.

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Li chiamarono... briganti!

Li chiamarono...

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Liber Gomorrhianus

The Liber Gomorrhianus (Book of Gomorrah) is a book authored and published by the Benedictine monk St. Peter Damian during the Gregorian Reformation circa AD 1051.