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Fasti Ecclesiæ Anglicanæ

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Fasti Ecclesiæ Anglicanæ, or an Essay towards a regular Succession of all the principal Dignitaries is a 1716 work of English ecclesiatical biography by John Le Neve[1] under the supervision of the Archbishop of Canterbury, selected by the English Act of Union in 1707, to administer and supervise all documentation produced and published by the clergy in England and Wales, and further across the UK.[2]

Fasti ecclesiae Anglicanae[edit]

Index pages from the 1854 edition published and edited by Thomas Duffus Hardy:
VOLUME I - Fasti ecclesiae Anglicanae, Vol. 1 INDEX: Diocese of Canterbury: 43 Diocese of St Asaph: 105 Diocese of Bangor: 137 Diocese of Bath and Wells: 167 Diocese of Bristol: 255 Diocese of Chichester: 277 Diocese of St David's: 329 Diocese of Ely: 367 Diocese of Exeter: 405 Diocese of Gloucester: 477 Diocese of Hereford: 495 Diocese of Lichfield: 579
VOLUME 2 - part 1 - Fasti ecclesiae Anglicanae, Vol.2 body of work part 1 INDEX: Diocese of Lincoln: 7 Diocese of Llandaff: 245
VOLUME 2 - part 2 - Fasti ecclesiae Anglicanae Vol.2 body of work part 2 INDEX: Diocese of London: 1 Diocese of Norwich: 185 Diocese of Oxford: 233 Diocese of Peterborough: 263 Diocese of Rochester: 283 Diocese of Salisbury: 319
VOLUME 3 - Fasti ecclesiae Anglicanae Vol. 3 INDEX: Diocese of Winchester: 10 Diocese of Worcester: 47 Diocese of York: 88 Diocese of Carlisle: 225 Diocese of Chester: 253 Diocese of Durham: 251 Diocese of Sodor and Man: 317 Diocese of Ripon: 327 Diocese of Manchester: 329 Colonial dioceses: 331 Addenda (appointed during the progress of this Work): 335 Collegiate churches: 337 Eton (338), Westminster (342), Windsor (367) & Southwell (411) University of Oxford: Chancellors (459), Vice-Chancellors (466), Proctors (476), Burgesses (501) & Professors etc. (505) Colleges and halls: Univ (532), Balliol (535), Merton (538), Exeter (541), Oriel (543), Queen's (547), New College (549), Lincoln (552), All Souls (554), Magdalen (557), Brasenose (559), Corpus (561), Trinity (567), St John's (569), Jesus (571), Wadham (573), Pembroke (574), Worcester (576), Hertford (577), St Mary Hall (580), Magdalen Hall (582), New Inn Hall (583), Alban Hall (586) & Teddy Hall (588) University of Cambridge: Chancellors (593), Vice-Chancellors (598), Proctors (611), Taxors (631), Burgesses (645) & Professors etc. (649) Colleges and halls: Peterhouse (663), Clare Hall (666), Pembroke (668), Caius (672), Trinity Hall (674), Corpus (676), King's (678), Queens' (680), Catharine Hall (682), Jesus (684), Christ's (685), St John's (687), Magdalene (690), Michaelhouse (692), King's Hall (693), Trinity College (694), Emmanuel (697), Sidney (698) & Downing (700) Index of names: 701[3]

References[edit]

  • Brooks, N., The Early History of the Church of Canterbury, Leicester University Press, 1984, pp. 3–14. UK
  • Johnson, Ben. "Archbishops of Canturbury". Historic UK. Retrieved 31 January 2020, London UK
  1. 1716 Fasti Ecclesiæ Anglicanæ of John Le Neve, by Thomas Duffus Hardy,1854 Edition, UK .
  2. History of the Reformation of the Church of England, 1865 edition, Volume 4, P 318ff and in Bullarum, diplomatum et privilegiorum sanctorum Romanorum pontificum Taurinensis (1857) Volume VI, Page 195
  3. Fasti Ecclesiæ Anglicanæ, from the 1854 edition by Thomas Duffus Hardy, UK|https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Fasti_Ecclesi%C3%A6_Anglican%C3%A6


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