Definition of Cuncacestre. Meaning of Cuncacestre. Synonyms of Cuncacestre

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Cuncacestre. Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Cuncacestre and, of course, Cuncacestre synonyms and on the right images related to the word Cuncacestre.

Definition of Cuncacestre

No result for Cuncacestre. Showing similar results...

Meaning of Cuncacestre from wikipedia

- Cuncacestre (Chester-le-Street) was a seat of the Anglo Saxon Bishop of Lindisfarne, and subsists as a Roman Catholic titular see. The church was established...
- was removed from there around 875 and translated to Chester-le-Street (Cuncacestre) in around 882. The Bishop owes his unique position to the 7th and 8th...
- auxiliary bishop of the Archdiocese of Birmingham and the titular bishop of Cuncacestre. He is the first Oratorian to be appointed a bishop in England since...
- On 4 January 2003, Pope Benedict XVI appointed him titular bishop of Cuncacestre and an auxiliary bishop of Westminster, making him one of the most senior...
- appointed him Auxiliary Bishop of Hexham and Newcastle and titular Bishop of Cuncacestre. Lindsay was consecrated bishop at St. Mary's Cathedral, Newcastle upon...
- Durham. The title has been revived as the Roman Catholic titular see of Cuncacestre. The church was rebuilt in stone in 1054 and, despite the loss of its...
- Roman Catholic Diocese of Hexham and Newcastle and Titular Bishop of Cuncacestre under Bishops Hugh Lindsay and Ambrose Griffiths from 1977 until his...
- Cratia Cremna Crepedula Cresima Croae Cubda Cufruta Cucusus Cuicul Culusi Cuncacestre Cunga FĂ©ichin ****ae Curium Cursola Curubis Cures Sabinorum Cusae Cyanae...
- bishop, for the diocese (sometimes known as Lindisfarne and sometimes as Cuncacestre the Latin name for Chester-le-Street) stretching between the boundaries...
- Martin's and St Paul's PCC, Canterbury, 1997) then called Cunecaster or Cuncacestre Orme (1996), p. 151 not a "Bishop of Cornwall"; the extent of his influence...