- a benefice, in
discharging the
duties of his
bishopric or benefice.
Coadjutorship may be of two kinds: one
temporary and revocable,
allowed on account...
-
Bishop Lynch, who was
relieved of his
Scottish coadjutorship on 4
April 1869 and
translated to the
coadjutorship of
Kildare and
Leighlin in
Ireland on 13 April...
-
before his ordination, with
several royal abbeys, he
rapidly rose to the
coadjutorship of Langres, then to that of
Reims and
became titular of that see at...
- degree, to
grant coadjutorship of the See of
Bremen for his son Frederick,
later crown prince of
Denmark (September 1621).
Coadjutorship usually included...
- This
canon is to be
found in the Book of Armagh.
Benignus resigned his
coadjutorship in 467 and died the same year. His
feast is
celebrated on 9 November...
- Ward's biography. In July 1860
Errington was
deprived by the Pope of his
coadjutorship with
right of succession. He
retired to
Prior Park, near Bath, where...
- Gibson,
Vicar Apostolic of the
Northern District; the
Briefs for the
coadjutorship and
titular see of
Bolina were
dated on 15 May 1807. However, the mandate...
- 31
January 2018 C. M. Widman, 'Father
Nicholas Petit, S.J., and the
Coadjutorship of Vincennes, '
Woodstock Letters, ****I (1902), 43. Brown, Mary Borromeo...
- of succession. Baden's
government acceded to Dalberg's wish, but the
coadjutorship was not
recognised by Rome. That same year
Wessenberg published anonymously...
- York: The
Catholic Publication Society. 1884. pp. 90–91. P. Cunich, The
coadjutorship of
Roger Bede Vaughan, 1873-77,
Journal of the
Australian Catholic Historical...