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Church of England (Corporate Name)

Preferred form: Church of England
Used for/see from:
  • Anglican Church
  • Anglikanskai︠a︡ t︠s︡erkovʹ
  • Ecclesia Anglicana
  • Kirche von England

The Christian guardian and Church of England magazine, 1824.

NLC, 4/9/87 (United Church of England and Ireland; Act of Union, 1801, united the Church of England [f. 1534] and the Church of Ireland under the name of United Church of England and Ireland. The union was dissolved by the Irish Church Act of 1869 and each reverted to its original name)

The Maryknoll Catholic dictionary, 1965: p. 34 (Anglican Church; Ecclesia Anglicana; Church of England)

Simvolicheskīi︠a︡ i bogosluzhebnyi︠a︡ knigi Anglikanskoĭ T︠S︡erkvi, kak vyrazhenīe ei︠a︡ vi︠e︡rosoznanīi︠a︡, 1908.

The national churches of England, Ireland, and Scotland, 1801-1846, 2002: page 2 (In 1801, there were, properly speaking, two established Churches in the United Kingdom--the Episcopal United Church of England and Ireland and the Presbyterian Church of Scotland. The United Church of England and Ireland was a recent innovation, created by clause V of the Act of Union of 1801, which had combined the respective establishments of England and Ireland 'into one Protestant Episcopal Church' whose 'doctrine, discipline and government' were to 'remain in full force for ever'. However, this ecclesiastical union was more a project for the future than a present reality. The conditions and circumstances of the two Churches were so different that for purposes of parliamentary legislation, and in the eyes of most observers, they were separate institutions. It was more accurate to speak of three established Churches, corresponding to the three historic kingdoms)

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