Showing 81 - 100 results of 634 for search '"Head of the Church', query time: 0.37s Refine Results
  1. 81

    The Anglican identity of the Church's higher education institutions: research report on visits to the institutions in 2012 by Gay, J

    Published 2022
    “…<p>This research was part of a wider project looking at the Anglican identity of the twelve universities and university colleges associated structurally with the Church of England and the Church in Wales. All of them grew out of Anglican colleges of education established to train teachers. …”
    Report
  2. 82
  3. 83

    Resumption of Church Life in the Stalin (Donetsk) Region Under German Occupation (1941–1943) by Rebrova Mariia

    Published 2016-06-01
    “…In 1942 in the region there were two diocesan administration: Yenakiyevo (headed by Archpriest Arseny Knyshev) — in the jurisdiction of the Metropolitan Alexy (Gromadsky) and Makeyevka (headed by Archpriest Peter Kachevsky) is subordinate to the bishop of Taganrog Joseph (Chernoff). …”
    Get full text
    Article
  4. 84

    A case for two voices in Old Church Slavonic – reflexively marked OCS verbs by Anna Malicka-Kleparska

    Published 2015-12-01
    “… Old Church Slavonic data manifest significant similarities in the distribution and formal properties of anticausatives, reflexives, subject experiencer verbs, statives, and reciprocals, while their semantics may also be viewed as partly uniform. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  5. 85

    “Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace”: church singing in occupied Pskov (1941–1944) by I. V. Gerasimova

    Published 2022-10-01
    “…The article reconstructs the organization of church singing in occupied Pskov in 1941–1944, associated with the restoration of worship in churches closed in the pre-war period, headed by the Holy Trinity Cathedral — a former anti-religious museum. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  6. 86

    Histories-vergelykende ekklesiologie – Oppad na ’n omvattende Praktiese Ekklesiologie by Wim A. Dreyer

    Published 2011-11-01
    “…In this contribution an historical-comparative ecclesiology is developed under the headings of institutional, transformational and non-institutional ecclesiology. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  7. 87

    The king, his chapel, his church. Boundaries and hybridity in the religious visual culture of the Norman Kingdom by Bongianino, U

    Published 2017
    “…Through the creation and subversion of architectural boundaries, the promotion of certain forms of visual hybridity, the transgression of artistic media, and the articulation of new liminal spaces, the Norman rulers transformed their churches and cathedrals into an ideal stage for performing their liturgy of kingship, and conveying the message of a multi-faceted religious system unified and harmonized only through the king, as supreme head of the Church and vicar of Christ.…”
    Journal article
  8. 88
  9. 89
  10. 90

    Territorial Dioceses and Ethnic Episcopies in the Structure of the Church Organization of the First Bulgarian Kingdom (Canonical Aspects) by Archpriest Alexander Zadornov

    Published 2016-11-01
    “…They were aimed at training the Slavonic clergy for the Slavonic church organization. In 893, the Bulgarian King Simeon was elevated to the throne, and a Slavonic eparchy headed by St. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  11. 91

    Territorial Dioceses and Ethnic Episcopies in the Structure of the Church Organization of the First Bulgarian Kingdom (Canonical Aspects) by Archpriest Alexander Zadornov

    Published 2016-12-01
    “…They were aimed at training the Slavonic clergy for the Slavonic church organization. In 893, the Bulgarian King Simeon was elevated to the throne, and a Slavonic eparchy headed by St. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  12. 92

    Missionary Activity of the Russian Orthodox Church in Chukotka (17th - early 20th cc.) by Yurganova Inna Igorevna

    Published 2015-06-01
    “…We consider the missionary activity of the Russian Orthodox Church in the Chukotka Peninsula in the context of civilizational component integration into the Russian imperial areas in the 17th - early 20th centuries, including a brief historiography of the problem, the history of the construction of churches and chapels, the creation of the Orthodox mission, its structure and the territorial boundaries of the missionary activities. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  13. 93

    State-Church Relations and the Religious Situation in a Provincial Town in 1997–2003 (On the Example of Tolyatti) by Vadim Yakunin

    Published 2021-08-01
    “…In order to implement the goal of the research, we used the materials of the municipal public institution “Tolyatti Archive” (orders and resolutions of the mayor of Tolyatti), data from periodicals, memoirs of contemporaries, materials of the current archive of the Samara diocesan administration closed to the public (reports of the ruling Bishop of the Samara diocese to the Moscow Patriarchate), materials from the author’s personal archive: reports of the assistant governors of Samara Oblast on religious issues reports of both secular and ecclesiastical officials on the religious situation in Samara Oblast and Tolyatti, other official and unofficial documents, many of which, due to their specificity, do not end up in Church or secular archives (correspondence between the heads of local religious organizations with Tolyatti Duma and City Hall officials; protocols of City Hall meetings on religious issues and the protocols of meetings in the religious organizations, which were conducted by the author). …”
    Get full text
    Article
  14. 94

    The first church in Chelyabinsk fortress in the context of the sacralisation of space during the Russian colonisation of the Urals and Siberia by Andrey Ivanovich

    Published 2024-12-01
    “…To find out the initiators of the nomination of the first temple in the Chelyabinsk fortress, an analysis of the names of the bishops of the Siberian Metropolis, in charge of which the fortress was located, was undertaken; monks of the Assumption Dalmatian Monastery in 1735, whose archimandrite was instructed to lay the church; the heads of the families of the fortress, recorded in the census of 1739 – 1740. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  15. 95

    State Policy Concerning Russian Orthodox Church Between 1958 and 1964 (Based on Krasnodar Krai) by Natalia Yu. Belikova

    Published 2019-10-01
    “…This diocese was headed by Metropolitan Viktor (Svyatin). Methods and materials. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  16. 96
  17. 97

    Interaction between the staff of the Council for the Russian Orthodox Church and the state security organs in the period of 1943–1953 by Grigory Bartenev

    Published 2022-12-01
    “…The next period ended with a change in the leadership of the MGB in 1946 and was characterized by the implementation of the planned church policy of the state through the Council, whose head G.G. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  18. 98

    The Motive of the Ram in the Architectural Decoration of the Christian Churches in Caucasus between the 10th-14th Centuries by Endoltseva Ekaterina

    Published 2021-11-01
    “…Represented on the façades of the churches, it has attained protective and apotropaic functions.…”
    Get full text
    Article
  19. 99

    Besluitneming in die Gereformeerde Kerkverband by Francois Venter

    Published 2024-02-01
    “…Contemporary participants in collective decision-making can find it difficult to distinguish between liberal-democratic processes and those of the church. Christ is the only head of his church and exegesis and hermeneutics are not exact sciences, it is, however, possible to deliberate on alternative Scriptural interpretations, but impossible to prove one to be correct and the other false. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  20. 100

    Personalistic View of John Paul II on the Humanizing Function of Art in the Context of Dialogue between the Church and Artists by Richard Gorban

    Published 2022-09-01
    “… This article presents the way John Paul II, the head of the Vatican at the beginning of the third millennium, theologically and philosophically substantiates and establishes the principles of a new humanism through the dialogue between the Church and art as the most personalized sphere of human activity. …”
    Get full text
    Article