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Encyclopedia results for Dispensation

Dispensation





Encyclopedia results for Dispensation

  1. Andrew Wood (bishop)

    Other persons Andrew Wood Andrew Wood died 1695 was a Kingdom of Scotland Scottish prelate from the 17th century. The son of David Wood, Church of Scotland Minister religion minister , by a daughter of John Guthrie Bishop of Moray John Guthrie , Bishop of Moray , he followed his father s career in the ministry. He became minister at Spott and then Dunbar , both in East Lothian , before becoming Bishop of the Isles in 1678. He received Dispensation Catholic Church dispensation from the king to hold this bishopric while retaining Dunbar. After two years as the Bishop of the Isles, in 1680 he was translated to the bishopric of Caithness . He held the position of Bishop of Caithness until the Glorious Revolution Revolution of 1688, when episcopacy was abolished in Scotland and all Church of Scotland bishops lost their Episcopal see see s. He died in 1695, aged 76, at Dunbar . References citation last Keith first Robert authorlink Robert Keith historian title An Historical Catalogue of the Scottish Bishops Down to the Year 1688 year 1824 edition New publisher Printed for Bell & Bradfute location London url http books.google.com ?id 9G8AAAAAMAAJ , pp.  218, 310 refend s start s rel succession box before Robert Wallace bishop Robert Wallace title Bishop of the Isles years 1678&ndash 1680 after Archibald Graham bishop Archibald Graham succession box before Patrick Forbes title Bishop of Caithness years 1680&ndash 1688 9 after Episcopacy abolished s end Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Wood, Andrew ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION Bishop of the Church of Scotland DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 1695 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Wood, Andrew Category 17th century births Category 1695 deaths Category Bishops of Caithness Category Bishops of the Isles Category Ministers of the Church of Scotland Category People from East Lothian ...   more details



  1. Roger Ashton

    Roger Ashton executed at Tyburn , 23 June 1592 was an English Roman Catholic soldier. He is a Catholic martyr. Life He was the third son of Richard Ashton of Croston , in Lancashire . In 1585 he had gone to serve in the Low Countries under the Earl of Leicester against the Spanish. William Stanley Elizabethan Sir William Stanley having been placed on guard over the town of Deventer , which had revolted from the Spaniards, he, with the assistance of Ashton, gave the town back to Spain and went over to their side 29 January 1587 . Cardinal William Allen cardinal William Allen published a Defence of this act in the form of a letter addressed to one R.A. . Stanley next entrusted to Ashton the task of bringing over his wife from Ireland, but she was already under arrest. At the close of the year 1587 he returned to England and was apprehended in Kent with a marriage dispensation Richard Challoner says it was a papal dispensation to marry his second cousin . In January, 1588, he was in the Tower of London . Ill towards the close of the year, he was transferred to easier confinement in the Marshalsea . From this he managed to escape and fled to his brothers in Lancashire. He was arrested later, at Shields near Newcastle upon Tyne Newcastle , while trying to escape overseas. Transferred to Durham and York , he was tried and sentenced at Canterbury . He was hanged, drawn, and quartered his indictment is not preserved. He died a very resolute Catholic, making profession of his faith. References reflist Attribution Catholic wstitle Ven. Roger Ashton Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Ashton, Ralph ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 1592 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Ashton, Ralph Category 1592 deaths Category English soldiers Category People executed by hanging, drawing and quartering Category 16th century Roman Catholic martyrs Category Year of birth unknown Category 16th century soldiers Category People from Lancashir ...   more details



  1. George Balderston Kidd

    Rev. George Balderston Kidd Cottingham, East Riding of Yorkshire Cottingham , near Hull, 28 July 1794 1852 was a English Dissenters Dissenting Minister and theological writer. He was the eldest son of the Rev. Anthony Kidd, Nonconformism Nonconformist minister. ref name TSA Kidd is mainly remembered for his posthumous book Christophaneia The Doctrine of the Manifestations of the Son of God under the Economy of the Old Testament ed. OT Dobbin London Ward, 1852 . This was used in argument with Unitarianism Unitarian s in the 19th Century to claim the pre existence of Christ and the appearance of Christ as the Angel of the Lord and Ancient of Days in the Hebrew Bible. ref name WCT The book was also listed as Christophany the Result of original Investigations into the Manifestations of the Son of God, under the Old Testament Dispensation . ref name JKJ It was one of the first texts to use the term Christophany to apply to claimed appearances of Christ as angels in the Hebrew Bible, rather than in the New Testament sense such as the Damascus Christophany . References reflist refs ref name JKJ John Kitto Journal of Sacred Literature, April 1852 to July 1852 2003 p267 Christophany the Result of original Investigations into the Manifestations of the Son of God, under the Old Testament Dispensation. By the late Rev. GB Kidd. Edited by the Rev. OT Dobbin, LLD ref ref name TSA Thomas Stratten A brief memoir of the rev. G. Balderston Kidd 1852 ref ref name WCT e.g Walter Chamberlain The Christian verity stated, in reply to a Unitarian 1861 p87 On these manifestations of The Son in the Old Testament, a useful book is Christophaneia, by a late dissenting minister, Mr. George Balderston Kidd a work particularly valuable for its minute and multitudinous Scripture references. ref Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Kidd, George Balderston ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH 28 July 1794 PLACE OF BIRTH Cottingham, East Riding of Yorkshire , England DATE ...   more details



  1. Censor Librorum

    Unreferenced stub auto yes date December 2009 In the Roman Catholic Church , the Censor Librorum is an ecclesiastical authority charged with reviewing texts and granting the nihil obstat . The Latin Censor Librorum translates as censor of books. While the title may suggest the function of suppressing books critical or otherwise unpopular with the Church, this is not the function of the Censor Librorum . Rather, it is the responsibility of the Censor Librorum to review texts for doctrinal accuracy. A text that is doctrinally correct that is, does not contain any statements that contradict Church doctrine but portrays the Church or Church officials in a negative manner must still be granted the nihil obstat . The office of Censor Librorum is a Diocese diocesan office , appointed by the diocesan Bishop Catholic Church bishop . The function is typically performed by a priest, but if no Priesthood Catholic Church priest is available, the function could be performed by a theologically educated layperson under a special dispensation. See also Nihil obstat Imprimatur Imprimi potest Category Censorship in Christianity Category Roman Catholic Church offices RC stub id Censor Librorum nl Censor Librorum sv Censor librorum ...   more details



  1. Jordan of Osnabrück

    Orphan date February 2009 Jordan of Osnabr ck c . 1220 15 April 1284 was a significant German political writer of the thirteenth century. He is known for his work De praerogativa Romani imperii . Antony Black writes In the tracts written between c. 1250 and c. 1281 by Jordan of Osnabr ck and Alexander of Roes ... it was claimed that divine dispensation had alloted the empire to Germans via Charlemagne . ref Political Thought in Europe 1250 1450 1993 , p.93. ref He died at Osnabr ck . Notes Reflist External links BBKL j Jordan v o band 3 autor Heinrich Koch artikel Jordanus von Osnabr ck spalten 645 649 Use dmy dates date January 2012 Persondata name Jordan of Osnabruck alternative names short description date of birth place of birth date of death 1284 place of death DEFAULTSORT Jordan Of Osnabruck Category 1284 deaths Category Year of birth uncertain de Jordan von Osnabr ck sv Jordanus av Osnabr ck ...   more details



  1. BHC

    BHC can refer to Bag Head Cult , an organization dedicated to proper mojo dispensation for the San Diego Chargers Bank holding company , company with significant ownership of one or more banks Barron Hilton Cup , a glider competition Beaconhills College , a school in Victoria, Australia Benzene hexachloride disambiguation , different chemicals Bergischer HC , a German team handball club British high commission Beverly Hills Cop film series Beverly Hills Cop film series , a movie franchise starring Eddie Murphy Beverly Hills Chihuahua BHC Communications , a b roadcast h olding c ompany, held by Chris Craft Industries British Home Championship , an annual football competition in the United Kingdom British Hovercraft Corporation , a former hovercraft manufacturer of the United Kingdom disambig de BHC fr BHC it BHC ja BHC ...   more details



  1. Chemical cosh

    Chemical cosh is a term used primarily by the British. To wikt cosh cosh someone means to bang them on the head, resulting in the person being sedated or knocked unconscious. A chemical cosh, then, refers to sedating people with chemicals, or medications. The term is generally used to refer to the situation where sedation is unnecessary. More specifically it refers to the widespread dispensation of antipsychotic antipsychotic drugs in residential care to make people with dementia easier to manage. ref http www.telegraph.co.uk health elderhealth 8086614 Chemical cosh will be cut for dementia sufferers.html Chemical cosh will be cut for dementia sufferers ref the use of ritalin to calm children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder . ref http www.dailymail.co.uk health article 189282 Fears use Ritalin children.html Fears over use of Ritalin on children ref See also Antipsychotic Controversy Antipsychotic controversy References references Category Antipsychotics Category Neologisms Category Psychiatric terms ...   more details



  1. William Dighton

    William Dighton was a medieval English clerk in the Privy seal and briefly Keeper of the Privy seal. He was the illegitimate son of a priest. He served as a clerk in the Privy Seal office from 1356 to 1394 under Edward II and Richard II. For a short time, 1381 1382 , he was promoted to Keeper of the Privy Seal . He was displaced from the position by a superior candidate in Walter Skirclaw , later Bishop of Coventry and Lichfield, after which Dighton resumed his previous role as a clerk. The circumstances of his birth required him to seek papal dispensation to take holy orders and to confirm each appointment. He became, however, rector of Trimmington, Norfolk, parson of Barking, Suffolk and Ash, near Wrotham, Kent. He exchanged the latter living for that of Wybarton in Lincolnshire. References http www.archive.org stream chaptersinadmini05toutuoft chaptersinadmini05toutuoft djvu.txt Chapters in the Administrative History of medieval England s start s off s bef before John Fordham s ttl title Keeper of the Privy Seal years 1381 1382 s aft after Walter Skirclaw s end DEFAULTSORT Dighton, William Category Lords Privy Seal ...   more details



  1. Dispensationalist theology

    Other uses Dispensation disambiguation Dispensational theology refers to the unified teachings of Dispensationalism ..., or separated time periods, in the Bible. Each dispensation is said to represent a different ... ends in judgment marking his utter failure in every dispensation. The seven dispensational periods ... this is not a critical or foundational factor to the theology the dispensation of innocence ... the Garden of Eden to represent a dispensation, and listed only six. Each one of these dispensations ... marking his utter failure in every dispensation. Viewing the flow of biblical history as a series ... Spirit . The term dispensation is drawn from Calvinist theology, as in the Westminster Confession ... of the millennial kingdom. the dispensation or age of Gentile nations Gen 1 11 , from Adam to Abraham ... the law. This does not mean that grace was missing from the dispensation of law, only that the law itself ... is in how each views the relationship of the present dispensation to the past and future dispensations ... however hold that this present dispensation is a key link between past dispensations and the future dispensations. In general that means God s plans have continued in this present dispensation ... Testament writers. For traditionalists who perceive the present dispensation as a parenthesis, the standard ..., then that may imply that the present dispensation is no longer a parenthesis, but has a relationship or connection with the prior dispensation. In contrast, progressives, instead of approaching ... Beliefs In the Latter Day Saint movement , a dispensation is a period of time in which God gave priesthood authority to men on the Earth through prophetic callings. Between each dispensation is an apostasy ... LDS Church LDS Bible Dictionary says A dispensation of the gospel is a period of time in which ..., namely the Nephites and the Jaradites. ref name LDS BD Adamic Dispensation According to Latter ..., and devilish see Moses 5 12 13 and the priesthood was lost thus ending the dispensation in apostasy ...   more details



  1. World to Come

    , Millennial Age , The New Earth and New Jerusalem , and Dispensation of the fulness of times and possibly ... world is flawed by Original Sin . See also Dispensationalism Dispensation of the fulness of times Maharishi ...   more details



  1. Umbrella company

    abuse of dispensation HMRC issue documentation to employers as a more effective way to record .... A dispensation is simply a working agreement between a company and HMRC. It is a cost saving ... A dispensation does not benefit a contractor. Citation needed date May 2011 A dispensation does not mean less paperwork for a contractor. Citation needed date May 2011 A dispensation does not affect what a contractor can claim as a legitimate business expense. Citation needed date May 2011 A dispensation ...   more details



  1. Margaret of Huntingdon, Lady of Galloway

    Margaret of Huntingdon c. 1194 c. 1228 was the eldest daughter of David of Scotland, 8th Earl of Huntingdon by his wife, Matilda of Chester , daughter of Hugh de Kevelioc, 3rd Earl of Chester and Bertrada de Montfort l Amauri . She was born in Galloway , Wigtownshire, Scotland. She married, as his third wife, Alan, Lord of Galloway at Dundee in 1209. They were reprimanded for marrying within the forbidden limits of kinship and had to obtain a dispensation by Pope Innocent III . Their children were Christina d. 1246 , who married William de Forz, 4th Earl of Albemarle , and died childless Dervorguilla of Galloway , who married John Balliol, 5th Baron de Balliol Margaret was dead by 1228, when Alan remarried for a third or fourth time. Sources Wood, John Philip . Peerage of Scotland , 1813. Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH Category 1180 births Category 13th century deaths Category People from Dumfries and Galloway Category House of Dunkeld Category Women of medieval Scotland Category 13th century Scottish people ...   more details



  1. Ted Stevens Olympic and Amateur Sports Act

    The Ted Stevens Olympic and Amateur Sports Act is a United States law codified at 36 U.S.C. Sec. 220501 et seq. of the United States Code that charters and grants monopoly status to the United States Olympic Committee , and specifies requirements for its member national sport governing body governing bodies for individual sport s. The current version of the Act was sponsored by Senator Ted Stevens the former United States Senator from Alaska and adopted in 1998. It is a revision of the previous Amateur Sports Act of 1978 that reflects changes such as the fact that amateurism is no longer a requirement for competing in most international sports, expansion of the USOC s role to include the Paralympic Games , increased athlete representation, and protection of the USOC against lawsuits involving athletes right to participate in the Olympic Games . The United States Olympic Committee has used the law to force the Gay Olympics to change their name to the Gay Games . ref http www.mpbn.net Home tabid 36 ctl ViewItem mid 3478 ItemId 17541 Default.aspx ref The organization has threatened to use the law against the Redneck Olympics , though it has given special dispensation to the Special Olympics . ref http www.sunjournal.com oxford hills story 1071387 ref ref http www.sunjournal.com oxford hills story 1071616 ref See also Amateur Sports Act of 1978 References reflist External links http www.soccerpark.com TedStevens.pdf Text of the Ted Stevens Olympic and Amateur Sports Act US fed statute stub Category United States federal legislation Category Sports governing bodies of the United States ...   more details



  1. Before Jerusalem Fell

    Before Jerusalem Fell is a book written by Kenneth Gentry based on his PhD dissertation from Whitefield Theological Seminary . The book is currently in its third edition and is published by American Vision in Atlanta, Georgia . The book presents a sustained argument from fields such as biblical hermeneutics , ancient history, textual criticism , archaeology , and Christian theology for why the Book of Revelation must have been written before the destruction of Jerusalem in AD 70, during the reign of Roman emperor Nero . Gentry argues that Nero Caesar is the sixth king presently ruling bibleverse Rev. 17 10 who functions in Revelation as the The Beast Bible Beast . The book is controversial in that it goes against majority evangelicalism evangelical and Dispensation period Dispensational opinion that Revelation was written in the reign of Domitian in AD 95, though the pre AD 70 date for Revelation was the dominant view of scholars in the 19th century and first two decades of the 20th century. Citation needed date July 2010 See also Preterism References reflist Unreferenced date November 2010 External links http freebooks.commentary.net freebooks docs 2206 47e.htm Before Jerusalem Fell at ICE FreeBooks Category American non fiction books Category Biblical studies reli book stub ...   more details



  1. Derogation

    Derogation is the partial revocation of a law, as opposed to abrogation or the total abolition of a law. The term is used in both Civil law legal system civil law and common law . It is sometimes used, loosely, to mean abrogation, as in the legal maxim Lex posterior derogat priori , i.e. a subsequent law imparts the abolition of a previous one. Derogation differs from dispensation in that it applies to the law, where dispensations applies to specific people affected by the law. In terms of European Union legislation, a derogation can also imply that a member state delays the implementation of an element of an EU Regulation etc into their legal system over a given timescale, such as five years or that a member state has opted not to enforce a specific provision in a treaty due to internal circumstances typically a state of emergency . See also Repeal External links http www.newadvent.org cathen 04739b.htm Catholic Encyclopedia Derogation Category Canon law Catholic Church Category Civil law legal system Category European Union law Law term stub RC Canon law stub bg cs Derogace de Derogation es Derogaci n fr D rogation it Deroga nl Derogatie Europees recht no Derogasjon pl Derogacja prawo ...   more details



  1. Alexander Home, 1st Lord Home

    of Home d. 1456, v.p. , married, following a Papal Dispensation, Agnes, daughter of Sir Adam Hepburn .... Jonet or Janet d.after 1471 , who married her cousin Sir Robert Lauder of The Bass Papal Dispensation ...   more details



  1. Donato Mascagni

    Donato Mascagni 1579 1636 was an Italy Italian painter of the Renaissance active in Florence , Volterra , Rome , Mugello , and Salzburg . He was a pupil of Jacopo Ligozzi . He is also known as Fra or Frate Arsenio because he joined the Servite monastery in 1605. He however obtained special dispensation through cardinal Gerolamo Bernerio to move to Florence and become a priest in 1609. His income from painting was used to support his family. After much travelling, he returned to Florence in 1630. References cite book first Filippo last Baldinucci year 1728 title Notizie de Professori del Disegno, Da Cimabue in qua, Secolo V. dal 1610. al 1670. Distinto in Decennali or Notice of the Professors of Design, from Cimabue to now, from 1610 1670 editor pages page 80 81 publisher Stamperia S.A.R. per li Tartini, e Franchi Googlebooks entry id url http books.google.com books?id zVQGAAAAQAAJ&pg PA1&dq baldinucci PPA153,M1 authorlink Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Mascagni, Donato ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH 1579 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 1636 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Mascagni, Donato Category 1579 births Category 1636 deaths Category People from Florence Category Italian painters Category Tuscan painters Category Mannerist painters Italy painter 16thC stub ...   more details



  1. 1344 in Ireland

    YearInIrelandNav 1344 Events February 10 Ralph d Ufford appointed Justiciar April 20 Custody of the lands of the lated Earl of Ormond Ireland Earl of Ormond granted to the Earl of Desmond April 24 Sanction of bonnaght in Ulster June 3 Justiciar ordered to resume and regrant all abandoned and waste lands July 21 Justiciar campaigns in south Leinster and Munster October 21 Pope Clement VI issues dispensation for marriage between Maurice fitz Thomas FitzGerald, Earl of Kildare , and Joan, daughter of the earl of Desmond Births Deaths References The Annals of Ireland by Friar John Clyn , edited and translated with an Introduction, by Bernadette Williams, Four Courts Press, 2007. ISBN 978 1 84682 034 2, pp. 240 244. A New History of Ireland VIII A Chronology of Irish History to 1976 , edited by T. W. Moody , F.X. Martin and F.J. Byrne. Oxford, 1982. ISBN 0 19 821744 7. http www.ucc.ie celt published T100001B index.html http www.ucc.ie celt published T100005C index.html http www.ucc.ie celt published T100010B index.html Category 1344 in Ireland Category 1340s in Ireland Category 1344 by country Ireland Category Years of the 14th century in Ireland ...   more details



  1. For the Relief of Unbearable Urges

    For the Relief of Unbearable Urges is a short story collection by Nathan Englander , first published by Knopf in 1999 . It has received many positive reviews. ref cite web last Various title Praise for Nathan Englander url http search.barnesandnoble.com For the Relief of Unbearable Urges Nathan Englander e 9780375704437 TABS work Barnes & Noble ref It earned Englander a PEN Malamud Award and the Sue Kaufman Prize for First Fiction . The collection contains nine stories, many of which are set in the Jewish Orthodox world. The title story tells of a married Hasidic Jew who receives special dispensation from a rabbi to visit a prostitute for the relief of unbearable urges. ref cite book last Englander first Nathan title For the Relief of Unbearable Urges year 2000 publisher Vintage location New York pages 182 ref The story The Twenty seventh Man , about Yiddish writers killed by Stalin, is an allusion to the Night of the Murdered Poets . The contents, in order The Twenty seventh Man The Tumblers Reunion The Wig The Gilgul of Park Avenue Reb Kringle The Last One Way For the Relief of Unbearable Urges In This Way We Are Wise References reflist Category 1999 books Story stub ...   more details



  1. SS Kalyan

    SS Kalyan was a ship operated by the P & O shipping line between 1915 and 1932. Wartime Service The SS Kalyan was used as a troop ship between England , Egypt and Salonika . She was then refitted as a Hospital Ship and dispatched to North Russia in October 1918. After a 12 day voyage she arrived in Archangel . There she acted as a temporary base hospital for British, Canadian, French Italian, Chinese and Russian sick and wounded. ref Hospital Ship at Archangel 1919 , BNA Topics , Vol 47, No. 3, May June 1990, p. 12 ref The ship remained there throughout the winter, with ice having to be broken each day to prevent damage through pinching . She returned to Leith in June 1919. Many of her crew were Muslim Lascar s who had problems during Ramadan 1919, as they were above the Arctic Circle and the sun did not set. General Edmund Ironside, 1st Baron Ironside Ironside gave them dispensation from observing the Ramadan fast. ref Archangel 1918 1919 by Edmund Ironside ref Sister ships SS Karmala SS Kashgar SS Kashmir SS Khiva SS Khyber References reflist DEFAULTSORT Kalyan Category Steamships Category 1915 ships Category Troop ships ...   more details



  1. Clarence Larkin

    . Like C. I. Scofield, he postulated seven separate dispensations the current being the Dispensation of Grace, Church Dispensation, Ecclesiastical Dispensation, or Parenthetical Dispensation. This position ...   more details



  1. Comprehensive Dangerous Drugs Act of 2002

    Criminal procedure trial The Comprehensive Dangerous Drugs Act of 2002 or Republic Act No. 9165 is a consolidation of Senate Bill No. 1858 and House Bill No. 4433. It was enacted and passed by the Senate of the Philippines and House of Representatives of the Philippines on May 30, 2002 and May 29, 2002, respectively. It was signed into law by President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo on January 23, 2002. This Act repealed the Republic Act No. 6425, otherwise known as the Dangerous Drugs Act of 1972, as amended, and providing funds for its implementation. Under this Act, the Dangerous Drugs Board DDB remains as the policy making and strategy formulating body in planning and formulation of policies and program on drug prevention and control. It also created the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency PDEA under the Malaca ang Palace Office of the President , which serves as the implementing arm of the DDB, shall be responsible for the efficient and effective law enforcement of all the provisions on any narcotic dangerous drugs , controlled substance controlled precursors and chemical substance essential chemicals as provided in this Act. Article II Unlawful Acts and Penalties Section 4 Importation of Dangerous Drugs Penalty Life Imprisonment to death with fine of P500,000 to P10,000,000. Section 5 Sale Trading, Admin Station, Dispensation, Delivery, Distribution External links Commons category http www.pdea.gov.ph images documents RA 9165.pdf RA 9165 Comprehensive Dangerous Drugs Act of 2002 Category 2002 in law Artic ...   more details



  1. Gumball machine

    a simple mechanism for dispensing the gumball, to the point of the actual dispensation being largely ... also use electricity to power various forms of transit for the gumball on its way to dispensation ...   more details



  1. Thomas la Warr, 5th Baron De La Warr

    Unreferenced date December 2009 File Thomas de la warre manchester cathedral.jpg thumb right upright A Blue plaque for Thomas de la Warre outside Manchester Cathedral Thomas la Warr, 5th Baron De La Warr c. 1352 &ndash 7 May 1427 was the second son of Roger la Warr, 3rd Baron De La Warr and Elizabeth de Welle , daughter of Adam, 3rd Baron Welles , and was intended for the church. In 1363, he received a Dispensation Catholic Church dispensation , permitting him to be ordain ed at the age of twenty, and was made a canon priest canon of Lincoln, Lincolnshire Lincoln . He received his first parish on 13 October 1372 he was at various times, rector or prebend of Ashton under Lyne , New Lafford , Sleaford , Swineshead, Lincolnshire Swineshead , Grindall in the East Riding of Yorkshire , Manchester , Oxton and Cropwell , Riccall , and Ketton both of these last in the see of Lincoln frequently in plurality. He was responsible for in 1420 building St. Luke s church in Brislington . He enlarged Manchester Cathedral into a collegiate church in 1421. There is a statue of him on the exterior of the Manchester town hall. He inherited the title and lands when his brother John la Warr, 4th Baron De La Warr John died, 27 July 1398 but asked, three years later, to be excused from Parliament. He was summoned, on pain of his life, in 1403. He died, and was presumably buried, at his then parish of Swineshead, Lincolnshire Swineshead , Lincolnshire . S start S reg en Succession box title Baron De La Warr before John la Warr, 4th Baron De La Warr John la Warr after Reginald West, 6th Baron De La Warr Reginald West years S end Use dmy dates date January 2012 Persondata name De La Warr, Thomas La Warr, 5th Baron alternative names short description date of birth 1352 place of birth date of death 1427 place of death DEFAULTSORT De La Warr, Thomas La Warr, 5th Baron Category 1352 births Category 1427 deaths Category Barons in the Peerage of England ...   more details



  1. P11D

    and Customs for a dispensation, which removes the requirement to report expense payments for which ... HMRC website Dispensation from expenses and benefits reporting Category Tax forms Category ...   more details




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