- male, deceased (624)
- Saint Mellitus (died April 24 624) was the first Bishop of London of the present diocese (established in 604) and the third Archbishop of...
- male, deceased (604)
- Augustine of Canterbury (birth unknown, died May 26, c. 604) was the first Archbishop of Canterbury, sent to Ethelbert of Kent by Pope Gregory the...
- male, deceased (1072)
- This man is not to be confused with Stigand of Selsey, the last bishop of Selsey." Stigand"' (d. 1072), was an English churchman of pre-Conquest...
- male, deceased (816)
- Pope Leo III (died June 12, 816) was Pope from 795 to 816. Leo announced his election to Charlemagne, sending him the keys of Saint Peter's tomb...
- male, deceased (1038)
- Aethelnoth (known also as Egelnodus or Ednodus) (died October 29, 1038) was an Archbishop of Canterbury. He was a son of the ealdorman Aethelmaer,...
- male, deceased (959)
- Aelfsige I (?-959) became Archbishop of Canterbury in 959. He succeeded Saint Aelfheah, also called Alphege the Bald, as Bishop of Winchester in...
- female, deceased (304)
- Saint Agnes is a virgin martyr and saint of the Roman Catholic Church and Eastern Catholic Churches. She is also acknowledged in the Church of...
- male, deceased (1136)
- William de Corbeil (?1070 - d. 1136), archbishop of Canterbury, was born probably at Corbeil on the Seine, and was educated at Laon. He had two...
- male, deceased (739)
- Saint Willibrord was a Northumbrian missionary, known as the "Apostle to the Frisians" in modern Netherlands. He became the first Bishop of Utrecht...
- male, 68 years old
- Denis James Hart is an Australian clergyman and the 8th and current Catholic Archbishop of Melbourne. Hart was educated at St. John’s Marist Br...
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