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  1. Die Church of England ( englisch für Kirche von England) ist die Mutterkirche der Anglikanischen Gemeinschaft, sodass sich ihre Geschichte weitestgehend mit dieser deckt. Sie ist innerhalb dieser Gemeinschaft die letzte eigentliche Landeskirche ( Staatskirche) und untersteht der Autorität des Staatsoberhauptes.

  2. The Church of England traces its history back to 597. That year, a group of missionaries sent by the pope and led by Augustine of Canterbury began the Christianisation of the Anglo-Saxons. Augustine became the first archbishop of Canterbury. Throughout the Middle Ages, the English Church was a part of the Catholic Church led by the pope in Rome.

  3. Discover the Church of England, a church for all, online and in every community. Learn about its faith, worship and services.

  4. Heute: Religion und Königshaus von Regierung abgekoppelt, aber noch Zwang zum Anglikanismus im Königshaus. Stand 2011: Mehrheit in UK Christentum zugehörig, weitere Religionen sind Islam, Hinduismus, Sikhismus, Buddhismus, Judentum. In Schottland außerdem Calvinismus und die Church of Scotland.

  5. In 597 Saint Augustine arrived in England. The pope, the leader of the Roman Catholic church, had sent Augustine there to spread the religion. Augustine founded a church and a monastery in Canterbury in southern England. Within 90 years most people in England had accepted the religion. The church became very powerful, and the archbishop of ...

  6. 30 de abr. de 2023 · The Church of England seeks to be a Christian presence in every community, up and down the land. Each parish or group of parishes has a parish priest – a minister ordained (or set apart) for ministry, who leads the people in worship, teaches the faith and gives pastoral support to the people of the parish. And much of the ministry of the ...

  7. 30 de mai. de 2024 · The Church of England became the established or, official, Church of the nation and of the English people. But there were still some who followed the old Catholic religion. Others – known as nonconformists or dissenters – felt that the Anglican Reformation had not gone far enough and chose to live outside the Church in their own communities.