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  1. 82002171 [1] Added to NRHP. January 21, 1982. St. Augustine of Canterbury Anglican Church (formerly St. John's Episcopal Church) is a historic church at 230 Salem Street in the South Campus Neighborhood of Chico, California, United States. It was built in 1905 at the southeast corner of West Fifth and Broadway Streets in Downtown Chico.

  2. Augustin est un moine bénédictin mort entre 604 et 609. Chef de la mission envoyée pour convertir les Anglo-Saxons, il devient le premier archevêque de Cantorbéry en 597 . Prieur dans une abbaye de Rome, Augustin est choisi par le pape Grégoire le Grand pour prendre la tête de la mission grégorienne. Après son arrivée en Angleterre ...

  3. Rev Christopher Easthill. Assistant priest (s) Rev Douglas Robinson, Rev Robert Vukovic. The Church of St Augustine of Canterbury, commonly known as The English church at Wiesbaden ( German: Die englische Kirche in Wiesbaden ), is a Hessian heritage-listed Anglican parish church located at Frankfurter Strasse 3 in Wiesbaden, Germany.

  4. Augustine of Canterbury. Not to be confused with Augustine of Hippo. Augustine of Canterbury (early 6th century – probably 26 May 604) was a monk who became the first Archbishop of Canterbury in the year 597. He is considered a founder of the English Church.

  5. Christ Church Cathedral was consecrated in June 602 or 603. At Canterbury Augustine found himself amongst a diverse grouping of other Christians – Queen Bertha, her entourage and her Frankish bishop, Augustine’s own accompanying Frankish clergy, and any surviving community of British Christians.

  6. Feast. 9 January. Adrian, also spelled Hadrian (born before 637, died 710), was a North African scholar in Anglo-Saxon England and the abbot of Saint Peter's and Saint Paul's in Canterbury. He was a noted teacher and commentator of the Bible. [1] Adrian was born between 630 and 637. [1] According to Bede, he was "by nation an African", [2] and ...

  7. Peter and Paul and changed after Augustine's death) was a Benedictine monastery in Canterbury, Kent, England. [2] The abbey was founded in 598 and functioned as a monastery until its dissolution in 1538 during the English Reformation. After the abbey's dissolution, it underwent dismantlement until 1848.