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  1. Frederick Donald Coggan, Baron Coggan, PC (9 October 1909 – 17 May 2000) was the 101st Archbishop of Canterbury from 1974 to 1980. As Archbishop of Canterbury, he "revived morale within the Church of England, opened a dialogue with Rome and supported women's ordination".

    • Cornish Arthur Coggan & Fanny Sarah Chubb
    • Robert Runcie
  2. Donald, Baron Coggan (born October 9, 1909, London, England—died May 17, 2000, near Winchester, Hampshire) was an Anglican archbishop of Canterbury from 1974 to 1980, theologian, educator, and the first Evangelical Anglican to become spiritual leader of the church in more than a century.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. He was, arguably, the first Archbishop of Canterbury to attempt to communicate en masse beyond the church; his Call to the Nation (1975) prompted 28,000 people to write letters in response to his vision for social change through a transformation of attitude and less personal selfishness.

  4. A tribute to the Most Revd Donald Coggan who died in 2000, a former Archbishop of Canterbury and York who was known for his open evangelicalism, mission and preaching. The tribute highlights his theological training, his support for women's ordination, his involvement in the National Initiative in Evangelism and his role in the Lambeth Conference 1978.

  5. 18 de mai. de 2000 · The former Archbishop of Canterbury Lord Donald Coggan has died aged 90. He died peacefully on Wednesday in a nursing home near Winchester, Hampshire, after a long illness.

  6. 19 de mai. de 2000 · The Rt Rev Dr (Frederick) Donald Coggan, Lord Coggan of Canterbury and Sissinghurst, cleric, born October 9 1909; died May 17 2000. Baden Hickman, the Guardian's former churches correspondent...

  7. Coggan, Donald (1909–2000). Archbishop of Canterbury. Coggan was born in London of a west country family and ultimately Welsh stock. He had a distinguished academic career at Cambridge and at Manchester University, where he taught Semitic languages and literature prior to ordination in 1934.