释义 |
Definition of archiepiscopal in English: archiepiscopaladjective ˌɑːkɪɪˈpɪskəp(ə)lˌɑrkiəˈpɪskəpəl Relating to an archbishop. (与)大主教(有关)的 Example sentencesExamples - Then there is his decision not to live in the archiepiscopal residence but in the simpler rectory near the cathedral.
- Younger auxiliary bishops are being appointed directly to archiepiscopal sees.
- And the Church, meanwhile, divided up the kingdom in its own way, into 18 archiepiscopal provinces and 136 dioceses.
- A century before Mozart, the virtuoso violinist and composer Heinrich Ignaz Franz von Biber was appointed to the music staff of the archiepiscopal court of Salzburg.
- Until the Reformation the hierarchy of courts, with appeals to the one above, was archdeacons' courts, bishops' courts, archiepiscopal courts, and the papal court.
- Archbishop Jaenberht was outraged when Offa raised Lichfield to an archiepiscopal see, and the scheme was abandoned after the king's death on the grounds that it had been prompted by enmity towards the people of Kent.
- The ship arrived brandishing his archiepiscopal cross defiantly at the prow.
- The previous Archbishop, Anselm's old master Lanfranc, had died four years earlier, but the King, William Rufus, had left the see vacant in order to plunder the archiepiscopal revenues.
DerivativesnounPlural archiepiscopacies Eger was given archiepiscopacy in 1804, and János Pyrker, the bishop of Eger, ordered the designs of the building from the architect József Hild. Example sentencesExamples - Yet, Oblate status within the Baltimore religious community improved significantly with the succession of Francis Patrick Kenrick to the archiepiscopacy of Baltimore in 1851.
- Shkodra was the seat of the Catholic archiepiscopacy and had a number of religious schools.
- In AD 816, during his archiepiscopacy, the Council of Chelsea enacted eleven canons to regulate the services and the government of the Church.
- He founded the archiepiscopacy of Esztergom.
noun ˌɑːkɪɪˈpɪskəpətˌɑːkɪɪˈpɪskəpeɪtˌɑrkiəˈpɪskəpət Nothelm consecrated three bishops during his archiepiscopate and agreed to the division of the Mercian diocese. Example sentencesExamples - In December 1882, he was elevated to the archiepiscopate of Canterbury.
- The most notable visual effect of Laud's archiepiscopate was the removal of the communion tables from the body of the church to the east end, where they were placed on a dais and railed off.
- His archiepiscopate was filled with quarrels with his cathedral clergy and, from 1207, with King John.
- The motto ‘Be Not Afraid’ has been chosen by the Archbishop as the personal motif of his archiepiscopate.
OriginEarly 17th century: via ecclesiastical Latin from Greek arkhiepiskopos 'archbishop' (from arkhi- 'chief' + episkopos 'bishop') + -al. Definition of archiepiscopal in US English: archiepiscopaladjectiveˌɑrkiəˈpɪskəpəlˌärkēəˈpiskəpəl Relating to an archbishop. (与)大主教(有关)的 Example sentencesExamples - Archbishop Jaenberht was outraged when Offa raised Lichfield to an archiepiscopal see, and the scheme was abandoned after the king's death on the grounds that it had been prompted by enmity towards the people of Kent.
- A century before Mozart, the virtuoso violinist and composer Heinrich Ignaz Franz von Biber was appointed to the music staff of the archiepiscopal court of Salzburg.
- Until the Reformation the hierarchy of courts, with appeals to the one above, was archdeacons' courts, bishops' courts, archiepiscopal courts, and the papal court.
- And the Church, meanwhile, divided up the kingdom in its own way, into 18 archiepiscopal provinces and 136 dioceses.
- The ship arrived brandishing his archiepiscopal cross defiantly at the prow.
- The previous Archbishop, Anselm's old master Lanfranc, had died four years earlier, but the King, William Rufus, had left the see vacant in order to plunder the archiepiscopal revenues.
- Younger auxiliary bishops are being appointed directly to archiepiscopal sees.
- Then there is his decision not to live in the archiepiscopal residence but in the simpler rectory near the cathedral.
OriginEarly 17th century: via ecclesiastical Latin from Greek arkhiepiskopos ‘archbishop’ (from arkhi- ‘chief’ + episkopos ‘bishop’) + -al. |