Timeline of Orthodoxy in the British Isles

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Schism Period - churches are no longer under Orthodoxy
  • 1670 Daniel Voulgaris creates and establishes first Greek Orthodox Community in London.
  • 1677 "Temple" erected for the nation of the Greeks [2]
  • 1738 Print 'Noon' [3] by William Hogarth [4] shows evidence of a crowd exiting a Greek Orthodox church.
  • 1837 Imperial Russian Embasy offers hospitality in London to the Greek Community for their religious activities.
  • 1850 Greek Orthodox church built in London Street in the City.
  • 1877 Greek Orthodox Church of the Divine Wisdom (St Sophia) in Bayswater built.
  • 1906 Greek Orthodox Church of Saint Nicholas built in Cardiff.
  • 1908 Oecumenical Patriarchate transfers its rights for four Greek Orthodox community churches to Church of Greece.
  • 1922 the Holy Synod of the Oecumenical Patriarchate creates the Greek Orthodox ArchDiocese of Thyateira and Great Britain, with London as its seat; Germanos Strinopoulos choses as first Bishop and Metropolitan of Thyateira.
  • {{Germanos was succeeded after his death in 1951 by Archbishop Athenagoras Kavadas (1951-1962); after his death by Archbishop Athenagoras Kokkinakis (1963-1979) and after his death by Archbishop Methodios Fouyias (1979-1988), who was replaced in April 1988 by the present incumbent of the Archdiocese, Archbishop Gregorios Theocharous (who for the previous 18 years had been Bishop of Tropaeou, serving in North London)}}
  • 1966 St. John the Wonderworker, Archbishop of London.
  • 1975 The Greek Orthodox community of Saint Panteleimon of Harrow established[5]
  • 1996 St. Aidan's Antiochian Orthodox Church in Manchester consecrated by Metropolitan Gabriel (Saliby).
  • 2005 [September] Mission in Macclesfield dedicated to St. Theodore of Canterbury opens.
  • 2007 Repose of Metropolitan Gabriel Saliby (Antiochian); Bishop John Yazigi elected to Metropolitanate of Western and Central Europe.
  • 2008 Enthronement of Metropolitan John (Yazigi) of Western and Central Europe, September 20.

Notes

  • Some of these dates are necessarily a bit vague, as records for some periods are particularly difficult to piece together accurately.
  • The division of Church History into separate eras as done here will always be to some extent arbitrary, though it was attempted to group periods according to major watershed events.
  • This timeline is necessarily biased toward the history of the Orthodox Church, though a number of non-Orthodox or purely political events are mentioned for their importance in history related to Orthodoxy or for reference.

See also

External links

Further Reading

References

  1. Considered a local Saint by the Orthodox church of England but not formally canonised.
  2. "In the year of salvation 1677 this Temple was erected for the nation of the Greeks, the Most Serene Charles II being King, and the Roual Prince Lord James being commander of the foreces, the Right Reverend Lord Henry Compton being Bishop, at the expense of the above and other Bishops and Nobles and with the concurrence of our Humility of Samos Joseph Georgeirenes, from the island of Melos." - Inscription from tablet carved in Greek preserved on the west wall of the church Charing Cross Road. This site is now occupied by St Mary's of Kenton a non-Orthodox denomination.
  3. From the series entitled "The Four Times of the Day"
  4. In Hogarth’s time the portion of the street where the church stood was called Hog Lane. It was later renamed Crown Street and was demolished when Charing Cross Road was widened.
  5. http://www.st-panteleimon.org/