![]() ![]() |
||
Antiochan-Jacobite Lineage | Roman-Old Catholic Lineage | Judean-Celtic Lineage |
1st Christian Church established in Jerusalem - 29 A.D.
|
||
James the Less - 37 A.D.
|
||
Stephen martyred by stoning - 30 A.D. | ||
Church of Antioch established - 37 A.D. | ||
Peter 37 A.D. | ||
Evodus - 40 | ||
Peter - 42 A.D. | ||
Roman Invasion of Britain - 43 | ||
Ignatius I - 43 | ||
James the Great beheaded - 44 | ||
Mission of Paul and Barnabas begins - 45
|
||
Aristobolus establishes churches in Ireland, Wales, Northumbria, and Roman Britain - 46? | ||
Thomas establishes Church of the East in Edessa (Syria) - 47 | ||
Simeon - 63 | ||
Passover Riot in
Jerusalem - 50
20,000-30,000 Jews killed
|
||
Council of Jerusalem - 50
Gentiles exempt from most of the Mosaic Law
|
||
Paul's 2nd Mission begins - 50
Split with Barnabas
|
||
Thomas establishes churches in India - 52 | ||
Paul imprisoned in Caesarea - 58 | ||
Paul shipwrecked on Malta - 59 | ||
Paul in Rome - 60 | ||
Possible founding of Christian community at Glastonbury by Joseph of Arimathea - 63 | ||
Thaddeus (Jude) martyred in Roman Syria - 65 | ||
Jewish Revolt
against Rome - 66
Herod's Temple and Qumran community destroyed (site of the Dead Sea
Scrolls discovered in 1947)
|
||
Great Fire of Rome - 67
Emperor Nero blames
Christians, Paul beheaded, Peter crucified
|
||
Linus - 67 | ||
Thomas martyred by flaying in India - 72 | ||
Romans defeat Jews at Masada - 73 | ||
Andrew martyred by crucifixion in Petras (Greece) -75? | ||
Ancletus (Cletus) - 76 | ||
Phillip martyred by crucifixion in Hierapolis (Phrygia) - 80 | ||
Simon the Zealot martyred in North Africa - 86? | ||
Matthew martyred in Ethiopia - 87? | ||
Clement - 88 | ||
Evaristus - 97 | ||
Bartholomew martyred by flaying and crucifixion in Armenia - 99? | ||
John dies of natural causes - 100
End of the Apostolic
Age
|
||
Alexander I - 105 | ||
Simeon crucified under Emperor Trajan - 107 | ||
Justus I - 107 | ||
Zaccheus - 113 | ||
Tobias - 114? | ||
Sixtus I - 115 | ||
Benjamin I -116? | ||
John I - 117 | ||
Matthias - 119? | ||
Philip - 121 | ||
Aaron - 123 | ||
Cornelius - 123 | ||
Telesphorus - 125 | Senecas - 125 | |
Justus II - 127? | ||
Levis - 128? | ||
Ephraim - 130? | ||
Joseph I - 132? | ||
Judas - 133? | ||
Romans defeat Bar
Kochba Revolt - 135
Jerusalem renamed
Aelia Capitolina, Jews prohibited from entering city on pain of death
until the 7th Century
|
||
Marcus - 135 | ||
Hygimus - 136 | ||
Cassianus - 138? | ||
Pius I - 140 | ||
Exodos - 142 | Poplius - 142? | |
Maximus I - 145? | ||
Julian I - 149? | ||
Gaius I - 152? | ||
Anicetus - 155 | Symmachus -155? | |
Theophulus -157 | ||
Gaius II - 158 | ||
Julian II - 162 | ||
Elias - 164 | ||
Soter - 166 | ||
Maximinus - 171 | ||
Capito - 168 | ||
Maximus II -172 | ||
Eleutherius - 175 | ||
Antonius - 177 | ||
Seraphim - 179 | ||
Valens -180 | ||
Narcissus - 184 | ||
Astlediades - 189 | Victor I - 189 | |
Zephyrinus - 199 | Dius - 199 | |
Philip - 201 | ||
Germanio - 203? | ||
Gordius - 207? | ||
Alexander - 213 | ||
Callistus I - 217 | ||
Sebinus (Zebinus) - 219 | ||
Urban I - 222 | ||
Pontian - 230 | ||
Anterus - 235 | ||
Fabian - 236 | ||
Babylos - 237 | ||
Fabius - 250 | ||
Demetrius - 251 | Cornelius - 251 | Mozambanus (Nazabancs)- 251 |
Lucius I - 253 | ||
Stephen I - 254 | ||
Sixtus II - 257 | ||
Valerian's Massacre - 258
Roman Emperor issues edict to execute all Bishops, Priests, and Deacons
|
||
Paul I - 259 | Dionysius - 259 | |
Hymeneus (Hymenacus) - 266 | ||
Felix I - 269 | ||
Anthony begins monastic movement in Egypt - 270 | ||
Domnus I - 270 | ||
Eutychian - 275 | ||
Timotheus - 281 | ||
Cyrilus - 281 | ||
Caius - 283 | ||
Tyrantus - 296 | Marcellinus - 296 | |
Zambdas (Zamboas) - 298 | ||
Hermon (Herman) - 300 | ||
Armenia adopts Christianity as state religion - 301 | ||
Vitalius - 301 | ||
Diocletian persecutions begin - 303 | ||
Marcellus I - 308 | ||
Eucebius - 309 | ||
Melchiades (Miltiades) - 311 | ||
Diocletian persecutions end - 312 | ||
Emperor Constantine's vision - 312 | ||
Edict of Milan - 313
End of persecutions, toleration of Christianity
|
||
Sylvester I - 314 | Marcarius I - 314 | |
Philognius - 318 | ||
Eustachius - 323 | ||
1st Council of Nicaea - 325
Affirmed the Divinity
of Christ, Trinitarian Doctrine, Nicene Creed
|
||
Emperor Constantine I
Commissions Bible - 331
Peshitta and Codex
Alexandrinus
|
||
Maximus II - 334 | ||
Marcus - 336 | ||
Julius I - 337 | ||
Paulinius - 338 | ||
Cyril I - 350 | ||
Liberius - 352 | ||
Herenius - 362? | ||
Damasus I - 366 | ||
Hilary - 374? | ||
Emperor Theodosius I issues the Edict of Thessalonica declaring Nicene Christianity as the state church of the Roman Empire - 380 | ||
-1st Council of Constantinople - 381
Condemned Apollinarism, the teaching that Christ had no human mind or
soul
|
||
Philabianus - 383 | ||
Siricius - 384 | ||
Evagrius - 386 | ||
John II - 386 | ||
Ninian evangelizes Picts in
Scotland - 397
|
||
Anastasius I - 399 | ||
Innocent I - 401 | ||
Alaric and Visigoths sack Rome - 410 | ||
Phosohorius - 416 | ||
Zosimus - 417 | ||
Morgan of Wales defends Celtic theology from Augustinian attack - 418 | ||
Alexander - 418 | Boniface I - 418 | |
Celestine I -422 | Juvenal - 422 | |
John I - 428 | ||
1st Council of Ephesus - 431
Proclaimed Mary "Theotokos",
Repudiated Nestorianism, the teaching of disunion between the human and
divine nature of Christ
|
||
Theodotus - 431 | ||
Patrick's mission to Ireland - 432 | ||
Sixtus III - 432 | ||
Leo I - 440 | ||
Domnus II - 442 | ||
Maximus - 450 | ||
Council of Chalcedon - 451
Repudiated
Monophystism, proclaimed "hypostatic union", the teaching that Christ
had human and divine natures in one substance
|
||
Accacius - 454 | ||
Martyrius - 457 | ||
Anastacius - 458 | ||
Hilary - 461 | ||
Peter II - 464 | ||
Simplicius - 468 | ||
Martyrius - 470? | ||
Emperor Romulus Augustus is deposed in Rome, marked by many as the fall of the Western Roman Empire - 476 | ||
Salutis - 482? | ||
Felix III - 483 | ||
Gelasius I - 492 | ||
Elias - 494 | ||
Anastasius II - 496 | ||
Symmachus - 498 | ||
Philadius - 500 | ||
Severius - 509 | ||
Hormisdus - 514 | ||
John III - 516 | ||
David of Wales - 519 | ||
John I - 523 | ||
Felix IV - 526 | ||
Boniface II - 530 | ||
John II - 535 | ||
Agapitus - 535 | ||
Sylverius - 536 | ||
Vigilus - 537 | ||
Segius - 544 | ||
Domnus III - 547 | ||
David converts Wales - 550 | ||
2nd Council of Constantinople - 553
Condemned Nestorian
writings and authors
|
||
Pelagius I - 556 | ||
Anadtasius - 560 | ||
John III - 561 | ||
Columba goes to Scotland to evangelize Picts, establishes monastery at Iona - 563 | ||
Gregory I - 564 | ||
Paul II - 567 | ||
Petra - 571 | ||
Benedict I - 575 | ||
Pelagius II - 579 | ||
Domnus IV - 586 | ||
Cynog - 589 | ||
Gregory I - 590 | ||
Julianus - 591 | ||
Athanasius I - 595 | ||
Sabinianus - 604 | ||
Teilo - 606 | ||
Boniface III - 607 | ||
Boniface IV- 608 | ||
Holy Quran revealed to Muhammad - 610 | ||
Ceven (Ceneu) - 610 | ||
Deusdedit (Adeodatus I) - 615 | ||
Boniface V - 619 | ||
Migration (Hijra) of Muhammad and Muslims from Mecca to Medina - 622 | ||
Battle of Badr, considered beginning of Islamic Empire - 624 | ||
Morfall (Morfael) - 624? | ||
Honorius - 625 | ||
Muslim Conquest of Arabia - 629 | ||
Muhammad's Farewell Pilgrimage (Hajj) to Mecca - 632 | ||
Muhammad dies in
Medina - 632
Disagreement
on Muhammad's successor led to several
divisions in the
Muslim community since the first
century of
Muslim history; most notable giving
rise to
Sunnis,
Shias and
Kharijites.
Umar (Umar ibn al-Khattab), a prominent
companion of Muhammad, nominated
Abu Bakr. Others added their support
and Abu Bakr was made the first
caliph. This choice was disputed by
some of Muhammad's companions, who held that
Ali (Ali ibn Abi Talib), his cousin and
son-in-law, had been designated his successor.
|
||
Aidan evangelizes in Northumbria - 635 | ||
John II - 636 | ||
Haerwneu (Haernynin) - 638? | ||
Severinus - 640 | ||
John IV - 640 | ||
Theodore I - 642 | ||
Theodorus I - 649 | Martin I - 649 | |
Elwaed (Elfaed) - 651? | ||
Eugene I - 654 | ||
Vitalian - 657 | ||
Synod of Whitby - 664
Church of Rome forces calendar an monastic changes on Celtic Church,
Colman defends Celtic practices, Episcopal seat moved from Lindisfarne
to York
|
||
Gwrnwen (Gurnuru) - 665? | ||
Severus - 668 | ||
Adeodatus II - 672 | ||
Donus - 676 | ||
Agatho - 678 | ||
Llumwerth I (Llunwerth I) - 679? | ||
3rd Council of Constantinople - 680
Affirmed that Christ
had human and divine wills
|
||
Leo II - 682 | ||
Athanasius II - 684 | Benedict II - 684 | |
John V - 685 | ||
Conon - 686 | ||
Julianus II - 687 | Sergius I - 687 | |
Islamic Dome of the Rock built in Jerusalem - 689 | ||
Gwrgwyst (Gwegwst) - 693? | ||
John VI - 701 | ||
John VII - 705 | ||
Sissinius - 708 | ||
Constantine - 708 | Gwgan (Gwrgan) - 707? | |
Elias I - 709 | ||
Gregory II - 715 | ||
Clydog - 720? | ||
Athanasius III - 724 | ||
Gregory III - 731 | ||
Battle of Tours stops Islam from expanding westward - 732 | ||
Einion (Eineon) - 734? | ||
Evanius I - 740 | ||
Zachary - 741 | ||
Clydawg - 748? | ||
Stephen II - 752 | ||
2nd
Council of Nicaea - 753
Affirmed the veneration of
saints and icons
|
||
Paul I - 757 | ||
Gervasius I - 759 | ||
Elfod - 762? | ||
Stephen III - 768 | ||
Adrian I - 772 | ||
Ethelman - 776? | ||
Joseph - 790 | Elane (Elanc) - 790? | |
Sacking of the monastery of Lindisfarne marks the beginning of Viking raids on Christendom - 793 | ||
Cyriacus - 793 | ||
Leo III - 795 | ||
King Charlemagne of the Franks is crowned first Holy Roman Emperor of the West by Pope Leo III - 800 | ||
Magelswyd (Maelsgwyd) - 803? | ||
Stephen IV - 816 | ||
Paschal I - 817 | Made - 817? | |
Dionysius I - 818 | ||
Eugene II - 824 | ||
Valentine - 827 | ||
Gregory IV - 827 | ||
Sadwrnfen (Sadyrnfyw) - 831 | ||
Cadell - 831 | ||
Sulhaithnay -835? | ||
Novis (Nobis) - 840 | ||
Sergius II - 844 | ||
John III - 847 | Leo IV - 847 | |
John Scotus Eriugena promotes Celtic "transcendentalism" and "universalism" - 855 | ||
Benedict III - 855 | ||
Nicholas I - 858 | ||
Idwall - 860? | ||
Adrian II - 867 | ||
John VIII - 872 | ||
Ignatius II - 877 | ||
Asser - 880? | ||
Marinus I - 882 | ||
Adrian III - 884 | ||
Stephen V - 885 | ||
Theodosius - 887 | ||
Formosus - 891 | ||
Boniface VI - 896 | ||
Dionysius II - 897 | Stephen VI - 897 | |
Romanus - 897 | ||
Theodore II - 897 | ||
John IX - 898 | ||
Benedict IV - 900 | Arthwael - 900? | |
Leo V - 903 | ||
Sergius III - 904 | ||
John IV - 910 | ||
Anastasius III - 911 | ||
Laudus - 913 | ||
John X - 914 | ||
Samson - 921? | ||
Basilus I - 922 | ||
Stephen VII - 928 | ||
John XI - 931 | ||
John V - 936 | Leo VI - 936 | |
Stephen VIII - 939 | ||
Ruelin (Ruebin) - 941? | ||
Maginus II - 942 | ||
Agapitus II - 946 | ||
Evanius II - 954 | ||
John XIII - 955 | ||
Dionysius III - 958 | ||
Rhydderch - 961 | ||
Abraham I - 962 | ||
Leo VII - 963 | ||
Leo VIII -963 | ||
Benedict V - 964 | ||
John VI - 965 | ||
Elwin (Elwyn) - 968? | ||
Benedict VI - 973 | ||
Benedict VII - 974 | Morfyw (Morbiw) - 974? | |
Llumwerth II (Llunwerth II) - 981? | ||
John XIV - 983 | ||
John XV - 985 | ||
Athanasius IV - 987 | Hubert - 987? | |
Eneuris (Eneurius) - 994 | ||
Gregory V - 996 | Ivor - 996? | |
John XVI - 997 | ||
Sylvester II - 999 | Morgeneu I - 999 | |
John XVII - 1003 | ||
John VII - 1004 | John XVIII - 1004 | |
Nathan - 1005? | ||
Sergius IV - 1009 | ||
Jenan (Ieuan) - 1011? | ||
Benedict VIII - 1012 | ||
Arwystl - 1017? | ||
Morganeu II - 1023 | ||
Ervin - 1023 | ||
John XIX - 1024 | ||
Dionysius IV - 1032 | Benedict IX - 1032 | |
Trahacarn (Trahaearn) - 1039 | ||
Theodorus II - 1042 | ||
Sylvester III - 1045 | ||
Gregory VI - 1045 | ||
Clement II - 1046 | ||
Damasus II - 1048 | ||
Leo IX - 1049 | ||
Great Schism between Roman Catholicism and Eastern Orthodoxy - 1054 | ||
Victor II - 1055 | ||
Stephen IX - 1057 | ||
Athanasius V - 1058 | Benedict X - 1058 | |
Nicholas II - 1059 | ||
Alexander II - 1061 | Joseph - 1061 | |
Bleiddud - 1061 | ||
John VIII - 1064 | ||
Battle of Hastings - 1066 | ||
Salien (Sulian) -1071 | ||
Gregory VII - 1073 | ||
Basilius II - 1074 | ||
Abdoone - 1076 | Abraham - 1076 | |
Dionysius V - 1077 | ||
Rhyddmarch - 1078? | ||
Evanius III - 1080 | ||
Wilfrid - 1085 | ||
Victor III - 1087 | ||
Dionysius VI - 1088 | Urban II - 1088 | |
Athanasius VI - 1091 | ||
1st Crusade begins - 1095 | ||
Siege of Antioch -
1097
Muslims
massacred
|
||
Siege of Jerusalem -
1099
Jews and
Muslims fight together to defend the city, defeated by Frankish
Crusaders, Kingdom of Jerusalem is established
|
||
Paschal II - 1099 | ||
Bernard - 1115 | ||
Knights Templar founded to defend Holy Land - 1118 | ||
Gelasius II - 1118 | ||
Callistus II - 1119 | ||
Honorius II - 1124 | ||
Innocent II - 1130 | ||
John IX - 1131 | ||
Athanasius VII - 1139 | ||
Celestine II - 1143 | ||
Lucius II - 1144 | ||
Eugene III - 1145 | ||
2nd Crusade begins -
1147
Muslims
recapture Edessa, Crusade viewed as unsuccessful
|
||
Anastasius IV - 1153 | David Fitzgerald - 1147 | |
Adrian IV - 1154 | ||
Alexander III - 1159 | ||
Michael I - 1167 | ||
Synod of Cashel - 1172
Celtic Church forced to adopt Roman liturgy, Church property
confiscated by Church of Rome, Celtic Church prohibited from
consecrating Bishops
Lawrence O'Toole (Lorcán
Ua Tuathail ) of Dublin last Celtic Bishop of ancient
autocephalous Celtic Church
|
||
Peter de Leiâ - 1176 | ||
Lucius III - 1181 | ||
Urban III - 1185 | ||
3rd Crusade begins - 1187
Muslim Salidin recaptures Jerusalem, allows pilgrims to enter the
city
|
||
Gregory VIII - 1187 | ||
Clement III - 1187 | ||
Celestine III - 1191 | ||
Innocent III - 1198 | ||
Athanasius VIII - 1200 | G. Camb - 1200? | |
4th Crusade begins -
1204
Crusaders sack
Constantinople, final breach between Eastern Orthodoxy and Roman
Catholicism
|
||
Geoffrey de Henelawe - 1204 | ||
Francis of Assisi becomes a hermit, founding the Franciscan order of friars, renounces wealth and begins his ministry - 1205 | ||
Michael II - 1207 | ||
John X - 1208 | ||
King John signs Magna Carta - 1215 | ||
Jowerth (Iorwerth alias Gervase) - 1215 | ||
Honorius III - 1216 | ||
5th Crusade begins -
1217
The Crusaders
launched a foolhardy attack on
Cairo in July 1221. The crusaders were
turned back after their dwindling supplies led to a forced retreat. A
night-time attack by the ruler of Egypt, the powerful
Ayyubid
Sultan
Al-Kamil, resulted in a great number of
crusader losses and eventually in the surrender of the army
|
||
Ignatius III - 1223 | ||
Gregory IX - 1227 | ||
6th Crusade begins -
1228
There were no
battles as Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II made a peace treaty with
Al-Kamil, the ruler of Egypt. This
treaty allowed Christians to rule over most of Jerusalem and a strip of
territory from Acre to Jerusalem, while the Muslims were given control
of the
Dome of the Rock and the
Al-Aqsa Mosque. Many of the
Muslims though were not happy with Al-Kamil for giving up control of
Jerusalem. In 1244, following the
siege of Jerusalem, the Muslims
regained control of the city
|
||
Anselm le Gras - 1230 | ||
Celestine IV - 1241 | ||
Innocent IV - 1243 | ||
7th Crusade begins - 1248
The crusader army and its Bedouin mercenaries were completely
defeated by
Baibars' force of
Khwarezmian tribesmen
|
||
Innocent IV authorizes use of torture in Inquisitions - 1252 | ||
Dionysius VII - 1253 | ||
John XI - 1253 | ||
Alexander IV - 1254 | ||
Richard de Carew - 1256 | ||
Urban IV - 1261 | ||
Ignatius IV - 1264 | ||
Clement IV - 1265 | ||
8th Crusade begins -
1270
King Louis IX again attacked the Arabs
in Tunis in North Africa. He picked the hottest season of the year for
campaigning and his army was devastated by disease. The king himself
died, ending the last major attempt to take the Holy Land
|
||
9th Crusade begins -
1271
The future
Edward I of England undertook another
expedition against
Baibars in 1271, after having
accompanied Louis on the Eighth Crusade. The Ninth Crusade was
deemed a failure and ended the Crusades in the Middle East
|
||
Gregory X - 1271 | ||
Innocent V - 1276 | ||
Adrian V - 1276 | ||
John XXI - 1276 | ||
Nicholas III - 1277 | ||
Thomas Beck - 1280 | ||
Martin IV - 1281 | ||
Philanus - 1283 | ||
Honorius IV - 1285 | ||
Nicholas IV - 1288 | ||
Ignatius Baruhid - 1293 | David Martyn - 1293 | |
Celestine V - 1294 | ||
Boniface VIII - 1294 | ||
Benedict XI - 1303 | ||
Clement V - 1305 | ||
The arrest of many of the Knights Templar beginning confiscation of their property and extraction of confessions under torture - 1307 | ||
Catholic Council of Vienne disbands Knights Templar - 1311 | ||
John XII - 1316 | ||
Henry de Gower - 1328 | ||
Ignatius Ismael - 1333 | ||
Benedict XII - 1334 | ||
Clement VI - 1342 | ||
John Thoresby - 1347 | ||
Reginald Brian - 1350 | ||
Innocent VI - 1352 | ||
Thomas Fastolfe - 1353 | ||
Adam Houghton - 1361 | ||
Urban V - 1362 | ||
Ignatius Basilius III - 1366 | ||
Gregory XI - 1370 | ||
Urban VI - 1378 | ||
John Wycliffe's Bible, 1st complete translation to English, included deuterocanonical books - 1382 | ||
Ignatius Abraham II - 1382 | ||
Boniface IX - 1389 | John Gilbert - 1389 | |
Innocent VII - 1389 | ||
Guy Mone - 1397 | ||
Gregory XII - 1406 | ||
Council of Oxford forbids translations of the Scriptures into the vernacular unless and until they were fully approved by Church authority - 1408 | ||
Henry Chichely - 1408 | ||
Ignatius Bacalius IV - 1412 | ||
Ignatius Behanam I -1415 | ||
Martin V - 1417 | ||
Joan of Arc, French national heroine, burned at the stake - 1431 | ||
Eugene IV - 1431 | ||
John Stafford - 1443 | ||
Nicholas V - 1447 | ||
John Kempe - 1452 | ||
Fall of Constantinople, overrun by Ottoman Empire - 1453 | ||
Thomas Bourchier - 1454 | ||
Gutenberg Bible, first printed Bible, by Johann Gutenberg - 1455 | ||
Ignatius Kalejih - 1455 | Callistus III - 1455 | |
Pius II - 1458 | ||
Paul II - 1464 | ||
Sixtus IV - 1471 | ||
Ignatius John XII - 1483 | ||
Innocent VIII - 1484 | ||
John Morton - 1486 | ||
Columbus discovers North America - 1492 | ||
Ignatius Noah - 1492 | Alexander VI - 1492 | |
Henry Deane - 1501 | ||
Pius III - 1503 | William Warham - 1503 | |
Julius II -1503 | ||
Ignatius Jesus I - 1509 | ||
Ignatius Jacob I -1510 | ||
Leo X - 1513 | ||
Martin Luther's "95 Theses" begins Protestant Reformation - 1517
|
||
Ignatius David I - 1519 | ||
Ignatius Abdullah I - 1520 | ||
Luther refuses to recant his works at the Diet of Worms - 1521 | ||
Adrian VI - 1522 | ||
Clement VII - 1523 | ||
Anabaptist movement begins - 1525 | ||
William Tyndale's NT, English NT translation from 1516 Greek text of Erasmus, first printed edition - 1526 | ||
Thomas Cranmer - 1533 | ||
Church of England breaks from Rome - 1534 | ||
Paul III - 1534 | ||
Myles Coverdale's Bible - 1536 | ||
Dissolution of the Monasteries in England, Wales and Ireland - 1540 | ||
Roman Inquisition established by Pope Paul III - 1542 | ||
Matthew Bible, by John Rogers - 1544 | ||
Original Book of Common Prayer of the Church of England by Thomas Cranmer - 1549 | ||
Julius III - 1550 | ||
Marcellus II - 1555 | ||
Paul IV - 1555 | ||
Reginald Pole - 1556 | ||
Ignatius Naamathalak - 1557 | ||
Queen Mary I of England persecuted reformers, John Rogers, Hugh Latimer, Nicholas Ridley, Thomas Cranmer of 238 burned at the stake - 1558 | ||
Pius IV - 1559 | Matthew Parker - 1559 | |
Pius V - 1566 | ||
Great Bible, by Thomas Cromwell, 1st English Bible to be authorized for public use in English churches - 1569 | ||
Gregory XIII - 1572 | ||
Edmund Grindal - 1575 | ||
Ignatius David II - 1577 | ||
Gregorian calendar of Pope Gregory XIII adopted at different times in different regions of the world - 1582 | ||
John Whitgift - 1583 | ||
Sixtus V - 1585 | ||
Urban VII - 1590 | ||
Gregory XIV - 1590 | ||
Ignatius Philathus - 1591 | Innocent IX - 1591 | |
Clement VIII - 1592 | ||
The Clementine Vulgate of Pope Clement VIII, replaced the Sistine Vulgate of 1590, the standard Latin Catholic Bible until the Second Vatican Council - 1592 | ||
Ignatius Abdullah II - 1597 | ||
Ignatius Cadhai - 1598 | ||
Richard Bancroft - 1604 | ||
Leo XI - 1605 | ||
Paul V - 1605 | ||
Bishops' Bible, a revision of the Great Bible checked against the Hebrew text, 1st to be published in England by episcopal authority - 1606 | ||
Baptist Church founded by John Smyth, due to objections to infant baptism and demands for church-state separation - 1609 | ||
Douay-Rheims Bible, 1st Catholic English translation - 1610 | ||
King James Version (Authorized Version) Bible is released, based primarily on Wycliffe's work & Bishop's Bible of 1572, original included Apocrypha - 1611 | ||
George Abbot - 1611 | ||
Gregory XV - 1621 | ||
Urban VIII - 1623 | ||
William Laud - 1633 | ||
Ignatius Simeon - 1640 | ||
Innocent X - 1644 | ||
George Fox founds the Quaker movement - 1648 | ||
Alexander VII - 1655 | ||
Cardinal Antonio Barberini - 1655 | ||
William Juxon - 1660 | ||
Ignatius Jesus II - 1661 | ||
Ignatius Messiah - 1661 | ||
Gilbert Sheldon - 1663 | ||
Michael le Tellier - 1668 | ||
Jaques Benigne de Bousseut - 1670 | ||
William Sancroft - 1678 | ||
Ignatius Cabeeb - 1686 | ||
Ignatius Gervasius II - 1687 | ||
John Tillotson - 1691 | ||
James Coyon de Matignon - 1693 | ||
Thomas Tenison - 1694 | ||
Old Catholic Church of the Netherlands splits with Roman Catholicism - 1701 | ||
Ignatius Isaac - 1708 | ||
William Wake - 1715 | ||
Dominicus Marie Varlet - 1719 | ||
Ignatius Sicarrablak - 1722 | ||
Cornelius Van Steenhoven - 1724 | ||
John Potter - 1737 | ||
Methodist movement, led by John Wesley and his hymn-writing brother Charles, begins - 1738 | ||
Johannes Van Stiphout - 1745 | ||
Ignatius Gervasius III - 1746 | ||
Thomas Herring - 1747 | ||
Matthew Hutton - 1757 | ||
Thomas Secker - 1758 | ||
Ignatius Gervasius IV - 1768 | Frederick Cornwallis - 1768 | |
Ignatius Mathias - 1781 | ||
John Moore - 1783 | ||
American Methodists form Methodist Episcopal Church at so-called "Christmas Conference", led by co- Superintendents Thomas Coke and Francis Asbury - 1784 | ||
Gaultherus Michael Van Niewenhuizen - 1786 | ||
W. White was consecrated by J. Moore,
William Markham and Charles Moss
|
||
Adrian Brockman - 1787 | William White -1787 | |
Samuel Provoost - 1787 | ||
James Madison - 1790 | ||
Thomas John Clagett - 1792 | ||
Robert Smith - 1795 | ||
Johannes Jacobus Van Rhijin - 1797 | Edward Bass - 1797 | |
Abraham Jarvis - 1797 | ||
Benjamin Moore - 1801 | ||
Samuel Parker - 1804 | ||
Gilbertus de Jong - 1805 | ||
Ignatius Behanam II - 1810 | John Henry Hobart - 1811 | |
Alexander Viets Griswold - 1811 | ||
Wilibrodus Van Os - 1814 | ||
Ignatius Jonas - 1817 | ||
Ignatius Gervasius V - 1818 | ||
Thomas Jefferson produced the Jefferson Bible - 1819 | ||
Johannes Bon - 1819 | ||
Johannes Van Santen - 1825 | ||
J.H. Hopkins - 1832 | ||
Ignatius Elias II - 1839 | ||
Southern Baptist Convention formed in Augusta, Georgia - 1845 | ||
Ignatius Jacob II - 1847 | ||
Immaculate Conception of Mary defined as Catholic dogma - 1854 | ||
Hermanus Heijkamp - 1854 | ||
G.D. Cummins - 1866 | ||
Roman Catholic First Vatican Council asserted doctrine of Papal Infallibility - 1870 | ||
Ignatius Peter III - 1872 | ||
Casparus Johannes Rinkel - 1873 | Charles E. Cheney - 1873 | |
W.R. Nicholson - 1876 | ||
A.S. Richardson - 1879 | ||
Julius I - 1882? | ||
Leon Chechemian - 1890 | ||
Joseph Rene Villate - 1892 | Geradus Gul - 1892 | |
Andrew Charles MacLagen - 1897 | ||
Azusa Street Revival in Los Angeles, CA begins modern Pentecostal movement - 1906 | ||
A. Matthew was consecrated by G. Gul, J.J. Van Thiel, N.B.P. Spit, and J. Demmel | ||
Arnold Harris Matthew - 1908 | ||
Beginning of Independent Catholic Movement - 1908 | ||
Scofield Reference Bible - 1909 | ||
Carmina Gadelica compiled by Alexander Carmichael - 1910 | ||
Frederick Willoughby - 1914 | ||
Frederick E. Lloyd - 1915 | ||
James I. Wedgewood - 1916 | ||
James Heard - 1922 | ||
Samuel Gregory Lines - 1923 | ||
Justin Boyle - 1927 | Irving S. Cooper - 1919 | |
Charles Hampton - 1931 | ||
Lowell Paul Wadle - 1940 | ||
William Bernard Crow - 1943 | ||
Hugh George De Willmott Newman - 1944 | ||
The Nag Hammadi library is discovered - 1945 | ||
Wallace David De Ortega Maxey - 1946 | ||
Lowell Paul Wadle (sub conditione) - 1947 | ||
Dead Sea Scrolls discovered - 1947 | ||
World Council of Churches founded - 1948 | ||
Assumption of Mary decreed by Pope Pius XII - 1950 | ||
Revised Standard Version Bible - 1952 | ||
H. Spruit was consecrated by L. Wadle, C. Hampton,
C. Hanlon, and H. Francis Marshall
|
||
Herman Adrian Spruit - 1957 | Herman Adrian Spruit - 1957 | Herman Adrian Spruit - 1957 |
Catholic Second Vatican Council, called by Pope John XXIII, produced 16 documents which became official Roman Catholic teaching after approval by the Pope, purpose to renew "ourselves and the flocks committed to us" - 1962-1965 | ||
United Methodist Church formed - 1968 | ||
Mass of Paul VI replaces Tridentine Mass - 1970 | ||
New American Standard Bible - 1971 | ||
New International Version of the Bible is first published (revised in 1978,1984) - 1973 | ||
New King James Version Bible, complete revision of 1611 Authorized Version, updates archaisms while retaining style - 1979 | ||
Robert E. Burns - 1980 | Robert E. Burns - 1980 | Robert E. Burns - 1980 |
I. MacKllop was consecrated by R. Burns and Patricia Dumont-Ford | ||
Ivan B.D.G. MacKillop - 1984 | Ivan B.D.G. MacKillop - 1984 | Ivan B.D.G. MacKillop - 1984 |
New Revised Standard Version Bible - 1989 | ||
T. Faulkenbury was consecrated by I. MacKillop and Meri Louise Spruit (widow of H. Spruit) | ||
Thomas John Faulkenbury - 1996 | Thomas John Faulkenbury - 1996 | Thomas John Faulkenbury - 1996 |
Celtic Christian Restoration Movement - 1996
Launched by Bishops I. MacKillop (Church of the Culdees), T.
Faulkenbury (Anamchara Celtic Church), and Joseph Grenier (Celtic
Christian Church)
|
||
Anamchara Celtic Church changes name to Reformed Celtic Church - 2008
Adopts Celtic "trinitarian universalism"
|
RCC Apostolic Succession
t

Thursday, April 23, 2015
Founder of RCC +Tanaiste Thomas Faulkenbury
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)