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    • Roman Empire

      • The most usual term for the geographical area of a bishop's authority and ministry, the diocese, began as part of the structure of the Roman Empire under Diocletian.
      www.newworldencyclopedia.org › entry › Bishop
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  2. The Episcopal Church (TEC) is one of 30 autonomous national churches that are part of the Anglican Communion. With 70 million members in 64,000 congregations in 164 countries, the Anglican Communion is the third largest body of Christians in the world, after the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox communions.

  3. A diocese is an area of land under the charge of a bishop. He looks after the religious needs of the Christians who live there. The bishop organises the work of the Church in the area, and is responsible for all the ministers (priests) in his area. Another word for diocese is see, or even 'episcopal see'. The diocese is the key geographical ...

  4. noun. /ˈdaɪəsɪs/ (plural dioceses. /ˈdaɪəsiːz/ ) (in the Christian Church) a district for which a bishop is responsible Topics Religion and festivals c2. Word Origin. Want to learn more?

  5. Q. 1. What is a Diocese? A. 1. In the Roman Catholic Church, the pope is the Bishop of the Diocese of Rome. Over and above that, he creates the other Catholic dioceses throughout the world and appoints their Bishops. The word "diocese," originating from the Greek language, means "administration."

  6. Roman Civil Dioceses. — The origin of the diocesan division is to be traced to the ancient division of the later Roman empire. The term diocese is used by Cicero ( Fam. 3:8, 4) to designate the district of a governor's jurisdiction.

  7. A complete guide to the word "DIOCESE": definitions, pronunciations, synonyms, grammar insights, collocations, examples, and translations.

  8. www.linguism.co.uk › language › dioceseDiocese - Linguism

    Dec 17, 2007 · The word we spell as ‘diocese’ (and pronounce variously and correctly as ‘diocis’, ‘diocees’ or ‘dioceez’) comes, NOT from some imaginary Greek word like ‘diocis’, BUT in fact from the four-syllable Greek word ‘dioecesis’, the plural of which is ‘dioeceseis’.

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