Everything about Diocese Of Argyll totally explained
» This article is about the mediaeval diocese. For the Roman Catholic diocese see Diocese of Argyll and the Isles (Catholic). For the Episcopal diocese, see Diocese of Argyll and the Isles (Episcopalian).
The
Diocese of Argyll was an ecclesiastical territory or
diocese in
Scotland in the
Middle Ages. The Diocese was led by the
Bishop of Argyll, and was based at
Lismore.
During the Scottish
Reformation, the majority of the Scottish
established church broke communion with the
Pope. The establishment oscillated for a number of years over the question of whether to retain the order of
bishops as leaders in the church, as the
Church of England had done. Eventually the
presbyterians, those who don't have bishops, became the majority of the establishment and the post-Reformation
Church of Scotland. However, the
Scottish Episcopal Church continued to appoint bishops for the ancient dioceses of Scotland. In 1688, the diocese was held with the
Diocese of Ross because of a shortage of bishops in the Episcopal Church. This union often included the dioceses of
Moray or
Caithness through the 17th and 18th centuries. In 1819, the ancient
Diocese of the Isles was added, and, in 1847, Alexander Ewing became the first Bishop of Argyll and the Isles. In 1878, the Roman Catholic Church founded a new diocese of the same name. Both the Episcopal and Catholic dioceses are now based in
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