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Re: St. Ninians, church or place (KEEP THIS INFO
> On Jan 5, 2021, at 6:20 AM, Anne Burgess via groups.io <anne.genlists@...> wrote:
>
> Both.
>
> From the point of view of family history, St Ninians is a //parish// in the
> On Jan 5, 2021, at 6:20 AM, Anne Burgess via groups.io <anne.genlists@...> wrote:
>
> Both.
>
> From the point of view of family history, St Ninians is a //parish// in the
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By
Carolynne Vynychenko
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#743
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Re: St. Ninians, church or place (Stirling)
Thanks for all the websites. I am trying to write up my family history now and these will certainly be helpful to "get it right" regarding the area, history and customs of the times.
Nancy
Thanks for all the websites. I am trying to write up my family history now and these will certainly be helpful to "get it right" regarding the area, history and customs of the times.
Nancy
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By
Nancy W.
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#742
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Re: St. Ninians, church or place (Stirling)
Anne, Thank you. It helps me understand the way things were done in early eighteenth and nineteenth centuries in Scotland. They were probably not very different from the way things were done in the
Anne, Thank you. It helps me understand the way things were done in early eighteenth and nineteenth centuries in Scotland. They were probably not very different from the way things were done in the
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By
Nancy W.
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#741
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Re: St. Ninians, church or place (Stirling)
Both.
From the point of view of family history, St Ninians is a //parish// in the county of Stirling. It happens to be next door to the parish of Stirling, and is now effectively a suburb of the
Both.
From the point of view of family history, St Ninians is a //parish// in the county of Stirling. It happens to be next door to the parish of Stirling, and is now effectively a suburb of the
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By
Anne Burgess
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#740
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Re: St. Ninians, church or place (Stirling)
https://www.familysearch.org/wiki/en/St._Ninians,_Stirlingshire,_Scotland_Genealogy has a lot of detail.
HTH,
Valorie
--
http://about.me/valoriez - pronouns: she/her
https://www.familysearch.org/wiki/en/St._Ninians,_Stirlingshire,_Scotland_Genealogy has a lot of detail.
HTH,
Valorie
--
http://about.me/valoriez - pronouns: she/her
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By
Valorie Zimmerman
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#739
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Re: St. Ninians, church or place (Stirling)
https://www.familysearch.org/wiki/en/St._Ninians,_Stirlingshire,_Scotland_Genealogy gives some interesting information, and https://www.minube.net/place/st-ninian-church-a370661 is a neat review. My
https://www.familysearch.org/wiki/en/St._Ninians,_Stirlingshire,_Scotland_Genealogy gives some interesting information, and https://www.minube.net/place/st-ninian-church-a370661 is a neat review. My
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By
Seymour Hosking
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#738
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Re: St. Ninians, church or place (Stirling)
From Wikipedia:
St. Ninians is a long-standing settlement which is now a district of the city of Stirling in central Scotland. It is located approximately one mile south of the city centre. It was
From Wikipedia:
St. Ninians is a long-standing settlement which is now a district of the city of Stirling in central Scotland. It is located approximately one mile south of the city centre. It was
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By
Anne Farrar
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#737
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St. Ninians, church or place (Stirling)
Sorry for the additional posting - I sent this Saturday but I haven't seen it or had any responses.
One of my Lowrie ancestors married Grace Monteath on 30 August 1829 at St. Ninian, Stirling,
Sorry for the additional posting - I sent this Saturday but I haven't seen it or had any responses.
One of my Lowrie ancestors married Grace Monteath on 30 August 1829 at St. Ninian, Stirling,
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By
Nancy W.
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#736
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Re: Queen Elizabeth
Which is why I was very careful to say, "The head of the Church of England is HM Queen Elizabeth, who is the second Queen Elizabeth in England but only the first to reign in Scotland."
The formal
Which is why I was very careful to say, "The head of the Church of England is HM Queen Elizabeth, who is the second Queen Elizabeth in England but only the first to reign in Scotland."
The formal
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By
Anne Burgess
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#735
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Re: Queen Elizabeth
nope!
it's this
"Elizabeth the Second, by the Grace of God of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and of Her other Realms and Territories Queen, Head of the Commonwealth, Defender
nope!
it's this
"Elizabeth the Second, by the Grace of God of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and of Her other Realms and Territories Queen, Head of the Commonwealth, Defender
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By
W David Samuelsen
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#734
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Re: Queen Elizabeth
Janet, you appear to be assuming that United Kingdom and Great Britain are synonymous. However, UK includes Northern Ireland, but GB does not. For example, see the useful map/diagram
Janet, you appear to be assuming that United Kingdom and Great Britain are synonymous. However, UK includes Northern Ireland, but GB does not. For example, see the useful map/diagram
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By
Lindsay Graham
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#733
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Re: Church of Scotland
Happy New Year Everyone,
Thank you for all of your responses to my question . You have conformed what I had originally thought and added some details that were unknown. I appreciate that.
My question
Happy New Year Everyone,
Thank you for all of your responses to my question . You have conformed what I had originally thought and added some details that were unknown. I appreciate that.
My question
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By
Glynn Currie
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#732
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Queen Elizabeth
Happy New Year to everyone.
I'm not disagreeing with Anne just clarifying the Queen's title:
The official style of the monarch is "By the Grace of God of the United Kingdom, Canada and Her other
Happy New Year to everyone.
I'm not disagreeing with Anne just clarifying the Queen's title:
The official style of the monarch is "By the Grace of God of the United Kingdom, Canada and Her other
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By
Janet Farmer
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#731
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Re: Church of Scotland
The head of the Church of England is HM Queen Elizabeth, who is the second Queen Elizabeth in England but only the first to reign in Scotland. King Henry VIII and Queen Elizabeth I of England, and
The head of the Church of England is HM Queen Elizabeth, who is the second Queen Elizabeth in England but only the first to reign in Scotland. King Henry VIII and Queen Elizabeth I of England, and
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By
Anne Burgess
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#730
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Re: Church of Scotland
No, that isn't correct. The Church of Scotland is Presbyterian, but it is not the only Presbyterian denomination in Scotland.
And the terms 'Conformist' and 'Non-conformist' are technically
No, that isn't correct. The Church of Scotland is Presbyterian, but it is not the only Presbyterian denomination in Scotland.
And the terms 'Conformist' and 'Non-conformist' are technically
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By
Anne Burgess
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#729
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Re: Church of Scotland
The Church of Scotland and the Church of England are entirely independent of one another. There are differences in the forms of worship, but the fundamental difference is in how the church hierarchy
The Church of Scotland and the Church of England are entirely independent of one another. There are differences in the forms of worship, but the fundamental difference is in how the church hierarchy
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By
Anne Burgess
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#728
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Re: Church of Scotland
The head of the Church of England is Queen Elizabeth II. Every ruler since Henry VIII had been head of the Church of England, except maybe Charles II (was he, considering that he was Roman
The head of the Church of England is Queen Elizabeth II. Every ruler since Henry VIII had been head of the Church of England, except maybe Charles II (was he, considering that he was Roman
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By
W David Samuelsen
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#727
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Re: Church of Scotland
Hi Glynn
I believe the Presbyterian Church is the same thing as the Church of Scotland. It is the official or conformist church of Scotland. All other churches in Scotland are considered
Hi Glynn
I believe the Presbyterian Church is the same thing as the Church of Scotland. It is the official or conformist church of Scotland. All other churches in Scotland are considered
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By
garyturnbull@...
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#726
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Re: Church of Scotland
Hi Glynn;
In Great Britain, the state recognizes or favours one denomination as the established church. In England, the Anglican Church is the recognized church and becomes known as the Church of
Hi Glynn;
In Great Britain, the state recognizes or favours one denomination as the established church. In England, the Anglican Church is the recognized church and becomes known as the Church of
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By
Donald Young
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#725
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Re: Church of Scotland
Glynn Currie,
Church of Scotland is Presbyterian.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Church_of_Scotland#/media/File:Reformed_Scots_Church_Denominations.svg
Church of England is Anglican or Episcopal
Glynn Currie,
Church of Scotland is Presbyterian.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Church_of_Scotland#/media/File:Reformed_Scots_Church_Denominations.svg
Church of England is Anglican or Episcopal
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By
W David Samuelsen
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#724
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