Clement Venkataramiah

Last updated

Clement William Venkataramiah was Bishop of Nandyal.

Venkataramiah was educated at St Augustine's College, Canterbury; and ordained in 1930. He was the Warden at the SPG High School at Giddalur from 1930 until 1941; and Chaplain at Igatpuri until 1945. After further stints at Ahmedabad, Deolali, Poona, Parel, Kurduvadi, Byculla and Surat he was appointed Archdeacon of Bombay, serving from 1959 until [1] 1963. He became the first diocesan Bishop of Nandyal in 1963; [2] he was consecrated a bishop by Lakdasa De Mel, Bishop of Calcutta and Metropolitan of India in St Thomas' Cathedral, Bombay [3] on the feast of St Mark (25 April) 1963. [4] He was Bishop for four years. [5]

Related Research Articles

Bishop of Guildford Diocesan bishop in the Church of England

The Bishop of Guildford is the Ordinary of the Church of England Diocese of Guildford in the Province of Canterbury.

William John Westwood was the 36th Anglican Bishop of Peterborough.

John Vernon Taylor was an English bishop and theologian who was the Bishop of Winchester from 1974 to 1984.

Alfred Barry

Alfred Barry was the third Bishop of Sydney serving 1884–1889. Over the course of his career, Barry served as headmaster of independent schools, Principal of King's College London university and founded Anglican schools. He officiated at the funeral of Charles Darwin in 1882.

The Diocese of Calcutta, Church of North India was established in 1813 as part of the Church of England. It is led by the Bishop of Calcutta and the first bishop was Thomas Middleton (1814–1822) and the second Reginald Heber (1823–1826). Under the sixth bishop Daniel Wilson (1832–1858) the see was made Metropolitan when two more dioceses in India came into being.

John Waine was Bishop of Chelmsford from 1986 to 1996; and previously Bishop of St Edmundsbury and Ipswich from 1978 to 1986, Bishop of Stafford, 1975–1978. He also served as Clerk of the Closet from 1989 to 1997, and in retirement served as a lay member on the Press Complaints Commission.

Frederick Ridgeway

Frederick Edward Ridgeway was an Anglican bishop from 1901 until his death 20 years later.

William Somers Llewellyn was the inaugural bishop of Lynn from 1963 until 1972.

Alfred Earle (bishop)

Alfred Earle was the Bishop of Marlborough from 1888 to his death.

Lloyd Morrell

James Herbert Lloyd Morrell was the seventh Bishop of Lewes.

John Freeman Perry is a retired Anglican bishop.

William Robert Mounsey was Bishop of Labuan and Sarawak from 1909 to 1916.

David Leake was the assistant Bishop in Northern Argentina from 1969 to 1979 when he became diocesan Bishop and for the latter part of that post also Primate of the Southern Cone.

George Frederick Cecil de Carteret was an Anglican cleric, and the long-serving Bishop of Jamaica from 1916 until 1931.

Oliver Stratford Tomkins was an Anglican Bishop of Bristol in the third quarter of the 20th century.

Herbert Bury

Herbert Bury was an Anglican bishop in the first decades of the 20th century.

Arthur Leonard Kitching was an Anglican missionary, bishop and author.

The archdeacons in the Diocese in Europe are senior clergy of the Church of England Diocese in Europe. They each have responsibility over their own archdeaconry, of which there are currently seven, each of which is composed of one or more deaneries, which are composed in turn of chaplaincies.

Colin Frederick Bazley is a retired bishop in the Church of England. He was a bishop in Chile from 1969 until his retirement in 2000.

Lucian Charles Usher-Wilson was a British Anglican bishop who served in Uganda during the mid-20th-century and afterwards in England.

References

  1. Crockford's Clerical Directory1959/60 p 1199 London, OUP,1959
  2. "Nandyal is made into a diocese" . Church Times (#5214). 18 January 1963. p. 1. ISSN   0009-658X . Retrieved 7 March 2015 via UK Press Online archives.
  3. First Bishop Of Nandyal. The Times (London, England), Thursday, 17 January 1963; pg. 12; Issue 55601
  4. "Bombay consecration" . Church Times (#5229). 3 May 1963. p. 1. ISSN   0009-658X . Retrieved 7 March 2015 via UK Press Online archives.
  5. jajjarapu