Archdeacon of Sheffield and Rotherham explained

The Archdeacon of Sheffield and Rotherham is a senior ecclesiastical officer within the Diocese of Sheffield (Church of England), responsible for the disciplinary supervision of the clergy[1] within the six area deaneries.

History

On 18 April 1884 the Archdeaconry of Sheffield, consisting of the rural Deaneries of Sheffield, Handsworth, Ecclesford, Rotherham and Wath, was created within the Diocese of York from part of the York archdeaconry. In 1913 the deanery of Wath was split off to form part of the new Archdeaconry of Doncaster.

In 1914 the Archdeaconries of Sheffield and Doncaster were split off from the Diocese of York to create the new Diocese of Sheffield. In 1942 the deaneries of Sheffield and Handsworth were abolished and replaced by the deaneries of Attercliffe, Ecclesall, Hallam, Laughton and Tankersley. The current (2014) six deaneries comprise Attercliffe, Ecclesall, Ecclesfield, Hallam, Laughton and Rotherham.

List of archdeacons

Blakeney was the first archdeacon after the archdeaconry was created in 1884.

In 1914, the new Sheffield diocese was created from Sheffield and Doncaster archdeaconries.

In 1999, the name of the archdeaconry was changed to Sheffield and Rotherham.

Notes and References

  1. "ABCD: a basic church dictionary" Meakin, T: Norwich, Canterbury Press, 2001
  2. https://web.archive.org/web/20131205080259/http://www.sheffield.anglican.org/home/latest-news/29-latest-news/4714-reverend-canon-malcolm-chamberlain-is-to-be-the-next-archdeacon-of-sheffield-and-rotherham Diocese of Sheffield – Chamberlain to be next Archdeacon