. . . . "Archibald Campbell, d\u00F6d 1744, var en pr\u00E4st inom Skotska Episkopalkyrkan som tj\u00E4nstgjorde som biskop av Aberdeen. Han var son till lord och dennes hustru lady Vere Ker; hans farfar var Archibald Campbell, 1:e markis av Argyll och hans morfar . Han utbildades f\u00F6r biskops\u00E4mbetet och vigdes i Dundee 1711, men utan att f\u00E5 ett eget stift. Den 10 maj 1721 valdes han, av stiftets pr\u00E4sterskap, till biskop i Aberdeen, men bes\u00F6kte aldrig sitt stift, utan uppeh\u00F6ll sig huvudsakligen i London; och d\u00E5 han fann att hans uppfattningar i vissa fr\u00E5gor inte delades av hans kolleger avsade han sig tj\u00E4nsten 1724."@sv . . . . . . "See vacant"@en . . . . . . "Archibald Campbell (died 1744) was a clergyman of the Scottish Episcopal Church who served as Bishop of Aberdeen. He was the son of Lord Neill Campbell by his first wife Lady Vere Kerr; his grandfathers were Archibald Campbell, 1st Marquess of Argyll, and William Kerr, 1st Earl of Lothian. He was a student of the church fathers and the author of a book on the Middle State, in defense of prayer for the dead. He lived in England for many years and was an associate of English nonjurors including George Hickes, Thomas Brett, Thomas Deacon, and Roger Laurence. In the usages controversy he was a staunch defender of the usages and wrote two pamphlets. When Brett engineered a reunion with the non-usager nonjurors in the early 1730s, Campbell, Laurence, and Deacon stood apart and constituted the extreme usager party. In mid-1733, after failing to find assistance from any English nonjuring or Episcopalian Bishops, Campbell proceeded to consecrate Laurence alone, and thereafter both consecrated Deacon. Due to the uncanonical nature of the consecration this breakaway group was never recognised by the regular nonjurors. The Orthodox British Church, as it became known, had congregations in London, Shrewsbury and Manchester, the latter lasting into the first decade of the nineteenth century. Campbell died in London in June 1744."@en . . . . "Archibald Campbell (bishop)"@en . . . "Archibald Campbell, d\u00F6d 1744, var en pr\u00E4st inom Skotska Episkopalkyrkan som tj\u00E4nstgjorde som biskop av Aberdeen. Han var son till lord och dennes hustru lady Vere Ker; hans farfar var Archibald Campbell, 1:e markis av Argyll och hans morfar . Han utbildades f\u00F6r biskops\u00E4mbetet och vigdes i Dundee 1711, men utan att f\u00E5 ett eget stift. Den 10 maj 1721 valdes han, av stiftets pr\u00E4sterskap, till biskop i Aberdeen, men bes\u00F6kte aldrig sitt stift, utan uppeh\u00F6ll sig huvudsakligen i London; och d\u00E5 han fann att hans uppfattningar i vissa fr\u00E5gor inte delades av hans kolleger avsade han sig tj\u00E4nsten 1724. Han studerade kyrkof\u00E4derna och skrev en bok om mellantillst\u00E5ndet, till f\u00F6rsvar f\u00F6r b\u00F6nen f\u00F6r de d\u00F6da. Han bodde i England under m\u00E5nga \u00E5r och var f\u00F6rbunden med engelska non-jurors som , , och . I stiden om de liturgiska bruken f\u00F6rsvarade han dessa och skrev tv\u00E5 pamfletter till f\u00F6rm\u00E5n f\u00F6r dem. \u00C5r 1717 blev biskop Campbell bekant med , metropoliten av Thebe, som d\u00E5 var i London, och tillsammans med n\u00E5gra engelska non-jurors f\u00F6reslog han en union med \u00D6stkyrkan, som Arsenius, n\u00E4r han reste till Ryssland, tog med sig till Peter den store. Tsaren godk\u00E4nde projektet, men det gick i st\u00F6pet, d\u00E5 han kr\u00E4vde godk\u00E4nnandet av vissa punkter som britterna inte kunde skriva under."@sv . . . "Archibald Campbell (biskop)"@sv . . . . "1017616408"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "2277"^^ . . "1721"^^ . . . . . . "Archibald Campbell (died 1744) was a clergyman of the Scottish Episcopal Church who served as Bishop of Aberdeen. He was the son of Lord Neill Campbell by his first wife Lady Vere Kerr; his grandfathers were Archibald Campbell, 1st Marquess of Argyll, and William Kerr, 1st Earl of Lothian. Campbell died in London in June 1744."@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "6782574"^^ . . . . . . . . "(prededed by George Haliburton)"@en . . . . . . . . . . .