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・ Croydon London Borough Council election, 1964
・ Croydon London Borough Council election, 1968
・ Croydon London Borough Council election, 1971
・ Croydon London Borough Council election, 1974
・ Croydon London Borough Council election, 1978
・ Croydon London Borough Council election, 1982
・ Croydon London Borough Council election, 1986
・ Croydon London Borough Council election, 1990
・ Croydon London Borough Council election, 1994
・ Croydon London Borough Council election, 1998
・ Croydon London Borough Council election, 2002
・ Croydon London Borough Council election, 2006
・ Croydon London Borough Council election, 2010
・ Croydon London Borough Council election, 2014
・ Croydon London Borough Council elections
Croydon Minster
・ Croydon Mosque
・ Croydon Municipal F.C.
・ Croydon North
・ Croydon North (UK Parliament constituency)
・ Croydon North by-election
・ Croydon North by-election, 1940
・ Croydon North by-election, 1948
・ Croydon North by-election, 2012
・ Croydon North East (UK Parliament constituency)
・ Croydon North West (UK Parliament constituency)
・ Croydon North West by-election, 1981
・ Croydon North, Victoria
・ Croydon Palace
・ Croydon Park


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Croydon Minster : ウィキペディア英語版
Croydon Minster

Croydon Minster is the parish and civic church of the London Borough of Croydon. There are currently more than 35 churches in the borough, with Croydon Minster being the most prominent. It is Grade I listed.
Six Archbishops of Canterbury were buried in the church: in date order these were Edmund Grindal, John Whitgift, Gilbert Sheldon, William Wake, John Potter, and Thomas Herring.
==History==
The church was established in the middle Saxon period, and is believed to have been a minster church: one which served as a base for a group of clergy living a communal life, who may have taken some pastoral responsibility for the population of the surrounding district. A charter issued by King Coenwulf of Mercia refers to a council which had taken place close to what is called the ''monasterium'' (meaning minster) of Croydon. An Anglo-Saxon will made in about 960 is witnessed by Elfsies, priest of Croydon; and the church is also mentioned in Domesday Book (1086).
The earliest clear record of the church's dedication to St John the Baptist is found in the will of John de Croydon, fishmonger, dated 6 December 1347, which includes a bequest to "the church of S. John de Croydon".
In its final medieval form, the church was mainly a Perpendicular-style structure of late 14th and early 15th-century date. It still bears the arms of archbishops Courtenay and Chicheley, believed to have been its benefactors.
In 1867 the medieval building was gutted by fire. Under the direction of Sir George Gilbert Scott it was rebuilt, incorporating some of the medieval remains (notably the west tower and south porch), and essentially following the same design, while extending the building's footprint further east. It was reconsecrated in 1870. It still contains several important monuments and fittings saved from the old building.
The church was elevated to the status of Croydon Minster (the modern honorific title) on 29 May 2011, the first such change in the diocese of Southwark.
Croydon has strong religious links, Croydon Palace having been a residence of the Archbishop of Canterbury from at least the beginning of the 13th century to the beginning of the 19th. The Bishop of Croydon is a position as an area bishop in the Anglican Diocese of Southwark. The current area bishop is Jonathan Clark, who was consecrated on 21 March 2012, and the current vicar is Colin J. Luke Boswell, Vicar of Croydon and Chaplain to the Whitgift Foundation.

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