Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 I, 7,1 | population of some 1,500,000 ~Greeks, but the greater
2 I, 7,1 | property being ~reckoned at £50,000,000. Since then, many Greeks
3 I, 7,1 | being ~reckoned at £50,000,000. Since then, many Greeks
4 I, 7,2 | nominally Lutheran, and the 66,000 Orthodox comprise only ***
5 I, 7,3 | Today there are about 10,000 Orthodox in Egypt, and perhaps
6 I, 7,3 | in Egypt, and perhaps 150,000-250,000 ~elsewhere in Africa.
7 I, 7,3 | and perhaps 150,000-250,000 ~elsewhere in Africa. The
8 I, 7,4 | Antioch~ numbers some 320,000 Orthodox in Syria and the
9 I, 7,4 | and ~perhaps a further 150,000 in Iraq and America. (Roman
10 I, 7,4 | Latin, number ~about 640,000 in Syria and the Lebanon).
11 I, 7,5 | they number today about 60,000 but are on the decrease,
12 I, 7,5 | of 1948 there were only 5,000 Greeks within the Patriarchate
13 I, 7,5 | there were more than 10,000 of them staying in the ~
14 I, 7,6 | married clergy, less than 1,000 had received more than an
15 I, 7,7 | 600 priests and over 450,000 faithful. The Turkish system,
16 I, 7,9 | total population of 200,000, there are perhaps 20,000
17 I, 7,9 | 000, there are perhaps 20,000 Orthodox, most of ~whom
18 I, 7,10| there were still only some 5,000 converts, although there
19 I, 7,10| in 1939 there were 200,000 Orthodox (mostly Russians,
20 I, 7,10| Orthodox ~bishop, with some 20,000 faithful; how much of Chinese
21 I, 7,10| forty parishes, with 25,000 faithful. The seminary at
22 I, 7,10| reports, numbers more than 100,000, mostly in Kenya. In ~1982,
23 II, 5,1 | volumes together comprise 5,000 closely~printed quarto pages,
24 II, 6,2 | few in number — perhaps 50,000 — and almost entirely~lacking
25 II, 6,2 | 80 parishes and some 70,000 faithful; but between~1915
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