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Christ Church Cathedral (Falkland Islands)

Christ Church Cathedral, on Ross Road in Stanley, Falkland Islands, is the southernmost Anglican
cathedral in the world. It is the parish church of the Falkland Islands, South Georgia and the British
Antarctic Territories.[1] The Parish of the Falkland Islands is part of the Anglican Communion. The rector
of the cathedral is under the ordinary jurisdiction of the Bishop of the Falkland Islands; since 1978, this
office has been held ex officio by the Archbishop of Canterbury, who is both ordinary and metropolitan
for the small autonomous diocese. In practice, authority is exercised through a bishop-commissary
appointed by the Archbishop of Canterbury, and known as the Bishop for the Falkland Islands

The cathedral is built on the site of Holy Trinity Church, which was destroyed by a peat slip that
destroyed part of Stanley in 1886.[1] The new building was designed by Sir Arthur Blomfield and built in
1890–1892 from the local stone and brick.[3] It incorporates a tower with a ring of five bells, 19th- and
20th-century stained glass windows, and a two-manual pipe organ built in Ireland.[4] Bishop Waite
Stirling consecrated the new cathedral on 21 February 1892.[1]

The cathedral is in possession of the Garter banner of Edward Shackleton, Baron Shackleton, which hung
in St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle, during his lifetime.[5] On the south wall of the cathedral is a
White Ensign flown during the Battle of the River Plate by HMS Achilles. A wooden plaque below the flag
has the inscription: "One of the ensigns worn by HMS Achilles at the Battle of the River Plate 13th
December 1939".[6] In the front of the building is a whalebone arch monument, made from the jaws of
two blue whales, erected in 1933 to commemorate the centenary of British rule in the Falkland Islands.
[7]

Special services are held throughout the year at the cathedral, including those commemorating
Liberation Day on 14 June, marking the conclusion of the Falklands War in 1982; Remembrance Sunday
on the Sunday closest to 11 November, marking the Armistice of 11 November 1918; and Battle Day on
8 December, marking the Battle of the Falkland Islands in 1914. Church parades are also held on each of
these days, as well as on the Queen's birthday on 21 April

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