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Showing 181 – 200 of 745

The East Caribbean Conference is a part of the Caribbean Union Conference in the Inter-American Division of Seventh-day Adventists. It was organized in 1926 and reorganized in 1945, 1960, 1975, 1984, and 1999. The territory divided and reorganized yet again in 2012. Its headquarters is in St. Michael, Barbados, and its territory is comprised of Barbados and Dominica.

East Central Colombian Conference is a part of North Colombian Union Conference in the Inter-American Division of Seventh-day Adventists.

The East Central India Union is the largest union in terms of membership in the Southern Asia Division.

The East Central Korean Conference (aka Dongjunghanhaphoe) is one of the five conferences comprising the Korean Union Conference of the Northern Asia-Pacific Division of Seventh-day Adventists. When the Chosen Union Mission was organized in 1919 it bore the name Central Chosen Mission, then reorganized as the East Central Korean Mission in 1978, and finally became the East Central Korean Conference in 1983.

East Central Mission (ECM) was organized on January 8, 1986. It covered Enugu state, Ebonyi state, and parts of Imo and Abia states, all in the Eastern part of Nigeria. In March 2002, the East Central Mission assumed conference status and became East Central Conference. On March 31, 2012, the East Central Conference became Abia North-Central Conference, with Enugu and Ebonyi states carved out of it, leaving parts of Imo and Abia states as the territory of Abia North-Central Conference.

​The East Central Rwanda Conference (formerly East Central Rwanda Field) is part of the Rwanda Union Mission in the East-Central Africa Division of the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists.

The East China Mission 华東区会, originally titled the Eastern Mission Field, functioned under three different entities: The China Union Mission (1909-1913), the Asiatic Division (1914-1915), and the North China Union Mission (1916-1917). Throughout its existence the headquarters was located in Shanghai. Its territory originally covered the provinces of Jiangsu, Anhui, and Zhegiang. Shandong province was added in November 1912.

​The East Denmark Conference was a former unit of church organization under the West Nordic Union Conference in the Northern European Division, covering the territory of East Denmark and the Faroe Islands.

​East El Salvador Conference is a part of El Salvador Union Mission. Its territory is comprised of La Unión, Morazán, San Miguel, and Usulután. It has 201 churches and 55,475 members in a population of 1,389,750. Its address is Km. 126.5, Carretera Panamericana a San Miguel, El Salvador.

East Ghana Conference was organized in 1999 as part of the Ghana Union Conference (currently Southern Ghana Union Conference).

​The East Guatemala Mission's main office is located in the main city of Chiquimula, and it covers the whole east area of Guatemala.

​The East Indonesia Union Conference was established in 1964 when the Far Eastern Division divided the Indonesia Union Mission into the East Indonesia Union Mission and the West Indonesia Union Mission.

​East Kenya Union Conference belongs to the East-Central Africa Division of Seventh-day Adventists. It was organized in 2013. Its headquarters is in Nairobi, Kenya.

East Kweichow Mission 贵(黔)東区会 was a sub-division of the West China Union Mission. Because Kweichow 贵州 (or Guizhou) Province was mountainous and not easily accessible during the 1920s, it seemed advisable to divide the province into two sections to more easily facilitate visitation and getting supplies to out-stations. Headquarters for the enterprise was located at the provincial capital Kweiyang 贵阳 (or Guiyang).

The East Los Llanos Conference is part of the Southern Colombian Union, located within the territory of the Inter-American Division of Seventh-day Adventists. The East Los Llanos Conference covers a population of 1,596,437, and includes the Colombian departments of Meta, Casanare, Guaviare, and Guainía.

​East Mato Grosso Conference (Associação Leste Mato-Grossense or ALM) is an administrative unit of the Seventh-day Adventist Church located in the territory of West Central Brazil Union Mission (Uniao Centro Oeste Brasileira or UCOB).

The East Mediterranean Field of Seventh-day Adventists (EMF) was first organized in 1971 under the management of the Middle East Union Mission (MEUM) and the Afro-Mideast Division, both also newly organized in 1970. EMF was comprised of five countries: Cyprus, Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, and Turkey; and its headquarters was located in the Beirut Adventist Center, Sayar, Hotel Deiu Street, Beirut, Lebanon.

The East Mediterranean Union Mission began in 1951 as part of the newly formed Middle East Division, also organized that same year. Its territory at the time included the countries of Cyprus, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Syria, Turkey, and the portion of Arabia bordering on the Persian Gulf, together with Oman. Listed under its jurisdiction were the Iraq, Jordan, Turkey and Lebanon-Syria missions. In 1953 leadership added the Cyprus Mission.

The East Minas Conference (AML) is an administrative unit of the Seventh-day Adventist Church (SDA) located in the territory of the Southeast Brazil Union Conference (União Sudeste Brasileira or USeB).

The East New Britain Mission existed as an administrative entity of the Seventh-day Adventist (SDA) Church for eight years between 1964 and 1972. It administered the territory of east New Britain and southern New Ireland in Papua New Guinea, located in the South West Pacific Ocean.